King of Wrath: Chapter 42
King of Wrath
VIVIAN
My sister and brother-in-law lived in Helleje, an idyllic county of beautiful villages, centuries-old manors, and state-preserved heritage sites located three hours north of Eldorraâs capital Athenberg.
Dante and I landed at Hellejeâs tiny airport on Friday afternoon. It took us another forty minutes by car to reach Agnes and Gunnarâs thirty-acre countryside estate.
âVivian!â My sister answered the door, the picture of country chic in her loose white blouse and riding boots. âItâs so good to see you. You too, Dante,â she said graciously.
I assumed my father hadnât told her what Dante did, either. She wouldnât have been so calm otherwise.
I wasnât surprised. My father would never willingly admit someone got the better of him.
Dante and I dropped our luggage in our rooms upstairs before rejoining Agnes in the living room. Gunnar was in session in Parliament, so it really was a Lau family weekend.
I paused when I saw my mother sitting on the couch next to my sister.
At first glance, she looked as put together as ever, but a closer examination revealed the lines of tension bracketing her mouth and the faint purple smudges beneath her eyes.
A pang hit my chest.
Her eyes brightened, and she rose halfway at my entrance before sitting back down. It was an unusually awkward move for Cecelia Lau, one that made my heart squeeze.
Agnesâs gaze ping ponged between us.
âDante, why donât I give you a tour of the house?â she said. âThe layout can be confusingâ¦â
He glanced at me. I gave him a small nod.
âIâd love a tour,â he said.
My mother stood fully when they left the room. âVivian. Itâs good to see you.â
âYou too, Mother.â
And then I was engulfed in her arms, my eyes stinging when I breathed in the familiar scent of her perfume.
We werenât big on physical affection in our household. The last time weâd hugged had been when I was nine, but this felt like a much-needed embrace for both of us.
âI wasnât sure you would show,â she said when she released me. We took our seats on the couch. âHave you lost weight? You look skinnier. You need to eat more.â
I was either eating too much or too little. There was no in between.
âI havenât had much of an appetite,â I said. âStress. Things have beenâ¦
chaotic.â
âYes.â She took a deep breath and ran a hand over her pearls. âWhat a huge mess this is. Iâve never been so angry with your father. Imagine, doing that to Dante Russo, of all peopleâ¦â
I cut her off with the question thatâd been plaguing me since I overheard Danteâs conversation with my father. âDid you know about the blackmail?â
Her mouth parted. âOf course not.â She sounded appalled. âHow could you think that? Blackmail is beneath us, Vivian.â
âYouâve always gone along with what Father does. I just assumedâ¦â
âNot always.â My motherâs face darkened. âI donât agree with him trying to disown you. Youâre our daughter. He doesnât get to decide whether or not I can see you or single-handedly kick you out of the family. I told him as such.â
A ball of emotion tangled in my throat at the unexpected development.
My mother had never stood up for me before.
âIs he here?â
âHeâs upstairs, sulking.â A frown pinched her brow. âSpeaking of which, you should go to your room and change before dinner. A T-shirt and yoga pants? In public? I hope no one important saw you at the airport.â
Just like that, the warmth from her earlier words disappeared. âYou always do that.â
âDo what?â She looked bewildered.
âCriticize everything I do or wear.â
âI wasnât criticizing, Vivian, merely making a suggestion. Do you think itâs appropriate to wear yoga pants to dinner?â
It was amazing how fast she switched from indignant and concerned to critical.
My father was responsible for most of my family problems, but a different type of frustration had simmered toward my mother for years.
âEven if I wasnât wearing yoga pants, youâd criticize my hair, skin, or makeup. Or the way I sit or eat. It makes me feel likeâ¦â I swallowed. âIt makes me feel like Iâm never good enough. Like youâre always disappointed in me.â
If we were discussing our issues, I might as well lay it all out there. The blackmail issue was the straw that broke the camelâs back, but trouble in the Lau household had been brewing for years, if not decades.
âDonât be ridiculous,â my mother said. âI say those things because I care. If you were a stranger on the street, I wouldnât bother trying to help you improve. Youâre my child, Vivian. I want you to be the best you can be.â
âMaybe,â I said, my throat tight. âBut it doesnât feel that way. It feels like youâre stuck with me as your daughter and youâre making do.â
My mother stared at me, genuine surprise shining in her eyes.
I knew she meant well. She wasnât deliberately malicious, but the tiny cuts and barbs added up over time.
âDo you want to know why Iâm so hard on you?â she finally said. âItâs because we are Laus, not Logans or Lauders.â She emphasized those names. âWeâre not the only new money family in Boston, but weâre the ones who are looked down on the most by the blue-blood snobs. Why do you think that is?â
It was a rhetorical question. We both knew why.
