thoroughly.â
Her head spun at the news. âWhatâs wrong with him, then?â
âHe has no paternal lineage, whatsoever. Heâs the bastard son of an Outcast. No one on his fatherâs side would even adopt him.â
Ouch. No wonder Talyn was willing to pay so much for a companion. There was no other legal way for him to have an Andarion female as part of his life. And to pair himself with an alien female would lower his caste even more.
Which, given how low it already was, would be quite a feat.
It wouldnât matter how high his rank or how pure his motherâs bloodline. No family would contract their daughter to a male without some paternal lineage. Especially not one whose father was such an Outcast that no one else in his entire family would adopt his son to protect him.
Just what crime had his father committed for his shame to taint his son so thoroughly?
A bastard herself, she knew exactly how harshly Andarions treated children like them. But at least she knew her fatherâs lineage and he allowed her to count it, even though her parents had never married. While being a half-Vest limited what choices and careers she had open to her, it was nowhere near as bad as being a solid lack-Vest.
Not to mention, she was female and that automatically put her in a better caste than his, since maternal lineages were the higher valued in Andarion society.
Her heart aching for him, she lifted her cowl and returned to her small cell that had been her home since sheâd begun her companion training.
She glanced around the small, spartan room.
While her mother hadnât been thrilled with her choice to do this, sheâd understood that it was the only way Felicia could go to her expensive university without crawling to her father for the money.
Or marrying into a family with a matriarch whoâd treat her and her mother like sub-sentient creaturesâbecause Felicia was bastard-born.
Her mother had kindly offered to take out loans for her. But Felicia had refused. Her motherâs health had been ailing these last few years, and she didnât want to stress her mother any more. Nor force her mother into the indignity of being scrutinized by a loaner or marriage broker. Her mother had suffered enough indignities in her life.
Indignities Felicia hadnât fully comprehended until her own training had given her a whole new respect for what her mother had been put through because of her father.
Her mother must have been out of her mind as a young Andarion.
Felicia still cringed every time she remembered the humiliating inspection and certification process her agency had insisted on before theyâd even list her profile on their site. Itâd been a solid year before theyâd offered her up for âadoption.â
As bad as her training had been, it was nothing compared to the rude, insufferable males sheâd interviewed with, whoâd wanted a young companion they could parade around like some show dog on a leash.
Worse, her time to pick a patron had been running out. Had Talyn waited one more day to call for a meeting, sheâd have been forced to accept Lord Aruxâs offer. She cringed at the mere thought. Heâd refused 80 percent of her requests and had been completely unreasonable and offensively rude.
Grateful it hadnât come to that, she swept her gaze around her meager belongings. Two days? It wouldnât take her two hours to pack her things.
But in two days, everything about her life would change.
Everything .
She shivered as that reality went through her. The only thing of value she owned was her virginity. Once it was gone, so was any negotiating power she currently had.
Closing her eyes, she prayed that sheâd made the right decision. If Talyn was lying to her, she would be no better off than her mother had been.
Yes, she had a six-month probation period with him. But once they slept together, sheâd be downgraded to a used