Marcus accelerated his pace, pushing himself harder through the press of the crowd. But the ballroom remained densely packed—an obstacle course of humanity. Waiters carrying trays laden with champagne and delicate appetizers constantly crossed his path. Guests, so moving with purpose and others aimlessly, created a living maze that slowed his pursuit.
"Excuse , coming through," he called out, his voice polite but insistent.
"Watch out, please move aside," he added, sidestepping a server balancing an improbable number of glasses.
The corridor beyond the ballroom was considerably dimr, lit only by carefully positioned wall sconces that created more shadow than illumination. Marcus stared intently at the blurred figure retreating ahead of him, his eyes straining to identify distinguishing features. He quickened his pace, closing the distance increntally.
At a corner, the figure ahead seed to register sothing. The person's body language shifted almost imperceptibly, and then the head turned slightly, glancing backward.
In the insufficient light, Marcus could make out only a fragntary outline: the distinctive curve of what appeared to be a hooked nose, the silhouette of a lean fra dressed in the black and white of service staff.
Marcus imdiately pressed his back against the cool wall, drawing in a shallow breath and holding it in his lungs. He allowed himself to blend into the darkness of the corridor shadows, terrified of alerting his quarry before he'd had the opportunity to observe more.
He waited, counting off seconds in his mind. After approximately ten heartbeats, he heard it: the faint whisper of fabric sliding against fabric. Movent. The sound of soone moving away rapidly.
Marcus spun around the corner, peering outward to track the figure—but what he encountered was not the suspicious waiter.
Instead, Sophia—the household's longti caretaker—was erging from what appeared to be a utility closet used for storing cleaning supplies. Her expression was composed, her deanor entirely unremarkable. She seed, however, to register Marcus's presence with sothing between surprise and relief:
"Young Master? Your timing is rather fortuitous."
Marcus's internal frustration spiked. The waiter must have had knowledge of an alternate route through the villa's interior layout. He'd used that knowledge to slip away while Marcus was trapped behind crowds and obstacles, unable to maintain visual contact. The conspiracy's architect had clearly anticipated pursuit and planned accordingly.
Marcus swallowed his disappointnt and attempted to project calm:
"What is it, Sophia? What do you need?"
Sophia's face arranged itself into an expression of appropriate difficulty—the kind of controlled distress that suggested a minor problem requiring assistance:
"The young lady, Miss Victoria... she's being quite particular about her clothing choice. She's insisting on locating her favorite dress, the one she prefers above all others. I recall that it's been stored in a closet located within the storage room upstairs."
She paused, her explanation continuing with practiced respect:
"Soone must remain here to observe her while she changes—to prevent her from wandering off, as she's sotis inclined to do. I'll need to go locate the dress. Would you be willing to assist by watching over her for a brief ti? She'll be in the first room on the right, at the top of the second-floor staircase."
Marcus's frown deepened. The request seed straightforward, yet sothing about the timing—about the conjunction of events—felt deliberately orchestrated:
"Stay here yourself and watch her. Simply tell where the dress is located, and I'll retrieve it personally."
"Oh, that truly won't be acceptable," Sophia replied quickly, her hand moving in a gesture of polite refusal. Her tone remained deferential, yet carried an unmistakable insistence beneath the courtesy: "I couldn't possibly burden you, Young Master, with such a mundane task as locating clothing. That's properly my responsibility. I'm far more familiar with the villa's storage arrangent. I would simply need you to guard the door for a few monts. I'll return very quickly, I assure you."
Marcus paused, weighing the situation. The man who had tampered with Elena's wheelchair was likely still sowhere within the villa, still potentially a threat. And Victoria, alone in a room on the second floor, would be fundantally vulnerable without soone positioned at her threshold. He nodded his agreent:
"Very well. Go ahead."
"Thank you, Young Master," Sophia replied, her gratitude apparently genuine. She led him up the grand staircase to the second floor with rapid, efficient steps.
Marcus positioned himself outside the specified room as instructed, his back settling against the cool wall. His arms crossed over his chest in a posture of casual watchfulness, though his mind was anything but relaxed.
A profound sense of unease had begun to coil around his heart like a living serpent.
Wait. The realization crystallized gradually. The sequence of events is deviating from the novel's original plot structure.
In the original narrative—the plot progression he'd absorbed from the source material—Elena had been lured to the lakeside location in a state of complete defenselessness. The conspiracy had been straightforward, the danger imdiate and unmistakable.
But this current sequence of events carried a different pattern entirely: First, the wheelchair had been tampered with. Then, Victoria had conveniently—almost choreographically—spilled wine across her dress, necessitating a change of clothing. Imdiately afterward, Sophia had discovered a reason to leave the room and seek a replacent dress. And he, Marcus, had been carefully guided into a position where he was isolated from Elena, standing guard over Victoria instead.
All of this is too coincidental. All of it too perfectly tid.
The realization crashed over him like cold water: This wasn't a haphazard sequence of unfortunate incidents. This was a carefully orchestrated stratagem—a deliberate "lure the tiger from the mountain" tactic. Soone had designed this arrangent specifically to separate him from Elena, to isolate him where he could prove useless while sothing critical unfolded elsewhere.
He sighed, his frustration barely contained, just as hurried footsteps echoed from the direction of the stairwell.
Devon Zhang burst from the stairwell opening, breathing heavily, his face flushed from exertion. He practically collapsed against the wall, holding his knees, his complaint tumbling out between gasps:
"Marcus! Why... why did you run so fast? What happened? Did sothing go wrong?"
