In aristocratic societies, unwritten social rules and traditions often carry significant symbolic weight and can lead to severe social consequences for those who violate them, even when the violation is unintentional. The story demonstrates how Saraphina's accidental wearing of white at the Duke's Winter Ball—traditionally reserved for the Duke's intended bride—transformed her from an outsider into the center of social attention, revealing how rigid social hierarchies and symbolic traditions can create dangerous situations for those outside established social circles.
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They Mocked the Girl in White—Until the Duke Asked Her to DanceAñadido:
They stopped the music before she even realized she had ruined herself. The orchestra died one instrument at a time.
First the violins, then the cello, then the low hum of conversation collapsed beneath the enormous crystal chandeliers of Ashborne Hall until 200 members of London Society stood suspended in complete and terrible silence. Saraphina Veil stopped walking halfway across the ballroom floor. Her slippers froze against polished black marble. Candle light spilled across the white silk of her gown. Every face in the room turned toward her at once. She did not understand why. Not yet. The silence stretched too long, long enough for panic to begin pressing cold fingers against her ribs. Somewhere near the champagne tables. A woman inhaled sharply. Another covered her mouth behind a lace fan. Saraphina felt the weight of their stairs crawl over her skin like frost. Dear God," someone whispered. "Who let her wear white?" Her stomach tightened. The winter ball at Ashborne Hall was the most exclusive event in Northern England. She knew that much. Everyone knew that much.
Invitations were whispered about for months. Noble families traveled hundreds of miles through December snow for a single evening beneath Duke Lucien Ashborn's roof. But Saraphina had not belonged here. Not truly. Three weeks earlier, she had been living quietly in a narrow stone cottage outside Norwich with her aunt Lydia and a dying garden buried beneath winter frost. She had owned two dresses, one gray, one white.
The white dress was older than the gray one, but better preserved because she almost never wore it. It had belonged to her mother once. Simple ivory silk with long sleeves and delicate pearl stitching along the collar. Elegant without trying to be. Tonight it had seemed like the safest choice.
Respectable, modest, invisible.
Invisible had always been Saraphina's talent. Until now. Miss Veil, the voice came from beside her. Thin and strained.
Lady Beatatrice Halloway gripped Saraphina's wrist hard enough to hurt beneath her gloves. Why are you wearing white? Saraphina blinked at her. I did not know there was a rule. Lady Beatatrice looked physically ill. Oh no.
The words came out barely audible. Oh no, no, no. Murmurs spread through the ballroom like smoke beneath a door.
Saraphina heard fragments drifting through the silence. She cannot possibly be that ignorant. Surely she did not know. The Duke will be furious. This is humiliating. Humiliating? The word landed like cold water down her spine.
Saraphina's pulse stumbled unevenly in her chest. She looked around the ballroom properly for the first time since entering. The women wore jewel tones, deep crimson, emerald green, midnight blue, silver, black, gold. Not one wore white. Not one. Her mouth went dry. Beatatrice, she whispered carefully. What does it mean? Lady Beatatrice stared at her with the horrified expression of someone watching a carriage will roll toward a cliff edge. At the winter ball, she said quietly. White is reserved for the woman the Duke intends to marry. Saraphina felt the floor vanish beneath her feet.
For one terrible second, she thought she might faint directly onto the marble.
The chandelier's overhead blurred. Heat crawled slowly into her face while the rest of her body turned cold. That cannot be true. It is, but nobody told me because nobody thought it was necessary. Lady Beatatrice looked around frantically as whispers sharpened through the crowd. No outsider has ever attended the winter ball before.
Outsider. Yes, that part was true.
Saraphina did not belong among these people with their diamonds and ancient bloodlines and careful cruelty polished beneath generations of etiquette. She was the daughter of a country pastor who had died with more debts than possessions. Her mother had passed years earlier from a winter illness that left the cottage unbearably quiet afterward.
Since then, Saraphina had lived gently and invisibly beside her aunt, sewing, reading, teaching children from nearby farms their letters for spare coins, existing carefully. Then, Lady Beatatric's companion fell ill 2 days before the winter ball. And suddenly Saraphina found herself inside a carriage traveling north through snow toward Ashborne Hall because Aunt Lydia desperately needed the money Beatatrice offered for temporary assistance during the social season. Saraphina had accepted because survival rarely arrived dressed as dignity. Now every aristocrat in the ballroom looked at her as though she had committed sacrilege. "What happens now?" she asked softly. Lady Beatatrice swallowed. "That depends on the Duke." The name moved through the room before the man himself appeared.
Ashborne. Saraphina had heard stories long before she ever saw the estate rising black against the winter hills.
Duke Lucien Ashborn, the Iron Duke, widowed before marriage, cold, untouchable, dangerous in the quiet way.
Storms were dangerous. Some said he had not danced in 6 years. Others claimed he barely spoke during public events unless absolutely necessary. There were darker rumors, too, about a fiance who died before their wedding beneath mysterious circumstances at this very ball years ago, about the Duke closing half the estate afterward and refusing every proposal placed before him since. No woman in London wanted his attention.
Every woman wanted it anyway. The massive ballroom doors opened.
Conversation disappeared completely.
Even the servants seemed to stop breathing. Saraphina turned instinctively toward the entrance. He stood framed beneath the dark archway like something carved from winter itself, tall enough that the men nearest him suddenly appeared smaller, broad shoulders beneath a perfectly tailored black coat. Dark hair touched faintly with silver near the temples. Not old, just sharpened by difficult years. The candle light caught against the severe line of his jaw and the pale scar disappearing beneath his collar. But it was his stillness that changed the room.
He did not move quickly. He did not need to. Power settled around him naturally.
The way cold settles over a lake before ice forms. Lucian Ashborn looked across the ballroom once. Then his eyes found her. Saraphina forgot how to breathe. It was not desire that struck her first. It was recognition, not because she knew him, because the look in his eyes carried the unbearable weight of someone who had once lost something important and never survived it properly afterward. The ballroom waited. Every noble in attendance stood frozen in anticipation of disaster. Saraphina realized suddenly that she was expected to apologize or flee or burst into tears from humiliation. Instead, she stood perfectly still beneath 200 merciless stairs while the Duke watched her from across the room without expression. He began walking toward her. The crowd parted instantly. Silk whispered across marble. Men stepped backward. Women lowered their voices. Nobody blocked his path. Saraphina's pulse thundered harder with each measured step he took. Lady Beatatrice quietly released her wrist and retreated three paces away as if distancing herself from a public execution. Lucien stopped directly in front of Saraphina. A close he was worse somehow, taller, colder, his presence pressed against the air itself. She could smell winter smoke and cedarwood clinging faintly to his coat. His eyes moved slowly across the white silk of her dress. Not hungrily, not warmly, carefully. The ballroom held its breath.
"Your grace," Saraphina managed softly.
He did not answer immediately. His gaze lifted back to her face. Gray eyes sharp and exhausted and unreadable. "Who dressed you tonight?" he asked at last.
His voice was low, calm. That made it more frightening somehow. Saraphina swallowed. "I dressed myself." A faint murmur rippled through the crowd.
Lucien's expression did not change. Were you informed of the tradition attached to White at the Winter Ball? Know your grace. Another silence longer. This time Saraphina could feel every aristocrat waiting for him to destroy her, to humiliate her publicly, to make an example out of the ignorant country girl who accidentally claimed a duke before all of London society. Instead, he asked quietly, "If you had known, would you have worn another color?" "Of course."
Something flickered behind his eyes, "Then, not amusement, something sadder, more dangerous."
He looked at her for another long moment while the ballroom drowned in anticipation. Then, very calmly, Lucien Ashborn offered her his hand. Gasps broke instantly around the room.
Saraphina stared at him in disbelief.
Your grace. The orchestra stopped," he said evenly. "That seems unfair to the lady. Nobody moved. Lucien's gaze shifted slightly toward the musicians platform. Play." The conductor nearly dropped his batton, scrambling to obey.
Music exploded back into the silence all at once. Violins rose, trembling into the candle lit air. Conversation remained dead. No one spoke while the Duke still stood before the girl in white. Saraphina's heart pounded so violently she feared everyone could hear it. "I do not understand," she whispered. "No," Lucien said quietly.
"You do not." Then he added the words that shattered the ballroom completely.
"Come dance with me, Miss Veil." Across the room, someone dropped a champagne glass. The music resumed, but the ballroom never truly recovered. Strings trembled through the air while 200 aristocrats pretended not to stare openly at the girl standing beside the Duke in white silk. Saraphina could feel every eye cutting into her from every corner of Ashborne Hall. The chandeliers above scattered golden light across polished marble floors and crystal champagne towers. But beneath the glitter, the room felt colder now, sharper, like a courtroom moments before sentencing. Lucien Ashbornne still held out his hand. calm, patient, entirely unreadable. Saraphina looked down at the offered hand as though it belonged to someone else entirely. Strong fingers, pale scars crossing one knuckle. No tremor, no hesitation. He did not appear angry that frightened her more than anger would have. "Your grace," she whispered carefully. "I think there has been some misunderstanding." "There has," he replied evenly. Several, in fact. The orchestra continued playing.
Nobody danced. Nobody dared move before the Duke did. Saraphina became painfully aware of the silence surrounding them despite the music. It pressed against her skin from all sides. Somewhere near the center staircase, a woman muttered loudly enough to carry. He cannot possibly intend to encourage this.
Another voice answered softly, "Watch him." Lucien did not look away from Saraphina. Miss Veil. Yes. If you continue standing there trembling, London Society will mistake you for prey. Heat rushed instantly into her cheeks. She straightened before she could stop herself. Something faint almost touched the corner of his mouth, then vanished immediately. Not quite a smile, more like the memory of one.
Slowly, carefully, Saraphina placed her gloved hand into his. The ballroom inhaled as one. Lucien's fingers closed around hers. Warm, steady, possessive in a way that made panic ripple low through her stomach. He guided her toward the center of the dance floor without hurry.
The crowd parted immediately. Women shifted aside in rustling silk. Men stepped backward with lowered eyes.
Nobody blocked the Duke's path. Nobody ever would. Saraphina became acutely aware of how small she looked beside him. She barely reached his shoulder.
The white silk of her gown glowed beneath the candle light while his black formal coat absorbed it completely.
Winter and midnight moving together across marble. I truly did not know, she said quietly once they reached the center of the floor. Lucien placed one hand lightly against her waist. Proper controlled. Yet somehow the contact sent another wave of whispers through the room. "I believe you," he said. "Then why are they looking at me like this?"
His gaze lifted briefly toward the surrounding ballroom. Cold amusement flickered through his expression.
"Because most of these people have built their entire lives around rules no outsider understands." "And I broke one.
You shattered one." The music swelled around them as he guided her into the first slow turn of the walts. Saraphina had danced only a handful of times before at village socials and harvest gatherings. Nothing like this. Nothing beneath chandeliers taller than houses while nobles watched with sharpened smiles and carefully hidden cruelty. But Lucien danced with impossible precision.
Every movement effortless, controlled.
He led without force, without uncertainty. She found herself matching him despite her nerves. You dance very well, he observed after a moment. I am trying not to fall. An admirable ambition. She glanced up at him despite herself. Was that humor? Barely. Another turn carried them beneath cascading candle light. The orchestra regained confidence slowly. Conversations resumed in fractured whispers around the edges of the room. Yet the center of the ballroom belonged entirely to them. Now Saraphina could feel it. The weight of attention, the terrible intimacy of public scrutiny. "Who taught you?"
Lucien asked. "My mother." The answer slipped out before she could stop it.
His gaze sharpened slightly. She danced.
Before she married my father, Saraphina hesitated. "She was not always poor."
No, Lucien said quietly. I imagine she was not. Something in his tone made her look at him properly again. There was recognition there. Not of her exactly, of the name perhaps, or the past attached to it. Before she could ask, a voice sliced smoothly across the ballroom. Your grace. The dance slowed around them. Saraphina turned instinctively toward the interruption.
Lady Verona Blackwell stood several feet away near the edge of the floor, surrounded by three elegantly dressed women who looked delighted by the unfolding disaster. Verona was beautiful in the cold, deliberate way marble statues were beautiful. Dark red velvet wrapped around her tall frame. Diamonds glittered at her throat like ice. She smiled directly at Saraphina without warmth. What an unexpected surprise this evening has become. Lucien's expression flattened instantly. Lady Verona. Surely introductions are appropriate now.
Verona's eyes drifted slowly over Saraphina's white gown. After all, the entire ballroom appears desperate to understand the situation. Silence spread outward again. Saraphina suddenly realized this woman terrified people almost as effectively as the Duke himself. Different methods, same result.
Lucien continued dancing. Then perhaps the ballroom should learn patience.
Verona laughed softly. You see, that is precisely the problem. London has waited 6 years already. Several nearby nobles immediately pretended not to listen while listening desperately. Saraphina felt tension tighten beneath Lucien's hand against her waist. Tiny, controlled, dangerous. Verona stepped slightly closer. It is quite unfortunate. she continued pleasantly that your guest seems unfamiliar with Ashborne traditions. Saraphina forced herself not to retreat beneath the woman's gaze. I already explained that the mistake was mine. Was it? Verona tilted her head. Most women would research a ball before arriving dressed for a proposal. Heat crawled sharply through Saraphina's chest. Around them came the faint rustle of entertained cruelty. This was what aristocrats truly loved. Not music, not elegance. Public humiliation wrapped in perfect manners.