Money bought a lot of things, but it couldnât buy off inherent biases.
âWe have to work twice as hard to get an iota of the same respect as our peers. We are criticized for every misstep and examined for every flaw when others get away with much worse. We have to be perfect.â My mother sighed. With her flawless skin and immaculate grooming, she usually passed for someone in her late thirties or early forties, but today, she looked her full age.
âYouâre a good daughter, and Iâm sorry if I ever made you feel like youâre not. I criticize you to protect you, butâ¦â She cleared her throat.
âPerhaps thatâs not always the right approach.â
I managed a laugh through the tears crowding my throat. âPerhaps not.â
âI canât change entirely. Iâm old, Vivian, no matter how good my skin looks.â She gave a small smile at my second laugh. âCertain things have become habit. But I can try and tone down myâ¦observations.â
It was the best I could ask for. If sheâd offered anything else, it wouldâve been unrealistic at best and inauthentic at worst. People couldnât change entirely, but effort mattered.
âThank you,â I said softly. âFor listening to me, and for standing up to Father.â
âYouâre welcome.â
An awkward silence descended. Heartfelt conversations werenât common in the Lau household, and neither of us knew where to go from here.
âWell.â My mother rose first and smoothed a hand over her elegant silk dress. âI have to check on the soup for dinner. I donât trust Agnesâs chef.
They put too much salt in everything.â
âIâll shower and change.â I paused. âIs Fatherâ¦will he be at dinner?â
The trip would be a waste if he locked himself in his room and avoided me the entire time.
âHeâll be there,â my mother said. âIâll make sure of it.â
Two hours later, my father and I sat across from each other at the dining table, him next to my mother, me in between Agnes and Dante.
Tension suffocated the air as we ate in silence.
He hadnât looked at me or Dante once since he entered. He was furious with us. It was obvious in the set of his jaw and the darkness of his scowl.
But whatever he had to say, he didnât say it at the table with my mother and sister present.
Dante ate languorously, seemingly unaffected by my fatherâs silent rage, while my poor sister tried to make conversation.
âYou shouldâve seen the interior ministerâs face when the royal cat ran across the stage,â she said, recounting a story from the palaceâs Spring Ball.
âI donât know how it got into the room. Queen Bridget was a good sport about it, but I thought her communications secretary would have a stroke.â
No one responded.
Meadows, Eldorraâs royal feline, was adorable, but none of us particularly cared about her daily adventures.
Someone coughed. Silverware clinked loudly against china. Deep in the house, one of the dogs barked.
I cut into my chicken so hard the knife scraped the plate with a soft screech.
My mother glanced at me. Normally, she wouldâve berated me for it, but tonight, she didnât say a word.
More silence.
Finally, I couldnât take it anymore.
âWe were better as a family before we were rich.â
Three forks froze mid-air. Dante was the only one who continued eating, though his eyes were sharp and dark as he watched the otherâs reactions.
âWe had family dinners every night. We went camping and didnât care whether our clothes were last season or what type of car we drove. And we wouldâve never forced someone into doing something they didnât want to.â
The insinuation hung heavy over the frozen table. âWe were happier, and we were better people.â
I kept my eyes on my father.
I was being more confrontational than Iâd planned, but it had to be said.
I was tired of holding back what I thought simply because it was unbecoming or inappropriate. We were family. We were supposed to tell each the truth, no matter how hard it may be to hear.
âWere we?â My father appeared unmoved. âI didnât hear you complaining when I paid your full college tuition so you could graduate without debt. You werenât concerned about being happier or better people when I bankrolled your shopping sprees and year abroad.â
Viciousness coated his words.
The metal handle of my fork dug into my palm. âIâm not saying I didnât benefit from the money. But benefiting from and even enjoying something doesnât mean I canât criticize it. Youâve changed, Dad.â I deliberately used my old address for him. It sounded distant and strange, like the echoes of a long-forgotten song. âYouâve strayed so far fromââ
âEnough!â Cutlery and china rattled in an eerie déjà vu from my fatherâs office.
Beside me, Dante finally set down his fork, his muscles tensing and coiling like a panther ready to pounce.
âI wonât sit here and have you insult me in front of my own family.â My father glared at me. âItâs bad enough you chose himââhe didnât look at Dante, but everyone knew which him he was talking aboutââover us. We raised you, fed you, and made sure you wanted for nothing, and you thank us by walking away when the family needs you most. You do not get to sit here and lecture me. I am your father.â
That was always his excuse. I am your father. As if that absolved him from any wrongdoing and gave him the right to manipulate me like a chess piece in a game I never consented to.
My mouth tasted like copper. âNo, youâre not. You disowned me, remember?â
The silence was loud enough to make my ears ring.
