her cope.
Looking about the dark mourning chamber, Guerrand could see Rietta and her daughter Honora weeping appropriately while accepting the condolences of some neighboring nobles. Among them were the wife of the merchant Berwick and her daughter Ingrid, thebetrothed of the dead young cavalier. Guerrand knew who she was only because he had been told—he’d never before seen young Ingrid Berwick himself.
Squinting now in the dim light of the oil lamps, he had to agree with Kirah’s assessment of the young woman’s appearance. Ingrid’s looks hadn’t been aided by the weeping she must have done since the news of her betrothed’s death. Still, he could scarcely summon a twinge of pity for her. She could only be crying for the lost opportunity, not Quinn. To Guerrand’s knowledge, she and Quinn had not met in recent years, if ever. Ingrid looked up just then, across the vast hall, as if she felt his assessing eyes on her. Guerrand nodded briefly, a grim, stiff gesture, and looked away.
Despite the milling crowd, Cormac and Anton Berwick were conspicuously absent. No doubt they had retired to Cormac’s study to smoke cigars or sip port, or whatever noblemen did when they felt “uncomfortable.” That was the most passionate word Guerrand could come up with to describe Cormac’s emotion regarding their brother’s death. “Inconvenienced” also came to mind, but nothing approaching grief.
That’s not quite true, Guerrand had to correct himself. Several times in the past few days, he had caught Cormac’s eyes on him, vaguely angry, yet not focused on the present, as if his thoughts were far away in time and space. Guerrand recalled the look his brother had not even known he witnessed: it said clearly, “Why the useful one, and not you?”
Guerrand winced, but not because of Cormac’s incredible cruelty. That did not surprise him. He flinched because he could see how the thought might occur to persons far more charitable than Cormac. He was, in his own estimation and in all senses of the phrase, less useful than his noble younger brother had been. His worst crime, if a malaise of the spirit could be called that, was that he had no idea what he could do to rectify that situation.
* * * * *
At that moment, Cormac DiThon was trying to find, in the haze provided by good port wine, a solution to a situation of his own. He’d been suffering from a burning ache, low in the belly, since the news of Quinn’s death. The gentle sloshing of the port soothed his stomach in a way brandy could not, and its ability to narrow the senses dimmed the edges of the pain. Drink could not, however, make his problems disappear, no matter how many opportunities he gave it.
Damned inconvenient, Quinn dying before the wedding. It was a minor annoyance that his half brother had met an ignominious death at the hands of bandits, rather than in the blazing glory of battle more suited to a cavalier. That mattered little to Cormac, because it seemed to matter not at all to the copious mourners who had been trooping through his castle for days. Quinn had been well liked, that was obvious. It was the reason he’d been an easy sell when Berwick had come looking for a titled son-in-law.
Stonecliff had been within Cormac’s grasp. The conversation he had just concluded with Anton Berwick had done nothing to bring it near again. Yet Cormac refused to let its return slip away so easily. He could not afford to buy the land back—if anything, his finances were worse than when he’d sold it to Berwick.
“Damn those bandits!” Cormac cursed aloud. No matter what he did, or how hard he worked, the fates seemed to conspire against him. How many times had the answer to his problems been within arm’s reach, only to be pulled away at the last instant? When his father had arranged his marriage to Rietta, Cormac had believed he was getting a handsome woman of high blood whose name and demeanor would raise his own standing. Instead, he got a
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