"Lady Verona," Lucien said softly. The warning in his voice changed the air instantly, but Verona merely smiled wider. "I am only attempting to protect the young lady from embarrassment." "Too late for that," someone murmured nearby.
A few quiet laughs followed. Saraphina felt them like tiny cuts beneath her skin. Lucien heard them too. His gaze lifted slowly toward the surrounding crowd. The laughter died immediately.
"Miss Vale is under my protection this evening," he said calmly. "I would advise everyone present to remember that." Silence crashed down again. "The statement moved through the ballroom like thunder beneath water." Saraphina felt her pulse stumble hard in her chest. Under my protection, not denial, not correction. Protection. Verona studied him carefully. Now that is a remarkably public declaration. Your grace. You forced a public conversation.
Did I? Yes. Lucien's voice remained perfectly even. And now you dislike where it has led. Verona's smile faded by one degree. Tiny. Nearly invisible.
Yet Saraphina sensed the shift immediately. This woman was accustomed to winning rooms. Lucien Ashbornne was one of the few men alive capable of denying her that victory. "Forgive my concern," Verona said smoothly. "I simply worried the girl might misunderstand what wearing white signifies here." Saraphina swallowed.
"There it was again. Girl, not lady, not guest." A reminder placed carefully like a blade beneath silk. Lucien looked at Saraphina then directly. Do you misunderstand it? He asked quietly, her breath caught. The ballroom leaned toward them without moving. Every noble in attendance listening openly now.
Saraphina chose her words carefully because instinct suddenly warned her that this answer mattered more than she understood. "No," she said softly. "I understand now." His gaze held hers one moment too long. Something unreadable moved through his expression before disappearing again beneath cold control.
"Good," he said. The orchestra shifted into another movement. Nobody else had resumed dancing. The entire ballroom still revolved around them alone. Verona noticed it too. "How extraordinary," she murmured. "You truly intend to continue. The music has not stopped."
Lucien guided Saraphina into another turn. Conversation fractured sharply around the room as nobles finally began whispering openly again. He has lost his mind. No. Then what is this? I do not know. Look at him. Saraphina tried to ignore them. She failed. I should leave.
She whispered. Lucien's hand tightened slightly at her waist. No. Your grace.
This situation is becoming worse. For whom? She stared at him. For me, perhaps another slow turn beneath the chandeliers. But leaving now would confirm weakness. And staying confirms what? His gray eyes settled on her again with unsettling intensity. That depends entirely on what happens next. Before she could answer, the grand staircase doors opened above the ballroom. A servant descended quickly toward the Duke carrying a silver tray. His face had gone pale beneath the candle light.
Lucien stopped dancing immediately. The ballroom fell silent for the third time that evening. The servant bowed low.
Your grace. Lucien took the folded note from the tray without expression.
Saraphina watched his face carefully as he opened it. Whatever he read changed something behind his eyes at once. Not shock, something colder, older, dangerous. Lady Verona noticed it, too.
What is it?" she asked quietly. Lucien folded the note once. Precisely. It appears, he said calmly, "that someone in this house has decided tonight would be an excellent evening to reopen old graves." A chill moved visibly through the ballroom. Saraphina frowned slightly. "What does that mean?" Lucien looked at her for the first time since entering the ballroom. Genuine emotion cracked faintly through the iron control in his expression. Not anger, not grief, fear, tiny but unmistakable. Then it vanished. It means, he said softly, that your white dress is no longer the biggest scandal in this room. The note disappeared into Lucien Ashborn's coat pocket as though it had never existed at all. That alone terrified the ballroom more than panic would have. Saraphina understood enough already to recognize dangerous self-control when she saw it.
Men who lost their tempers could be predicted. Men who became quieter were another matter entirely. The orchestra faltered uncertainly before continuing again beneath the chandeliers. Nobody resumed normal conversation. The air inside Ashborne Hall had changed too completely for that. Whispers slid through the ballroom in nervous currents while noblemen exchanged tense glances over crystal glasses and women leaned behind jeweled fans pretending discretion they no longer possessed.
Saraphina still stood in the center of the dance floor beside the Duke. Exposed beneath every candle in the room. Your grace, Lady Verona said carefully.
Perhaps this conversation would be better continued privately. Lucien's eyes remained on Saraphina. No one word, flat, final. Verona's jaw tightened by almost nothing. You are causing unnecessary speculation. London society survives entirely on speculation. Not this kind. Especially this kind. The surrounding nobles pretended not to react while reacting to every syllable.
Saraphina suddenly understood something deeply unpleasant. These people did not merely attend scandals. They fed on them. Ballroom gossip was blood sport wrapped in silk gloves and diamond necklaces. Tonight she had unknowingly stepped into the center of the arena.
Lucien extended his hand toward her again. Miss Veil. She hesitated only briefly this time before placing her hand in his once more. A low murmur swept through the ballroom. The second acceptance mattered more than the first.
Somehow the Duke noticed it too. His gaze swept briefly across the watching crowd before returning to her. You learn quickly, he said quietly. I am trying to survive. Good. Another waltz began.
Slower this time, more intimate. The chandeliers reflected across polished marble floors while servants moved carefully around the edges of the room, replenishing champagne. Nobody was truly drinking anymore. Saraphina became painfully aware of how close Lucien stood. Not improper, never improper, but impossible to ignore. Every movement he made carried restraint, sharpened into elegance. He smelled faintly of cedar smoke and winter air, like cold forests after snow. "What was in the note?" she asked softly. "Trouble that narrows nothing. It was not meant to." Despite everything, the answer nearly pulled a startled laugh from her. She managed to suppress it barely in time. Lucien noticed anyway. One dark eyebrow lifted faintly. Did you just almost laugh at me, Miss Veil? No, your grace. A terrible liar. A cautious one. Another turn carried them past towering windows glazed black with winter night. Snow drifted beyond the glass in slow silver spirals beneath the estate lanterns.
Inside the ballroom, the heat from hundreds of candles blurred the air slightly. softening the edges of crystal and gold and polished stone. Yet none of it reached Lucy Ashbborne. He still looked carved from winter itself.
"Everyone here fears you," Saraphina said quietly before she could stop herself. The words escaped too honestly.
His expression did not change. "Do you?"
she considered lying. "I think," she answered carefully. "That everyone else is afraid because they understand the rules of this world better than I do.
Something unreadable flickered in his eyes again. And yet you are the only person in this room speaking honestly to me tonight. Perhaps because I have not learned the rules properly. Do not. The response came immediately. Firm, almost harsh. Saraphina blinked. Lucien guided her through another turn before continuing more quietly. The rules of this world exist to protect people already holding power. His gaze drifted briefly across the ballroom. Most of the people here mistake cruelty for refinement. Saraphina followed his gaze.
Lady Verona stood near the musicians now surrounded by admirers. Elegant, perfectly composed. Yet even from across the ballroom, Saraphina could feel the woman watching them calculating. And her? She asked carefully. Lady Verona Blackwell understands the rules better than anyone. You sound exhausted by her.
I am exhausted by many things. His tone ended the subject neatly. Nearby, several young debutants whispered together behind fans while openly staring at Saraphina's gown. One finally gathered enough courage to approach. She could not have been older than 17.
Pretty in a nervous, fragile way. Pale blue silk, trembling smile. Your grace.
Lucien inclined his head minimally. Lady Charlotte. The girl curtsied quickly before turning wide eyes toward Saraphina. Miss Veil. She breathed softly. Is it true? Saraphina frowned.
Is what true? Charlotte looked almost dizzy with excitement. That the white dress means the Duke has chosen you.
Silence spread immediately around the nearest nobles. Even conversations 10 ft away quieted. Saraphina felt heat rush sharply into her face. No, she said at once. It was an accident. Charlotte looked disappointed. Oh, Lady Charlotte, Lucen said calmly. It is impolite to interrogate guests. Sorry your grace.
She curtsied again, mortified now, and hurried away through the crowd.
Saraphina exhaled slowly. This is becoming impossible. No, Lucien's hand remained steady against her waist. It is becoming visible. That is worse. His gaze settled on her again. Direct measuring. For a woman like you, perhaps. The words caught her unexpectedly. A woman like me. Quiet. He paused briefly. People tend to underestimate quiet women until it becomes dangerous. Saraphina stared at him for half a heartbeat too long.
Nobody had ever described her that way before. Quiet had always meant forgettable, harmless, easy to overlook.
Yet Lucien said it like recognition instead of dismissal. Before she could answer, the ballroom doors opened again.
A second servant entered hurriedly. This one looked even paler than the first. He approached Lucien carefully as though nearing a sleeping wolf. Your grace.
Lucien's expression hardened almost imperceptibly. What now? The servant swallowed. There is a gentleman requesting immediate audience. Then he may wait. He says he cannot. The servant lowered his voice. He mentioned Lady Eleanor. Everything changed instantly.
Saraphina felt it beneath Lucien's hand before she saw it on his face. Not movement, stillness. The terrible stillness of a man locking emotion behind iron doors. Around the ballroom, several older nobles exchanged alarmed looks. Lady Verona went completely motionless near the orchestra platform.
Eleanor. The name moved through the ballroom in fractured whispers.
Saraphina heard it repeated again and again beneath lowered voices. Why would someone mention Eleanor tonight after all these years? Impossible. Lucien released Saraphina's hand slowly. Stay here. your grace. He looked down at her then, and for the first time all evening, the mask slipped enough for exhaustion to show clearly beneath it.
Real exhaustion, old and heavy. Do not leave the ballroom. The request sounded dangerously close to concern. Before Saraphina could answer, Lady Verona crossed the room toward them with deliberate grace. Lucien. It was the first time anyone had used his given name openly tonight. I strongly suggest ending the evening now. I did not ask for your advice. No, but you need it.
Her voice lowered. Mentioning Eleanor during the winter ball is not coincidence. Saraphina watched carefully between them. Something lived beneath this conversation that she did not yet understand. Something old, painful, dangerous enough to make even powerful people nervous. Lucien's gaze turned briefly toward the grand staircase leading upward into the darker levels of Ashborne Hall. The estate suddenly felt enormous around them, less like a home than a fortress holding too many secrets behind locked doors. "Keep the guests occupied," he told Verona. Her eyes narrowed faintly. "And the girl, the girl again." Saraphina hated the phrase instantly. Lucien looked back at Saraphina long enough that several nearby aristocrats visibly noticed. Miss Veil remains under my protection. The ballroom went dead silent yet again.
Verona's expression finally cracked by one degree. Not shock, something closer to disbelief. Lucien, she said carefully. You cannot possibly mean to continue this. Continue what? This spectacle. Interesting choice of word.
His voice remained calm, especially from someone who spent the last hour feeding it. Verona's mouth tightened. You are behaving irrationally. No. Lucien's eyes sharpened dangerously. I am behaving intentionally. A visible ripple moved through the watching nobles. Saraphina suddenly realized they were witnessing something unprecedented. The Duke never explained himself publicly. Yet tonight, he continued making declarations around her that sounded increasingly impossible to misunderstand. Verona noticed the same thing. "You barely know her," she said quietly. "That has never stopped anyone in this room before. This is different." "Yes." Lucien's gaze drifted briefly toward Saraphina again. "It is."
The answer stunned the surrounding crowd into absolute silence. Even Saraphina forgot how to breathe for a second.
Lucien stepped backward then. Distance immediately returned between them like cold water rushing into empty space. Do not leave the ballroom. He repeated quietly to her. I mean it. Then he turned and walked toward the staircase without another word. The crowd parted instantly before him. Nobody attempted to stop him. Nobody dared. Saraphina remained standing beneath the chandeliers alone in her white silk gown while 200 aristocrats stared openly now.
The moment Lucien disappeared beyond the staircase landing. The whispers exploded across the ballroom like broken glass.
Did you hear him? Intentional. My god, who is she? What happened to Eleanor?
He called her protected. That has meaning. Everyone knows it has meaning.
Saraphina's pulse thundered unevenly in her chest. Lady Verona remained several feet away, watching her now with an expression no longer softened by politeness. Cold calculation replaced elegance completely. Slowly, gracefully, Verona approached. You should be careful, Miss Veil. Saraphina straightened instinctively. About what?
Verona stopped directly in front of her.
Men haunted by dead women often mistake obsession for affection. The words landed softly, cruy, before Saraphina could answer. A frightened scream echoed suddenly from somewhere above the ballroom. Every head snapped upward at once. Then came the sound that froze the entire estate. A woman's voice crying out from the second floor gallery. The portrait is gone. For three terrible seconds, nobody in the ballroom moved.
The scream echoed through the upper galleries of Ashborne Hall like shattered glass beneath water. Then the whispers began all at once. The portrait? Which portrait? Dear God, not tonight. Saraphina looked instinctively toward the second floor balcony circling the ballroom. Candlelight flickered across carved railings and towering marble columns while startled guests craned their necks upward, searching for the source of the commotion. Above them, a maid stood frozen near the eastern corridor and trance with both hands pressed against her mouth. White-faced, terrified, Lady Verona closed her eyes briefly as though some dreadful inevitability had finally arrived. "What portrait?" Saraphina asked quietly.
