the least shabby sitting room.
“Thank you , Gilbert. Jeanne, may we resume this conversation later?”
“Of course , Mademoiselle,” Jeanne curtsied.
Cinderella left the shadowy library and made her way to the front hall.
The Colonel stood near the front entrance, admiring a vase of wildflowers.
“Colonel Friedrich , what brings you to Aveyron?” Cinderella said, briefly curtseying to the officer as he removed his attention from the flowers and turned to face her.
“Good afternoon , Cinderella. I am here for you, of course.”
“I beg your pardon , but I do not understand.”
“This is the fourth day you have been gone from Werra. I thought your absence was an indicator of poor health. Although you seem to be quite well,” the Colonel said, his eyes traveling the length of Cinderella’s body.
“I am fine , but I thank you for the inquiry,” Cinderella said.
The Colonel clasped his arms behind his back. “What kept you from the market?”
“I was needed here in Aveyron,” Cinderella said, lying through her teeth. Besides deciding what items to sell, there was very little Cinderella could do at Aveyron except get in the way of the servants.
“Y ou will soon return to spending your days in Werra?”
“Yes ,” Cinderella reluctantly said. The extra coin she received from the Colonel kept her fortified for the past few days, but she had to return to Werra for reasons besides money.
“I am heartened to hear that. May I place an early reservation on your afternoon—and your maid’s afternoon, I suppose?”
Cinderella studied the Colonel. “Haven’t you tired of history , or my voice?” Cinderella asked, her tone closer to sincerity than the stiff politeness she usually used.
“Not yet ,” the Colonel smirked.
Cinderella brief ly closed her eyes. “Very well. I shall see you tomorrow afternoon?”
“I eager ly await the moment. Until then, be in good health,” the Colonel said, tipping his hat to Cinderella before he made for the door.
The footman leaped to open the door for the Colonel , and slammed it on the officer’s heels. Although the footman said nothing, the look of distaste on his face was clear.
“I agree ,” Cinderella said. She shivered in the chill of the chateau and wrapped her arms around herself before she made her way back to the library where the rugs awaited. She was almost out of the entrance when her step-mother, Lady Klara, called.
“Cinderella,” she said. Her voice was crystallized ice: sharp, jagged, and as cold as winter.
“Yes , Step-Mother?” Cinderella said, brandishing the title like a weapon.
Lady Klara was just as cold as her voice with icy eyes and hair the color of a stormy sky. She always stood straight, as if she had an icicle pressed to her back, and her expression was cool. Today, probably due to Cinderella’s heavy-handed words, her top lip curled in a sneer. “There was an Erlauf guest?” she asked as she elegantly descended the staircase that led to the second floor of the chateau.
“Yes , Step-Mother.”
“They did not wish to see me?”
“No, Step-Mother. He was here for me,” Cinderella said.
Lady Klara folded her hands in front of her. “I see. I apologize for detaining you so. Carry on.”
“Thank you , Step-Mother,” Cinderella said, curtseying before she fled the room, shivering. Lady Klara had that effect on her. The woman never liked Cinderella’s father, and Cinderella was no better in her eyes.
Cinderella co-existed with her step- family because their presence made her unmarried state possible. Without them, Cinderella would not be chaperoned, and Aveyron would be snatched from her by the queen of Erlauf before Cinderella could turn eighteen.
However , whatever positives there were to their presence, Cinderella still disliked them—and the feeling was mutual. Lady Klara was from Erlauf. She was the widow of an army officer who was slain in battle.
Hous ing the enemy, feeding them, and seeing to their