Page 21 of Fairest


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I suddenly notice that there are other people in the room, too. Men, also in suits, while the women are in a mix of sharp velvet or silk suits and cocktail dresses. None of them looks older than about twenty-five. Is this how rich young people socialise?

My gaze shifts back to Rose’s brother.

She has already told me that Cillian’s twenty-six, but the age gap feels much bigger right now. I will never be that sophisticated. Or so dominant. Down the side of his neck, reaching under his shirt, is a tattoo, at odds with the rest of his appearance. I don’t want to be caught staring too hard, but it looks like it might be antlers, similar to the ones I imagined framing his head a few minutes before. His surname is Hunter, after all. Maybe he’s playing up the link, what with their house being named after that ancient pagan hunting god. Well, he definitely has the body of a god if the way he fills out that jacket is anything to go by. Deciding that it doesn’t seem like he’s going to shake hands, I curl my hands into fists and put them behind me.

‘And this is Vittoria Riali,’ Rose says, unenthusiastically, gesturing at the evil queen. ‘My brother’s’—she pauses—‘girlfriend.’

The evil queen, Vittoria, flashes Rose a look of pure animosity.

‘Is this some stray you picked up at college to make yourself look good?’ she scoffs and glances around the room at the other guests. Some of whom smile back, although most shift nervously, watching Cillian as if to gauge his reaction before deciding whether to join this woman’s snideness or not.

‘Niamh’s hardly a stray, Vittoria,’ Rose says, flicking her hair off her shoulder. ‘And it’s university. Not college. We’re going to be lawyers, remember? One day, you might need our help.’

‘I doubt it,’ says Vittoria dismissively, rolling her eyes at Cillian, whose attention is still solely focused on me. I can’t bring myself to look him in the eye again, he’s making me nervous. Is this some kind of test to see how long I can withstand his piercing gaze?

‘Niamh is planning to specialise in criminal law,’ Rose points out, and I reach for her, pleading with my eyes for her to just stop. I don’t want these people to know anything about me.Knowledge is power.The words whisper through my head from nowhere, but I shiver as if someone whispered them directly into my ear. ‘She’s keen to ensure that victims and their families are able to access the justice system, no matter their socio-economic background.’

‘How very… noble.’ Vittoria says, although distaste flits across her features before she schools them back to haughty disdain. ‘Only the very young and the very naïve nowadays believe that’s possible.’

There’s a titter of amusement around the room, but this is the one aspect of my life where I am confident and I have the sinking sense that if I don’t stand up for myself right now, that these people will… will what? What can they possibly do except look down on me?

‘Anything is possible if you put your mind to it,’ I counter, more loudly than I intend, and the group falls momentarily into a shocked silence.

‘Cute,’ Vittoria says, recovering quickly, smiling in amusement as she slides a hand over Cillian’s chest, two fingers slipping in between the buttons of his black shirt. But Cillian doesn’t seem amused by Vittoria. His eyes are still firmly fixed on me.

‘Sometimes, in this world the only person capable of getting justice for you is yourself,’ he says. ‘With or without the blessing of the legal system.’

With one swift movement he captures Vittoria’s hand and removes it from inside his shirt. He tucks it in the crook of his elbow, and I see the dark red lacquer of her nails, perfectly matching the shade of her lipstick. The perfection of her appearance makes me look at my own pale pink nails, and I notice a chip on my index finger. How insignificant I must seem to these people.

‘Besides, is anyone ever truly innocent?’ he asks me.

‘Yes,’ I say. How can that even be in doubt? But laughter circles the room and my cheeks flush in the dim light. ‘Some people are victims who deserve to be defended.’

‘I doubt you can relate, Vittoria.’ Rose says.

‘Relate? To being a victim?’ Vittoria sneers. ‘I’d rather have a lawyer who was guaranteed to win.’

‘Vittoria.’ The warning in Cillian’s tone is clear. But if I think this means he approves of me, I’m soon corrected when he snaps at me: ‘Surname?’

‘Whyte,’ I reply, instantly. ‘Niamh Whyte.’

‘You’re… Irish?’ Cillian asks, his voice a rich, velvety murmur that seems to brush against my skin, leaving a trail of heat in its wake. A delicious shiver coils its way down my spine.

‘Yes. My grandparents are–were– Irish.’

There’s an awkward silence as Rose and Vittoria stare daggers at one another while Cillian gives me his full attention. I find it impossible to look away.

‘Rose,’ Vittoria says with deep condescension, ‘why don’t you and your little friend go and get a drink? Dance a little. Maybe play some party games. Let the grown-ups talk.’

I feel Rose bristling beside me. ‘Why don’t you go?—’

‘Now, now, Rosebud. Let’s not be rude to our guests.’

‘Rude? That’s rich.She’sso beyond rude, she’s?—’

‘Rose!’ His terrifying demeanour is broken for a fraction of a second when he rolls his eyes, then looks at me. ‘She may stay.For now.’

She may stay? Would Cillian really have thrown me out? I glance around and realise that yes, yes he probably would. And if he didn’t want to get his hands dirty doing that, there were plenty of people in the room who would be willing to do it for him.