Verona looked at her with sudden sharpness. "You truly know nothing. No one tells me anything. That may be the only reason you are still standing comfortably in this room. Before Saraphina could answer, rapid footsteps descended the grand staircase. Lucien Ashborn appeared again from the upper landing, moving far faster than she had seen him move all evening. The ballroom parted instantly before him. His expression had transformed completely now. The cold, detached control remained, but beneath it lived something darker. A storm held tightly behind locked iron doors. Several nobles stepped backward without realizing they were doing it. Fear moved through the room ahead of him. Real fear. Lucien stopped near the center of the ballroom.
Everyone remains downstairs, he said calmly. Nobody argued. Nobody would have dared. The evening will continue as planned. Continue. An older gentleman blurted nervously. Your grace with respect. Someone has broken into the memorial gallery. Lucien's eyes shifted toward the speaker. Then I suggest the staff locate the intruder. The man immediately lowered his gaze. Of course.
Saraphina studied Lucien carefully. He did not look surprised. Angry, yes, exhausted, certainly, but not surprised, as though tonight's disaster had been waiting for him long before she arrived, wearing white silk into the ballroom.
Lucien, Lady Verona, approached slowly.
You should close the east wing. It already is. Then someone unlocked it.
His jaw tightened faintly. Tiny movement. Dangerous implication.
Apparently, the orchestra had stopped again without instruction. Silence pressed heavily against the ballroom now while snow drifted beyond the enormous windows overlooking the frozen estate grounds. The winter ball no longer felt glamorous, felt haunted. Lucien's gaze swept once across the crowd before settling on Saraphina again. "Miss Veil," she straightened instinctively.
"Yes, your grace, come with me." The words detonated quietly through the ballroom. Lady Verona stepped forward immediately. Absolutely not. Lucien did not even look at her. Your objection is noted. She should not be involved in this. She already is. Saraphina's pulse stumbled. Your grace. I do not understand why you would want me there.
His gaze remained fixed on her face.
Neither do I. The honesty of the answer unsettled her more than anything else tonight. around them. Nobles whispered openly, "Now he cannot possibly take her upstairs into the memorial gallery. Has he lost his mind?" "No, that is the problem." Lucien offered his hand again.
"Always the hand first, always calm before catastrophe." Saraphina hesitated only a moment this time before placing her fingers into his. The ballroom watched the gesture with terrible fascination. Lucien. Verona's voice sharpened. Think carefully. He finally looked at her. Then I have spent six years thinking carefully. The words landed with quiet violence. Verona fell silent. Lucien turned away from the ballroom without another explanation.
Guiding Saraphina toward the grand staircase while 200 members of London Society stared openly after them. The marble steps curved upward beneath enormous oil paintings and candlelet wall sconces. Saraphina became increasingly aware of how silent the estate had grown outside the ballroom itself. The music no longer reached the upper levels. Only distant murmurss followed behind them like ghosts. "Am I in danger?" she asked softly once they reached the second landing. Lucien continued walking beside her. Possibly.
That is not reassuring. I was not attempting reassurance despite everything. She nearly smiled again. He noticed. There it is. What? That expression. I have no idea what you mean. You stop looking frightened for approximately 5 seconds at a time.
Perhaps because your answers are so absurd, my fear becomes confused. A faint breath escaped him. men. Not laughter exactly, but close enough that Saraphina glanced sideways at him in surprise. Lucien caught the look immediately. Do not become accustomed to it. To what? Me almost smiling. The corridor above the ballroom stretched long and dim beneath rows of oil portraits and dark velvet wallpaper.
Winter wind rattled faintly against tall windows overlooking the snowcovered grounds. Several servants clustered nervously near the eastern wing entrance where a heavy iron gate stood partially open. One maid still looked close to fainting. The moment Lucien appeared.
Every servant straightened instantly.
Your grace. Who opened the gate? Lucien asked. The butler swallowed hard. No one knows, sir. The lock was intact less than 20 minutes ago. Lucien's expression darkened. and the portrait. The maid near the wall finally found her voice.
Gone your grace. She pointed weakly down the corridor. The frame is empty.
Saraphina felt a strange chill move through her chest. Lucien released her hand slowly before walking toward the eastern gallery entrance. The servants moved aside immediately. Nobody crossed the threshold after him. Saraphina realized with growing unease that they were afraid of the room itself. Lucien glanced back once. Stay close. The eastern gallery was colder than the rest of the estate. Much colder. Candle flames flickered weakly against dark panled walls lined with portraits hidden beneath draped black silk. Morning cloth. The realization settled heavily over Saraphina as she followed Lucien deeper into the corridor. At the far end stood an enormous gilded frame hanging empty beneath the candle light. A rectangle of untouched dust marked where a portrait had once remained for years.
Lucien stopped walking. The entire room seemed to still around him. Saraphina looked slowly toward the empty frame.
Who was she? She asked quietly. He did not answer immediately. When he finally spoke, his voice sounded distant somehow. Older Lady Eleanor Whitmore.
The name moved through the cold gallery like a prayer spoken too late. Saraphina stepped slightly closer to the empty frame. Your fiance? Yes. She glanced toward the black silk draped across neighboring portraits. Why are they covered? Because this wing has remained closed since her death. Saraphina looked back at him sharply for 6 years. Yes.
The answer carried no embarrassment, no apology, only exhaustion. She turned slowly again toward the empty frame.
Someone had removed the portrait recently. She could see disturbed dust along the floorboards beneath it. One candle nearby still flickered unevenly as though brushed by movement moments earlier. Who would steal her portrait?
Lucien's eyes hardened. Someone trying to send a message. What kind of message?
He looked directly at her then. One involving you. Cold spread instantly through her stomach. That is impossible.
Perhaps I never met Lady Eleanor. No.
His gaze lingered strangely on her face again. But tonight is the first winter ball since her death where another woman entered this house wearing white.
Silence settled heavily between them.
Saraphina suddenly became acutely aware of the empty frame towering above them like an open grave. "That cannot be coincidence," she whispered. "No, Lucien's voice dropped lower. It cannot." A floorboard creaked somewhere deeper in the gallery. Both of them turned instantly toward the sound. The corridor beyond the morning drapes remained dark and empty beneath trembling candle light. Lucien stepped slightly in front of Saraphina without seeming to realize he had done it.
Protective automatic. Who is there? His voice cut sharply through the silence.
No answer came. Only the distant rattle of winter wind against old windows.
Saraphina's pulse quickened. Perhaps it was the house settling. No, Lucien's eyes remained fixed on the darkness ahead. Someone is still here. Then, from somewhere beyond the covered portraits, a woman's voice whispered softly through the shadows. She looks exactly like her.
The voice vanished so quickly, Saraphina almost believed she imagined it. Almost.
The candle flames along the eastern gallery trembled weakly against dark velvet walls while silence closed around them again. Lucien did not move. Every line of his body had gone still with dangerous precision. "Who is there?" he asked again. "Calm, cold, the kind of calm that arrived immediately before storms. No answer came from the darkness beyond the morning drapes. only the faint groan of old floorboards somewhere deeper inside the sealed wing. Saraphina realized suddenly how isolated they were from the ballroom below. The winter ball continued somewhere beneath them like another world entirely. Music drifted upward in faint fractured notes through layers of marble and stone. But here the estate felt abandoned, frozen in grief 6 years too old to still breathe this heavily through the walls. Lucien stepped forward slowly. Stay behind me.
I am beginning to dislike how often you say that. Then stop walking into dangerous situations. I did not exactly plan this evening. Something faint moved through his expression at that.
Exhausted amusement perhaps. Then it disappeared again as he pushed aside one of the black morning drapes hanging along the corridor wall. Dust rose softly into the candle light. Behind the drape hung another portrait, this one still intact. A severe looking Ashborne ancestor stared down from the canvas with pale judgmental eyes. Empty corridor beyond. No intruder. Lucien moved farther into the gallery.
Saraphina followed despite every instinct warning her not to. The floor beneath her slippers creaked softly with age. Candle smoke and old varnish thickened the cold air. Someone was here, she whispered. Yes, and they knew about me. Apparently, you sound remarkably calm about that. Lucien stopped near another covered portrait.
Miss Veil, yes, I have spent 6 years waiting for someone to reopen this wound. The honesty of the statement settled heavily between them. Saraphina watched him carefully. Now beneath the weak candle light, the Duke no longer resembled the untouchable aristocrat who controlled ballrooms with silence alone.
Here inside the morning gallery, he looked tired, haunted, like a man carrying something sharp beneath his ribs for too many years. "You expected this?" she asked quietly. "Not tonight," his hand tightened briefly around the edge of the morning drape. But eventually, yes, because of Lady Eleanor, because powerful families do not bury scandals. He looked toward the empty frame at the far end of the gallery. They preserve them quietly until someone decides to weaponize them again. Saraphina frowned slightly. You speak as though her death was political.
Everything involving aristocracy becomes political eventually. Another floorboard creaked somewhere behind them. Both turned instantly. This time, the movement was unmistakable. A shadow disappeared beyond the corner near the sealed staircase at the far side of the corridor. Lucien moved immediately fast.
The cold restraint vanished beneath pure instinct as he crossed the gallery toward the movement. Saraphina hurried after him despite herself. "Your grace!
Stay back! You keep saying that." He ignored her entirely. The corridor narrowed toward an old servant staircase, half hidden behind carved paneling. One iron door stood slightly open. Winter wind slipped faintly through the crack, carrying the smell of snow and frozen pine from outside.
Lucien pushed the door fully open. Empty staircase, no intruder, but something white lay abandoned on the top step beneath flickering candle light.
Saraphina bent slowly and picked it up before Lucien could stop her. silk ribbon, pale ivory, soft with age. Her stomach tightened instantly. "What is this?" Lucien looked at the ribbon in her hand, and all color disappeared from his face. "Give it to me," she did carefully. His fingers closed around the ribbon with terrifying stillness. "It belonged to Eleanor," he said quietly.
Saraphina felt cold move slowly down her spine. "Someone took it from the portrait?" No, his gaze remained fixed on the silk. This ribbon was buried with her. Silence crashed through the gallery. Even the candle flames seemed to hesitate. Saraphina stared at him in disbelief. That is impossible. Yes. His voice had gone dangerously soft now. It is. A servant suddenly appeared breathless at the far end of the corridor. Your grace. Lucien did not look up. What? Lady Verona requests your immediate presence downstairs. She may wait, sir. The servant swallowed hard.
The guests are beginning to leave. That finally drew Lucien's attention. His eyes lifted sharply toward the ballroom direction. Why? Rumors are spreading.
The servant glanced nervously toward Saraphina before lowering his voice.
Some believe Lady Eleanor's ghost has returned. Saraphina nearly laughed from sheer disbelief before realizing nobody else found the idea ridiculous. The servants looked genuinely frightened.
Lucien closed his hand slowly around the ribbon. "Control the staff," he said coldly. "No one discusses this outside the estate." "Yes, your grace," the servant hurried away immediately.
Saraphina exhaled slowly once they were alone again. "Ghost stories. People prefer ghosts to truth. And what is the truth? Lucien looked at her for a long moment before answering. I do not know anymore. The confession startled her more than the ribbon head. Powerful men were not supposed to sound uncertain.
Yet exhaustion carved deep shadows beneath his eyes now. He suddenly looked older than he had downstairs beneath the chandeliers. Not physically, emotionally. You loved her, Saraphina said softly. The words came carefully, gently. Lucien looked away first. Yes.
No hesitation, no performance, just truth stripped bare enough to hurt.
Saraphina studied the empty frame again.
And she died before the wedding. 3 days before. What happened? His jaw tightened. Officially, that sounds ominous. Officially, Lady Eleanor Whitmore fell from the western balcony during the winter ball. Saraphina's breath caught. Officially, Lucien's gaze darkened. I found her myself. Silence settled between them again. Heavy now, personal. Saraphina suddenly understood why the estate felt haunted. Some grief stained buildings permanently. "I am sorry," she whispered. Lucien looked at her sharply then as though the softness of the words surprised him more than accusation would have. Most people are not. Most people did not lose her.
Another dangerous silence. Then quietly, almost unwillingly, he said, "You should stop doing that." "Doing what?" Speaking to me like I am human. The answer pierced straight through her chest unexpectedly. Before she could respond, footsteps echoed rapidly from the main corridor. Lady Verona appeared moments later. Dark red velvet sweeping sharply behind her like spilled wine across marble. She stopped the instant she saw the ribbon in Lucien's hand. For the first time all evening, genuine fear crossed her face. No, Lucien said nothing. Verona stepped closer slowly.
Where did you find that? Near the servant's staircase. Her expression hardened immediately. Then someone wants panic. Someone already has it. Verona glanced toward Saraphina with visible unease now. She should not be here. She is already here. That is precisely the problem. Saraphina straightened instinctively beneath the woman's gaze.
You keep speaking as though I am contagious. Verona looked directly at her. No, Miss Veil. I speak as though you are dangerous. I am a pastor's daughter from Norwich. And yet tonight you arrived wearing Eleanor's color. The words landed sharply in the cold gallery. Saraphina looked toward Lucien.
Was Lady Eleanor also meant to wear white at the winter ball? Verona answered before he could. No woman had ever worn white here before Elellanor.
Another chill moved through Saraphina slowly. Then why create the tradition afterward? Lucien's eyes remained fixed on the ribbon because after she died, I never intended another woman to stand beside me again. The honesty of the statement left the gallery completely silent. Saraphina suddenly understood the true meaning of tonight's scandal.
It was never about etiquette alone.
