The carriage rolled to a stop, its heavy wheels crunching over the gravel of the grand estate. The Duke’s mansion lood before them, its high spires and dark stone walls standing as an unspoken promise of power, of luxury, and of captivity.
Eliza stepped out, her gown whispering against the cold marble of the entrance steps. The journey had been silent, the air thick with unspoken words. She had sensed sothing shift in Raen’s presence, though she couldn’t yet put a na to it.
The doors swung open, and a row of servants bowed deeply as they passed. The Duke walked beside her, but his grip on control was unmistakable. Every movent, every breath he took seed calculated, deliberate as if he were weaving an invisible web around her.
At the threshold of the grand dining hall, Raen finally spoke.
“Go inside,” he said, his tone even, unreadable.
Eliza hesitated. “Aren’t you coming with ?”
He smiled, but there was sothing in his eyes a glint of amusent laced with sothing far darker. “Soon.”
With that, he turned, leaving her at the entrance. She should have questioned him, should have pressed for answers. But she didn’t. Without another word, she stepped forward, the heavy doors closing behind her.
***
Raen strode down the dimly lit corridor, his boots echoing against the polished floors. The butler was already waiting for him, standing in the shadows with the quiet efficiency that only long years of service could bring.
“My lord,” the man said with a bow.
“I need another device,” Raen ordered, his voice low, controlled. “One that will ensure my complete hold over her.”
The butler did not flinch. He had seen the Duke’s thods before, had witnessed the careful, calculated steps he took to bind what he desired.
“What specifications would you like?” the butler asked.
Raen exhaled slowly, rolling his shoulders as though shaking off the remnants of restraint. “Sothing more refined. The current one is effective, but it lacks… precision. I want sothing that does not rely control but consus.”
The butler nodded. “It will be arranged.”
Raen’s fingers traced over his wrist, where a subtle rune glowed for just a second before vanishing. He had already lessened the heat in Eliza’s invisible collar just enough to allow her mind a little clarity. Enough for her to believe she was regaining control.
But in truth, it was only another chain.
Because clarity was dangerous. It let her think. It let her struggle. And Raen wanted her to fight, to resist, so he could break her anew.
***
Inside the dining hall, Eliza felt a strange shift within her. The haze that had clouded her thoughts for days had thinned, the burning heat that had clung to her skin now dimd to embers. She pressed a hand to her throat, feeling… lighter.
Her mind, once drowning in the storm of Raen’s presence, now felt sharp, awake. The mory of his touch, his whispered words, still lingered, but they no longer consud her like wildfire.
For the first ti in what felt like forever, she thought clearly.
And she realized sothing chilling.
She had never truly been free.
Her fingers curled into the silk of her dress as she sat at the dining table. Raen had allowed this. He had given her just enough control to believe she had won it.
A bitter laugh almost escaped her lips. The realization should have terrified her. But instead, it did sothing else.
It angered her.
Because if Raen thought he was the only one who could play this ga, he was wrong.
And for the first ti, a seed of rebellion blood in her heart.
***
Raen returned to the dining hall monts later, his expression unreadable as he took his seat across from her.
Eliza looked at him, truly looked at him, and felt the weight of everything he had done settle into her bones.
“You’re quiet,” he observed, tilting his head slightly.
She t his gaze without flinching. “I was just thinking.”
His lips curled into a slow smirk. “Dangerous.”
She lifted her glass of wine, her fingers steady. “Only if I allow it to be.”
His smirk deepened. She thought she was regaining control. She thought she was beginning to understand the rules of this ga.
Good.
Because there was nothing more thrilling than watching her fight… only to realize, in the end, that she would never truly escape.
Not from him.
Not from the cage he had built around her.
And certainly not from the love that burned between them - bright, consuming, and utterly inescapable.
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