Read Fantasyland 04 Broken Dove Online
Authors: Kristen Ashley
Unfortunately, that led me straight into bitchy.
“Well, I apologize for being a drain on your time and taking you away from your schedule. If you’re that busy, please don’t let me keep you. I mean, we’re just discussing our future.”
“According to you, my dove, we don’t have a future.”
“That’s not what I said,” I hissed.
“Oh yes,” he whispered. “It is.”
Seriously?
“Apollo—”
He was not whispering when he said, “If you can manage it without attacking anyone, see yourself home. I’ll give your apologies to the children that you couldn’t make dinner tonight. I’ll also not be joining you later this evening. However, this will serve to give you alone time to make important decisions about your future. And when you do, please share them with me so I can make some about mine as well.”
With that, he turned on his boot and walked away, not realizing he left me gutted.
Or maybe he did and he just didn’t care, seeing as he was the one who’d gutted me.
Chapter Seventeen
Huzzah!
I sat in the front room of the dower house, my crossed arms draped over the back of a couch, head down, cheek resting on them, staring at the light snow falling outside.
It really was pretty. Like a movie, so perfect it was unbelievable.
And that sucked.
For the first time since I’d been there, I wanted to go back to my world.
It had been four days since Apollo and I fought. And I had not seen him or heard from him in all that time. I hadn’t even seen any of the guys.
Apparently, Apollo got the boys in our fight. Not surprising but it made things feel worse than they already did.
And I was getting the sense from not seeing him that things were pretty bad.
In other words, it had not been a good four days.
At first, I was pissed at Apollo and how he’d behaved like an arrogant ass who got what he wanted and when he didn’t, he threw a macho man hissy fit. I was also pissed at him because, although I’d been anxious at the time, I missed dinner with the kids and that hurt. Because he was right, they seemed to like meeting me (and I definitely liked meeting them, if you didn’t count the part where I made a fool of myself). So, since the hard part was done, I wanted the second less-hard part to happen and I wanted that
bad
.
Then, of course, seeing as he was an arrogant ass but he was also Apollo and I liked him, as one day wore into two, I started to miss him.
Now, on day four, I knew where I stood.
Therefore, I knew I needed to make a plan.
That was, figure out what to do with my life in this world.
A life without Apollo and his kids in it.
The problem was, I had no clue what to do with that life.
See, I really didn’t want to be a prostitute. Even if they were revered in this world, I still thought that would suck.
And I couldn’t be a ladies maid. I knew this because I couldn’t do hair and had no clue how to iron clothes in this world.
A barmaid seemed kind of fun, but they didn’t exactly wear nice clothes or hang with the best crowds and Lord knew, with my allure for trouble, it would find me and bars were where trouble often started seeing as alcohol was imbibed in them.
I could probably work in a kitchen since I knew how to cook but we could just say that baking those cookies was a pain in the ass. It was worth it in the end, but they didn’t have measuring cups in this world. Or ovens that had temperature controls. I could go on. Those cookies were touch and go from the start and I considered it a miracle they worked out okay.
I considered the option of starting my own business. They didn’t have pizza in this world and everyone liked pizza. They liked it more when it was delivered to their house and the only thing they had to do was eat it and throw away the box. But, alas, I didn’t figure pizza would stay warm being delivered in a sleigh. And starting my own business would require money, which I didn’t have.
In other words, there really weren’t a lot of opportunities that I’d seen for women in this world. In my world, I could get by. Sure, I would have to go back on the run. But before I took off, I stole a bucketload of Apollo’s money that I’d stashed in safe places all over, so I didn’t actually have to make a living.
Just run.
And hide.
But I couldn’t get back to my world.
So I had a medieval history degree and department store experience in a world that was kind of living its medieval history and had no department stores.
I was fucked.
Apollo was right, my options were not vast. I really only had one.
Marry him.
And honestly, when he wasn’t being an arrogant ass, that was far from a bad choice. He came with a great house, cute kids and a pack of good friends, not to mention kickass clothes.
He also came with tender looks, interesting conversation, laughter, the ability to make me feel cherished and unbelievably great sex.
But now, I didn’t have any of that because he was making it clear he didn’t want me anymore.
Yes, I was fucked.
I sighed and it was a big one.
The one bit of good news in the last four days was that I started my period. So I wasn’t pregnant.
Though, it must be said, having your cycle in that world was not fun and games, seeing as their sanitary products were as medieval as the rest of the world was. I’d learned this on the journey from Fleuridia (not fun to start your period around a bunch of guys you couldn’t ask about tampons or pads and find a way to make do) and, like chamber pots, I still wasn’t used to it.
I drew in a big breath and sighed again.
“Miss Maddie?”
I turned my head to see Cristiana standing in the doorway.
The one saving grace these last four days was that Apollo left me with my girls. At first, they’d acted the same, except a little cautious because of my mood. Now, they were watchful—in a caring way, of course, seeing as that was how they were.
But I hadn’t shared what happened and twice I’d seen Loretta open her mouth only to have Meeta give her an elbow to the ribs. So I knew they were worried.
I also knew I should open up to them. They were my friends. Or they were becoming my friends.