White did not symbolize engagement here anymore. a symbolized memory. Mourning the ghost of a woman the Duke had never truly buried. And now she appears," Verona said quietly, looking directly at Saraphina. In white, Saraphina opened her mouth to protest, but another realization stopped her cold. Earlier in the ballroom, someone had whispered she looked exactly like her. Slowly, cautiously, Saraphina turned back toward the empty portrait frame. What did Lady Eleanor look like? Neither Lucien nor Verona answered immediately. That silence frightened her more than words would have. Finally, Verona spoke softly. You should not ask questions you are not prepared to hear answered. Then, Lucien looked directly at Saraphina beneath the flickering candle light and said the words that made her blood turn cold. She had your eyes. For a moment, Saraphina forgot the cold. forgot the empty portrait frame towering behind them. Forgot the whispers spreading through Ashborne Hall like poison beneath polished floors. She only stared at Lucien while his words echoed heavily through the morning gallery. She had your eyes. The statement should not have mattered. Gray eyes were hardly rare.
Yet something in the way he said it made her chest tighten painfully beneath her ribs. Not fascination, not attraction, recognition. Old grief colliding violently with something living. Lady Verona broke the silence first. That was unnecessary. Lucien's gaze remained on Saraphina. It was true. Truth is not always useful. I am tired of useful lies. Verona's expression sharpened. And I am tired of watching you punish yourself. Saraphina looked carefully between them. There was history here beyond simple friendship. Years of shared damage hidden beneath controlled voices and aristocratic restraint. You both speak as though Lady Eleanor's death was not accidental, Saraphina said quietly. The gallery fell still again.
Verona looked away first. Lucien did not. People fall, he said evenly. People are also pushed. A chill moved visibly through the room. Even the servants lingering near the entrance lowered their eyes immediately. Saraphina swallowed carefully. Do you believe someone killed her? Belief is irrelevant. Lucien folded the silk ribbon slowly into his palm. I failed to prove anything. Lucien, Verona warned softly. She deserves honesty. Does she?
Verona's gaze snapped toward Saraphina.
No offense, Miss Veil, but you arrived in this house 4 hours ago wearing the dead woman's color. Now her portrait is missing, and half the estate believes ghosts are walking the halls. I hardly planned any of this. No. Verona studied her carefully. That is what makes it dangerous. Lucien suddenly stepped away from the empty frame. Decision settled across his features like iron locking into place. The ball continues. Verona stared at him in disbelief. You cannot possibly be serious. The guests leave now. Rumors spread faster. They are already spreading. Then we control them.
Saraphina frowned slightly. How exactly does one control rumors involving dead fiances and missing portraits. Lucien's mouth almost shifted again, that faint near smile appearing only long enough to vanish. With difficulty, he turned toward the gallery exit. Miss Vale. She looked up immediately. Yes, you will remain at Ashborne Hall tonight.
Saraphina blinked. I beg your pardon?
Verona closed her eyes briefly as though enduring a headache. Lucien. No.
Saraphina straightened instinctively.
Absolutely not. Lucien stopped walking.
Slowly, he turned back toward her beneath the candle light. No, I am already the center of enough scandal for one evening. Leaving now would worsen it. Remaining here overnight with you would destroy me socially. Society already believes you accepted my proposal. The bluntness of the statement sent heat instantly into her face. That is not funny. I was not joking. Your grace. She lowered her voice carefully.
I am a respectable woman, which is precisely why you cannot leave this estate tonight. Frustration flashed through her chest. You do realize those two statements directly oppose each other. No, his gaze remained calm. They intersect perfectly. Verona stepped forward sharply. Lucien think I am. No, you are reacting. The difference has become irrelevant. Saraphina watched him carefully now. Something had changed in the Duke since entering the morning gallery. The cold restraint remained, but beneath it lived urgency now, not panic exactly, protective instinct sharpened by old fear. Why? She asked quietly. Why do you suddenly care whether I stay? Lucien looked at her for a long moment before answering. Because someone deliberately connected you to Eleanor tonight. Silence, heavy, dangerous, and Saraphina whispered. And 6 years ago, Lucien said softly. The last woman publicly associated with me died before sunrise. Cold spread slowly through her stomach. Verona looked genuinely angry now. You should not have said that. She deserves the truth. No, she deserves distance from this family before it destroys her, too. The words landed harder than intended. Everyone in the gallery felt it. Lucien's jaw tightened visibly. Enough, Verona. Is it? Her composure cracked slightly for the first time all evening. Because I watched what happened to Eleanor. I watched what it did to you afterward.
And now suddenly, another girl appears in white silk looking enough like her to make servants pray in hallways.
Saraphina stepped backwards slightly before she realized she was doing it.
Lucien noticed immediately. His expression shifted almost imperceptibly.
Regret perhaps. Miss Veil, do not. Her voice came softer than intended. Please do not look at me like that. He went still. Like what? Like you are seeing someone else. The words hung painfully between them. Lucien looked away first.
That alone told her everything. Verona exhaled quietly. Finally, the Duke's voice lowered dangerously. Do not mistake guilt for weakness. I mistake nothing anymore. Snow rattled suddenly against the tall gallery windows.
Somewhere downstairs, the orchestra resumed again. The distant music eerie now beneath the weight of the estate secrets. servants still hovered nervously near the entrance, pretending not to listen while hearing every word.
Saraphina suddenly felt exhausted down to the marrow of her bones. For hours ago, she had been worried about embarrassing herself among aristocrats.
Now she stood inside a sealed morning wing, listening to a duke confess suspicions surrounding his dead fiance while ghosts of old scandals moved through canlit corridors. "I should leave," she said quietly. Lucien's attention snapped back to her instantly.
No, you keep saying that because I mean it and I mean this. She drew a careful breath. Whatever happened here 6 years ago has nothing to do with me. Lucien stared at her for one unbearable moment before answering. I hope that is true.
The honesty of the response chilled her more than fear would have. Verona moved toward Saraphina then her expression softer now. Not kind exactly, but less sharp. Miss Veil. Yes. How much do you know about your mother's family? The question caught Saraphina completely offguard. Very little. Why? Verona exchanged a glance with Lucien.
Something unspoken passed silently between them. Because Eleanor Whitmore also came from a pastoral family outside Norwich. Saraphina's pulse stumbled.
What? Different town. Verona continued carefully. Different name, but similar circumstances. That means nothing, perhaps. Verona studied her face again beneath the flickering candle light.
Perhaps not. Lucien suddenly turned toward the gallery entrance. Enough for tonight. His voice regained that cold ducal authority again. Final untouchable. The guests remain downstairs. The east wing is sealed immediately. No one enters without my permission. The servants straightened instantly. Yes, your grace. He looked back toward Saraphina. You will be escorted to a guest suite. I did not agree to stay. You are staying.
Frustration sparked sharply through her exhaustion. Do Dukes ever hear the word no? Rarely. That explains much. Another tiny flicker threatened the corner of his mouth. gone almost immediately. But this time, Saraphina definitely saw it.
So did Verona. Her expression darkened further. This is exactly what worries me. Lucien ignored her completely. Mrs. Pembroke will prepare rooms in the North Wing. The North Wing? Verona frowned.
You never place guests there. Miss Vale is not most guests. Silence followed that statement immediately. Saraphina felt it strike the room like thrown glass. Even the servants noticed.
Verona's eyes narrowed slowly. Careful, Lucien. I am being careful. No, Verona looked directly at him. You are already attached. The accusation settled heavily through the morning gallery. Lucien's face became unreadable once more. Stone replacing every trace of emotion. You mistake responsibility for attachment.
Verona laughed softly without humor. Do I? Nobody answered. A clock somewhere deeper inside the estate struck midnight. The sound echoed faintly through Ashborne Hall like a warning bell. Saraphina suddenly realized she had not eaten since morning. Had not sat down in hours. Had not breathed properly since entering the ballroom in white silk. Midnight. And somehow the night felt less finished now than when it began. Lucien stepped toward the gallery exit. Come, Saraphina hesitated before following him. As they passed the empty portrait frame once more, something caught her eye near the bottom corner of the wall. Tiny scratches carved faintly into the wood paneling beneath the missing portrait. Not old, fresh. She slowed instinctively. Wait. Lucien stopped immediately. What is it?
Saraphina crouched carefully beside the wall. Her fingers brushed lightly across the carved marks. Letters. Someone had scratched words directly into the wood beneath the empty frame. Lucien moved beside her instantly. His expression darkened as he read the message carved into the paneling. Not her. Silence swallowed the gallery hole. Then beneath the weak candle light, Saraphina looked slowly up at Lucien Ashborn and realized he had gone completely pale. Lucien stared at the carved words as though they had reached through six years of silence and wrapped cold fingers around his throat. Not her. The letters cut unevenly into the wood beneath the empty portrait frame. Fresh marks, fresh splinters. Someone had carved them recently. Very recently. Saraphina rose slowly from her crouched position while unease tightened painfully through her chest. "What does it mean?" she whispered. Lucien did not answer immediately. His gaze remained fixed on the message beneath the candlelight.
Verona stepped closer beside them, the dark velvet of her gown whispering softly against the floorboards. The moment she saw the words, all color disappeared from her face. No, she breathed quietly. Absolutely not.
Saraphina looked sharply between them.
You both know something. Neither answered. The silence became answer enough. Lucien finally exhaled slowly through his nose. Controlled, deliberate, dangerous. Seal this corridor, he ordered the servants behind them without turning around. No one enters the east wing tonight. Yes, your grace.
And if anyone speaks about what they saw here, his voice lowered softly. They leave this estate permanently. Fear flickered instantly across the servants faces. Of course, sir. The staff scattered immediately down the corridor.
Only Lucien, Verona, and Saraphina remained beside the empty portrait frame. Now, candle light flickered weakly across black morning drapes while winter wine rattled somewhere inside the walls of Ashborne Hall. Saraphina suddenly realized her hands had gone cold. "You are frightening me," she admitted quietly. Lucien finally looked at her. Something painful moved through his expression before disappearing again beneath rigid control. Good. The answer stunned her. Good. Fear keeps people alive. Lucien, Verona warned sharply.
Enough. No. He folded the silk ribbon tightly into his palm. Not anymore. He turned back toward the carved message. 6 years. His voice sounded distant now, almost to himself. 6 years and suddenly someone chooses tonight. Saraphina swallowed carefully. Because of me, Lucien did not deny it. That hurt more than denial would have. Verona crossed her arms tightly beneath the candle light. The timing is too precise. Yes, someone knew she would arrive wearing white. Impossible, Saraphina said immediately. No one knew what dress I planned to wear. Lucien's eyes shifted toward her again. Did anyone see the gown before tonight? She hesitated. My aunt. Anyone else? Lady Beatatrice, perhaps. One of her maids helped unpack after we arrived. Verona frowned faintly. That is enough. Saraphina stared at her. You truly believe this was arranged? I believe someone reopened Eleanor's grave the exact night another woman appeared wearing her color.
Verona's voice sharpened. I no longer believe in coincidence. The gallery seemed colder suddenly. Saraphina looked again toward the empty frame towering above them. Why carve those words?
Lucien answered quietly. Because someone thinks I am making a mistake by associating me with Eleanor. Yes. Then why not simply say so? Lucien's expression darkened because aristocrats rarely speak plainly when cruelty can be theatrical instead. Silence settled heavily again. Somewhere below them, the orchestra shifted into another dance while the winter ball continued beneath layers of fear and whispered scandal.
The contrast felt surreal now. Beautiful music drifting upward into a corridor full of ghosts. Saraphina looked carefully at Lucien. Did Lady Eleanor look very much like me? He went still again. Verona answered before he could.
Enough to disturb people. That is not an answer. It is the only safe one.
Saraphina drew a slow breath. I deserve honesty. Lucien laughed once softly, bitterly. That sentence alone proves you have never lived among aristocrats. She should not have smiled at that. But she did. Tiny, exhausted, human, Lucien noticed instantly. So did Verona. There it is again. The Duke murmured quietly.
What? Saraphina asked. You smile at the wrong moments. Perhaps because your house has become increasingly absurd.
You are standing inside a sealed morning gallery beside a stolen portrait and a carved threat. Exactly. Her gray eyes lifted toward him steadily. Absurd. For one brief dangerous second, Lucien Ashbborne almost truly smiled. Not the faint flicker from earlier. Something realer, warmer. It transformed his face completely before vanishing beneath iron control once more. Verona saw it happen.
Her expression hardened instantly. This needs to stop. Lucien's attention shifted toward her. What does whatever this is becoming? I am protecting a guest. No, Verona stepped closer. You are looking at her the way you used to look at Eleanor. The words sliced cleanly through the gallery. Saraphina felt the tension hit the room instantly.
Lucien's face became unreadable.
Careful. Someone should have been careful 6 years ago. Silence crashed down. Saraphina looked sharply between them. What happened six years ago?
Neither answered immediately. Verona looked away first this time. Lucien finally spoke. I failed someone. That is not the same as explaining. It is enough. Not for me. The answer surprised all three of them. Saraphina straightened slowly beneath their attention. Everyone keeps speaking around me instead of to me. Her voice remained soft, calm. I walked into this estate wearing the wrong color and somehow became attached to a dead woman whose portrait vanished tonight. If I am truly in danger, I deserve more than half-truths. Lucien watched her silently for several long seconds, then quietly.
You remind me of her there, too.
Saraphina's pulse stumbled painfully.
How? Eleanor never accepted partial answers. Verona closed her eyes briefly.
