[Jake’s POV]
The next evening, I arrived at Aurelia Bancroft’s townhouse without a gun, without guards, and without the comforting illusion that either of those things would have made the room safer.
Her ho stood on East Seventy-Third behind a black door polished so cleanly it reflected the streetlights like dark water. No sign. No obvious security. No visible caras. That was how I knew the house was watched from every angle. People like Aurelia did not leave their safety to locks. They turned entire neighborhoods into soft cages and made everyone inside pretend they were only being polite.
A driver opened the door before I knocked.
"Mr. Hart," he said.
Not a question.
I stepped inside.
Warmth wrapped around imdiately. The entrance hall slled of lilies, old wood, and expensive perfu. Sowhere deeper in the house, won were laughing softly. Not the careless laughter from parties, but the controlled kind, the kind that said each person knew who was listening and which nas were dangerous to ntion before dessert.
Aurelia appeared at the end of the hall in a deep burgundy dress, her dark hair pinned elegantly at the back of her neck. She looked older than Claire, older than Nia, older in that deliberate way won like her carried experience as a weapon rather than a burden. Not tired. Not softened. Mature, polished, and dangerous enough to make every young man in the room feel like he had brought a wooden spoon to a knife fight.
"Jake," she said.
"Aurelia."
Her eyes moved over once. "No guards."
"You said not to bring any."
"I said many things. n usually hear the ones that flatter them."
"I am trying a new thing."
"Listening?"
"Don’t spread it around."
She smiled and offered her hand. I took it lightly. Her fingers were cool, rings simple but old. She let the contact last exactly long enough to remind that this was her house, her table, her rhythm.
"Co," she said. "You are late enough to be noticed and early enough to be useful."
"That sounds intentional."
"It always is."
She led through a drawing room where six won stood in small clusters with wine glasses and soft smiles. Marianne Bellamy was near the fireplace, dressed in cream and gold, her auburn hair swept over one shoulder. She looked calr than she had any right to be. When her eyes t mine, she gave the smallest nod. Not rescue . Not thank you. Just, I am here.
Margot Delacroix stood near the window.
Black dress. Dark blonde hair. Gloves.
Of course she wore the gloves.
She was speaking to an older woman with silver hair and a pearl necklace, but the mont I entered, her attention shifted. Not her face. Not her posture. Just the eyes. She noticed everything, then returned to her conversation as if I were furniture being moved into the wrong room.
Good.
Let her pretend.
Aurelia raised her glass slightly. "Ladies, Mr. Jake Hart."
The room turned toward with the synchronized grace of predators hearing a twig snap.
Vivian Crossley reached first.
She was sixty-one, silver-haired, beautifully dressed, and smiling like soone’s favorite grandmother if that grandmother knew where every body was buried. Her hand was warm when she took mine.
"Mr. Hart," she said. "You are younger than your rumors."
"And you are kinder than yours."
The System appeared instantly.
**[Penalty Warning!]**
**Complint detected.]**
No.
A small hiccup escaped before I could stop it.
The room paused.
Vivian stared at .
Then she laughed. "Oh, I like him."
Aurelia’s mouth curved behind her glass.
Margot did not smile.
**[Mission Progress: 9%]**
**[Penalty Completed.]**
**System Comnt: Sohow effective.]**
I hated that this kept working.
Dinner was served in a long room lit by candles and low chandeliers. The table was round, not rectangular. That was the first thing I noticed. A round table gave no one the obvious head seat, but Aurelia had still found a way to sit where every glance eventually returned to her. Marianne sat three seats to my left. Vivian was placed beside . Margot was across from , far enough that I could not speak to her without involving the table, close enough that she could watch my hands.
The food arrived quietly. Soup first. Sothing pale and delicate that looked like it had been frightened onto the plate.
Vivian leaned toward . "Do you know why Aurelia invited you?"
"No."
"Good answer. n who say yes usually bore ."
"What do you think?"
"I think she wanted to see whether you would co in swinging."
"And?"
Vivian tasted her soup. "You ca in listening. That is worse."
Across the table, Margot finally spoke.
"Worse for whom?"
Her voice was exactly as it had been on the phone. Smooth. Elegant. Calm enough to be insulting.
Vivian looked delighted. "For whoever expected noise."
Margot’s eyes shifted to . "Mr. Hart has made a reputation out of noise."
"I am trying to disappoint people in new ways," I said.
Aurelia lifted her glass. "A noble hobby."
Soft laughter moved around the table.
I did not look at Margot again too quickly. Marianne had been right. Won like her survived by becoming the center of the hidden conversation. So I let Vivian pull into talk about art donors, fake restoration budgets, and a retired judge who apparently had a mistress in Lisbon and a wife who knew but preferred the tax arrangent. It was ridiculous, cruel, funny, and more useful than half the board reports I had read in my life.
The Winter Table was not gossip.
It was intelligence dressed in silk.
Every story had a number hidden inside it. A divorce. A shipnt. A foundation transfer. A frightened husband. A missing signature. These won passed secrets like sugar, sweetening the room while feeding each other weapons.
By the second course, I understood why Isabella wanted a hand here.
By the third, I understood why she was careful.
Aurelia watched from her place at the curve of the table. "You are very quiet tonight, Jake."
"I was told to listen."
"By whom?"
"Soone smarter than ."
"That does not narrow it down."
Vivian laughed into her wine.
Even Marianne’s mouth twitched.
Margot’s gaze remained steady. "Listening can be a performance."
"So can indifference," I said, finally looking at her.
The table softened around the edges.
There it was.
The first cut.
