Chapter 265 Fractured Loyalties
Trent ignored his mother. “Apologize, Jacinda,” he repeated, voice low and iron–cold.
4+5 Free Coms
“I said nothing wrong,” Jacinda insisted. “She brags about a family of martyrs. If that were true, why have you never mentioned it?”
Those words were another slap, this time to Trent’s face. His heart throbbed because of those words. I never bothered to know Quinn. We married for convenience: Sidonie had left the country, my parents kept pressing and Quinn seemed an acceptable wife. When she told me her parents died abroad, I offered only hollow condolences. If I had truly tried to understand her, perhaps we would never have walked the road to divorce.
“Jacinda, the one spewing lies is you, not Quinn. Apologize, or stop calling me your brother.” Trent’s face
fell.
“You’re taking her side? You’d disown me for that woman?” Jacinda whispered, stunned.
“Trent, have you lost your mind? How can you possibly side with Quinn?” Penelope demanded.
“Apologize,” Trent barked.
Jacinda flinched. She glanced at her brother’s storm–dark face, then at Penelope’s, and finally muttered, “I’m sorry.”
“Too late,” Quinn scoffed. “Jacinda, you and your mother are already out on bail. The trial for spiking my drink in that hotel is almost here. When we reach court, I’ll add another charge–insulting veterans!”
She turned to Laura. “Ready to head back?”
“Absolutely. I’ve finished my prayers,” Laura replied.
Quinn nodded. “Then let’s go,” she said, already walking away.
Jacinda’s knees buckled. “Trent, I only said a few things about Quinn–how is that insulting veterans?”
Penelope hissed, “She’s kicking us while we’re down. You can’t let her get away with it, Trent!”
Trent watched Quinn stride toward the church’s exit, then bolted after her. This cannot be how it ends. I have so much to tell her–so many regrets to confess.
He caught up as Quinn and Laura reached the car park outside.
“Quinnie, don’t go. I need to talk to you!” Trent called.
Quinn turned, frost in her eyes. “Trent Grafton, you may call me Quinn, Ms. Bridger, or Ms. Quin Bridger–but ‘Quinnie‘ is no longer yours to call.”
He faltered. “I’m… just used to it, that’s all.”
“Used to it?” Quinn scoffed. During three years of marriage, he rarely called me that. Now that we’re divorced, he suddenly remembers the nickname.
“Break that habit now. Hearing it makes my skin crawl.” Quinn did not mince words.
111
C
1/2
09:26 Mon, 28 Jul G
Chapter 265 Fractured Loyalties.
Color drained from Trent’s face.
ww
Comments
The readers' comments on the novel: The Divorced Military Queen Awakens (by Sadie Baxter)