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Story: The Liveship Traders Trilogy
‘Odd. I thought it was cruel of you to refuse me when I begged your help. I now see you intended to be kind.’ She heard the icy scorn in her own voice and recognized it.
This is how my father quarrels with my mother, she thought, turning her own words against her.
Something in her wanted to stop this, but she did not know how.
She needed to think, she needed time to think, and instead everything just kept happening.
The only Presentation Ball she would ever have was whirling on around her, she might be able to get the Satrap to save her father, and instead of all the other girls watching enviously as her elegant beau danced with her, she was standing here having a stupid quarrel with him. It wasn’t fair!
‘I did not intend to be kind. I intended to be truthful,’ he said quietly.
The music had ended. The dancers were leaving the floor or securing new partners.
Reyn’s words fell in the silence, not loudly, but enough that several heads turned their way.
Malta sensed that he was as uncomfortably aware of the attention as she was.
She tried to put a small smile on her face, as if his words were some kind of a witticism, but her cheeks felt hot and stiff.
At that moment, someone cleared his throat behind her. She turned her head.
Cerwin Trell swept a low bow to her. ‘Would you allow me the next dance?’ There was a small challenge in his voice, almost as if the words were directed to Reyn rather than to her. Reyn took it up.
‘Malta Vestrit and I were sharing a conversation,’ he pointed out in a dangerously pleasant voice.
‘I see,’ Cerwin retorted, his voice equally controlled. ‘I thought she might more enjoy sharing a dance with me.’
The first strains of the music threaded through the hall. Folk were staring at them. Without asking her, Reyn took her hand in his. ‘We were just about to dance,’ he informed Cerwin. His other hand caught her waist, and as easily as if he lifted a child, he suddenly whirled her into the dance.
It was a spirited tune, and she found she could either dance or stumble awkwardly after his grip on her hand.
She chose to dance. She quickly caught up a finger-pinch of her skirts to display her lively feet, and then deliberately embellished the sprightly dance.
He met her challenge without missing a beat, and suddenly it took every bit of her concentration to match herself to him.
For a moment, she was aware of the effort, and then they moved as one.
Couples who had been stealing peeks at them suddenly moved aside to cede them more of the dance floor.
She caught a fleeting glimpse of her grandmother as Reyn twirled her through a step.
The old woman was smiling fiercely at her.
She found, with surprise, that she herself was smiling in genuine pleasure.
Her skirts floated as he turned her through the elaborate steps.
His touch on her waist was sure and strong.
She became aware of his scent, and was not sure if it was a perfume he wore or the musk of his skin.
It did not displease her. She was almost aware of the admiring looks from the spectators at the ball, but Reyn was at the centre of her thoughts.
Without quite intending to, she closed her fingers firmly on his, and his grip on her hand strengthened in response. Her heart lifted unexpectedly.
‘Malta.’ It was only her name he spoke. It was not an apology for anything, but it was an affirmation of all he felt for her.
A wave of feeling washed through her in response.
She suddenly perceived that the incident with the Satrap was separate entirely from what was between herself and Reyn.
It had been her error to even mention it in his presence.
It had nothing to do with him or with her relationship with him.
She should have known it would only upset him.
At this moment, for now, neither of them had to think about anything outside of what they were together.
That was the language of this dance. For this space of time, they moved perfectly together and understood each other. That was what she should be savouring.
‘Reyn,’ she conceded, and smiled up at him.
The quarrel was swept away by their moving feet, trodden down and forgotten.
Too soon the music was ending and he spun her gracefully through the closing measure, then caught her briefly in his arms to halt her movement.
It caught her breath as well. ‘When we move together, like this,’ she whispered shyly, ‘I almost feel we are destined to always move as one.’
He held her a moment longer in his arms than was strictly proper. It set her heart to racing. She could not see his eyes, but knew he looked down into her face. He spoke softly. ‘All you have to do, my dear, is trust me to lead you in your steps,’ he told her indulgently.
