The Sinful Young Master - Chapter 59
Chapter 59: Another traveller
The evening banquet was a carefully orchestrated affair, as all things were under Baroness Cleora’s direction. The great hall blazed with candlelight, warming the tapestries that lined the walls. The long tables groaned under the weight of Barony’s finest dishes—roasted pheasant with herbs from the castle gardens, fresh bread still warm from the ovens, wines from the family’s private cellars.
Roblan sat at his mother’s right hand, freshly bathed and dressed in house colours, though his eyes rarely left his plate. Sitting across from him, Nora alternated between glaring at her brother and engaging in pointed conversation with Lady Maena about the current political climate in the eastern provinces.
Jolthar, for his part, seemed determined to charm every servant and noble within earshot. His stories – carefully edited to remove the more colourful details—entertained his end of the table throughout the meal. “And there I was,” he was saying, gesturing with a piece of bread, “convinced that the merchant was hiding something in his cargo. Turns out, the man was smuggling nothing more dangerous than love letters to his mistress in the capital. Though, considering the content of some of those letters, perhaps they were more dangerous than I initially thought.” His audience laughed appreciatively, and even the Baroness’s lips twitched slightly.
As the evening drew to a close and the guests began to retire, Baroness Cleora caught Jolthar’s eye and made a subtle gesture toward her private study. He followed her there, noting the fine furniture and the wall of books that spoke of both wealth and scholarship.
“Young knight,” she said once the door was closed, “I would speak plainly with you.”
“My favourite way to be spoken to, my lady,” Jolthar replied, though his usual levity was tempered by respect.
“When I sent word seeking help in retrieving my son, I expected competence. What you and Lady Maena demonstrated was excellence.” She moved to a cabinet and removed a small wooden box. “Roblan is… young. Foolish in the way that only the young can be. But he is my son, and you have returned him to me before the Blue Rose could do lasting damage to his reputation – or worse.”
She opened the box, revealing a signet ring set with a deep blue stone. “This has been in our family for generations. It marks its wearer as a friend of House Arvain and grants certain… privileges within our territories.” She held it out to him. “I would have you wear it.”
Jolthar looked at the ring, then at the Baroness, his usual smile replaced by genuine surprise. “My lady, this is too generous.”
“It is precisely generous enough,” she corrected him. “You returned my son to me. You treated his shame with humour rather than contempt. And…” she smiled slightly, “you managed to make Nora laugh at dinner, something I haven’t seen since this whole affair began. Take the ring, Jolthar. Consider it a mother’s gratitude.”
Jolthar accepted the ring with a formal bow, for once at a loss for a clever remark. When he straightened, however, his familiar grin had returned. “I don’t suppose this means I’m allowed to raid your wine cellars whenever I’m in the area?”
The Baroness’s laugh was unexpected and warm. “Don’t press your luck, warrior. Even my gratitude has limits.”
As Jolthar left the study, the ring weighing comfortably on his finger, he could hear the distant sound of voices from the family’s private quarters – Nora’s sharp tones, Roblan’s quieter responses, and beneath them both, the steady, measured voice of their mother.
Family, he reflected, was a complicated thing. But then again, in his experience, the most valuable things usually were.
The corridors of Barony Castle wound like veins through stone and memory.
Jolthar walked along the path. His eyes scanned the shadowed hallways, searching for a particular figure he had glimpsed earlier—Nora.
He found her in a small alcove near the library, away from the bustling banquet hall. Her current posture – back straight, fingers tracing the spine of an old book – struck him immediately. There was something… different about her.
Something that resonated with his own inexplicable sense of displacement. Something not a fifteen-year-old young girl would do.
“Interesting reading?” Jolthar approached his voice casual but with an undercurrent of calculation.
Nora looked up, her eyes sharp and far too knowing for someone her age. At barely fifteen, she carried herself with a maturity that spoke of experiences beyond her years. “History,” she replied, holding up the tome. “Though I find most historical accounts somewhat… lacking in nuance.”
He recognized the opening. A perfect opportunity.
“Lacking how?” Jolthar leaned against the wall, positioning himself to block any casual eavesdropping. “Most people are content with the surface narrative.”
A slight smile played on Nora’s lips. “Surface narratives are for people who haven’t seen how complicated things can truly be. Like how history books never capture the real complexity of human motivation.”
Jolthar’s pulse quickened. The phrasing, the cadence – it was too deliberate. Too… modern.
“You sound like you’ve studied something beyond local histories,” he probed carefully. “Perhaps… contemporary analytical methods?”
Nora’s eyebrow arched.
Just a fraction. But it was enough.
“Contemporary?” she repeated, testing the word. “Interesting choice.”
Jolthar decided to drop a subtle hint. “Ever heard the phrase ‘paradigm shift’?” He watched her reaction carefully.
The briefest flash of recognition crossed her eyes. Not surprise, not confusion – recognition. A knowing that went beyond this world, this time.
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“Interesting terminology for a warrior,” Nora responded neutrally. But her fingers had stopped tracing the book’s spine. She was fully engaged now.
Jolthar leaned in slightly, his voice dropping to a near whisper. “Some warriors read more than just battle maps.”
“And some readers understand more than just words on a page,” she countered.
The dance was delicate. Neither wanting to be too direct, both testing the waters.
“You know,” Jolthar said casually, “I once heard a fascinating theory about how personal perspectives shape historical narratives. Almost like… memories from another context entirely.”
Nora’s breath caught. Barely perceptible. But he saw it.
“Another context?” she asked, her voice carefully neutral.
“Mmm.” Jolthar allowed himself a knowing smile. “Like remembering something that hasn’t happened yet. Or perhaps… somewhere else entirely.”
She studied him then, not with the eyes of a fifteen-year-old, but with the measured gaze of someone who had lived multiple lifetimes.
“You’re suggesting something quite extraordinary,” Nora said finally. “That memories might transcend… traditional boundaries?”
“Precisely,” Jolthar said. “Imagine remembering technologies that don’t exist. Concepts that are generations ahead of current understanding.”
Nora’s fingers closed the history book. “Like computers?” she asked, so softly it was almost a breath.
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