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Gregoris Frasner’s ho office was designed to intimidate quietly.

Dark-paneled walls absorbed light rather than reflected it. The coffered ceiling sat high enough to make most n feel smaller the mont they walked in, and the hand-carved, ancient, and aggressively unnecessary desk was positioned so that anyone standing in front of it had to look up. Gregoris had never pretended otherwise. Wealth, like power, worked best when it did not apologize for itself.

He sat behind the desk now, jacket discarded, sleeves rolled back to his forearms, gold cufflinks glinting in the light with every movent. Several docunts lay open in front of him on trade concessions, military provisioning routes, and council correspondence that required a duke’s signature and patience. He was midway through annotating a clause when the door opened.

Peter, his butler, entered without knocking.

"Your Grace," Peter said, voice even, posture immaculate. "There has been... a situation."

Gregoris did not look up imdiately. He finished the sentence he was underlining, set the stylus aside, and only then lifted his gaze.

"Define situation," he said calmly.

Peter stepped fully into the room and closed the door behind him. "Moon Lotus. Luncheon hour."

That was enough.

Gregoris leaned back slightly in his chair, fingers steepling. "Go on."

"There was a public exchange," Peter continued. "Between Lady Delphine Rosenroth and her son. Witnesses confirm raised voices. Not shouting... but pointed. Very pointed."

Gregoris’s mouth curved, faint and sharp, at the corner.

"Well," he said mildly, "Rafael is hardly one to raise his voice, even when cornered." He leaned back a fraction more, the chair barely protesting beneath him. "Did Delphine take her revenge for his absence from the last year’s Coming of Age ceremony?"

Peter inclined his head. "In effect, yes. She chose the luncheon for maximum visibility."

"Of course she did," Gregoris replied. "Delphine has always preferred punishnt with witnesses."

He rose then, unhurried, and crossed to the window. The grounds below were immaculate, with the perfection that cos from money applied without restriction. He barely saw them.

"She frad his refusal as defect," Peter continued. "Publicly. Questioned his suitability. His judgnt. His... availability."

Gregoris’s fingers stilled against the glass.

"And Rafael?" he asked.

"He did not yield," Peter said. "By all accounts, he responded with procedural clarity. He found out about Your Grace’s marriage contract."

Gregoris tilted his head and turned to Peter. "She told him about it just now? After months?"

"Yes, she considered it as an affront to her, declaring you publicly as her enemy. It seems like Countess Delphine didn’t like that her son used the courting system to force Your Grace to be his partner at the upcoming charitable gala."

Gregoris turned fully toward him then, the faint amusent leaving his expression and sharpening into sothing colder, more attentive.

"Force," he repeated softly. "An interesting choice of word."

Peter kept his face carefully neutral. "That was her framing, Your Grace. She implied coercion. That Lord Rafael manipulated the system to corner you into public association."

A quiet breath left Gregoris’s nose, a chuckle escaping in the end. He pushed away from the window and returned to the desk, resting a hand against it with his usual confidence.

"So," he said mildly, "she accused her own son of being competent."

"Yes."

"And revealed my contract while doing it."

"Yes."

Gregoris’s fingers tapped once against the wood. "Did he know?"

"No," Peter replied. "Witnesses confirm the revelation was not coordinated. Lord Rafael appeared... genuinely surprised."

That pleased him.

Gregoris straightened, interest sharpening into sothing calculating. "Good."

Peter hesitated. "Good, Your Grace?"

Gregoris’s chuckle faded into sothing quieter, more thoughtful. He looked amused in the way n did when things went exactly as expected.

"Isn’t Your Grace worried about it?"

Gregoris leaned back into his chair, the leather creaking softly beneath his weight. For a mont, he didn’t answer. His gaze drifted upward, tracing the familiar lines of the coffered ceiling, the dark wood that had watched him sign death warrants, dismantle Houses, and send n to wars that would never rember their nas.

"No," he said at last.

Peter waited.

"It makes the routine of commanding Shadows and hunting criminals dim," Gregoris continued, voice quieter now, stripped of its earlier amusent. "Predictable." He exhaled slowly. "Threats that announce themselves. Enemies who behave exactly as expected. It dulls the edge."

He shifted, resting one arm along the chair’s edge, fingers relaxed. "Rafael isn’t like that."

Peter’s brow lifted a fraction. "So Your Grace is serious about marrying him?"

Gregoris laughed, his steel silver eyes shining with a trace of ether.

"Serious?" he echoed. "That’s not relevant."

Gregoris leaned back, one arm draped over the chair’s edge, posture relaxed in the way only a man certain of his advantage could afford. "Rafael is an oga," he said plainly. "A restrained one. Highly conditioned. Taught to absorb pressure instead of redirecting it." His eyes narrowed slightly. "And today, he didn’t."

Peter absorbed that. "You see that as compatibility."

"I had all the proof from the last encounters," Gregoris replied. "What’s under the surface is worth taking."

He tapped a finger once against the desk. "He didn’t fold. He stood his ground publicly against the one person who trained him not to." A faint smile returned, sharp and proprietary. "That tells exactly how he’ll behave once claid."

Peter’s expression remained neutral, but his voice lowered. "And you intend to claim him."

"Yes," Gregoris said simply.

"Your Grace, with all due respect, I have to remind him that Lord Rosenroth is a person. One that doesn’t like you... If we take into account the poisoned cookies."

Gregoris didn’t look offended. If anything, the reminder seed to amuse him.

"I’m aware he dislikes ," he said calmly. "That’s not a flaw, but discernnt."

Peter held his ground. "Dislike can harden into refusal."

"It can," Gregoris agreed. "Or it can sharpen into negotiation." His gaze lifted, steel-silver and intent. "Rafael doesn’t lash out blindly. He calculates. Even when he’s angry, he aims."

He straightened slightly, the relaxed sprawl of his posture giving way to sothing more focused. "The cookies were a ssage. He wanted inconvenienced, embarrassed, and reminded that he wasn’t harmless." A pause. "And he chose a thod that wouldn’t get him arrested or publicly ruined."

Peter exhaled slowly. "You find that reassuring."

"I find it attractive," Gregoris corrected. "Because it ans when he resists , he’ll do it intelligently." His mouth curved faintly. "And when he gives ground, it won’t be because he’s broken."

Peter hesitated, then spoke carefully. "You are still describing possession."

"Yes," Gregoris said without hesitation. "I am."

He leaned forward, forearms resting on the desk now, hands loosely clasped. "I don’t want a compliant oga who dissolves the mont pressure is applied. I want one who knows exactly where his limits are and chooses, deliberately, when to let soone past them."

His eyes narrowed a fraction. "Rafael has spent years surviving by making himself smaller. Today he stopped." A quiet satisfaction threaded his voice. "That shift doesn’t happen unless sothing inside him is already aligned for conflict."

Peter considered that. "And you believe that conflict belongs to you."

"I believe," Gregoris said evenly, "that if anyone is going to claim him, it should be soone who sees restraint as strength." He leaned back again, unbothered. "Soone who won’t mistake his silence for surrender."

The room settled into silence.

"Prepare the gala response," Gregoris added after a mont. "And adjust security protocols. If Rafael is changing tactics, others will notice."

Peter inclined his head. "And if Lord Rosenroth escalates?"

Gregoris’s smile returned, slow and unmistakably predatory. "Then I’ll et him where he stands."

He reached for the next docunt, already done with the question.

"After all," he said calmly, "he’s stopped being quiet. And I have no intention of letting anyone else benefit from that first."

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