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Seymour House was unusually still that evening, the kind of heavy quiet that settles on a ho when sothing is already wrong but no one has spoken it aloud yet.

Lord Jas burst through the doors the mont the butler admitted him, his expression thunderous. Servants scattered. He strode straight into the drawing room where Baron Seymour and the Baroness were sitting with tea between them.

His mother looked up, startled. "Jas? Why are you ho so early from White’s?"

He didn’t bow. He didn’t sit. He simply said, "Margaret’s courtship with Lord Lockhart must not continue."

Baroness Seymour blinked, then scoffed softly. "You will not sabotage your sister’s prospects. Frederick Lockhart is an earl. Your sister is fortunate he even glances her way."

Baron Seymour frowned. "Continue, Jas. Tell what you’ve heard."

Jas inhaled sharply. "At White’s... Lockhart spoke of Margaret." His hands curled into fists.

"He said he prefers agreeable won from the lower end of the peerage — because they’re desperate for status and wouldn’t dare oppose him. He said once he weds such a woman, he may do anything he pleases to her."

Baron Seymour froze.

Baroness Seymour’s teacup paused mid-air, but she said nothing.

Jas pressed on. "He spoke so casually, Mama. As if marriage were a convenient purchase, and a wife rely... property." His voice cracked with fury. "He intends to use Margaret. To control her because she lacks political power."

Baron Seymour surged to his feet. "He said this?"

"Yes, Father. Every word."

Baroness Seymour set her teacup down with a faint click. "I don’t see the issue. n speak confidently in clubs. It does not an he would behave—"

"Mama."

Jas rarely raised his voice. Tonight, he did.

"You never let Margaret think for herself. You never let her decide what she wants. You draped her in ribbons, shoved her into drawing rooms, and told her her value depends on marrying up. And now—now you can’t even see she’s being hunted by a man who sees her as nothing but convenience!"

A stunned silence followed.

Baron Seymour looked at his wife in disbelief. "Is this true? Did you forbid Sophia from playing with Margaret because you feared Sophia would influence her to think for herself?"

Baroness Seymour stiffened.

Jas exhaled shakily. "Mama... all Margaret knows is Sophia stopped being her friend. But you stopped their friendship. Sophia never pushed her away — you did."

A soft gasp ca from the doorway.

Margaret stood there, trembling, her little sister Agatha peeking out behind her skirts.

"Mama..." Margaret whispered. "Is it true? That you told Sophia not to play with anymore? Because you didn’t want to make my own decisions?"

Her mother opened her mouth — but no words ca.

Margaret stepped into the room, her face pale, eyes wide with dawning hurt.

"All this ti," she murmured, "I thought Sophia abandoned . That she looked down on . But it was you?"

Baroness Seymour swallowed, suddenly looking far smaller than her usual grandeur. "I did what was best for your future."

Margaret shook her head, voice trembling. "No, Mama. You did what was best for your ambition."

Agatha clutched her sister’s hand.

Margaret slowly turned to her father, eyes bright with a mix of anger and heartbreak. "Papa... I do not want Earl Lockhart."

Baron Seymour’s expression hardened like iron.

"You will never be forced to." He looked at his wife, his voice lowering into sothing cold. "This ends now."

Margaret exhaled shakily — relief, grief, confusion all tangled together — and Jas placed a steady hand on her shoulder.

For the first ti in years, Margaret wasn’t being steered. She was choosing.

London wakes up to the kind of gossip that traveled faster than any carriage, carried mouth-to-mouth with the efficiency of fire leaping across a dry field.

By sunrise, the early pronaders in Hyde Park were already murmuring. By breakfast, the information had migrated into drawing rooms, spilled over teacups, and was being whispered behind fans. By luncheon, even the footn had opinions.

The Lockhart–Seymour courtship had shattered.

And as is custom among the ton, a broken courtship was never just a broken courtship — it was an invitation for every maid, valet, coachman, and housekeeper to pour out stored observations the way one upended a teapot.

The trickle beca a flood.

"Did you hear?" the Marchioness Winchester whispered to her sister. "Lord Lockhart sent a governess away to Bath."

"A governess?" her sister gasped. "For what reason?"

The Marchioness leaned in, lowering her voice to a scandalized hiss. "He got her with child."

Fans snapped open across the square. "And he did nothing for her," a footman from Beaufort House muttered to another as they passed on errands. "I heard he cut her off entirely. Wouldn’t even see the babe."

A nearby maid added,"My cousin works at the Bath boarding house she was sent to. Says the poor woman barely had enough to pay for her confinent."

The maid lowered her voice further. "And the Earl? He never sent a single sovereign."

News traveled with ruthless montum.

By midmorning, Almack’s patronesses were already discussing whether Lord Lockhart should be... discouraged from attending future balls.

By noon, Lady Jersey had declared him a "danger to impressionable debutantes."

By one o’clock, even Baroness Seymour — stubborn, image-conscious Baroness Seymour — could no longer ignore the avalanche.

But the most damning effect ca from the ton’s collective shift: Sympathy swung violently toward Lady Margaret.

"She had no idea," whispered the mothers.

"Poor girl," murmured the debutantes.

"Lockhart is finished," the lords muttered darkly.

The sun stretched thin over the London streets, gentle but indifferent, as Lady Sophia Fiennes walked arm-in-arm with Lady Elizabeth Talbot. Their attendants followed at a respectful distance, their steps softened by the city’s hum.

Elizabeth, normally the picture of serenity, kept glancing sideways at Sophia with a kind of restless energy that hinted she was holding sothing sharp and urgent on her tongue.

