It was the first time anyone had said that about her and Lionel. For a second, Hannah wasn’t sure if it was an insult or a compliment.
“Cherry, I stopped you for the sake of the Temple family, and for your parents.”
“For my parents? Ha! Sending him away was for my parents? Do you think I’m an idiot?” Cherry scoffed, crossing her arms. “Go on, explain yourself.”
“You’ve just been formally acknowledged by the family. If I introduced you to Quennel now, he would know you forced me to do it. He’d be disgusted with you, and he’d assume your parents raised you poorly. It would reflect badly on the entire Temple family.”
“Cherry, if you’re going to be an embarrassment, at least have the decency not to drag the rest of us down with you.”
Hannah’s eyes raked over her cousin with unconcealed contempt. “It’s amazing you had the nerve to lecture me about having manners. People always talk most about the things they lack themselves.”
With a final, dismissive sneer, Hannah turned and walked back into the ballroom.
The chilly night wind swept over Cherry, leaving her feeling cold and hollow. She glared at Hannah’s retreating back, her heart filled with bitter resentment.
“What’s so great about her?” she muttered. “She’s just an illegitimate child who doesn’t even know who her father is. If she hadn’t married Lionel, I wouldn’t have given her a second glance.”
It was clear that using Hannah to get to Quennel was not going to be easy. But there were other ways.
Back in the ballroom, Quennel was engrossed in a discussion about a new partnership. Lionel stood a short distance away from Peter and Samuel. The moment he saw Hannah return, he started toward her.
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