Margot smiled faintly. "And what am I performing?"
"Patience."
"Am I?"
"Yes. You have been waiting for soone else to ask why I ca."
"And why did you?"
I leaned back slightly, letting the silence breathe. Every woman at the table felt it. Not because I was powerful. Not because I had a plan. Because I did not rush to fill it, and in a room like this, silence belonged to whoever could afford to hold it.
"I ca because frightened n keep ntioning won they underestimate," I said.
Vivian’s smile faded.
Aurelia watched more carefully now.
Margot’s gloved fingers rested beside her knife. "That sounds like an accusation."
"No. An observation."
"Against whom?"
"Not the won."
That changed the room.
A small thing. A shift in shoulders. A glance between Vivian and Marianne. Aurelia’s eyes warming by a fraction. Even Margot noticed it, and for the first ti, irritation touched the edge of her face.
She had expected to accuse. To threaten. To co after her directly.
Instead, I had handed the room respect.
Not flattery.
Respect.
Harder to dismiss.
Marianne spoke then, voice calm. "n often mistake silence for loyalty."
Vivian added, "And patience for ignorance."
Aurelia looked at Margot. "Wouldn’t you agree?"
Margot smiled. "Of course."
But she did not like being turned into part of the room instead of its hidden director.
Good.
The main course arrived, giving everyone a reason to look away. Lamb, vegetables cut too perfectly, sauce painted across porcelain like modern art that had finally beco useful. I ate enough to keep Nia from threatening later and listened as the conversation shifted again, this ti toward foundations.
Marianne placed her wine glass down.
"I discovered irregularities in my foundation transfers," she said.
The table went quiet with impressive speed.
Aurelia did not stop her.
Vivian watched Margot.
Margot watched Marianne.
"That must be distressing," Margot said.
"It was," Marianne replied. "Then I beca angry."
"Anger is rarely a good auditor."
"No," Marianne said. "But it finds locked doors quickly."
I almost smiled.
Margot’s fingers tightened once around her glass. "Have you involved counsel?"
"Not yet."
"Wise. These matters can beco embarrassing if handled publicly."
Marianne looked directly at her. "For whom?"
The air sharpened.
Aurelia sipped her wine like she had been waiting all evening for soone else to draw blood.
Margot’s smile remained. "For families."
"My children are safe," Marianne said.
There it was.
A direct strike.
Margot understood instantly.
Her eyes moved from Marianne to .
I gave her nothing.
The System chid.
**[Mission Progress: 47%]**
**[Target Margot Delacroix: Irritated.]**
**[Marianne Bellamy: Excellent.]**
For once, I agreed completely.
Vivian leaned toward and murmured, "Your angry wife is doing well."
"She is not my wife."
"No," Vivian said, amused. "But she is angry enough to be useful."
Across the table, Margot placed her napkin beside her plate. "Excuse ."
She stood.
Aurelia tilted her head. "Leaving so soon?"
"Powder room."
"Of course."
Margot left the dining room through the side door.
I waited two seconds.
Three.
Then Aurelia looked at .
Not permission.
A challenge.
I stood.
Vivian smiled into her wine.
Claire’s voice ca softly through the comm hidden beneath my collar. "Jake, she is moving toward the back corridor. No visible guards inside, but two n outside shifted positions."
"I see her."
"You do not see anything. You are in a dining room."
"I feel spiritually inford."
"Do not make jokes while following a professional blackmailer."
I walked out before she could say more.
The corridor beyond the dining room was narrow and warm, lined with frad botanical prints. Margot stood near the end, one gloved hand resting on a small side table, phone already in the other. She did not seem surprised when I appeared.
"You are clumsy," she said.
"I get that when people are nervous."
"You think I am nervous?"
"I think you left a table you were controlling because Marianne said her children were safe."
Her smile thinned. "You are sentintal."
"Sotis."
"That makes you weak."
"No," I said. "It makes expensive to threaten."
For the first ti, Margot’s mask slipped.
Only a fraction.
But I saw it.
She stepped closer, voice low. "You are playing in the wrong room, Mr. Hart. Isabella does not need to touch you directly. She only needs to make everyone near you expensive to keep."
"So she sent you."
"She sent many things."
"Are you one of them?"
Margot smiled again. "I am the polite one."
Behind her, the back door opened slightly.
A man’s shadow appeared.
Claire’s voice sharpened. "Jake."
I moved first, grabbing Margot’s wrist before she could step back. Her glove was smooth beneath my fingers. She stiffened, not afraid, angry.
The shadow behind her vanished.
A decoy.
No attack.
Just a test.
Margot looked down at my hand on her wrist, then back at . "Careful."
I let go.
"Tell Isabella," I said, "I found her table."
Margot adjusted her glove slowly. "She already knows."
Then she leaned closer.
"Ask yourself why she let you in."
She walked past and returned to the dining room as if nothing had happened.
I stood alone in the corridor for a mont, the sll of lilies and candle wax pressing around .
The System appeared.
**[Ding!]**
**[Intelligence Fragnt Acquired.]**
**Fragnt: Isabella expected Host to enter Winter Table.]**
**Mission Progress: 62%]**
That was not a victory.
That was a warning.
I returned to the dining room with Margot already seated, smiling politely over her wine. Aurelia watched enter, eyes sharp enough to cut glass.
Vivian leaned toward as I sat.
"Well?" she whispered.
I picked up my fork.
"She is exactly as unpleasant as advertised."
Vivian laughed.
Margot smiled.
Aurelia lifted her glass.
And sowhere beneath the table’s warmth, the trap began to breathe.
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