Lucien. But he continued anyway. The first time I met her, she argued with me for 20 minutes beside a frozen fountain because she believed I was arrogant.
Saraphina blinked despite herself. Were you? A dangerous pause. Then Lucien answered calmly. "Yes." Against all reason, she laughed softly. The sound startled the gallery itself. Small, brief, honest. Lucien looked at her as though he had forgotten what laughter sounded like in this wing of the estate.
Verona looked almost alarmed. "This is exactly what I feared." "What?"
Saraphina asked. Verona's gaze settled carefully on her face, that he would start breathing again. The words silenced everyone. Lucien's expression hardened immediately. "Enough! No!"
Verona looked suddenly exhausted beneath the candle light. I buried Elanor 2.
Lucien, do not act as though you alone suffered. Something sharp flickered across his face. Then grief stripped briefly of elegance. I know. The quietness of the answer hurt more than anger would have. Saraphina looked away instinctively toward the empty portrait frame. "What was she like?" she asked softly. Lucien's eyes followed hers toward the missing portrait. For a moment, she thought he might refuse to answer again. Instead, he said quietly, "Alive!" The words settled strangely in the cold gallery. People feared her because she noticed everything. His voice lowered slightly. She laughed during serious conversations. She hated silence. She once climbed onto the roof of Ashborne Hall during a thunderstorm because she wanted to see lightning over the valley. Saraphina smiled faintly despite the sadness threading through his words. That sounds reckless. It was.
Something almost tender moved through his expression before fading again. I spent most of our engagement trying unsuccessfully to keep her safe. Verona looked down at the floorboards. And in the end, Lucien's jaw tightened sharply.
Silence swallowed the unfinished sentence hole. Saraphina understood anyway. The realization settled painfully through her chest. He had not merely lost Eleanor. He had built an entire mosselum around the guilt afterward. The East Wing, the morning drapes, the untouched portrait gallery.
6 years frozen inside one terrible night. Suddenly, she understood something else, too. Lucien Ashborn had not truly been living all this time. He had only been enduring. A loud crash echoed faintly from somewhere downstairs. All three looked toward the ballroom immediately. Raised voices followed beneath the distant music. One servant came running breathlessly up the corridor moments later. Your grace, Lucien straightened instantly. What now?
There has been an incident in the ballroom. What kind of incident? The servant swallowed hard. Lady Blackthornne publicly accused Miss Vale of manipulating you. Verona muttered something under her breath. Lucien's expression turned dangerously still. Who else heard it? Everyone, sir. Of course they had. Aristocratic cruelty never wasted an audience. Saraphina exhaled slowly. Wonderful. It became worse. The servant continued nervously. Lady Blackthornne also claimed Miss Vale deliberately impersonated Lady Eleanor to gain your attention. Silence. Cold and immediate. Lucien's eyes darkened into something almost frightening. Who allowed her to say that publicly? The servant looked confused by the question.
No one stops Lady Blackthornne, sir.
Lucien's voice dropped lower. I do. Even Verona looked slightly alarmed now.
Lucien. He ignored her completely. Bring Lady Blackthornne to the west salon.
Immediately your grace now. The servant hurried away, almost tripping over himself. Saraphina looked carefully at Lucien. "You do not need to defend me."
His gaze shifted toward her. "Calm, absolute." "Yes," he said softly. "I do." Before she could answer, another realization struck her sharply. "Wait!"
Lucien frowned slightly. "What?"
Saraphina looked toward the empty portrait frame again, then toward the carved message beneath it. If someone wanted society to believe I am replacing Eleanor, her pulse quickened. Then why write not her? Lucien went still instantly. Verona's expression changed too. Oh God. Saraphina looked slowly between them as the horrifying possibility settled into place. What if the message was not warning you about me? Silence. Heavy. Dangerous. Lucien's face drained of all remaining warmth.
Then what was it warning me about?
Saraphina stared toward the empty frame beneath the flickering candles and whispered the thought neither of them wanted spoken aloud. What if Eleanor was never the woman they intended to kill?
The words settled into the morning gallery like smoke that refused to clear. What if Eleanor was never the woman they intended to kill? Lucien did not move. For one terrible heartbeat, Saraphina thought he might simply stop breathing altogether. The candle light along the corridor flickered weakly across his face, catching the sharp line of his jaw and the sudden emptiness in his eyes. Verona looked horrified. Truly horrified. No, she whispered immediately. No, that is impossible. Is it? Saraphina asked quietly. Nobody answered. The silence itself became unbearable. Lucien finally turned slowly toward the empty portrait frame again.
His voice when it came sounded stripped raw beneath the iron calm. Eleanor was not supposed to attend the winter ball that night. Saraphina frowned slightly.
What? Verona looked sharply toward him.
You never told anyone that. No one asked the correct questions. His gaze remained fixed on the frame. Eleanor became ill 2 days before the ball. Fever. Exhaustion.
She intended to remain upstairs.
Saraphina's pulse quickened. Then why did she come down? Because someone sent a note requesting she meet them privately in the west gallery. A chill spread instantly through the corridor.
Who sent it? Lucien laughed once softly, bitterly. That was precisely the problem. The note carried no signature.
Verona crossed her arms tightly.
Everyone assumed she slipped. Everyone preferred to assume she slipped.
Lucien's voice darkened. The alternative would have implicated half the aristocracy present that evening.
Saraphina looked carefully at him now.
And you? I never believed she fell accidentally. The honesty of the confession settled heavily through the gallery. Saraphina stepped closer to the empty portrait frame almost without realizing it. Then perhaps tonight is not about Eleanor returning. Lucien's eyes shifted toward her immediately.
explain. She drew a careful breath. If someone wanted to reopen the scandal publicly, they could have simply exposed old rumors. Her gaze moved toward the carved message beneath the frame. But instead, they removed the portrait and left those words. Not her. Verona's expression slowly changed as understanding began to spread across her face. "Oh god," Saraphina continued quietly. "That sounds less like a threat." She looked directly at Lucien and more like a correction. Silence.
Evie, dangerous. Lucien's hand tightened visibly around the folded silk ribbon.
You think someone believes Elanor died by mistake. I think someone wants you to reconsider the entire night. Verona shook her head sharply. No, absolutely not. If that were true, she stopped suddenly. Saraphina noticed immediately.
What? Verona looked away. Lucien's gaze sharpened. "Finish the sentence." "If that were true," Verona said quietly at last. "Then the question becomes obvious." Saraphina felt cold settled deeper beneath her ribs because she already knew the question before Verona spoke it aloud. "Who was the real target?" The corridor seemed to contract around them. Lucien looked toward Saraphina then slowly carefully like a man noticing danger too late. "No," Verona said immediately. "Do not start imagining absurd connections." "Absurd," Lucien's voice lowered dangerously. A woman appears in my ballroom wearing Eleanor's color for the first time in 6 years. The portrait disappears. Someone carves not her beneath the frame. He looked back at Saraphina again and she has Eleanor's eyes. Verona exhaled sharply through her nose. Gray eyes are not evidence. No, Lucien's expression hardened, but timing often is. Saraphina suddenly felt deeply aware of the white silk still wrapped around her body.
Earlier the dress had represented embarrassment. Scandal. Now it felt like bait. "You truly believe this could involve me somehow?" she whispered.
Lucien did not answer quickly enough.
That silence frightened her more than words would have. Verona stepped closer immediately. Miss Vale listened to me carefully. Her tone softened for the first time all evening. You need to understand something about powerful families. I am beginning to dislike every sentence that starts that way.
Surprisingly, Verona almost smiled.
Sadness touched the expression briefly before vanishing. fair. She folded her gloved hands together carefully.
Aristocratic scandals rarely disappear.
They evolve. People marry strategically, inherit strategically, destroy strategically. Her eyes shifted briefly toward Lucien. And sometimes people die strategically, too. Saraphina swallowed.
You think Eleanor's death involved inheritance? I think Eleanor was about to become Duchess of Ashbborne. Verona's voice lowered. That made her politically valuable. Lucien stared toward the dark corridor windows where snow pressed softly against the glass. Eleanor once told me someone had been following her during the season. Saraphina looked sharply toward him. What? She dismissed it afterward. His jaw tightened faintly.
Said, "I worried too much. Did you investigate?" Yes. Bitterness sharpened the single word. No one found anything.
Verona frowned slowly. You never told me that either. I stopped speaking about Eleanor years ago. Silence settled again. Saraphina suddenly understood something important. Lucien Ashborn had not buried his grief because he healed.
He buried it because nobody helped him carry it. "You blame yourself," she said softly. His gaze shifted instantly toward hers. "I was responsible for protecting her. You were not responsible for another person's choices. That is not how titled family's function. The answer came too quickly, too sharply.
Saraphina studied him beneath the flickering candles. "No," she said quietly. "That is how guilty men function. The gallery went silent."
Verona actually looked startled.
Lucien's face became unreadable again.
Stone, winter, distance. Yet something fragile moved beneath it now. Something exhausted by years of self-punishment.
You speak very confidently for someone who met me tonight. Perhaps because pain sounds familiar in every accent. The words escaped before she could stop them. Lucien stared at her for one long unbearable second, then softly, almost to himself. God help me. Verona closed her eyes briefly. There it is again.
Saraphina frowns slightly. What? Verona looked directly at Lucien. The way he talks when he starts caring. Lucien's expression hardened immediately. Enough.
No. Verona folded her arms tighter. You spent 6 years frozen solid. Then this woman walks into your ballroom and suddenly you are speaking like a man instead of a monument. Saraphina felt heat creep into her face instantly. Lady Verona, do not misunderstand me.
Verona's gaze softened slightly toward her. I am not insulting you. I am terrified for both of you. Lucien turned away abruptly toward the gallery exit.
This conversation ends now. Lucien. No.
His voice cracked sharply through the corridor. Final dangerous. The east wing remains sealed. The guests leave at dawn and Miss Veil stays under guard until I determine who orchestrated tonight.
Saraphina blinked. Under guard protection? That sounds suspiciously similar to imprisonment. Get accustomed to disappointment. She should not have laughed. She did anyway. A small exhausted sound escaping before she could stop it. Lucien paused halfway toward the corridor door. Slowly, he looked back at her. That dangerous almost smile returned briefly, softer this time. Human. It transformed him in ways she suspected he did not understand. Verona noticed too. Her expression turned almost mournful. You smiled at him again, she murmured quietly. Saraphina looked startled.
What? You keep doing it. Verona's eyes shifted toward Lucien. And he keeps answering. The Duke immediately looked away. That alone confirmed everything.
Before anyone could speak again, rapid footsteps echoed from the main staircase beyond the gallery. A younger servant appeared breathless near the entrance.
Your grace, Lucien straightened instantly. What now? A guest has collapsed downstairs. Verona cursed softly beneath her breath. Who? Lady Blackthornne. The servant swallowed hard. She claims she saw someone standing on the west balcony outside the ballroom windows. Lucien's expression sharpened dangerously. Who? She says.
The servant hesitated visibly. She says it was Lady Eleanor. Silence. Then Saraphina noticed something that chilled her more than ghost stories ever could.
Lucien did not look frightened by the claim. He looked furious. No, he said softly. Verona frowned. Lucien. His gaze darkened toward the ballroom below.
Someone is staging this. Why? Saraphina asked quietly. Lucien looked directly at her. Because they want the house afraid before they reveal the real target. The implication landed heavily between them.
Saraphina's pulse quickened. You still think that target could be me. I think, Lucien said carefully, that someone spent tonight trying to connect you to a woman who died under suspicious circumstances. He stepped closer then, near enough that she could see exhaustion beneath his eyes again. And I think whoever carved that message knows something about Eleanor's death the rest of us never did. Silence stretched softly between them. Snow whispered against the windows. The distant ballroom music had stopped again below.
What happens now? Saraphina asked.
Lucien's gaze held hers steadily. Now, he said quietly. I find out why a stranger from Norwich walked into my house wearing the face of my dead fiance. The corridor fell silent after Lucien's words. A stranger from Norwich walked into my house wearing the face of my dead fiance. Saraphina stood motionless beneath the trembling candle light while the weight of the sentence settled heavily into her chest. She should have felt insulted or frightened.
Instead, she felt something stranger, seen too closely by a man who understood grief better than anyone she had ever met. Verona recovered first. Lucien. Her voice sharpened quietly. You are exhausted. I am observant. You are projecting. Am I? His gray eyes remained fixed on Saraphina. Then explain tonight. Nobody could. That was the problem. Too many impossible details now circled Ashborne Hall like wolves in snow. The white dress, the missing portrait, the carved message, the silk ribbon, the whispers of Eleanor's ghost walking the galleries. Saraphina suddenly wished desperately for the small cottage outside Norwich, for weak tea beside the fire and Aunt Lydia complaining about winter vegetables.
Anything ordinary, anything untouched by aristocratic tragedy. Your grace, she drew a careful breath. You are speaking as though I arrived here intentionally.
Lucien's expression softened by one dangerous degree. I know you did not.
Then why do you keep looking at me like I hold answers? Because someone in this house believes you do. The words landed coldly. Verona stepped between them slightly. Enough for tonight. No.
Lucien's voice remained calm. Tonight is precisely when the truth began moving again. He turned toward the servant waiting anxiously near the gallery entrance. Bring Lady Blackthornne to the west salon immediately. Yes, your grace.
And no one leaves the estate grounds until morning. The servant hesitated.
