With a click, the door swung open, revealing an exasperated Verena staring up at him. Behind Rowan, her slave mouthed an apology and threw up his hands. This wasn’t the first Rowan had visited and saw no one else but her. The tall Morealis stared at her for a moment, then smiled and pushed past her into the office.
“A good jest, Verena,” he drawled, sprawling himself over one of the chairs nearest to her crafting table. It didn’t much matter to him, but he gravitated toward any of the nicer ones in the room, “But we both know my injuries would be seen to by the Morealis doctors.” He smiled, “So I am happy to report I am whole and unharmed…my but you missed me I see,” He poked at the failed compound on her crafting table, almost deigning to taste it with his pinkie and then thought better of it, “Shutting yourself away from the world in this dingy office is most unbecoming, Verena…what would your family say?”
He was hardly one to talk, of course. His affairs had created a situation where almost no one had any faith in his commitment. Rowan should have been married years ago, but repeated scandals had a way of weighing against his merits. As if it was a crime to appreciate beauty…perhaps, in a past life, he would have been an Askara. Yes, that must be it. He’d have to tell his friend about that one. In any case, it was not lost on him that his brother was already in negotiations for a marriage and he was head of house. If ruling the Morealis required a brood of children and some Dynasty wife…well then, perhaps he would have to give serious consideration to his continued dalliances.
He met with exasperation with a traditional smile, crossing one leg over the other and laying his head back against the chair. “Verena, Verena, Verena…are you seeing anyone lately?” He paused, almost chuckled, shaking his head. “Perhaps that was rude of me, but curiosity compels me all the same.” Stretching his head up, he looked at her, shrugging his shoulders, “I am not, by the way, seeing anyone I mean. You see, the last woman I shared my passions with had the most curious way of beginning a laugh. You’ve heard a donkey bray, yes? Well she began as if braying, but it settled into ordinary laughter shortly after…but it was the beginning, you see…it stuck with me, haunted me, tormented me.”
Leaning forward off the chair, he stared down into the bowl and then pushed it across the table towards her. “Well you can imagine that I did not allow that to continue much farther.” He scowled, “Father disapproved, as usual, but he stepped down from head of house so I should hardly be kowtowing to his drumbeat.” He rubbed his right shoulder absently, wincing as he pressed against the bruise there, “What sort of vile father commands his son to be beat senselessly again and again? We are not the Konrath, and Dimitri never went through my rigors.” Rowan pondered this, tapping a thumb against his lips, “Do you suppose the old bastard is getting forgetful? Perhaps as his mind goes he thinks me someone else or…” With a dramatic sigh, Rowan fell back against the chair again, “Dash it all, I have no idea.”
Through a web of fingers he focused on Verena again.
“But what of you, lovely, lovely Verena? Do tell me you have someone who strikes your fancy, at least…let your family rejoice quietly that they might yet marry you off, hmm? Or…” He considered again, “Are the rumors about Cassius true? Does the doctor stoop to marry the lecher and tie both households in the ribbons of matrimony?” |