The aftermath inside White’s looked nothing like the dignified sanctuary of gentlen it pretended to be. Chairs were askew, several lords appeared to be recovering from shock, and the footn were whispering furiously behind gloved hands as if they had just survived a small battlefield.
At the center of it all sat Lady Sophia Fiennes of Kent—fist bloodied, expression defiant, and posture far too triumphant for soone who had just punched an earl in the face.
Benedict was on one knee beside her, sleeves rolled up, carefully tending to her bruised knuckles with a cloth dampened in brandy. His jaw was tight with worry, and Sophia could practically feel the tremor of restrained emotion in the way he held her wrist—gentle, almost reverent.
"You should not have done that," Benedict murmured, voice low, warm, shaken. He dabbed at a particularly raw spot, and Sophia winced.
"He laughed at ," she replied simply. "I refuse to be laughed at by a man who exiles governesses to Bath and does not even support his own child. Aristocracy does not excuse cruelty."
"Even so," Benedict muttered, "White’s is not ant for you."
She sniffed. "Yet I find myself here often."
"Yes," he sighed, "that is precisely the problem."
Across the room, chaos continued.
Kurt and Andrew were trying to restrain Earl Lockhart, who was shouting sothing about "insolent won" and "proper discipline," while Jeremy and Ian stood guard like hounds ready to pounce should the earl advance again. Earnest hovered uselessly with a handkerchief, looking seconds away from fainting.
Lord Jas Seymour—still flushed with the humiliation of witnessing his forr almost-brother-in-law punched by a marquess’ daughter—was giving Lockhart a tongue-lashing that grew increasingly scathing.
"You dare insult my sister," Jas snarled, "and now this? You are lucky she rejected you before you ruined her life—"
Lockhart spat sothing back, and Jeremy nearly launched himself at the man before Andrew pinned him by the collar.
"Not here," Andrew hissed. "Not again."
A heavy thud echoed.
White’s went silent.
The door opened.
And Duke Alexander Campbell of Sutherland entered—expression stony, posture rigid, every inch of him radiating the exact brand of aristocratic authority that made grown n suddenly reconsider their life choices.
"Where," he said, voice booming through the hall, "is Lady Sophia Fiennes?"
Everyone instinctively looked at Benedict, who straightened subtly, positioning his body between Sophia and the room as though shielding her from artillery fire.
Alexander’s gaze followed the movent.
His eyes landed on his niece.
Sophia, bruised hand lifted slightly, looked up and offered a sheepish, "Good afternoon, Uncle."
Alexander inhaled sharply. "Why," he asked slowly, "does my niece resemble a prizefighter?"
Silence.
Dead silence.
Sophia opened her mouth. Benedict quickly pressed a hand over hers.
Jeremy coughed into his fist.
Kurt looked at the ceiling.
Earnest visibly prayed.
Finally, Andrew stepped forward in diplomatic agony, "Your Grace... Lady Sophia may or may not have—ah—engaged Lord Lockhart in a matter of honor."
Alexander turned to the badly bruised Lockhart.
Then back to Sophia.
Then at Benedict still clutching Sophia’s injured hand.
"...Of course she did," he muttered like a man who had seen far too much for one lifeti.
He massaged his brow. "Very well. Where is the nearest physician? Lady Sophia will need treatnt, and—God help —an escort. I presu none of you allowed her to challenge an earl to a duel?"
Jeremy winced.
Sophia perked up. "I offered."
Alexander’s soul visibly left his body for several seconds.
"Oh heavens," he whispered.
Sophia stood, straightened her gown, and bowed her head. "I will accept my reprimand, Uncle. But Lord Lockhart deserved it."
Alexander surveyed Lockhart’s bruised jaw. "...Yes. He probably did."
Sophia blinked in surprise.
"But," he continued firmly, "this is the first and last ti I retrieve you from a gentlen’s club. Next ti, Lady Sophia, I will let the Patronesses of Almack’s handle you."
This ti everyone winced. Even Sophia paled.
Alexander sighed, gestured to the door, and said, "Co. Your grandfather is going to faint."
Benedict helped her up. She let him.
And as they walked out—Sophia bruised and unrepentant, Benedict protective and exasperated, the gentlen collectively traumatized—the entirety of White’s remained frozen in stunned silence.
Until Earnest whispered, "...Should we start taking wagers on how many more tis she will infiltrate this club?"
The room groaned.
Fiennes Estate, Grosvenor Square — Drawing Room
The drawing room had the atmosphere of a tribunal.
Every luminary of Sophia’s life was gathered—Lady Jersey like a hawk in silk; Duke Theodore stiff in paternal indignation; Duchess Arabella with her habitual glimr of calculation; Her Majesty Queen Charlotte serene but undeniably present; Prince Felix observing with cool caution; Elizabeth biting her lip in dread; Duchess Catherine exasperated; Marquess Reginald amused but trying not to show it; Marchioness Josephine looking as if she desperately needed a glass of wine.
The mont Alexander guided Sophia into the room, all conversation ceased.
Her knuckles were wrapped and crimson.
Her hair was disheveled from her earlier brawl.
She looked like a mythic heroine who had just stord Troy rather than a marquess’ daughter returning from a stroll.
Josephine rose first.
"Sapphire," she breathed, "Lady Elizabeth told us you departed from your pronade without warning. The footman confird it. Why—" her voice trembled between outrage and worry—"why would you do such a thing?"