Even the guests, sir. Lucien's gaze sharpened. Especially the guests. The servant hurried away without another word. Saraphina looked toward the ballroom staircase below. That will create panic. Good. Good. Fear makes liars careless. Verona rubbed slowly at her temple. You are becoming impossible again. I was always impossible. No, her voice lowered softly. You were grieving.
The silence afterward hurt. Saraphina saw it in Lucien's face before he buried the reaction again beneath iron control.
He looked away first. Mrs. Pembroke will escort Miss Veil to the north wing.
Lucien. Verona's tone sharpened immediately. Do not place her there.
Why? Saraphina asked quietly. Verona hesitated. Lucien answered instead because the north wing overlooks the west balcony. Cold moved slowly through Saraphina's stomach. The balcony where Eleanor died. Yes, that seems unnecessarily cruel. No, Lucien looked directly at her again. It seems necessary. For what? For honesty. The answer unsettled her more than she cared to admit. Before she could respond, another servant appeared breathlessly from the main staircase. Your grace, Lucien visibly lost patience. What now?
A gentleman downstairs insists on seeing Miss Veil privately. Saraphina frowned immediately. Me? Yes, miss. The servant swallowed nervously.
He claims it concerns your mother.
Everything stopped. Saraphina felt it instantly. the air, the candle light.
Lucien's attention. Verona straightened sharply beside her. Who? Lucien asked softly. The servant lowered his voice.
Lord Adekus Ren. Silence crashed through the gallery. Verona actually swore beneath her breath. Saraphina blinked in confusion. Who is that? Lucien's face became dangerously unreadable. A man who should not know your name. That is not reassuring. No. His gaze hardened toward the servant. Where is he now? In the west salon, sir. Lucien moved immediately toward the corridor exit.
Miss Veil comes with me. Verona caught his arm sharply. Absolutely not. He stopped. Release my sleeve, Verona.
Attakus Ren spent years attached to the Witmore estate. Her voice lowered urgently. If he requested the girl by name, then this situation is worse than we thought. Saraphina's pulse quickened.
Someone should explain what is happening. Lucien looked at her carefully. Lord Adakus Ren is a political strategist. That sounds harmless. It is not. Verona folded her arms tightly. Families hire men like Ren when they need scandals buried quietly.
Cold spread beneath Saraphina's ribs.
buried. Lucien's jaw tightened faintly.
Yes. You think he helped conceal what happened to Eleanor. I think Lucien said evenly that Attekus ran appears whenever powerful people become nervous. The corridor suddenly felt smaller. The walls closer. Saraphina realized with growing unease that tonight had expanded far beyond personal grief. Eleanor's death was not merely a tragedy. It was a secret powerful people had invested years protecting and now he wants to see me. Lucien's gaze remained fixed on her.
Yes. Why? That he said quietly is what concerns me. They descended the grand staircase together in silence. The winter ball below no longer resembled celebration. Clusters of aristocrats whispered nervously beneath chandeliers while servants moved too quickly between half-finish champagne glasses and abandoned dance cards. The orchestra sat motionless now. No one danced anymore.
Conversations died instantly the moment Lucien appeared beside Saraphina at the top of the staircase. Fear moved visibly through the ballroom. Not of scandal of him. Saraphina became painfully aware once again of the white silk wrapped around her body, of how every noble gaze followed her now with suspicion sharpened into fascination. There she is. Look, dear God, she truly does resemble the portrait. No wonder the Duke lost control. Lucien heard every whisper. She knew he did, yet he never slowed, never acknowledged them. Power radiated from him too naturally for that. As they crossed the ballroom floor toward the west salon doors, Lady Blackthornne suddenly rose from a velvet chair near the fireplace. A severe woman in emerald silk with sharp aristocratic features and too many diamonds. Your grace. Her voice trembled slightly. I saw her. Lucien stopped. You saw someone? No. Lady Blackthornne's pale eyes darted nervously toward Saraphina.
I saw Lady Eleanor standing on the balcony. Murmurss exploded immediately around the ballroom. Saraphina felt every stare sharpened toward her. Lady Blackthornne continued before anyone could interrupt. She was wearing white silence. Lucien's face became carved stone. Describe precisely what you saw.
She stood beyond the glass doors overlooking the West Gardens. The woman's voice shook visibly now. At first, I thought it was Miss Veil. Her eyes shifted uneasily toward Saraphina again, but then she disappeared.
Disappeared? Lucien repeated flatly.
Yes, without opening the doors. Yes.
Several nearby women crossed themselves quietly. Aristocrats pretending sophistication suddenly looked very willing to believe in ghosts. Lucien remained entirely expressionless. You imagined it. I did not. You consumed three glasses of champagne within an hour. Lucien. Verona warned softly.
Enough. Lady Blackthornne looked insulted now. Your grace. I know what I saw. No. Lucien's voice lowered dangerously. You know what fear suggested to you after gossip infected this ballroom? The woman flushed immediately. I will not be spoken to that way. Then stop spreading ghost stories in my house. Silence crashed down hard. Nobody defended her. Nobody ever defended themselves successfully against Lucien Ashbornne. Lady Blackthornne sat back down stiffly beneath the weight of public humiliation. Saraphina watched him carefully. He had protected her again.
Publicly, deliberately, the realization settled strangely through her chest.
Lucien turned toward the west salon doors. Inside, Saraphina followed him while whispers erupted behind them once more. The west salon felt warmer than the galleries upstairs. Dark green wallpaper, fire light, leather chairs, yet tension poisoned the room immediately. A tall, silver-haired man stood beside the fireplace with a crystal glass untouched in his hand.
Lord Adakus Ren. He turned slowly as they entered. Sharp blue eyes settled instantly on Saraphina, then widened.
Not dramatically, not enough for anyone else to notice, but enough for her.
Recognition? Impossible, he murmured softly. Lucien closed the salon doors behind them with controlled force. You requested Miss Veil by name. Attekus never looked away from Saraphina. Yes.
Why? A long silence followed. Then Adakus Ren said quietly because 22 years ago her mother disappeared after leaving Ashborne Hall. The world seemed to stop moving. Saraphina stared at him in disbelief. What? Lucien's expression darkened instantly. Explain yourself carefully. Adakus finally tore his gaze away from Saraphina. Her mother's name was Viven Veil. Saraphina's pulse stumbled violently. How do you know my mother? Because before she married a pastor in Norwich, Adakus swallowed slowly. Vivien Vale was employed here at Ashbborne Hall as Lady Eleanor Whitmore's personal companion. Silence.
Absolute. Total. Saraphina felt the floor vanish beneath her feet. No, she whispered immediately. That is impossible. I wish it were. Attekus's voice lowered. Because the last time I saw your mother alive, she was standing beside Lady Eleanor on the west balcony the night Elanor died. The fire cracked softly in the west salon. Nobody moved.
Nobody seemed capable of movement after Adakus Ren's words. Saraphina stood frozen beneath the golden fire light while her pulse thundered unevenly through her chest. her mother, Ashbborne Hall, Eleanor Whitmore, the West Balcony. Every impossible thread from tonight suddenly tangled together around her throat. "No," she whispered again.
"You are mistaken." Attekus looked genuinely tired as he studied her face.
"I hoped I was." Lucien stepped forward slowly. Dangerous calm settled across his expression once more. "You will explain everything." Adakus nodded once.
Of course. Begin with why you never mentioned Vivien Veil before tonight.
Because I was instructed not to.
Verona's eyes narrowed sharply. By whom?
A long pause. Your father. Lucien's face hardened instantly. The temperature in the room seemed to drop. Saraphina looked between them in confusion. Your father. Lucien's voice lowered dangerously. My father died 3 years ago.
Yes. Attakus swallowed carefully. But 6 years ago, the Duke of Ashbborne controlled every detail surrounding Eleanor's death. Verona looked furious now. You are telling me Lucien's father knew Vivian Veil was there that night?
Yes. And concealed it? Yes. Silence, heavy, suffocating. Saraphina gripped the edge of a nearby chair because suddenly the room no longer felt stable beneath her feet. Why would my mother need hiding? She asked softly. Adakus looked at her carefully. Because Viven disappeared the morning after Eleanor died. Disappeared completely. Lucien's expression darkened further. I searched for her. Adakus glanced toward him with visible surprise. You never found anything. No. Lucien's jaw tightened because apparently my father was burying evidence before sunrise. Verona turned sharply toward Attekus. What exactly happened that night? Attakus exhaled slowly as though reopening a grave inside his own memory. Lady Eleanor attended the ball unexpectedly.
Very few people knew she planned to leave her rooms. His gaze shifted toward Saraphina. Viven accompanied her. Why?
Because Eleanor trusted your mother.
Saraphina felt something extrangely in her chest at that. She barely remembered her mother clearly now. Only soft hands, lavender soap. A lullabi sung quietly beside winter windows. "Continue," Lucien said coldly. Adekus nodded. Near midnight, Elellanor received a note requesting she meet someone privately on the west balcony. Lucien's face became carved stone again. the unsigned note.
Yes. And Viven went with her. At first, Attacus hesitated. But according to the servants, Eleanor later asked Vivien to retrieve something from upstairs.
Saraphina frowned slightly. What? Nobody knows. Attacus looked toward Lucien. By the time Viven returned, Eleanor was already dead. Silence swallowed the room whole. Saraphina looked instinctively toward the dark salon windows overlooking snow-covered gardens beyond Ashborne Hall, the west balcony. A woman falling through winter darkness while music continued downstairs. The image hurt. What happened to my mother afterward? She asked quietly. Attakus's expression shifted uneasily. That is where the story becomes dangerous.
Lucien stepped closer. Meaning, meaning the next morning, Vivien accused someone publicly inside this house. Verona inhaled sharply. No. Yes. Attacus's gaze lowered briefly. She claimed Eleanor did not fall accidentally. Saraphina felt her stomach tighten painfully. Who did she accuse? Another long silence, then softly. Your father. Lucien went completely still. Verona closed her eyes briefly as though she had expected the answer and still hated hearing it aloud.
Saraphina stared at Attekus in disbelief. The former Duke? Yes, that is impossible. It sounded impossible then, too. Attekus rubbed slowly at his forehead. The Duke of Ashborn controlled enormous political influence. Viven was a companion from a modest family. No one wanted scandal. Lucien's voice dropped lower and my father denied it immediately. Of course, he did. Adekus looked at him carefully. Lucien, do not defend him. I am not. A dangerous silence stretched between the two men.
Saraphina suddenly realized Lucien looked less shocked than furious, as though some buried suspicion had finally found shape tonight. "Why would my mother accuse him?" she whispered. She claimed she saw an argument between him and Eleanor earlier that evening.
Attakus hesitated again about money.
Verona frowned sharply. Money. Elellanor inherited substantial property after her parents died. Adakus's expression darkened. Marriage contracts were complicated. Your father believed certain lands should transfer entirely to the Ashborne estate after the wedding. Lucien's mouth tightened visibly. Eleanor refused. Yes. Saraphina looked toward Lucien slowly. You knew this. No. The answer came instantly.
Honest. Sharp. Eleanor handled the state negotiations personally because she distrusted my father's adviserss. His gaze turned colder, apparently with reason. Silence settled heavily again.
The fire light flickered across dark wood paneling and crystal glasses while distant ballroom whispers continued beyond the salon walls. Ashborne Hall itself seemed to listen. "What happened after my mother made the accusation?"
Saraphina asked softly. Attekus exhaled slowly. "Your father silenced the situation immediately." Lucien's eyes darkened. "How officially?" Attekus gave a bitter smile. Vivien Vale suffered emotional distress after witnessing Eleanor's death and left the estate voluntarily and unofficially. Silence, then quietly. Your mother vanished before sunrise. Saraphina felt cold spread through her entire body. No, I am sorry. No, she shook her head sharply.
My mother married my father in Norwich.
She raised me. She was not missing.
Adakus studied her face carefully. When did she die? When I was 12. From illness. Yes. Another silence. Strange this time. Heavy with realization.
Attakus slowly sat down beside the fireplace as though his knees suddenly weakened beneath him. Dear God. Lucien's attention sharpened instantly. What?
Attekus looked toward Saraphina. Viven disappeared 22 years ago. Her pulse stumbled violently. Yes. and you are 22.
Silence crashed through the salon.
Verona stared at Saraphina openly now.
Lucien's expression did not change at all. That frightened her most because she could feel how intensely he was thinking behind the stillness. Say what you mean, he said quietly to Attekus.
The older man swallowed carefully. Viven vanished from Ashborne Hall already pregnant. The world tilted sideways.
Saraphina actually took a step backward before she realized it. No, her voice came barely audible now. No, Adakus looked devastated. We believed she fled England entirely. You are saying my mother was pregnant while working here.
Yes. Lucien's gaze sharpened dangerously. Did anyone know who the father was? Silence again. Attekus did not answer quickly enough. Verona stared at him in disbelief. Attekus. He looked toward Lucien slowly, carefully. There were rumors. Lucien's face became terrifyingly calm. What rumors? That Viven and Eleanor were protecting someone. Saraphina could barely breathe now. Protecting who? Attacus's voice lowered almost to a whisper. "You." The room went dead silent. Lucien did not move. Did not blink. Fire light flickered across his face while snow drifted beyond the dark windows outside.
Saraphina stared between them in complete disbelief. "That is absurd."
Nobody answered, which made it worse.