"Sophia... did you hear?" she finally whispered.

Sophia blinked. "Heard what, Lizzie?"

Elizabeth took a breath, then unleashed it all at once.

"The courtship between Earl Lockhart and Lady Margaret is over. Completely. Lord Jas intervened after overhearing Earl Lockhart speaking at White’s. It turns out he had no intention to value Margaret at all—he planned to wed her because he believed the Seymours are desperate for status."

Sophia stopped walking.

Elizabeth continued, voice dipping even lower.

"And that is not the worst of it. Word spread that Lord Lockhart exiled his forr governess to Bath after she beca with child. He gave her no support—not for her, not for the babe. The ton knows now. Everyone knows."

For a mont, the street noise beca a dull, distant thrum.

Sophia’s expression, so often bright with blunt honesty or philosophical mischief, hardened into sothing colder, sharper, and startlingly calm.

"How... interesting," she murmured.

Elizabeth’s breath caught; she recognized that tone. Sophia is rarely angry and rarely angry people are dangerous.

"Do not follow , Lizzie."

"Sophia—wait—"

"I have business to attend to," Sophia said, already turning, the wind catching the edges of her sapphire-blue cloak. "Soone must be reminded of his place in this polite society."

"Sophia!" Elizabeth reached out—but missed the fabric by inches.

By the ti Elizabeth turned to call the attendants, Sophia was already five strides ahead, then ten, then practically disappearing into London like a storm slipping into the horizon with purpose.

One of the attendants murmured, "Milady, shall we—?"

"No," Elizabeth sighed, rubbing her forehead. "We both know no one can stop her once she decides to champion justice."

She watched Sophia vanish down the road.

"And Heaven help Earl Lockhart," she added softly, "for Sophia shows rcy to philosophers... but not to cowards and rakes."

White’s, St. Jas Street

Though White’s had weathered scandals, shouting matches, and even the occasional drunken wrestling bout between bored lords, nothing prepared its well-heeled patrons for the sight that burst through the discreet side passage.

Lady Sophia Fiennes did not enter quietly.

She strode in—riding gloves still on, hair slightly wind-tossed from her rushed walk, sapphire eyes blazing like a woman who had personally decided that the gods of Olympus had taken too long to deliver justice.

The hum of masculine chatter sputtered out.

Tankards froze midair.

A stack of betting slips fell from a clerk’s hands.

Jeremy whispered, horrified-delighted, "Oh no."

Ian whispered, equally horrified, "Oh yes."

Benedict’s soul briefly left his body.

Down the room, Earl Frederick Lockhart—smirking, polished, smug—leaned against a mahogany pillar, boasting to his cronies.

On the opposite side stood Lord Jas Seymour, jaw tight, fists clenched.

Sophia marched straight to Lockhart. "Lord Lockhart."

The title dripped from her tongue as though she were scraping sothing unpleasant off her shoe.

The room inhaled collectively.

Lockhart turned lazily. "Well. If it isn’t Lady Sophia Fiennes. Co to lecture on Greek philosophers again?"

Sophia’s voice was steady, cold, terrifying in its calm.

"You do not deserve to be called a gentleman—because nothing about your actions reflects the honor that title demands."

Lockhart blinked, then laughed. His companions followed, brittle echoes.

Sophia tilted her head, returning the laugh—the dangerous one she used whenever Ian dared suggest she needed rest.

"My lord," she continued, "your ancestors worked hard to earn the rank you now tarnish. You treat won as bargaining pieces, you prey upon vulnerability, and you discard responsibility like a drunken cad dropping cards on a gaming table."

Lockhart stepped forward. "Careful, Lady Fiennes. You’re speaking above your station."

"Oh," Sophia murmured, "I haven’t even begun speaking."

Gasps rippled again. Benedict began edging forward. Kurt moved in next to him.

Andrew muttered, "Dear God, she’s going to do sothing."

Sophia smiled sweetly.

Lockhart sneered. "And what exactly will you—"

CRACK.

Her fist t his jaw with a clean, horrifyingly satisfying connection. Lockhart staggered back into a table, sending cards and brandy flying.

White’s erupted.

Jeremy cheered.

Earnest fainted again.

Adrian choked on air.

Benedict shot forward—just in ti to keep Sophia from punching him a second ti.

Lord Jas shouted, "SOPHIA, WAIT—"

Sophia hissed, trying to break free from Benedict’s grip, "I will duel him myself for Lady Margaret’s honor!"

"SOPHIA, YOU CANNOT DUEL HIM!" Benedict half-lifted her off the ground as she lunged again.

Lockhart, holding his jaw, sputtered, "She’s MAD!"

Sophia glared at him, fist already bruising. "Mad? No, my lord. Righteous. And woefully disappointed that you are still breathing the sa air as honorable gentlen."

Benedict finally managed to drag her back.

Kurt and Andrew flanked Lockhart to block his retreat—

partly to prevent him running,

but mostly to protect him from her.

Lord Jas stepped to Sophia’s side, bowing his head.

"Lady Sophia," he said, voice shaking, "on behalf of my sister... thank you."

Sophia lifted her chin, eyes icy, unrepentant. "You may tell Lady Margaret," she said,

"that she was never my enemy. But he—" she jabbed a bruised finger toward Lockhart—

"is."

The club was silent.

Sophia winced only slightly as Benedict cradled her fist, examining the swelling.

"You’ve cut your knuckles," he murmured softly.

She huffed. "Worth it."

Jeremy applauded. Ian sighed. Lockhart looked like he wanted to flee the country.

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