Randel did not leave.
He stopped in the shadow of a massive column. The court physician was already bandaging his wounded hand, but his gaze — burning with cold fire — remained fixed on the center of the hall. Pain, shock, and wounded pride had fused inside him into sothing else entirely: steel-hard, rciless determination. He was not a boy to be pushed aside with a single gesture. He was the heir of Aichenwald, and what he considered his, he did not surrender lightly.
The orchestra began a waltz. Elegant, flowing, laced with hidden tension.
It was at that precise mont that Lord Caelan, wearing a light, triumphant smile, bowed before Amanda.
“Would you do the honor, Lady Custodian? Allow to prove that imperial nobles know how to do more than sche — we can also dance.”
Still feeling the weight of Randel’s stare upon her, Amanda nodded. It was the logical move. Part of the ga. She placed her hand in his, and they glided onto the parquet.
Their dance was flawless. Two masked figures — one dark, one radiant — moved in perfect harmony. Caelan was an exceptional partner: confident, leading, his touch light yet indisputable. Amanda matched him; her body, guided by the muscle mory of its original owner, executed the complex steps with ease. But her gaze kept drifting, again and again, back to that shadowed column.
Randel stood motionless. He never took his eyes off them. His face was a mask of icy calm, but every muscle was strung tight to breaking. He saw Caelan’s hand resting on her waist. Saw him lean in to murmur sothing that made Amanda’s mask tilt slightly toward him. With every such movent, with every perfectly synchronized step, the cold inside Randel condensed further, hardening into diamond.
“I’m sorry,” the thought flashed through Amanda’s mind when her eyes t his once more. “I don’t know what’s happening to . You’re too close. It frightens . This… isn’t .”
She had thought this performance would push him away. But watching his rigid, tense figure, she realized with dawning horror that everything had backfired completely. He had not retreated. He had lain in wait. And in his eyes she read not despair, but a promise. The promise of a storm.
And the storm arrived.
The waltz reached its climax. Couples spun, music flowed like a river. Caelan, caught up in the mont and in what he believed was his victory, drew Amanda a fraction closer than etiquette permitted. His lips returned to her ear.
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And at that exact instant, Randel stepped out of the shadow of the column.
He crossed the hall not like a guest, but like its master — parting the crowd with nothing but the force of his gaze. His bandaged hand was pressed to his chest, yet there was such power, such unassailable authority in his bearing that people instinctively drew back. The music did not stop, but it felt as though the entire murmur of the hall had been swallowed by the rising thunderhead of his anger.
He reached them in perfect ti with the music. Without a word, he laid his uninjured hand on Caelan’s shoulder. The touch was not rough, but so heavy, so commanding, that the imperial envoy fell silent mid-sentence and turned.
“My dance,” Randel said.
His voice was quiet, yet it rang louder than any orchestra. There was no request in it. It was a command.
Caelan froze. His smile remained, but it had turned brittle.
“Lord Randel, you appear… unwell. Your hand—”
“I said. My dance.” Randel shifted his gaze to Amanda, and in his eyes she read sothing that stole her breath. This was not a plea. It was a challenge — to her, to her ga, to her attempt to run. “Custodian.” He spoke her title, and in his mouth it sounded like possession.
Amanda looked at him — at his pale face twisted by inner struggle, at the blood seeping through the bandage on his hand. Her own plan was crumbling before her eyes, and instead of panic, she was suddenly flooded with a strange, aching anticipation. Almost unconsciously, she nodded.
Seeing her assent, Caelan released her hand with a light, mocking smile.
“As you wish. It is not every day one sees a duke dance one-handed.”
Randel ignored him completely. He did not take her hand. He simply stepped forward, taking Caelan’s place. His uninjured hand settled on her waist — firr, surer than the imperial’s had been. His wounded hand remained between them like a silent reproach.
And a new waltz began.
But this was no longer an elegant dance. This was combat.
He led her strongly, almost harshly; his steps were wider, his rhythm more commanding. He did not look at her. His gaze was fixed sowhere ahead, yet his entire being was focused on her. He spoke no words. He simply danced — pouring into every turn, every movent, all his fury, all his pain, all his questions, and his unshakable declaration: *You are mine.*
Amanda, thrown off balance, tried at first to resist. But his will was stronger. And gradually her own body began to answer. This was no longer a ga. This was sothing raw, real, and terrifyingly sincere. She felt the heat of his body through their clothes, heard his quickened breathing. And what she had taken for weakness — that strange warmth in her chest whenever she saw him — suddenly no longer seed like an enemy, but the only anchor in this raging sea of lies and intrigue.
The dance ended as abruptly as it had begun. The music ceased. Randel stopped, but did not release her. At last he lowered his burning gaze to her face.
“Enough gas,” he whispered, so softly that only she could hear. His fingers tightened slightly on her waist. “We will talk. Now.”
And without giving her a chance to protest, still holding her hand, he led her away — not toward the balcony, but toward his private chambers. His steps were firm, his grip undeniable.
The ga was over.
Now the real battle began.
And this ti, Amanda understood that she would not be able to run.
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