Chapter 20
Around us, the girls were speaking with each other and the royal family. Only Nicholas, Susie, and myself
were silent.
The King gave Nicholas a hard look, and Nicholas’s lips twitched like he wanted to frown but didn’t.
I thought he might talk to me, but instead, he leaned forward to see Susie around me.
“It is a pleasant evening, wouldn’t you agree, Susie?”
Susie paled. “You… know my name?”
“Of course. I know the name of every candidate.” Original content from NôvelDrama.Org.
“… oh…” She audibly swallowed a spoonful of soup. “Of course. Sorry to offend.”
“I’m not offended,” Nicholas said. “But, to my question. Wouldn’t you agree?”
Susie’s face shifted from white to red so fast, I worried she might be lightheaded. I placed an arm beside her, ready to catch her if she tilted.
“A–Agree?” Susie stuttered
“Yes.” Nicholas’s brow furrowed slightly. “That the weather is pleasant?”
“Ohl Yes, Yes, very pleasant.” Susie pushed her chair back. “If you’ll excuse me, I… I, uh… I have to use the bathroom!”
She jumped to her feet and started walking away. Halfway to the door she turned around, seemingly having realized she was still clutching her cloth napkin. She dropped it onto her chair, and then scuttled
away, pressing her hands to her face.
Nicholas blinked a couple of times. He hadn’t moved at all otherwise, like he couldn’t quite believe what had just happened.
“She’s very shy,” I said.
He recovered then, glancing at me. He sat back in his chair and focused on his soup:
The girls across the table were watching the scene curiously. Nicholas had gone back to not speaking! www he was furious with me, but if he continued to be so unwelcoming, he would eam a negative
putation with the girls, and with the cameras
deemed to be zooming in on him.
I forced a laugh, bringing the attention to myself. 1, personally, find the weather very pleasant”
Nicholas glanced at me again, his frown clear this time.
Subtly, I tilted my head toward the camera.
He noticed the camera and immediately schooled his frown into a passive expression.
“Have you ever studied birds, Piper?” he asked me. He didn’t wait for me to answer. “I’ve taken to raising some. Beautiful, majestic creatures. But there is one bird that I cannot help but actively dislike.”
“Which is?” I asked.
“The cuckoo bird,” he said. His gaze sliced into me. “They lay their eggs in other birds‘ nests. A clever.
tactic, but shameless.”
The blood pulled away from my face. He was talking about me. I had a child, yet here I was, still
participating in the Luna choosing game. Did he think this was some clever ploy of mine, to seek out an
uneven match? To aim higher than I had any right to?
I dabbed at the corner of my mouth with my napkin, giving myself a moment to recover from the insult.
Then I spoke.
I
“Actually, I love birds,” I said.
“Oh?” he feigned interest. He lifted his soup–filled spoon.
“My favorite bird is the swan. They are so pure, loyal. Monogamous. Among swans, you would never see
multiple females having to fight over one male.”
He choked on his soup.
Some of the other girls immediately noticed. “Are you well, Prince Nicholas?”
“Fine,” he said, clearing his throat. He absolutely refused to look at me again, focusing solely on his soup
bowl, even after he’d finished the contents within.
Yet I barely had any time to feel smug over the reaction, before Susie walked quickly back into the room.
Oddly, she didn’t return to her seat, but leaned over it to speak to me.
“Piper, the maids caught me in the hall. It’s about Elva.”
All good feelings vanished. “What is it?”
Susie brow crinkled. A small line creased above her nose.
Whatever the news, it wasn’t good.
I braced myself, but worries over Elva’s health punched the air from my lungs like a physical blow, no
matter how prepared I’d thought myself.
Susie spoke. “Elva has a high fever.”