My books are like my future grayeard. Quiet and silent.

Free Read Chapter "Throne and Collar" Vol. 4 by Tizzz

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Thursday, March 5, 2026

Chapter 41


The morning of the Council session arrived grey and cold. The kind of weather that felt like a comment on proceedings.

Dante stood at the window of the silk chamber. Lachlan's valet dressed him in borrowed finery — deep charcoal wool, good cut. 

Nothing that announced wealth. Nothing that suggested its absence either. 

The clothes fit well enough. Lachlan had clearly estimated his measurements without asking. That should have been unsettling. 

Somehow it wasn't anymore.

Below, the city moved through its ordinary morning. Merchants opening stalls. Servants crossing the square with market baskets. 

Dante adjusted the weight of the standard-issue short sword hidden beneath the charcoal wool. 

It was a fine piece of steel, well-maintained by the manor's smith, but to his hands, it felt clunky and poorly balanced compared to the crescent blade Lachlan had confiscated on their first night. 

For three weeks, he had performed his duties as Head of Security using this temporary gear, a professional compromise that forced him to mentally recalibrate his strike patterns to account for the unfamiliar center of gravity.

He had learned to compensate for the handicap—he could, after all, be effective even with a candlestick if required—but the absence of his own steel remained a persistent itch in his tactical awareness. 

It was a reminder that while Lachlan trusted him with his life, he didn't yet trust him with his full lethality.

Children running the crooked lanes between the older buildings. Loud and oblivious and alive in the uncomplicated way that only children managed.

Dante watched them and thought about Marcus.

Not with guilt. He'd examined that possibility and found the room empty. Marcus had been his partner. His teacher. 

The closest thing to family the Guild had permitted either of them. He'd also been a man who would have put a blade through Lachlan without hesitation. 

Who had looked at what they'd built and seen only deviation to be corrected.

Some things couldn't be recovered from. Dante had learned that early. The Guild had taught him that particular lesson with great thoroughness.

What he felt instead was something quieter and stranger. A door closing. The specific silence of a past that could no longer reach him.

"You're thinking about him," Lachlan said from across the room. Not a question.

"Briefly." Dante turned from the window. "It's done now."

Lachlan studied him for a moment. Those amber eyes missed nothing and discarded less. Then he nodded. 

Apparently satisfied with whatever he found. He returned to the document spread across his desk.

"The Council will attempt to separate us within the first twenty minutes," he said. 

"Ravencroft will push hardest. He has the most to gain from undermining my household's credibility. Westbridge will follow his lead because he always does. Pemberton is the variable. She's clever and she doesn't like Ravencroft. That may work in our favour."

"And if they vote to question me alone?"

"They won't get the opportunity." Lachlan set down his pen. Turned fully to face him. 

"Because you're not attending as a detained person seeking rescue. You're attending as my Head of Security. Present in a professional capacity. The distinction matters enormously in terms of Council protocol."

"Will they accept that?"

"They'll have to decide whether to challenge it openly." A slight smile. 

"Which means challenging my right to employ staff of my choosing. That sets a precedent none of them want applied to their own households. Politics is mostly about finding the argument your opponents least want to have."

Dante crossed to the desk. Looked down at the document. Staff records, he realised. 

His name in Lachlan's precise handwriting. Dates carefully backdated. 

Duties listed with the thoroughness of someone who'd done this kind of paperwork before.

"You've forged my employment history," Dante said.

"I've formalised it," Lachlan corrected. "Everything listed is accurate to our actual arrangement. The dates are somewhat creative."

"Somewhat."

"Significantly." The smile widened slightly. "Does that trouble you?"

Dante considered the question with genuine attention. The way Lachlan had taught him to consider things — all the way down, past the surface response to whatever lived underneath.

"No," he said. "It doesn't."

"Good." Lachlan stood. 

The valet appeared immediately to assist with his jacket — deep navy, gold buttons. Nothing ostentatious. Everything precisely correct for the occasion. 

"Because I need you focused today. Not on last night. Not on what's coming. Not on the Guild or Marcus or any of it. Just on the room we're walking into and the people in it."

"I'm always focused."

"You're always capable of focus. There's a difference." 

Lachlan dismissed the valet with a look. The man vanished with the practised invisibility of the professionally discrete. 

Alone now, Lachlan turned to Dante fully. 

"You've been through significant psychological... reorientation... in the past twelve hours. Most people would need days to integrate that. You're being asked to walk into a political arena and perform absolute composure."

"Most people haven't been trained the way I have," Dante noted, his voice carrying the professional blankness that was his only armor.


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