The silence was deafening.
Beatrice stood frozen in the doorway, her hand still gripping the frame for support. Her legs trembled beneath her, weak from months of forced sedation, weak from childbirth, weak from everything Atlas had put her through.
But none of that mattered now.
Because Atlas was lying on the floor in a pool of his own blood.
The gun had clattered from his hand, skittering across the polished marble until it came to rest against the far wall. His body was motionless, sprawled at an unnatural angle, one arm flung out as if reaching for something—or someone—that would never come.
Blood.
So much blood.
It spread across the pristine white floor like spilled ink, dark and viscous, pooling beneath his head. The metallic scent filled the air, thick and suffocating, mixing with the acrid smell of gunpowder.
Beatrice's breath came in short, shallow gasps. Her vision blurred at the edges, the world tilting dangerously.
This isn't real. This can't be real.
But it was.
Atlas—the man who had manipulated her, drugged her, stolen her child, planned her death—was dying.
Or maybe already dead.
"Atlas..." The name fell from her lips, barely a whisper.
No response.
Her heart pounded so violently she thought it might burst from her chest. Every instinct screamed at her to move, to do something, but her body refused to obey.
And then—
"LET HIM DIE."
Blade's voice exploded in her mind, sharp and vicious, cutting through the shock like a blade through flesh.
Beatrice flinched, her hands flying to her temples.
"Let him die, Bea," Blade repeated, his tone colder now, more controlled but no less intense. "This is what he deserves. After everything he's done—to you, to me, to us—he deserves to bleed out on this floor like the dog he is."
Beatrice's throat tightened. Her vision swam with unshed tears.
"I..." She tried to speak, but the words caught in her throat.
"Don't you dare," Blade snarled. "Don't you fucking dare try to save him. He tried to kill you, Bea. He drugged you. He took your son. He was going to let you die and raise our child as his own. And you want to save him?"
"I—" Beatrice's voice cracked. "I don't know..."
"You don't know?!" Blade's fury burned through her skull like fire. "Are you out of your goddamn mind? This man has done nothing but hurt you from the moment you met him! He doesn't deserve your compassion. He doesn't deserve your mercy!"
Beatrice's knees buckled. She sank to the floor, her hands pressing against the cold marble as she tried to steady herself.
Atlas's blood was inching closer, creeping toward her fingers like a living thing.
She jerked her hand back.
"Blade..." she whispered, tears streaming down her face. "He's... he's the father of my child."
A bitter laugh echoed in her mind.
"Father?" Blade spat the word like poison. "He's a monster. He doesn't get to be a father. He doesn't get to be anything."
Beatrice shook her head, her breath coming in ragged sobs. "But our son... what do I tell our son? That I let his father die? That I stood there and watched?"
"You tell him the truth," Blade said coldly. "That his father was a killer. A manipulator. A man who would have destroyed you both without a second thought."
Beatrice pressed her palms against her eyes, trying to block out the voice, the blood, the overwhelming sense of drowning. But she couldn't. Because Blade was right.
Atlas had done all of those things. He had hurt her, betrayed her, nearly killed her. And yet...
Her hand moved.
Slowly, trembling, her fingers reached for the phone in her pocket.
"Bea, NO!" Blade roared. "Don't you fucking do it! Don't you—"
Beatrice pulled out her phone, her vision blurred by tears, her hands shaking so badly she could barely hold it.
"I'm sorry," she whispered. "I'm so sorry, Blade, but I... I can't..."
"BEA!"
She dialed.
The line rang once. Twice.
"Emergency services, what's your location?"
Beatrice opened her mouth, but no sound came out at first. Her throat was too tight, her chest too constricted.
"Hello? Are you there?"
"I..." Beatrice forced the words out, each one like a knife twisting in her gut. "I need... an ambulance. There's been... a shooting."
Blade's scream tore through her mind, raw and agonized.
"YOU FOOL! YOU FUCKING FOOL!"
Beatrice squeezed her eyes shut, tears streaming down her face as she gave the operator the address.
"Please hurry," she choked out. "He's... he's losing a lot of blood."
The operator's voice was calm, professional. "Stay on the line. Help is on the way. Can you tell me if the victim is breathing?"
Beatrice's gaze snapped to Atlas. His chest rose and fell—barely. Shallow, labored breaths that rattled in his lungs.
"Yes," she whispered. "He's breathing."
Chapter 1
The silver goblet slipped from Lady Seraphine Virell's fingers, red wine spreading across the marble floor like spilled blood.
The sound echoed through the grand ballroom, silencing the orchestra mid-note and drawing every pair of eyes to her pale face.
"What did you say?" she whispered, her violet eyes wide with disbelief as she stared at her father.
Lord Edmund Virell's weathered face was grave, his usual joviality replaced by something that looked dangerously close to fear.