My motherâs lips parted in a silent inhale; my sisterâs eyes turned the size of half quarters.
Dante didnât move an inch, but his warm reassurance touched my side.
âYou didnât treat me like a daughter,â I said. âYou treated me like a pawn. Your willingness to cut me off the minute I refused to do your bidding is proof of that. Iâll always be grateful for the opportunities you provided me growing up, but the past doesnât excuse the present. And the truth is, present you is not someone I would be proud to call a parent.â
I fixed my stare on my father, whose face had turned a lovely shade of crimson.
âAre you at all sorry about what you did?â I asked quietly. âKnowing how it would affect the people around you?â How it would affect us?
I wished, prayed for a single spark of remorse. Something that told me my old father was still buried under there somewhere.
If he was, I didnât see him. My fatherâs eyes remained stony and unyielding. âI did what I had to do for my family.â
Unlike you.
The unspoken words bounced off me, unable to find purchase.
I didnât bother replying. Iâd heard all I needed to hear.
DANTE
I found Francis in the living room after dinner, staring at the fireplace. It was spring, but nights in Helleje were cold enough to warrant extra heat.
âIt doesnât feel good, does it?â
He startled at the sound of my voice. A scowl pinched between his brows when looked up and saw me enter. âWhat are you talking about?â
âVivian.â I stopped in front of him, half-empty scotch in hand, blocking his view of the fire. âLosing her.â
My shadow spilled onto the couch, looming large and dark enough to swallow him whole.
Francis glared up at me.
He looked smaller without the bluster backing him up. Older too, with craggy lines crisscrossing his face and bags beneath his eyes.
A month ago, Iâd hated him with a burning passion, so much so the mere thought of him hazed my vision with red. Now, looking at him, I just felt scorn and yes, a bit of remaining hatred too. But for the most part, my anger had cooled from molten lava into hard, unfeeling rock.
I was ready to put Francis Lau behind me and move the hell on⦠after we had a little chat.
âSheâll come to her senses.â He sank deeper into the couch. âSheâll never turn her back on family.â
âThatâs the thing,â I said. âYouâre not her family anymore.â
Itâd taken every ounce of willpower to hold my tongue at dinner. This was Vivianâs trip and her time to confront her family; she didnât need my help. But now that dinner was over and it was just me and her father, I didnât have to hold back.
âYou use your family as an excuse,â I said. âYou say you want whatâs best for them, but you did what you did for yourself. You wanted the status and influence. You pawned your daughters off to men they barely knew for your own ego. If you truly cared about your family, you wouldâve put their happiness over your selfish desires. You didnât.â
Things had worked out well with the Lau daughtersâ arranged matches âthough a question mark still hung over my relationship with Vivianâbut Francis had no way of knowing how theyâd turn out when he made the deals.
Crimson darkened his skin. âYou know nothing about us or what I had to do to get to where I am.â
âNo, I donât, because I donât care,â I said coldly. âI donât give a shit about you, Francis, but I do love Vivian, so Iâll keep this short and simple for her sake.â
He opened his mouth, but I continued before he could speak.
âYou say she walked away from her family when sheâs the only reason youâre sitting here right now. If you werenât her father and she didnât still care about you despite the shit you put her through, youâd be buried beneath the fucking rubble of your company. But Iâm not as nice as Vivian.â
The soft menace of my words curled through the air and settled on the surface of my scotch.
âIf she wants to reconcile with you in the future, thatâs up to her. But if you talk to her again the way you did at the dinner table tonightâif you hurt her in any way, if you make her shed a single tear or cause her a single fucking second of sadness, I will take everything from you. Your business, your house, your reputation. I will blacklist you so thoroughly you wonât even be able to get past the bouncer at your shitty local bar.â
My gaze burned into Francisâs as his face lost color. âDo you understand?â
My anger may have cooled, but it was still there, one wrong word away from erupting again. I was ready to put Francis in the rearview mirror where he belonged, but if he upset Vivianâ¦
Heat scorched my gut, warmer than the fire at my back.
Francis gripped his knee. He vibrated with resentment, but without Vivian as a buffer or leverage over me, there wasnât a damn thing he could do.
âYes,â he finally ground out.
âGood.â My smile was devoid of warmth. âRemember, this time, I showed you mercy for her. Next time, I wonât be so forgiving.â
I finished my drink in one easy pull and tucked the empty glass in his hand like he was one of the servers he sneered at before walking away.
Six months ago, I wouldâve burned the fucking room down with Francis in it. But tonight, I wasnât interested in a showdown or argument.
My hatred of him had almost cost me the person I loved, and I refused to waste a single second more on him. Not when there was someone else Iâd much rather spend my time with.