Part 4 (1/2)
Alura, on the other hand, tucked her chin to her chest and shrank back at his father's approach. A bad move, as the one thing his father despised in all creatures was a weak spine.
With one made of absolute iron, Bastien put himself between them so that his father couldn't reach Alura without stepping past him. ”Sorry we disturbed the party, Sair.”
”What have I told you about bringing your-”
”Careful what words you choose, Alvaldr,” Bastien said sharply, cutting him off with his royal address to remind his father of their audience before his father made the situation worse for them all. The man had obviously missed Alura's stunning declaration on her arrival to the room.
And since everyone in the gargantuan crowd was holding their communal breath to catch every single word of the scandal, they had yet to repeat the news for the emperor's hearing.
Like that would last.
Clearing his throat, Bastien turned and gently took Alura's arm. He pulled her forward to meet his father.
When he spoke, it was loud enough for everyone around them to hear his words without mistaking them. ”You'll have to forgive my fiancee, Sa. We were planning to tell you and dara the good news later, after the party, but Alura's dress didn't make it to the palace from the delivery service I ordered for her ... she was late getting in from her patrol and didn't have time to pick up another change of clothes, and you know how pregnancy hormones play havoc with a woman's sensibilities. Rather than show her the proper sympathy for her predicament, leave it to me to always say the wrong thing at the wrong time. I'm told I inherited that gene from you, Alvaldr.”
The last bit caused a round of laughter to echo in the room from their guests.
And it served to do just what Bastien had intended. It set his father back on his heels as he digested those words with the same expression Bastien was sure had been on his own face a few minutes ago.
”Pardon?”
Bastien inclined his head to his father. ”May I present my fiancee and the future dara of my child, Lieutenant Aurora Wyldestarrin, or Alura, as her family and friends call her.”
His father came as close to stuttering as Bastien had ever seen him. ”Wyldestarrin?”
Bastien didn't miss the shock underlying his father's question. And before he could answer, the rumors took off through the room like wildfire, echoing and slapping him even harder than Alura had.
”Did I hear that correctly? He traded one zusa for another?”
”She doesn't look like the other one. What was that pleb's name, again? Flame or something silly like that?”
”Well, I'm not surprised. It was just a matter of time before he knocked up another pleb. Who didn't see that coming?”
”No wonder she broke it off with him. Can you imagine finding your zusa in bed with your boyfriend? I'd have shot them both!”
Bastien ground his teeth as pain tore through him over their cruelty. More than that, he resented them speculating about his life and motives when they knew nothing about the details of the event.
Knew nothing about him, personally.
Sorry, worthless b.a.s.t.a.r.ds and their biting tongues they thought so much of. But that was the problem in life-everyone wanted to be a know-it-all expert, and act like they had all the facts and answers when they knew absolutely nothing whatsoever about the matter at hand. Just a handful of unrelated details they put together from half truths and outright lies, using their own petty minds and base thoughts to fill in the gaps. The accusations they made against him spoke more about them than it did him. Because in the end, those false a.s.sumptions and allegations came from inside their own corrupt souls that they exposed to the light by their words and deeds. They unknowingly accused him of what they'd do and not of what he'd actually done.
”The careless mouth oft betrays the truth of the heart.” His paternal grandfather's words rang in his ears. The old man had been right. ”Great minds talk about philosophy and ideas. Small minds talk about people.”
Truer words had never been spoken.
Little did the jikkas know they were quickly telling him which side of that equation they fell on. And it wasn't good for them. For the one thing about a Cabarro, they never forgot a slight of any kind. Their unofficial family motto was that winning wasn't everything. Rubbing it in the face of your enemy was also important.
And the only ones worse about that than the Cabarros were the Triosans-his mother's family. Which meant he had a double dose of it hard-wired into his DNA.
As if she sensed the turmoil inside him, his mother appeared at his back and placed a gentle hand to his shoulder. ”Congratulations to you both.” She kissed his cheek. ”Alura? If you'd like to follow me, I'll have my secretary attend your needs so that you won't feel out of place.”
The party slowly resumed, but Bastien's mood was ruined. As was his life.
Especially when Lil returned to his side and shook her head. ”Couldn't keep it in your pants for five minutes, could you, blyt theren?”
No one could make the affectionate Kirovarian term for little brother sound more patronizing than his sister.
Wanting to punch her like he'd done when he was five and she'd stolen all his toys to show him who was the bigger and stronger sibling, Bastien excused himself. He'd deal with Lillian's insanity later. Right now he needed to resume his discussion with Alura and figure out what had happened to cause this.
Well, he knew the mechanics. Sort of. But that night they'd spent together was still really fuzzy in his head. Honestly, he barely recalled anything after he'd left Quin in the landing bay and had gone straightaway to get loaded. Upset over his encounter with Ember, he'd been so effing drunk that he could barely stand when Alura had shown up unexpectedly at the bar where he'd plowed through so much Tondarion Fire, it was a wonder he still had functioning kidneys.
d.a.m.n it!
Not that he blamed the alcohol. He was the moron who'd gone out with Alura before that. But Bastien hadn't considered their dinner anything more than one revenge meal to stab at Ember.
It's what I deserve for being a b.a.s.t.a.r.d.
Clearly, as Lil had said, this was his fault. He owned every bit of it. He was the one who'd accepted Alura's dinner invitation.
The one who'd gone drinking alone and been so irresponsible that the last thing he remembered was blacking out in the bar, then waking up naked in Alura's bed.
He just wished he could undo the last few months. How could anyone f.u.c.k up their life so bad, so fast?
His stomach drew so tight that for a moment, he feared he'd vomit. He'd never meant for any of this to happen.
It's what you get for being a jacka.s.s. The only reason he'd ever accepted Alura's invitation to dinner had been to make Ember crazy. To hurt her as much as she'd cut him.
Yeah, and how's that working for you, champ?
Bastien cursed himself silently for this blunder. To this day, he didn't know what he'd done to p.i.s.s off Ember so completely. Everything had been going great between them.
Until he'd ruined it all by proposing. That horrific memory was still enough to shrivel his gut with horror and degradation.
It'd been the most perfect night when he'd taken Ember to her favorite dance club. Had paid an exorbitant amount to have the rooftop decorated like it was free-floating in s.p.a.ce-a fantasy she'd once confided to him that she'd carried since childhood. And there, while her favorite song had played, he'd held out his grandmother's ring and asked her to marry him.
He'd expected an enthusiastic yes.
Instead, she'd stared at the ring as if it had poisonous fangs and was coiled to strike at her. It'd been the longest pause of his life, while half the club looked on and he knelt, waiting ... and waiting.
Finally, she'd stepped back and swallowed hard. ”Bas ... I...”
His stomach had hit the ground as he dreaded for her to finish that sentence. ”You, what?”
”I'm not ready to settle down yet. And I know you're not. I think we should take a break first, and really consider this.”
Nothing had ever gutted him like those words. She might as well have cut out his heart and shoved it down his throat. Especially when she turned on her heel and left him there like a complete and utter dumba.s.s.
Which was nothing compared to the next morning when he'd met the lance corporal holding his gear and warning him about his new orders.
And squad.