"You heard me correctly, daughter. His Majesty has decreed your marriage to General Kael Drakar. The ceremony will take place within the fortnight."
The words hit her like a physical blow. Around them, the birthday celebration that had been in full swing moments before now buzzed with whispered speculation.
Seraphine could feel the weight of curious stares, the barely concealed excitement of nobles who lived for such scandalous developments.
"But Father, I don't understand—" Her voice cracked, and she hated herself for the show of weakness. "General Drakar has never even spoken to me. Why would the king—"
"Because we have no choice." Edmund's voice dropped to a harsh whisper, his fingers digging into her elbow as he pulled her aside. "The debts, Seraphine. The debts have finally come due."
Her blood turned to ice. She'd known their family's finances were strained—the lavish lifestyle they maintained came at a cost—but she'd never imagined it was this dire.
"How dire?" she managed, though part of her didn't want to know.
"Dire enough that refusing the king's... generous offer... would mean losing everything. Our lands, our titles, our lives if we're deemed treasonous." His grip tightened. "The king knows of our situation, and General Drakar has agreed to assume our debts in exchange for your hand."
"So I'm being sold." The words tasted bitter on her tongue. "Like a broodmare at market."
"You're securing your family's survival," Edmund snapped, but his eyes couldn't meet hers. "And perhaps... perhaps it won't be as terrible as you imagine. The general is wealthy, powerful—"
"And terrifying," Seraphine finished. "Father, the man is known for his brutality on the battlefield. They say he's never taken a wife because no woman could satisfy his... particular tastes."
She'd heard the whispered rumors about General Kael Drakar—how he fought like a demon possessed, how his enemies spoke of supernatural strength and eyes that glowed like coals in the dark.
Some claimed Dragonborn blood ran in his veins, though such talk was usually dismissed as battlefield superstition.
"Gossip and nonsense," Edmund said, but his voice lacked conviction. "You'll learn to manage him, as wives have always managed their husbands."
"And if I refuse?"
The silence stretched between them like a taut string ready to snap. Finally, Edmund's shoulders sagged in defeat.
"Then we're all dead within the month. The king's patience has run out, Seraphine. This marriage is our only salvation."
She closed her eyes, feeling the weight of her family's fate settling on her shoulders like a funeral shroud. When she opened them again, her father was watching her with a mix of guilt and desperate hope.
"Very well," she said quietly. "I'll do my duty."
The relief on his face was almost painful to witness. "Thank you, daughter. I know this isn't what you wanted—"
"No," she interrupted, her voice growing stronger. "It isn't. But I won't let our family fall into ruin because of past mistakes."
As if summoned by their conversation, a disturbance near the ballroom's entrance drew their attention.
The crowd was parting like water before the prow of a ship, and through the gap strode a figure that made Seraphine's breath catch in her throat.
General Kael Drakar was taller than she'd expected, his broad shoulders filling out his midnight-blue military jacket with predatory grace.
Dark hair was pulled back severely from a face that might have been carved from granite—all sharp angles and hard planes that spoke of nobility bred for war.
But it was his eyes that held her transfixed: pale silver-green, like winter frost over deep water, and currently fixed on her with an intensity that made her skin flush with unexpected heat.
He moved through the crowd without acknowledging the bows and curtseys offered by the nobles, his attention never wavering from her face.
When he finally stood before them, Seraphine caught his scent—leather and steel, smoke and something wilder, more primal that made her pulse quicken despite her fear.
"Lord Virell," Kael said, his voice a low rumble that seemed to vibrate through her bones. "Lady Seraphine."
He offered a precise bow, but those strange eyes never left hers.
When he straightened, she found herself looking up into a face that revealed nothing of his thoughts—a perfect mask of cold control.
"General Drakar," she managed, pleased that her voice remained steady. "I... understand congratulations are in order."
Something flickered in those pale eyes—amusement? Hunger? It was gone too quickly to interpret.
"Indeed." He extended a gloved hand toward her. "Perhaps you would honor me with a dance, my lady? So that we might become... better acquainted."
The request was perfectly proper, but something in his tone made it sound like a challenge.
Or a threat.
Seraphine glanced around the ballroom, acutely aware that every conversation had ceased, every eye was trained on this moment.
She placed her hand in his, gasping softly at the contact.
Even through his leather gloves, she could feel the heat of his touch, the carefully controlled strength in his fingers as they closed around hers.
"I would be honored, General."
He led her onto the dance floor, and the orchestra hastily struck up a waltz.
As his arm encircled her waist, drawing her closer than strictly necessary, Seraphine felt a shiver run down her spine that had nothing to do with fear.
"You're trembling," he observed quietly, his breath warm against her ear as they began to move in perfect synchronization.