And even Captain Kirk had chats with Spock and Bones. Mostly, it was mild arguing or banter but he shared his troubles with them. He was not the man, the island. Of course, the crew of the
Enterprise
was always in a life or death situation and that tended to promote sharing. Still.
It was just that it had been so long since I’d had friends, or
anyone
to open up to, I’d forgotten how.
And, in thinking about it (which I tried not to do, and failed), it occurred to me I really never had good friends I could open up to. When I was a kid, I didn’t want to bring friends to my house because I didn’t even like being in my house, I didn’t want to make friends come there. This meant invitations to their houses dried up and I was often left out.
Thinking on this, I realized as I grew older, my solitude kind of became habit. I had friends, just never really close ones.
Even though I hadn’t opened up to the girls, it wasn’t lost on them things weren’t great. This was because I was moping and also because Apollo hadn’t showed in four days.
“Hey,” I called to Cristiana.
She smiled a small smile, her eyes on me assessing in a kindly way, and she moved into the room.
“Can I get you anything?” she asked. “Tea, perhaps?”
“I’m good, honey, thanks,” I murmured.
She sat on the couch with me and looked out the window.
I looked back out it too.
“Ulfr doesn’t come.”
When she spoke, I looked back to her.
“Sorry?”
She gave me her eyes, no less assessing, no less kind, but now astute. “Four nights he has not been here.”
“No,” I agreed.
“Will we see him tonight?”
I looked back to the falling snow and whispered, “I doubt it.”
There was a long moment of silence before Cristiana broke it.
“May I ask, Miss Maddie, why you delay so long in healing this breach?”
I turned surprised eyes to her. “Sorry?”
“It’s yours to heal and you delay. This isn’t right.”
“I…” I began and trailed off.
What was she talking about? How was it
my
breach to heal?
Had Apollo said something to her?
“Um…Cristiana, no offense,” I pulled it together to say, “but you don’t know what happened. I’m not sure it’s my breach to heal.”
“We women,” she started, “it rarely is but it always
is
. Learn from me. I have thirty-five years with my husband. He is proud. He is stubborn. Therefore, when we have words and distance forms, it’s up to me to close it.”
There it was. One thing that was the same in both worlds.
“That isn’t right,” I told her the truth.
“It isn’t but there are a lot of things that aren’t right or fair in this world and this also pertains to relations between men and women.”
She wasn’t wrong about that.
“This, I know,” she began and I braced because her voice had gentled and she’d leaned into me when she spoke. I took these as warning signs and I was glad I did when she continued. “I have worked at Karsvall for twenty-three years. And thus, I was there when Ulfr brought home his bride.”
I pulled in a sharp breath.
She kept going.
“Honestly, I knew no husband and wife who settled into marriage, and then parenthood, with the ease in which those two did. They had a steadiness that would have seemed unnatural if it wasn’t so beautiful.”
This, I did not need to hear.
Since I knew she was trying to be nice, I didn’t tell her that and she kept talking.
“When she grew ill, he went to her several times a day, every day, and from their bedchamber, you would hear laughter. You would think nothing was amiss from the noises coming from that room. But when he left and the door closed behind him, the cloud would descend. She was in her bed, she never felt it, but it followed him with every step he took. He is a good man, neither servant nor soldier bore the brunt of that illness eating away the woman he loved. But as it ate her away, it ate him too. And when she was lost, that cloud descended and stuck, immovable, shadowing him everywhere he went, except when he was with his children.”
I pressed my lips together as I felt my eyes sting with tears.
That was so Apollo, to go to Ilsa when she was sick. Visit with her. Make her laugh.
But every time he did it, it had to kill him more and more.
I hated this for Apollo.
Hated
it.
“Then came you,” she stated.
At that, my lips parted.
She kept going. “At first, when I laid eyes on you, your resemblance…extraordinary. I feared I understood his attraction to you and it was not healthy.”
I held her eyes.
She went on.
“But what I saw was not him attempting to recreate what he had with Lady Ilsa. It was him building something new with you. Although she could make him laugh, the air did not ring with the richness of it near as often as it does with you. Although she was his wife and the mother of his children and he is a certain type of man, the type who would lay down his life to protect theirs, he did not look on her as if he needed to spring to her side at any given moment to shelter her from a storm.”
Oh God.
Apollo looked at me like that?
My heart clutched.
She kept talking but did it softly.
“What you have is new. So you may not know him well enough to understand that even if it is he who should ride to you to heal what has broken between you, his pride will not allow it. It may be that whatever happened between you is keeping him awake at night. He still won’t do it. He is a man, but he is also an Ulfr. They have many qualities that are very good and these qualities make them the best House in Lunwyn. But with any good comes bad. I mentioned he is proud. But he’s also stubborn. And last, he is a man used to getting his own way. And these three together will make things difficult at times for the people around him, most specifically the woman who warms his bed.”
“I get you, Cristiana, boy do I get you,” I told her. “But when he has something to say, he doesn’t let me get a word in edgewise.”
“Then, dearie,”—she leaned deeper into me, grabbed my hand and held it tight—“you must find a way to communicate, to
make
him listen, and that way may not be through words.”
She was making all sorts of sense and it was an understatement to say that I liked—no, I had to admit I
loved
some of what she was saying.