"No," she whispered again. "No, my father was a pastor." "Yes," Adekus said softly. "The man who raised you was Lucien finally spoke. Quiet, controlled, dangerous enough to cut glass. You believe Saraphina is my daughter? No.
Attakus looked genuinely shaken now. I believe your father believed it.
Silence. Absolute. Terrible. Saraphina felt her knees weaken beneath her.
Lucien reached for her automatically before she could fall. One strong hand steadied her elbow instantly. Warm, steady, protective. She hated how much comfort the contact gave her. That is impossible, she whispered. Lucien's gaze remained fixed on Attacus. Explain.
Viven and Eleanor became close during the engagement season. Attakus rubbed slowly at his face. There were whispers Eleanor suspected your father intended to disinherit you after the marriage.
Verona inhaled sharply. Oh my god.
Lucien's hand tightened slightly against Saraphina's arm. Continue. Then suddenly, Viven became pregnant.
Attacus's voice lowered further, and Eleanor began fighting aggressively to protect your inheritance rights.
Saraphina's pulse thundered painfully.
Why would she do that? Adakus looked directly at her. Because, according to the rumors, another terrible pause.
Viven claimed you were not the former Duke's child. Silence. Then Lucien asked the question none of them wanted answered. Whose child did she claim?
Attekus stared directly into Lucien Ashborn's eyes beside the fire light and said quietly. Yours. The fire snapped sharply in the silence that followed.
Nobody breathed. Nobody moved. Saraphina stood completely still beneath the warm salon light while the world around her quietly shattered into pieces too impossible to hold. yours. The word echoed through her chest with terrifying force. Lucien's child, no could not exist inside reality. Lucien Ashbornne was 34 years old, powerful, untouchable, cold as winter stone. She had met him only hours ago beneath chandeliers and scandal and white silk. Yet suddenly the room felt filled with invisible threads binding them together long before tonight began. No, she whispered faintly. No, Attekus Ren looked exhausted now, older somehow beneath the fire light. I warned Vivien the rumors would destroy her. Stop, Saraphina said immediately. Please stop speaking as though any of this is true. Lucien had not released her arm. She realized it only when his hand tightened slightly at her elbow, grounding her before she fell completely apart. Saraphina. Her name sounded different in his voice now, softer, more dangerous. She stepped away from him instantly. Do not, Lucien went still. Do not what? Do not say my name like that. Her pulse thundered painfully through her chest. You cannot possibly believe this. Lucien's expression became unreadable again. I believe someone spent 22 years hiding something. That does not mean it is true. No, his voice remained calm. But it means we ask questions instead of dismissing possibilities because they frighten us.
Verona stepped forward sharply. Enough.
Everyone looked toward her. For the first time tonight, Lady Verona Blackwell appeared genuinely shaken beneath her polished elegance. We are standing inside a locked salon discussing whether the Duke of Ashbborne unknowingly fathered a child with a companion 22 years ago while his fianceé later died under suspicious circumstances. Her voice tightened visibly. Do any of you understand how catastrophic this becomes if it reaches society? Adakus laughed softly without humor. Society already smells blood. The words landed hard outside the salon doors. Muffled ballroom whispers still drifted faintly through the estate halls. The winter ball had transformed into a feeding frenzy hours ago.
Aristocrats would spend months devouring tonight's scandal. Saraphina suddenly felt sick. My father, her voice came small now, fragile. The man who raised me loved my mother. Lucien's gaze shifted toward her instantly. I know. No tears burned unexpectedly behind her eyes. You do not. She looked away toward the dark windows. Snow drifted beyond the glass beneath moonlight, silvering the frozen estate grounds. He taught scripture every Sunday in a church barely large enough for 40 people. He repaired broken chairs himself because the parish could not afford replacements.
He carried my mother to bed when she became ill because she could no longer climb the stairs alone. Her throat tightened painfully. Do not turn him into a lie. Silence settled heavily through the salon. Lucien looked at her for a long moment before speaking. I am not questioning the man who raised you.
His voice lowered carefully. I am questioning why your mother hid from Ashborne Hall after Eleanor died.
Saraphina closed her eyes briefly because that question terrified her too.
Now Attekus moved slowly toward the fireplace. Viven disappeared before dawn. No farewell, no explanation, only gone. And you allowed that? Lucien asked coldly. I was not the Duke. No. Lucien's gray eyes sharpened dangerously. You were merely the man cleaning up his scandals. Verona exhaled sharply.
Lucien. He knew. The Duke's voice remained frighteningly calm. All these years, he knew Viven existed. Attekus finally looked angry, too. You think I enjoyed burying what happened here? I think you obeyed my father because men like your father destroyed anyone who refused them. The silence afterward hurt. Saraphina watched Lucien carefully now. The accusation struck him somewhere deep beneath the iron restraint. I am not him, he said quietly. Attekus's expression softened immediately. No.
Then stop looking at me like you expect history to repeat itself. Another painful silence. Verona crossed slowly toward Saraphina. Then sit down before you faint. I am not going to faint. You are white as the snow outside. Saraphina sank into the velvet chair anyway because suddenly standing required too much strength. The room blurred faintly around the edges from exhaustion and shock and too many impossible revelations colliding at once. Lucien remained standing near the fireplace.
Tall, still entirely composed except for the tension visible in his hands. There is another problem, Adekus said quietly.
Nobody liked the sound of that sentence.
What now? Verona asked. Adakus looked toward Saraphina carefully. If Viven believed Lucien was your father, then Eleanor almost certainly knew too.
Lucien's expression hardened. Continue.
Elellanor spent the final weeks before her death rewriting portions of her marriage contract. Verona frowned sharply. Why? Attakus hesitated. Because she intended to secure legal protection for Viven and the child after the wedding. Silence crashed through the salon again. Saraphina stared at him in disbelief. Why would she do that?
Adakus's eyes lowered briefly. Because Eleanor Witmore loved Lucien enough to protect his mistakes. The word struck harder than intended. Lucien actually flinched. Tiny movement, barely visible.
But Saraphina saw it. "No," he said quietly. Eleanor would never. She knew about Viven. "No, Lucien," Adekus sighed heavily. She confronted Viven herself.
The fire crackled softly between them.
Saraphina's pulse quickened again. "My mother knew Lady Eleanor personally.
very personally. Attakus nodded once. At first, Eleanor was furious. Then, another hesitation. Something changed.
Lucien's voice lowered dangerously. What changed? Viven insisted. You never knew about the pregnancy. Silence, then softly. Because it happened before your engagement became official. Saraphina felt her breath catch painfully. Lucien closed his eyes once briefly like a man absorbing a blow silently. I never touched Viven, he said quietly. Attakus frowned slightly. What? Lucien's eyes opened again. Cold. Certain. I never had any relationship with her. Silence.
Absolute. Verona stared at him sharply.
Lucien. I am telling the truth. The room shifted instantly. Saraphina felt confusion crash violently through her exhaustion. Then why would my mother claim? I do not know. Frustration cracked faintly through Lucien's composure for the first time tonight. I knew Viven existed. Of course, I did.
She attended Eleanor constantly during the engagement season, but that was all.
Attacus looked genuinely stunned now.
She specifically named you. Then she lied or protected someone. Verona whispered suddenly. Everyone turned toward her. She looked pale beneath the firelight now, thoughtful, frightened.
What if Viven accused Lucien because the truth was worse? Silence followed immediately. Saraphina's stomach tightened. Worse, how? Verona looked slowly toward Lucien, then toward the dark salon windows. If the former Duke believed the child threatened inheritance rights, her voice lowered carefully. Then perhaps Viven attached Lucien's name deliberately because she feared the real father. Cold spread through the room like spilled ink.
Lucien's face changed instantly.
Terrifyingly, no. Attakus stared at Verona. You think? I think powerful men often silence inconvenient women. She looked toward Saraphina with visible unease. And I think Viven may have chosen the only name capable of protecting her child afterward.
Saraphina stopped breathing. "No, no."
The implication moved through the salon before anyone spoke it aloud. Lucien's father, the former Duke, "No," Lucien said again, "sharper this time."
"Absolutely not." Yet something in his face betrayed him. "Fear! Real fear!"
Adekus sat heavily beside the fireplace.
Dear God, Saraphina felt suddenly cold despite the fire light warming the room.
Her mother, her quiet, gentle mother with lavender soap and trembling hands near the end. Hidden inside this monstrous history all along. There is more, Adekus said quietly. Nobody wanted more. He continued anyway. 2 days before Eleanor died, she changed her will.
Lucien looked up sharply. What? She added a sealed provision. Attekus swallowed carefully. One involving Viven and the unborn child. Silence. Then Lucien asked softly. Where is that document now? Attacus looked directly at him. Missing. The salon went still again. Saraphina stared toward the fire while realization spread slowly through her chest like winter frost. Missing portrait. Missing will. missing truths buried beneath 6 years of silence.
Someone had not merely hidden Eleanor's death. Someone had dismantled the evidence piece by piece afterward.
Lucien moved toward the windows abruptly, staring out into the snow-covered darkness beyond Ashborne Hall. Someone reopened this tonight for a reason. Verona nodded slowly. Yes, not because of ghosts. No, Lucien's reflection stood dark against the glass.
powerful, haunted, furious now in ways that frightened even the room itself.
Someone believes Saraphina's existence threatens them. Silence followed. Heavy final. Then Saraphina whispered the question none of them truly wanted answered. What if they are right? The question remained hanging in the salon long after Saraphina spoke it aloud.
What if they are right? Snow drifted beyond the tall windows of Ashborne Hall while the fire burned lower inside the great, casting restless shadows across dark wood walls and exhausted faces.
Nobody answered immediately because every person in the room understood the danger beneath the question. If Saraphina truly carried some hidden claim connected to the Ashborne family, then tonight's terror was not random. It was strategy. Lucien turned slowly away from the window. The fire light caught the sharp angles of his face and the exhaustion buried beneath his composure.
Then someone spent 22 years trying to erase you. The words landed softly, brutally. Saraphina stared at him in silence. Erase you. The phrase cut deeper than fear because suddenly her entire life looked different through it.
the tiny church in Norwich, the quiet cottage, her mother refusing to speak about the past, the careful isolation that once seemed ordinary now felt constructed, intentional. "No," she whispered faintly. "My mother would never lie to me. Parents lie constantly to protect children," Verona said quietly. "Especially frightened ones."
Saraphina looked toward her sharply. You speak as though you understand. A strange sadness crossed Verona's expression. I do. Silence followed.
Lucien crossed slowly back toward the center of the salon. We proceed carefully from this point forward.
Attekus laughed bitterly near the fireplace. Carefully? Yes. Lucien's gray eyes hardened. Because if someone feared Saraphina enough to reopen Eleanor's death tonight, then panic becomes exactly what they want. And what exactly do you think they want? Verona asked.
Lucien looked toward Saraphina. Access.
Cold moved slowly through the room.
Saraphina frowned slightly. Access to what? To you? Why? Perhaps to determine what your mother told you before she died. Nothing. Her voice came sharper now. My mother never spoke about Ashborne Hall or Eleanor Whitmore or any of this. Lucien watched her carefully.
Are you certain? Yes, she hesitated briefly. Although everyone in the room stilled instantly. Although what?
Attekus asked. Saraphina frowned faintly, searching through memory. Near the end, when she became very ill, her voice softened involuntarily.
Sometimes she confused dreams with conversations. Lucien stepped closer.
What did she say? I thought it was nonsense. Saraphina shook her head slowly. She kept apologizing to someone named Ellie. Silence complete. Verona closed her eyes briefly. Adakus muttered something under his breath. Lucien's face changed instantly. Eleanor. What?
Only family called her Ellie. The salon seemed to contract around them.
Saraphina's pulse quickened painfully again. There is more. Lucien's voice lowered. Tell me. She looked away toward the fire because suddenly memory hurt.
One night she woke screaming during a storm. Her fingers tightened unconsciously against the velvet armrest. She kept saying she should not have left her alone on the balcony.
Silence crashed hard through the room.
Attekus sat down heavily. Verona looked pale beneath the firelight. Lucien did not move at all. "You never mentioned this before?" he asked softly. Because I did not understand it. Saraphina's throat tightened painfully. I thought fever damaged her mind. Lucien looked away abruptly toward the dark windows again. No. His voice sounded distant now, fractured. It damaged her silence.
Nobody spoke after that. The truth moved quietly through the salon now. Vivian Vale had not forgotten Ashborne Hall.
She had carried it until death.
Saraphina suddenly felt grief rising unexpectedly beneath her ribs. Not only for Eleanor, for her mother, too. For all the years she spent hiding terror inside ordinary life. There is another possibility, Verona said quietly.
Lucien's gaze sharpened immediately.
Meaning if Viven truly believed someone murdered Elellanor, Verona folded her hands tightly together. Then perhaps she did not disappear simply to protect the child. Her eyes shifted toward Saraphina carefully. Perhaps she fled because she believed they would kill her next. Cold silence swallowed the room whole.
Saraphina stopped breathing for one terrible second. Lucien's expression darkened dangerously. Who knew about the pregnancy? Adakus answered immediately.
Very few people names. Viven. Eleanor, your father. He hesitated. And me?
Verona frowned sharply. No servants.
Rumors only. Lucien paced slowly toward the fireplace now. Restless energy moved beneath his restraint for the first time all night. Someone removed Eleanor's portrait tonight. Yes. Someone carved not her beneath the frame. Yes. and someone wanted Saraphina publicly associated with Eleanor before revealing Viven's connection to this house. Lucien stopped moving. That is not random.