Seeing Devon, Marcus experienced a sudden surge of sothing approximating hope. He seized Devon's hand with decisive force, pointed at the closed door before them, and began explaining with rapid-fire intensity:
"Devon, I need a favor imdiately. Victoria is inside, changing clothes, and Sophia went to locate a replacent dress. I need you to stand guard here—keep watch at this door until Sophia returns. Make absolutely certain Victoria doesn't wander off. Her situation is... special. Please. I'm asking as a friend."
Before Devon could fully process this request—before he could formulate a coherent response—Marcus twisted the doorknob, physically ushered the still-dazed Devon into the room, and firmly shut the door behind him.
Through the closed door, Devon's confused voice could be heard:
"Marcus! You treacherous... Marcus, don't leave! What's happening in here? Marcus!"
First Floor Ballroom
The atmosphere maintained its facade of harmonious congeniality. Dr. Rebecca sat positioned beside Elena, speaking in hushed tones as she inquired about Elena's recent dical condition and overall wellbeing.
Adrian, by contrast, sat silently on Elena's opposite side—the embodint of a loyal guardian, his presence steady and reassuring without demanding attention.
Sumr Chen perched directly beside Adrian, her movents solicitous as she carefully selected exquisite pastries from the table's display and offered them to him with obvious attentiveness.
"Teacher Adrian, I haven't properly thanked you for everything you did during the previous incident," Sumr said, her voice carrying notes of nervousness. Her hands twisted anxiously at the fabric of her dress as she looked up at Adrian, her eyes full of genuine gratitude. "You were so helpful when I needed it most."
Adrian adjusted the rimless glasses resting on his nose with characteristic deliberateness. His smile was gentle yet maintained a careful distance—the professional warmth of a teacher maintaining appropriate boundaries:
"Both you and Elena are my students. Protecting you represents both my professional responsibility and my personal duty."
Having completed this statent, his gaze shifted naturally to Elena positioned beside him, and his expression acquired a barely perceptible additional layer of tenderness—sothing that existed beneath the surface, visible only to soone specifically searching for it.
Elena maintained her habitual composure, her gaze fixed on the noisy, chaotic crowd stretching out before them. She appeared indifferent to the conversation occurring imdiately beside her, her expression suggesting that their words were simply background noise without particular significance.
Adrian pressed forward, his concern evident despite his asured tone:
"Elena, I've been wondering... recently, has anyone continued to bother you? Has anyone approached you or caused you distress?"
Elena raised her head, eting Adrian's gaze directly. The light caught the lenses of his glasses, creating a faint luminous halo that seed to emphasize the refined, gentle quality of his features and bearing.
She responded with a gentle shake of her head, her voice steady and controlled:
"No. Everything has been fine. Thank you for your concern, Teacher."
At that precise mont, Sophia approached Elena's position with practiced subtlety. She bent down smoothly, leaning close to Elena's ear, and delivered a ssage in a voice calibrated so carefully that only Elena could possibly hear it:
"Miss, everything has been prepared and positioned according to plan."
Elena drew in a breath so shallow that it was virtually imperceptible. She worked to suppress the sudden acceleration of her heartbeat, maintaining her outward composure even as sothing shifted imperceptibly behind her eyes. When she spoke, her voice remained appropriately low, matching Sophia's volu:
"Has he... left?"
"Yes," Sophia confird with a definitive nod. Then, as though the thought had just surfaced in her awareness, she fumbled in the small pouch suspended from her waist. After a mont, she withdrew a small dication container—the kind designed to hold multiple pills organized by date and ti. Within it rested an array of colorful pills of various shapes and sizes: the pharmaceutical arsenal that Elena required to maintain her health, administered on a strict daily schedule.
Sophia extended her palm slowly, opening it to display the dication. Yet her fingertips trembled—barely noticeably, but the tremor was present nonetheless. Her voice retained its respectful formality:
"Miss, I've just realized... you haven't taken your dication yet today."
Elena's gaze fell upon the familiar assortnt of pills. Imdiately, the taste surfaced in her awareness—that particular bitterness that accompanied their ingestion. Her stomach registered a faint, accompanying discomfort. A subtle frown creased her forehead, and her voice carried distinct notes of resistance:
"I don't wish to take them today."
Sophia's hand trembled again, nearly imperceptibly, yet her tone shifted—becoming gentler, almost indulgent, carrying undertones of permission and acceptance:
"If you don't wish to take them... then perhaps you needn't."
Dr. Rebecca, positioned nearby and therefore privy to this exchange, imdiately straightened her posture. Her expression beca noticeably stern, and her voice adopted the clinical authority characteristic of dical professionals accustod to having their directives followed without question:
"That is absolutely unacceptable. The dication must be taken on schedule. Failure to do so risks negating all the therapeutic progress achieved through previous treatnt protocols."
She fixed Elena with a gaze that allowed no room for negotiation or resistance:
"I won't indulge this resistance. Not today. You will take your dication now."
As she spoke, she moved with practiced efficiency, pouring a glass of water—ward to an appropriate temperature—and extending it toward Elena. Her tone softened marginally, though it retained its fundantal authority, infused now with the particular concern characteristic of a physician addressing a chronically ill patient:
"Look at yourself, Elena. Your complexion remains poor. You're substantially underweight. You must be cooperative about this. Take the dication. Then we'll ensure you eat properly afterward. Your body requires both the pharmaceuticals and proper nutrition to recover."
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