"No," she snapped, the restraint finally cracking. "You do not get to interrupt this ti."
Rafael leaned back in his chair instead, spine straight, hands still folded loosely on the table. If she wanted a spectacle, she would have to create it without his help.
"I have tolerated your obstinacy for years," Delphine continued, her voice sharp enough now that it was no longer rely audible but ripping through the nearby air. "I have defended your refusal to marry, your delays, and your insistence that your work excuses your absence from every expectation placed upon you as my son."
A pause. A breath drawn too hard.
"And then," she went on, "I discover that the one man in this Empire who should not be anywhere near my family has decided to make you his interest."
Kendall’s fingers tightened around his glass. Anatoli looked up sharply.
"You know exactly who I an," Delphine said, voice rising despite herself. "Gregoris Frasner. Duke of Alamina. The sa man who has spent years opposing in council, undermining my alliances, and smiling while he does it."
Rafael’s jaw tightened. "Mother..."
"You will listen," she cut in. "Because you owe that much."
Her anger had slipped its leash now. This was no longer the carefully injured matron. This was Delphine Rosenroth with a grievance, and she was past pretending it was purely maternal.
"You refuse marriage," she said, almost incredulous with fury. "You evade your Coming of Age recognition so thoroughly that even the registry barely notices your absence. You make yourself unclaimable by design..."
Kendall sucked in a quiet breath. Anatoli went pale.
"—and yet sohow," Delphine continued, voice ringing, "the only man I consider a personal enemy has decided that you are worth courting."
The word ’courting’ ca out like an accusation.
"Do you have any idea how that looks?" she demanded. "An oga who will not marry suddenly becos desirable to the Duke of Alamina the mont his status is obscured? Do you know what people assu, Rafael? That you were waiting. That you were holding out."
Heat flared under Rafael’s skin, sharp and unwelco.
"I didn’t invite him," he said tightly.
"Oh, I know," Delphine replied, with biting certainty. "Because if you had, at least it would have been honest."
She inhaled again, slower this ti, and when she spoke next, her voice was colder, controlled again, but only barely.
"He sent a contract," Delphine said.
Silence fell around the table like a dropped curtain.
"A month ago," she continued, as if savoring the timing. "While you were hiding behind procedure and rerouted acknowledgnts. While you were congratulating yourself for being clever."
Rafael’s breath caught despite himself.
"You didn’t think," Delphine pressed on, "that I might notice a Duke of Alamina submitting a marriage frawork for my son?"
Kendall stared at Rafael, stunned. Anatoli looked physically ill.
"I discovered it late in the afternoon," Delphine went on, her tone sharpening into sothing almost vicious. "After the palace finally quieted enough for real work. And do you know what offended most?"
Her voice dropped, every word placed with intent.
"That the boy I raised is not turning against ."
Rafael exhaled slowly.
"Is that all?" he asked, his voice becoming so cold that it stopped movent at the table around them. Even the nearby conversations faltered.
A beat.
"Or do you intend to continue?"
He lifted his gaze fully now.
"Lady Rosenroth," Rafael said, and the title severed the last personal thread between them. He was done indulging both her and the situation she was orchestrating. Gregoris, for all his calculation, had never pretended to care about Rafael’s feelings. Delphine had and that failure cut deeper.
"I should remind Your Excellency," he continued evenly, "that I beca a legal adult the mont I completed the ceremony."
His tone never rose, and he maintained his usual deanor reserved for councils with Damian and Gabriel at the sa table.
"That transition revoked your authority to make personal decisions on my behalf. It also revoked your right to interfere with, delay, or suppress correspondence addressed to ."
Rafael chose a pause to allow the words to sink in with everyone who was listening.
"Obstructing a contract in which I am the primary beneficiary is not maternal concern," Rafael said. "It is a legal overreach."
Silence fell hard.
Kendall’s glass hovered midair. Anatoli stared outright.
Rafael leaned back slightly, composed, lethal in his calm.
"You may disapprove of who courts ," he went on. "You may dislike his House, his thods, or his proximity to your influence. None of that grants you standing."
His gaze sharpened.
"And none of it authorizes you to sha publicly to regain control."
Rafael took a deep breath before continuing.
"If you wished to be consulted," Rafael said, "you should not have chosen humiliation as your opening move."
He reached for his comm to anchor the mont.
"I will not accept a definition of family that requires my public diminishnt," he continued, voice carrying just far enough now that there was no pretending this was private. "Nor will I remain silent while my autonomy is frad as a defect."
Another pause.
"Being courted by Gregoris Frasner," Rafael added coolly, "is neither an offense nor a failure."
His eyes hardened.
"What you have done today, however, is."
Delphine’s breath was sharp on the other end of the line.
"You forget your place," she snapped.
Rafael leaned back in his chair, perfectly calm and with a serene smile on his face. But those eyes, those pale blue eyes, were the definition of frost.
"Should I remind you," Rafael said evenly, "that His Excellency, the Duke of Alamina, already has your accord?"
The silence that followed was imdiate and total.
"Written," Rafael continued, each word placed with care, "and registered through the archaic courting system both of you insisted upon preserving."
Kendall’s head snapped up. Anatoli’s breath caught audibly.
"You acknowledged receipt," Rafael went on, voice unchanging. "You did not reject it. You did not contest its validity."
"That constitutes consent."
Delphine said nothing.
Rafael let the weight of it settle before literally dismantling a feared queen socialite with words alone.
"So no," he continued calmly, "I am not forgetting my place. I am occupying it."
A faint murmur rippled through the surrounding tables now. People were no longer pretending this was private.
"You do not get to denounce a process you personally validated," Rafael said. "Nor do you get to weaponize my reluctance to marry as a moral failure while simultaneously authorizing the very chanism you now pretend to abhor."
Delphine’s voice, when it ca, was low and furious. "You are twisting procedure."
"No," Rafael replied. "I am citing it."
Rafael didn’t care that Delphine had approved the courting system only because of Augustus. He didn’t care that his mother made a mistake in not checking who the Duke of Alamina really was. Because Delphine didn’t care about what he wanted, only what she thought was good for Rafael, and he was done pretending he cared enough to put up with it.
"You wanted leverage," he said quietly. "You wanted unsettled."
His gaze lifted, unfocused now, seeing not the restaurant but the pattern she had always followed.
"What you did not anticipate," Rafael added, "is that you provided with standing."
He straightened slightly, the movent subtle.
"You chose to act as gatekeeper," he said. "You chose to make my personal life a matter of registry and public comntary."
His voice hardened, not louder, just sharper.
"That forfeited your claim to discretion."
Kendall swallowed. Anatoli closed his eyes briefly, as if bracing for impact.
"I will not contest the courtship publicly," Rafael concluded. "Because legally, I do not need to."
A beat.
"But I will not allow you to pretend this is about concern when it is about control."
Silence.
Then, softly, almost kindly, Rafael added, "You taught better than that."
He reached forward and ended the call.
The comm went dark.
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