Adakus nodded grimly. No. Saraphina suddenly realized something horrible.
The ballroom. Everyone looked toward her. What? She swallowed carefully. The white dress. Her pulse quickened. What if that was not an accident either?
Silence. Lucien stared at her. Explain.
Lady Beatatric's maid unpacked my trunk after we arrived. Saraphina frowned as memory sharpened unexpectedly. I distinctly remember placing the gray dress on top before dinner. Verona's eyes widened slowly. But you wore white because when I dressed tonight, the white gown had been laid across the bed already prepared. Cold moved visibly through the room. Attekus muttered another curse beneath his breath. Lucien went terrifyingly still. Someone chose the dress for you. Yes. Saraphina's voice lowered faintly. And I never questioned it because I assumed the staff misunderstood my instructions.
Lucien's jaw tightened sharply. Find Lady Beatatric's maid. He ordered immediately toward the servant near the door. Now, yes, your grace. The servant hurried out at once. Verona stared toward Saraphina with growing unease.
Someone wanted the ballroom to see Eleanor reborn. No. Lucien corrected softly. Someone wanted me to see her.
The honesty of the statement settled heavily between them. Saraphina looked at him carefully now at the exhaustion buried beneath his composure, at the grief that still lived inside him after 6 years. He had been manipulated tonight, too. Not only her, Lucien.
Verona's voice softened unexpectedly.
This was never about ghosts. No, his gaze remained fixed somewhere distant beyond the firelight. It was about memory. Silence stretched. Then, suddenly, a loud knock struck the salon doors hard enough to startle everyone.
Lucien's expression hardened instantly.
Enter. The doors opened quickly. Mrs. Pembroke hurried inside, pale-faced and breathless beneath her black housekeeper's uniform. "Your grace! What happened?" "One of the upstairs maids is missing." The room went silent immediately. "Which maid?" Lucien asked softly. Mrs. Pembroke swallowed hard.
The girl assigned to unpack Miss Veil's things. Saraphina felt ice move slowly through her chest. Lucien's voice lowered dangerously. When was she last seen? Approximately 30 minutes ago, near the north corridor, Mrs. Pembroke's hands trembled visibly now. She appeared frightened. Sir, frightened of what? She kept repeating that she should never have touched the white dress. Silence crashed through the salon. Lucien looked toward Saraphina immediately. Did she say anything else? Mrs. Pembroke hesitated. Yes, speak. The older woman swallowed carefully. She said someone paid her to make sure Miss Vale entered the ballroom looking exactly like Lady Eleanor. Nobody moved. Nobody breathed.
Then Saraphina whispered the question already terrifying all of them. Who paid her? Mrs. Pembroke looked toward Lucien with visible fear. She would not say.
Lucien's face became carved stone. Find her. We are trying your grace. No. His voice cut sharply through the salon. You are searching quietly. I am ordering every servant in this house awake until she is found. Yes, sir. Mrs. Pembroke hurried out again. The moment the doors closed, Adakus looked toward Lucien grimly. They are cleaning evidence.
Lucien nodded once slowly. "Yes, which means whoever orchestrated tonight still believes the girl knows something dangerous." Saraphina rose from the chair despite exhaustion pulling at her body. I do not know anything. Perhaps not consciously, Verona said softly. But memory survives in strange ways.
Lucien's eyes lifted toward her. What are you suggesting? Verona hesitated briefly. Children remember more than adults realize. Saraphina frowned. I was an infant. Yes. Verona's expression tightened. But your mother was not.
Silence followed. Lucien suddenly crossed toward a writing desk near the salon wall. He unlocked the bottom drawer with deliberate movements and removed an old leather folder thick with age. Attekus stared immediately. You kept them. Every report. Lucien carried the folder back toward the firelight.
Every witness statement from Eleanor's death. Saraphina watched him carefully as he opened the documents. His hands remained steady. Only his eyes betrayed the storm beneath the surface. Now, he scanned several pages quickly before stopping abruptly. Silence stretched.
Verona stepped closer. What is it?
Lucien looked slowly up from the papers.
His face had gone pale again. Viven gave a statement the night Elanor died.
Attakus frowned sharply. That was destroyed. Apparently not. Lucien's gaze shifted toward Saraphina. And according to this document, before disappearing from Ashborne Hall, his voice lowered dangerously. Your mother claimed Eleanor told her she had hidden proof somewhere inside this estate. The room froze.
Saraphina's pulse thundered violently.
Proof of what? Lucien looked directly into her eyes beside the dying fire light. Who killed her? The salon fell into complete silence after Lucien spoke the words aloud. Proof of who killed her. The fire burned low behind them now. Shadows moving restlessly across the walls of Ashborne Hall while winter wind whispered against the tall windows overlooking the frozen grounds.
Saraphina stared at the old document in Lucien's hand as though it might suddenly explain her entire life. Her mother knew, Eleanor knew, and someone had spent 22 years making certain the truth remained buried beneath titles and silence and fear. Where? Verona asked quietly. Lucien's gaze remained fixed on the paper. Viven's statement says Eleanor hid the evidence somewhere only Lucien would understand. Attakus frowned sharply. That makes no sense. No.
Lucien's voice lowered slightly. It makes perfect sense. Everyone looked toward him. Something had changed in his expression. Not merely anger now.
Memory. Elellanor hated obvious hiding places. He said quietly. She believed secrets survived longer when hidden inside sentiment. Saraphina watched him carefully. You know where she would hide something. Perhaps he closed the leather folder slowly. Or perhaps I knew her once and spent 6 years trying unsuccessfully to forget. The honesty hurt the room again. Verona stepped closer beside the fireplace. Lucien. No.
He looked toward the salon doors. If Eleanor left evidence inside this estate, then tonight was not about haunting Ashborne Hall. His gray eyes sharpened dangerously. It was about stopping us from finding it. Attakus nodded grimly. The missing portrait. A distraction. The ballroom panic. Another distraction. Lucien's attention shifted slowly toward Saraphina and the white dress. Silence stretched between them.
She understood before he spoke again.
They needed me emotionally compromised.
The words landed softly, true enough to ache. Saraphina looked away first because suddenly the room felt too intimate, too dangerous. Lucien Ashborn had spent 6 years into grief. Tonight, someone deliberately reopened that wound using her face and her mother's secrets.
Yet, despite all the manipulation, despite all the ghosts surrounding them, he had protected her at every turn, publicly, repeatedly, the realization settled painfully through her chest. A sudden knock struck the salon doors again, hard, urgent. Lucien straightened immediately. Enter. Mrs. Pembroke hurried back inside, pale with alarm.
Your grace, tell me. We found the maid.
Silence. Alive? Lucien asked sharply.
Yes, sir. Relief flickered briefly through the room before the housekeeper continued. But she is terrified. Where is she now? In the servants's quarters.
Mrs. Pembroke swallowed carefully. She claimed someone threatened her family if she spoke. Lucien's face hardened instantly. Who? She does not know. No.
Mrs. Pembroke's voice trembled faintly, but she described the person who paid her. Saraphina's pulse quickened. Who was it? The housekeeper looked directly toward Lady Verona Blackwell. She said the woman wore dark red velvet and emerald earrings. Silence exploded through the salon. Verona froze completely. Attekus stared at her in disbelief. Saraphina felt the air vanish from the room. Lucien's expression became unreadable. Verona. Lady Verona looked genuinely stunned. No, you wore dark red velvet tonight. Half the women in England own red velvet. Emerald earrings? Attacus asked quietly. Verona reached instinctively toward her throat.
Emeralds glittered coldly against her pale skin beneath the firelight. This is absurd. Lucien stepped closer slowly.
Calm. Terrifyingly calm. Did you instruct the maid to prepare the white dress? No. Did you know Eleanor's portrait would disappear tonight? No.
Did you know Attakus intended to reveal Viven's connection to Ashborne Hall?
Verona's composure cracked visibly for the first time all evening. I did not orchestrate this silence. Heavy dangerous. Saraphina watched her carefully now. Earlier, Verona frightened her. Cold elegance, sharp intelligence. But beneath the fear tonight, there was something else too.
Grief. Old grief carried quietly for years beside Lucien's. Lucien, Verona whispered softly. You cannot possibly believe I would hurt Eleanor. The Duke's gaze remained fixed on her. I do not know what to believe anymore. The answer devastated her visibly. Saraphina saw it happen in real time. A woman who had spent years standing beside a grieving man suddenly realizing he no longer trusted anyone completely. Verona looked away sharply toward the windows. I loved her too. Lucien's face tightened faintly. Tiny movement. Real pain. I know. Do you? She laughed softly without humor. Because for 6 years you locked yourself inside this mosselum while the rest of us learned how to survive around your grief. Silence. Then softly, I stayed. The words hit harder than anger.
Lucien looked at her carefully. "Yes, everyone else moved on." Her voice trembled now despite obvious efforts to control it. "I did not." Saraphina suddenly understood. Verona Blackwell loved him. Not dramatically, not selfishly, quietly, patiently, like someone standing beside winter, hoping eventually spring might return. And tonight, Saraphina arrived wearing white. Lucien seemed to understand the realization crossing Saraphina's face because his expression darkened immediately. Verona, no, she straightened sharply. Do not pity me. I hate pity. I was not offering it. Good.
Her composure returned slowly beneath practiced aristocratic elegance. Because I am not ashamed of loving someone incapable of noticing it. Silence swallowed the room whole. Even Attekus looked away awkwardly. Saraphina's chest tightened unexpectedly. Not jealousy, sadness. Verona deserved better than 6 years of standing beside a ghost. Lucien finally spoke softly. You should have left. Verona smiled faintly, brokenly, perhaps. Before anyone could continue, another realization struck Saraphina sharply. Wait. Everyone turned toward her. She looked toward Verona carefully.
If you did not arrange the dress, her pulse quickened. Then someone deliberately wanted suspicion pointed toward you. Attekus straightened immediately. Of course. Lucien's expression sharpened dangerously. They needed division inside the house. Verona looked toward Saraphina slowly.
Something shifted in her face. Then respect perhaps. You are smarter than they expected. Saraphina ignored the compliment. If someone wanted us fighting each other, then whoever orchestrated tonight is still close enough to watch the chaos unfold.
Silence followed. Lucien suddenly crossed toward the salon doors. No one leaves Ashborne Hall. Lucien. Verona frowned sharply. The guests remain until morning. His voice lowered dangerously.
And every corridor inside this estate is searched immediately. For what? Attekus asked. Lucien looked toward the old leather folder still resting beside the fireplace. For whatever Eleanor hid. The search began within minutes. Servants carrying lanterns moved through darkened corridors while frightened aristocrats whispered together inside locked guest chambers upstairs. Snow continued falling heavily beyond the estate windows, burying the grounds in white silence. Saraphina followed Lucien through the eastern wing once more because somehow neither of them could tolerate distance now. The morning gallery looked colder after midnight, emptier. The missing portrait frame still hung beneath candle light like an open wound carved into the wall. Lucien stopped beside it slowly. Eleanor once told me something strange here.
Saraphina looked toward him. What? She said, "People always hide the truth inside the thing they fear losing most."
His gaze drifted toward the empty frame.
At the time, I thought she meant love.
And now, Lucien's eyes shifted toward her. Now, I think she meant memory.
Silence settled softly between them. Not painful this time. Heavy, intimate.
Saraphina suddenly became deeply aware of how alone they were in the corridor.
just candle light and winter shadows and six years of unfinished grief standing quietly between them. Lucien, the name escaped before she thought better of it.
He looked at her immediately. Something dangerous moved through his expression, hearing his given name in her voice. You should not say it like that. Like what?
Softly. Heat rose unexpectedly into her cheeks. I was not aware I said it softly. You did. Silence stretched again, then quietly. You are not him.
Lucien frowned slightly. What? Saraphina looked toward the empty frame. Your father, his face changed instantly. She continued before fear stopped her. You keep punishing yourself for what happened to Eleanor. But every person who knew her speaks about your grief with certainty. Her gray eyes lifted toward his steadily. No one speaks about your cruelty that way. Lucien stared at her for one long unbearable moment.
Saraphina. Her name sounded almost painful in his voice now. Then suddenly something caught the candle light near the bottom corner of the empty frame. A tiny metal glint half hidden behind carved wood molding. Lucien saw it simultaneously. Instantly, he crossed toward the wall and pressed carefully against the inner frame edge. A hidden compartment clicked open with a soft mechanical sound. Silence crashed through the gallery. Inside the compartment rested a sealed envelope yellowed with age. Eleanor's handwriting curled elegantly across the front. For Lucien, neither moved for one terrible heartbeat. Then Lucien reached slowly into the compartment and removed the letter with trembling fingers. The first visible tremor Saraphina had seen from him all night. Open it," she whispered softly. Lucien stared at the envelope beneath flickering candle light. Snow rattled faintly against the gallery windows. Somewhere deep inside Ashborne Hall, a clock struck 2 in the morning.
Then, finally, carefully, Lucien broke the seal. Inside rested a single folded page and a silver key. His eyes scanned the letter once, twice, all color disappeared from his face immediately.
"What?" Saraphina asked. Lucien looked slowly up at her. Shock, grief, fury.
Something else, too. Relief so painful it nearly broke him open where he stood.
Eleanor knew. His voice came barely audible now. Knew what? He swallowed hard, then quietly. My father killed her.
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