His patronizing words popped the bubble he had created around them.
She stepped free of his embrace, to drop him a very formal curtsey.
‘I thank you for the pleasure of the dance, Sir,’ she told him coolly.
‘You will excuse me now.’ As she rose, she nodded a farewell to him.
She turned and walked away as if she knew where she was going.
From the corner of her eye, she saw him start to come after her, only to have a Rain Wild man hasten up to him and catch him by the arm.
Whatever the man wanted of him seemed more important than his pursuit of her.
He halted and turned to him. Fine. She kept walking.
The agitation in her heart would not let her stand still.
Why did he have to spoil everything like that?
She could not see anyone she knew. Not her mother or grandmother, not a girl of her acquaintance, not even Davad Restart.
She saw the Satrap, surrounded by a circle of Bingtown society matrons.
She could scarcely intrude on that group.
The musicians had struck up another tune.
She moved towards a table laden with wine and glasses.
It would have been more proper for a young man to bring her refreshment.
It was suddenly so awkward to be alone. She imagined that every eye in the room tracked her solitary movement.
She was almost there when Cerwin stepped in front of her. She had to stop to keep from bumping into him. ‘Perhaps we can dance now?’ he asked gently.
She hesitated. It would anger Reyn or perhaps fill him with jealousy. But she no longer wished to play such games. This was complicated enough without that. As if Cerwin sensed her reservations, he nodded sombrely to the dance floor. ‘It did not take him so long to decide on a new partner.’
In disbelief, she turned to see what he indicated.
Her heart stood still in her chest. Reyn moved gracefully through the languid dance steps with one of the Satrap’s Companions in his arms. It was not even the beautiful one.
It was the unadorned woman in the cream gown that he held close and listened to so attentively.
‘No,’ Cerwin whispered. ‘Don’t stare. Put your head up and look at me. Smile. And off we go.’
With a frozen little smile, she set her hand in his.
He gathered her in and they moved out onto the dance floor with all the grace of two dogs circling one another.
His dance stride was short after matching herself to Reyn.
She felt like she lurched about in his arms. He seemed blissfully unaware of this awkwardness.
Instead, he smiled down at her. ‘At last, I find you in my arms,’ he said softly.
‘I thought my dreams would never come true. Yet here you are, presented as a woman! And that Rain Wild fool has cast you aside for someone he can never hope to possess. Ah, my Malta. Your hair gleams so that it dazzles me. The fragrance of your hair intoxicates me. I could never dream to possess a more precious treasure than your tiny hand in mine.’
The compliments rained down on her. She set her teeth in a smile and endured them. She tried not to watch Reyn dance with the other woman. His veil made it hard to tell, but it seemed that she had captured his attention completely. Not once did his head turn in her direction.
She had lost him. That simply, that quickly.
One tart word too many, and the man was gone.
She actually felt as if her heart had been tugged out of her chest, leaving only an empty space.
Foolishness. She had not even decided whether or not she loved him.
So that could not be it. No. It was that he had claimed to love her, and she had foolishly believed him.
Obviously, he had lied to her. It was only injured pride that she felt, she was sure of it.
It was only that she felt angry because he had made a fool of her.
Why should she care at all? She was right now dancing in the arms of another man, a very handsome man who obviously doted on her.
She didn’t need Reyn. She had never even seen his face; how could she love him?
She felt suddenly dizzy as she glimpsed Reyn bending his head, to speak to the Companion more privately.
The woman answered earnestly and at length.
Malta nearly stumbled, and Cerwin tightened his grip on her.
He was uttering some nonsense about how pink her lips were.
What in Sa’s name did he expect her to reply to such inanity?
Should she compliment his teeth, or the cut of his shirt?
She actually heard herself say, ‘You look very handsome tonight, Cerwin. Your family must be proud of you.’
He smiled as if she had praised him to the stars. ‘Such words from your lips mean so much to me,’ he assured her.
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