Sophia lifted her chin, defiant but tired. "I defended a lady’s honor from a rake like Lord Lockhart. If I were a man, you would praise for being principled and valiant. But because I am a woman, I am lectured again."
A low murmur crossed the room.
Lady Jersey stepped forward, her expression unreadable—half-proud, half-scandalized.
"Lady Sophia," she began, "your courage is comndable. You did not resent Lady Margaret despite the unpleasantness between you, and you intervened when she was vulnerable. But the ton will feast on this for weeks. You have given the gossips an entire season’s worth of material in one punch."
Sophia shrugged. "I do not care if this ruins my marriage prospects. I do not care if Lord Benedict halts his courtship. If Margaret is safe from that man, then all is well."
Across the room, Queen Charlotte inhaled, the sort of sigh that signaled she was about to deliver imperial wisdom born from decades of reigning.
"My dear girl," Her Majesty said, leaning forward with an air of weary fondness, "you are brave... astonishingly so. But bravery must be tempered with discretion. The world will not change because you wish it to. It will change because you survive long enough to bend it."
Sophia opened her mouth—perhaps to quote Rousseau, or Locke, or one of the Enlightennt philosophers she treated like household saints—but the Queen raised a gloved hand.
"I understand your fire," she continued. "Believe , I once had such fire myself. But the court—society—feeds on impropriety. They do not care for justice. They care for spectacle. And you, child, have provided them a grand one."
Arabella folded her arms. "Your Majesty speaks truth. Sophia, your intentions were noble, but you must recognize the consequences. Lockhart may be disgraced, but his allies remain."
Duke Theodore cleared his throat. "And though we respect your loyalty, Sophia, a lady of your station must act with decorum."
Sophia clenched her jaw. "Decorum is a privilege reserved for those not being wronged."
Prince Felix smiled faintly—approvingly, even.
Queen Charlotte shook her head. "Still, striking a peer inside White’s... very bold. Imprudent. But bold."
Reginald finally spoke, tone warm, half-amused, and half-fatherly exasperation.
"She is her grandfather’s granddaughter. And her grandmother’s. And... well, her mother’s daughter. What did you all expect?"
Josephine shot him a glare.
Elizabeth hurried to Sophia’s side, gently clasping her uninjured hand. "You frightened us, Soph. We were worried."
Sophia softened. "I did not intend to frighten anyone."
Alexander snorted. "You broke a man’s jaw."
"It was at an angle that suggested it deserved breaking," Sophia countered.
Several noblewon stifled reluctant laughs. Even Queen Charlotte’s lips twitched.
But Arabella stepped in, voice firm.
"Regardless of rit, your actions will reshape the remainder of this season. If you wish to protect your reputation—and your future—it is ti to let the adults negotiate the aftermath."
Sophia bowed her head—not in submission, but in an exhausted acknowledgnt.
"As you wish, Grandmama."
Queen Charlotte rose, gathering her retinue.
"One thing is certain," she said, giving Sophia a final glance filled with reluctant admiration.
"London will not forget Lady Sophia Fiennes this season."
She swept out with the authority of a woman who had seen generations of scandals—yet none quite like this.
That very next day, London was humming.
Not in the polite, restrained way of calling cards and afternoon tea—but in that unmistakable, electric way when sothing outrageous had happened and the entire aristocracy could taste the scandal on the air.
By noon, there was not a drawing room, tea salon, or pronade path untouched by the revelation:
Lady Sophia Fiennes had struck Earl Frederick Lockhart inside White’s.
The first whispers ca from footn delivering parcels.
The second wave ca from maids changing linens.
By the ti the aristocracy stepped out for their afternoon stroll, the story had matured like overripe fruit.
At Bond Street, two marchionesses nearly collided outside a milliner’s shop.
"Have you heard?" one hissed, clutching her reticule. "Lady Sophia punched Lord Lockhart!"
The other blinked rapidly. "Oh heavens... did she faint afterward?"
"Faint? My dear, the man staggered. She remained upright."
A scandalized little gasp escaped both of them.
At Gunter Tea’s room, three debutantes huddled around their ice creams.
"She struck him with her bare hand?"
"A lady is not supposed—"
"But Lockhart deserved sothing, did he not?"
They looked around nervously, then leaned closer.
"...I heard she challenged him to a duel."
"...A duel?"
"...with pistols."
One girl nearly dropped her spoon.
In White’s entryway, a knot of young lords whispered furiously.
"I tell you it’s true—Beaumont saw the whole thing."
"Lockhart’s jaw is purple."
"Purple? I heard it was crooked."
"No, no—broken. And apparently she quoted philosophy first."
A collective shiver went through them "A lady quoting philosophy then throwing a punch..."
"...Montgory is dood. Completely dood."
In the Pronade at Hyde Park that afternoon, Mothers slowed their steps as the gossip flowed like a warm river.
"It was reckless."
"And improper."
"And positively heroic."
"She defended Lady Margaret, you know," another whispered.
"That child has a heart too soft for her own good."
"And that Montgory boy—didn’t he rush to her imdiately?"
"Oh, quite. Practically sprinted. It’s obvious he’s in love."
"I just wonder how the Huntingtons will spin this," one mused.
"Oh please," sniffed another, "they’ll turn it into so grand narrative about honor and moral courage. They always do."
In every threshold, in every corner and every parlor, the sa sentence repeated like an incantation:
"Lady Sophia Fiennes struck Earl Lockhart."
So said it disapprovingly. So admiringly. So with a spark of envy.
But all said it.
Because no matter how improper, how shocking, how unladylike—it was unforgettable.
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