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The palace looked the sa.

Which was, frankly, insulting.

Gabriel stepped out of the convoy with the wind still tugging at the edges of his coat, the collar skewed from the ride and his scarf half-loosened in frustration. He hadn’t said a word on the way back—which, for Gabriel, was never a good sign.

He’d been pulled from the Winter Ball halfway through a sentence. A well-constructed one, delivered with perfect timing and a razor’s edge of charm. There had been polite laughter, Serathine’s daughter hovering too close, and a tray of overly sweet fruit cocktails he’d already declined more than once.

"We’re going ho," Edward had said, with that particular tone that didn’t allow for interpretation. Not later. Not after dessert. Not after Gabriel had finished bleeding diplomacy across a room of half-interested nobles.

Now.

They’d inford Serathine and the rest of the group. And then they’d left—without Damian.

And that... that was the part that stuck.

Because if Damian had sent Edward and stayed behind, it ant sothing had gone wrong. Sothing calculated. And, more importantly, sothing he didn’t want Gabriel to see.

He was shielding him again.

Edward hadn’t explained, not really. Just a brief, sterile line: "There may have been concern regarding the refreshnts."

Which, in imperial terms, ant soone had likely tried to poison him.

Again.

Gabriel didn’t even bother to ask what was in the glass. He hadn’t touched anything except mineral water and his own plate—and even then, only after Edward gave the nod. He wasn’t careless.

And he wasn’t shocked.

He did sigh, though. A sharp breath through his nose as they entered the palace’s front hall, the doors closing behind them with too much ceremony.

Because he understood.

He understood the implications. The fact that he was removed quietly, without fuss, and without explanation. That his presence at court—his body, his silence, his health—was now sothing being handled.

And he knew what that ant.

He was pregnant. He was marked. He was political currency. And now, he was fragile.

That was the worst of it.

Not the threat itself, but the way the walls had started to close in—not with violence, but velvet gloves. Whispered precautions. Silent decisions made behind his back in the na of safety. The way everyone kept treating him like sothing breakable, delicate, strategic.

He wasn’t fragile. He was furious.

"Edward," Gabriel said, finally breaking the silence as they turned into the main corridor, "if you’re going to remain quiet, at least give the ti necessary for this. You’re almost pushing ."

Edward didn’t break stride. His expression remained unchanged.

"I’m fine." Gabriel continued, yanking his scarf off with one hand, irritation curling in every word. "I walked myself out of the ballroom. I stepped into the car. I didn’t faint, cry, or threaten to set anything on fire. The least I’m owed is one minute to adjust my coat."

Edward didn’t stop, but he did slow half a step. Just enough to let Gabriel move at his own pace. A concession. Not an apology.

"That’s better," Gabriel muttered.

The palace was too still. Soone had cleared the way ahead of them too thoroughly. There was no staff. No passing courtiers. Just marble and etherlight and the sound of Gabriel’s own heels against the floor.

Every inch of it scread control.

He hated it.

"Damian could’ve sent a ssage," Gabriel added under his breath. "He knows I don’t panic. Or, if I do, I do it quietly and after the threat is dead."

Edward didn’t respond.

Gabriel narrowed his eyes. "That wasn’t rhetorical."

"I’m aware," Edward replied mildly. "But you already know the answer."

Gabriel exhaled again—less a sigh, more the sound of soone choosing not to scream into expensive curtains.

’Right. I knew. Damian was trying to protect and the child. Again.’

The thought settled sowhere behind his ribs, sour and bitter and infuriatingly soft.

They were halfway down the corridor when Gabriel stopped walking.

Edward halted two steps ahead, turning only when the silence stretched a mont too long.

"Are we going to speak about it," Gabriel asked, tone sharp but deceptively polite, "or just panic and pray I don’t collapse before the blood results co in?"

Edward didn’t answer imdiately.

Which was, of course, the answer.

Gabriel folded his arms across his chest, coat half-off his shoulder, expression unimpressed.

"I’m not going to shatter because soone brewed sothing with malicious intent," he said. "And unless you think the tea also erased my critical thinking, I’d like to be briefed before I’m examined like a particularly delicate porcelain artifact."

Edward gave him a long, asured look.

Then: "It was a contraceptive compound. Masked in a blend tailored for oga focus. Harmless to most. Damaging to male ogas. Difficult to detect. Subtle over ti."

Gabriel blinked once.

"That’s not an answer," he said. "That’s a dical brochure."

"It’s what we have so far," Edward replied. "And it’s what the physician will confirm."

Gabriel didn’t speak. Not at first.

Then, slowly, "So soone tried to sterilize ?"

Edward hesitated. "Yes."

Gabriel tilted his head. "But I’m already pregnant."

"Yes," Edward said again.

A beat.

Gabriel arched a brow. "And no one thought that might be worth ntioning before I was dragged out of the ball like a scandal in silk shoes?"

Edward exhaled. "Damian didn’t want you to know until we had confirmation."

Gabriel’s jaw clenched, but he smiled anyway.

It wasn’t a kind smile.

"Of course he didn’t."

He started walking again, the motion smooth, deliberate, as if his anger had sowhere to be and had already sent a carriage ahead.

Edward followed without a word. There was nothing left to say that wouldn’t make it worse.

Monts later, Gabriel pushed open the door to the dical office. The hinges had been oiled. The light was soft, calculated. Too clean.

The physician looked up, already gloved, already waiting. A tray of sterile instrunts sat at the edge of the counter—prepped and positioned as if Gabriel were expected to collapse at any mont.

He didn’t.

He stepped inside with the practiced elegance of soone who had endured far worse under brighter lights.

The source of this c𝐨ntent is freewe(b)nov𝒆l

You are reading Bound by the Mark of Lies (BL) Chapter 256: Chapter 250: Impromptu medical checkup (1) on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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