Chapter 17 â The Duchessâs Return
âI wasnât actually planning to go that farâŚâ
Rubyâs voice trailed off as she looked nervously at her mother, Marchioness Camilla.
She rubbed her palm as if it still stung.
âI⌠I hit someone.â
Camilla froze.
âHit? Who?â
ââŚA maid.â
The drawing room went silent.
Ruby glanced up timidly. Her motherâs face was stiff.
Frightened, Ruby quickly added, âBut it was that commonerâs fault firstâ!â
âWell done.â
âEh?â
Camilla patted Rubyâs shoulder twice.
âThe lower they are, the more strictly they must be taught their place.â
Rubyâs eyes went round.
âR-really?â
âOf course. Iâve told you this before, havenât I? And it was even better that you hit the maid instead of that girl herself.â
âWhy is that?â
âBecause that girl is your auntâs protĂŠgĂŠâher ward. It would only cause trouble if you were too rough with her directly.â
Rubyâs expression brightened instantly.
So she hadnât done anything wrong after all!
Feeling pleased, she asked eagerly, âMother, did you already meet with Lady Sharon?â
âNot yet. Sheâs busy, so weâre waiting.â
Camilla patted the seat beside her. Ruby sat down obediently.
The Abner familyâs sofa was so soft and luxuriousâit felt even better than the one in the Coel mansion.
âMother,â Ruby said suddenly, âwhat if we lowered our expectations a little?â
Camilla turned her head. âWhat do you mean?â
âI meanâwhat if we asked her to take me in as her ward, like that commoner girl?â
Camilla blinked, caught off guard. âAs her ward?â
âYes! She agreed to sponsor that weird kid, didnât she? If sheâd take someone like me instead, sheâd be even happier!â
Camillaâs face grew thoughtful. Ruby continued, excited.
âShe could grow fond of me later. I just need to get into the mansion first.â
ââŚThat actually makes sense,â Camilla murmured slowly.
âThat kind of request would sound harmless enough. And since our Coel family is the biggest buyer of her magic stones, she canât refuse easily.â
A smile spread over her lips.
âMy clever Ruby. How did you become so smart?â
Ruby grinned proudly. âBecause I take after you, Mother.â
The two laughed brightly together, then looked around the elegant sitting room.
Banners of the Abner family hung on the wallsâeach one scarred and torn from past battles.
Medals and gifts from the imperial court filled the spaces between them.
They were priceless treasuresâsymbols of generations of sacrifice and bloodshed.
Camilla thought to herself: money can buy almost anything.
But one thing it canât buy is honor.
âIf a successor from the Coel family were to rise in the Abner line,â she whispered dreamily,
“That would be truly magnificent.â
It was true. In the capital, countless noblewomen were desperate to push their children into the Abner family.
That was what happened when a powerful house had no heir.
âWhatâs the point of standing at the top of power,â Camilla muttered, âwhen thereâs no one of your own blood to inherit it?â
Ruby nodded confidently, matching her motherâs proud smile.
But just thenâ
âHow amusing,â came a cold voice. âYou really do talk nonsense, donât you, Camilla?â
The door opened soundlessly.
Camilla flinched and stood up in alarm.
She had been told the Duchess would take another hour to arriveâ
But there, in the doorway, stood Sharon Abner herself.
âS-sisterâŚâ Camilla stammered.
The Duchess strode into the room, draped in a coat made of northern wolf fur.
her sharp violet eyes blazing.
She stopped before them and said evenly,
âIâll give you a chance.â
ââŚA chance?â Camilla whispered.
âExplain yourself. That ridiculous thing you just saidâsay it again. With your own mouth.â
Thirty minutes earlier.
âI-Iâm fine, my lady.â
Soyaâs left cheek was swollen bright red.
My hands clenched into fists.
Ruby Coel.
That eight-year-old brat had slapped her so hard that her palm mustâve burned.
âStill, itâs a relief she didnât hit you, my lady,â Soya said with a shaky smile.
âWith her temper, it couldâve been worseâŚâ
She was trying to comfort me, even though she was the one hurt.
Miel sat beside us, pale and silent, pressing an ice pack together for Soya.
Watching them, I turned abruptly and walked to the door.
âMy lady?â
I grunted and pushed it open.
âMy lady! Where are you going?â
They rushed after me, but I tripped over my own feet and fell flat on the floor.
âMy lady!â
Miel hurried to help me up, but I shook off her hand firmly.
âIâm going to see the Duchess.â
Both of them froze.
Soya stammered, âB-but Iâm really fine!â
She looked desperately at Miel for support.
âT-the young lady didnât mean toâright, Miel?â
Miel nodded uneasily. âRight. And⌠Rubyâs always like that. She treats all the servants terribly.â
I didnât answer. My lips pressed into a hard line.
Of course, I knew nobles like that existedâ
The kind who treated servants like animals, nothing more than tools.
And even if the servants belong to another household, as long as itâs covered up, no one cares.
Usually, these incidents got buried quietly with hush money.
Iâd even seen it happen beforeâback in my previous life.
But this⌠this is too much.
I frowned, my small fists trembling.
Miel took my hands gently, looking serious.
âMy lady, youâre very smart, so Iâll speak honestly,â she said.
âWeâre grateful you care about us, but⌠the Coel and Abner families are very close. More precisely, the Duchess and Lady Camilla are personally close. Itâs best not to make this a big issue.â
ââŚâ
âYou saw it yourself earlierâLady Camilla called our mistress âSister.â Thatâs how familiar they are.â
I frowned deeply.
âBut⌠isnât that wrong?â
Miel went quiet.
âWhen you talk to a duchess, you should say ‘Your Grace’ or ‘Duchess,’ right? Not âsister.ââ
Miel and Soya exchanged uneasy looks.
Of course they didâthey knew I was right.
How familiar. Itâs always the same.
When Sharon Abner came to the orphanage to take me in,
Duke Longton had called her âMadam.â
At first, it sounded politeâuntil I realized what it meant.
Sharon Abner wasnât a mere lady; she was a duchess and the official head of her house.
Calling her âMadamâ was a deliberate insult, a refusal to acknowledge her authority.
It was the same in my past life.
Even then, Sharon Abner had been constantly undermined.
Duke Longton, especially, enjoyed belittling her.
In noble meetings and social gatherings, those who disliked her used âMadamâ instead of “Duchess.”
a subtle but cruel form of humiliation.
Camilla might have used âsisterâ with the same intention.
âIf you were close to the Emperor,â I muttered, âwould you call him brother too?â
Miel and Soya fell silent.
I sighed.
And then thereâs the matter of that mana stone mineâŚ
âThe reason the Abners discovered so many mana crystal mines was thanks to my mother!â
When Ruby had said that, something clicked in my memory.
In the northern part of Abner’s territory, there was a large mana stone mine.
In my past life, by the time I was a teenager, that mine had been sold off cheaplyâ
because the mana crystals inside had become contaminated and useless.
But then something unbelievable happened.
Right after ownership changed hands, the contamination âmiraculouslyâ disappeared.
My eyes narrowed.
I remembered reading about it in an old article.
The buyer of that mine⌠was Camilla Coel.