Page 16 of A Sea So Cruel


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“Did you see anything?” Linnea asked, trying to keep such a heavy question as light as a feather.

Asta splashed her face with water from the basin in her room and patted her skin with a cloth. “I think so. There was a woman who left the village with a married couple while I was leaving my session. Something about the woman seemed strange, like she was coaxing them into going with her, but I couldn’t get close enough to hear. I trailed them to the path that cuts through the forest and down to the shoreline, but I lost them in the dark. I turned around and came back before I was caught.”

Linnea contemplated Asta’s words but didn’t respond, which Asta was relieved about. She was too tired to dissect that information tonight. They could talk about it with Gyrial and the twins tomorrow.

“The new orphans are sweet. Everyone was quite happy that I brought paints and bread this week.” Asta looked to her cousin. “Any trouble here?”

“None,” Linnea shrugged. “There are extra guards on duty tonight, though. The castle is swarming with them. I was sure you’d be caught when you returned.”

There was a knock on the main door and Linnea walked through the common room to answer, Dyri hiding behind her legs.

Linnea’s voice was raised—alarming Asta immediately. “You can’t just—”

She turned to find Kaid standing in her bedroom doorway, dirty and panting. Something about him looked so primal, far from the clean-cut, finely pressed appearance he always presented himself with.

“What the hell are you barging into my room for?” Asta approached the lord and pushed him back into the common room with a swift shove of her palm to his chest.

“Do you want to tell me why the fuck you’re wandering around the village and swinging swords in the middle of the night?” Kaid snapped. “And don’t lie to me. I know it was you, blondie.”

Asta’s blood went cold as the color drained from her face. How had Kaid caught her? She had been doing this for years by herself, only having Linnea’s help starting a few months ago. She had never been discovered.

But she knew there was no sense in acting confused. Kaid would see right through it.

“Why do you care? It’s not hurting you. Unless you would like me to demonstrate my blade skills on you,” Asta smirked, and she was relieved to see that the joke made Kaid’s shoulders loosen a bit.

His turquoise gaze swept over Asta’s body and she realized she was only wearing her nightgown—her short, tight nightgown that barely covered her legs—and she immediately felt very exposed.

“Wait here,” Asta gestured to a sofa in her common room, “I’ll be right out.”

After dressing in the longest robe she could find, Asta returned to the common room and sat in a chair opposite the sofa. Her traitor of a dog had joined Kaid on the couch and laid his head on the lord’s lap, enjoying the ear scratches the man was giving him while his ridiculously long tongue flopped from the side of his mouth.

Kaid leaned forward, bracing a forearm on his knee. It reminded her of earlier that day when those same forearms had been resting atop hers.

He spoke softly. “I won’t tell anyone. Just tell me what you’re doing. Tell me, so I know what kind of family I’m getting involved in.”

Asta laughed harder than she thought she would. A family. Maren had hardly socialized with her in two years and Asta still held a grudge against her father for his unfaithful acts and insistence to ignore the happenings in his closest village. They weren’t a family. They hadn’t been for a long time.

“You’re marrying a polished, proper princess. That’s what you’re getting involved in. The rest of us don’t matter.”

Kaid’s brows furrowed. “Look, I know enough now where I could keep tailing you to find out, or you could confess. Your choice, sweetheart.”

The dark-haired lord leaned back now, crossing one leg over the other. He had collected himself and returned to his usual charming form once more.

“Fine,” Asta said curtly.

She told him about the missing villagers and the increasing number of orphans. Asta explained that she started going to the village to try and investigate the cause of it all, but then Gyrial suggested she should know how to defend herself if she was going to keep putting herself in dangerous situations. Kaidlistened intently, and Linnea had made herself a ghost in the room, straightening piles of books and clothing strewn about.

“So the first place you were visiting was the orphanage?” Kaid’s eyes wandered back to the canine’s face that rested in his lap and he patted Dyri’s head.

Asta nodded and explained that she brings gifts to the orphans and has grown to love them. She mentioned that she even learned sign language so she could play with the nonverbal and deaf children.

“Why do you do it? Why do you go there and risk it so often?” Kaid asked through narrowed eyes.

Asta couldn’t quite read his expression. It was stuck somewhere between curiosity and disbelief. “Don’t you ever want to be something more than a title? Don’t you want to make an impact on the world?”

He rubbed the back of his neck and Asta took in the sight of his flexing arm muscles. “Sometimes, I guess.”

Asta sat forward in her seat. “Well it’s not just sometimes for me. It’s always. It’s fate. I am going to make a damn difference in this world one way or another, whether it’s something small like bringing more funding to the orphanages or something large like apprehending whoever is responsible for our missing villagers. Either way, I will be more than just a princess. I’ll be a savior.”