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The silence that followed Verisse’s remark clung like fog—thick, heavy, impossible to ignore.

Then Lord Sylvain, ever the courteous buffer, chuckled lightly. "Now, now, let’s not turn a mory into scandal. Old acquaintances resurface often. Nothing so unusual about that."

Lady Fiorenza followed his lead. "Of course. We’re all civil here. There’s no harm in saying hello to an old friend, is there?"

But even as their tones softened, the eyes did not.

They were pressing again—now smiling, now gentle—but the push was no less calculated.

"Especially now," Lady Aline added, her voice smooth, "after he’s made such a... grand statent. A figure like that, standing alone in a crowd—one might say it’s even rude not to greet him."

"And you two were close," Verisse chid, her words wrapped in silk. "Who better to make the introductions, hm?"

"Unless, of course," Lord Bartolini said, "you’re afraid?"

That word settled differently.

Not like an accusation.

Like bait.

Valeria’s gaze didn’t flicker, but her spine straightened just enough to draw breath from the air around her. She could see it now—clear as polished glass. This wasn’t idle curiosity. This was maneuvering.

They were trying to tether her.

To Lucavion.

To his recklessness.

To his defiance.

Because if they could link her to him publicly, they wouldn’t need to whisper about Andelheim anymore. They wouldn’t have to question her loyalty to the Empire’s order—they could simply fra her as compromised.

And what better way to do so than by watching her hesitate?

A quiet part of her wanted to turn away. To shut the door with dignity and make no move at all.

But another part...

Another part twisted.

Why didn’t I go to him?

Not just because of the scandal. Not just because of the danger.

But because she didn’t want to be seen near him. Not now. Not after he shattered protocol and scorched the foundation of the court in one sweep.

He had beco untouchable—not in elevation, but in volatility.

And yet...

Her eyes drifted, almost against her will, toward the far corner of the banquet hall.

There he was.

Lucavion.

Not hidden. Not mingling.

Just there.

Leaning, calm, watching the room from a distance.

He wasn’t laughing. He wasn’t reveling.

He stood as though none of it mattered. As though he had already seen this ga played a hundred tis and had lost interest in pretending it was clever.

Alone.

Not by exile.

By choice.

Valeria’s chest tightened.

If he were in my place... would he hesitate to stand beside ?

The answer ca quickly.

No.

Lucavion would’ve already walked through fire, made a scene, torn through every polite veneer just to reach her if their positions had been reversed.

He wouldn’t have flinched.

Because he didn’t calculate risk the way she did.

A few beats of silence followed, until Lord Fendrin—older, sharper, but known for choosing the winning side—stepped in.

"Let us not get carried away," he said smoothly. "Lady Valeria has stated before she only t him during the Vendor Marital Tournant. It’s been years since then, hasn’t it?"

Lady Fiorenza nodded quickly, catching the thread. "Exactly. And people do change. How could she have possibly known he’d co back and... and do this?"

"And frankly," another voice added from deeper in the cluster, "he’s never been known to the world. The man appeared out of thin air."

The attempted defense wove through the conversation like silk through thorns—ant to protect, to redirect, to sever her from Lucavion’s shadow. But even those threads frayed quickly.

Because the others weren’t ready to let it go.

"Still," Verisse said softly, "if she was close to him, and claims she no longer knows him... doesn’t that say sothing else entirely?"

Lady Aline tilted her head, voice gentle but fanged. "Yes. Maybe next ti she cos for one of our families, she’ll pretend not to know us, either."

It wasn’t just poison in the words.

It was doubt.

It was fear.

And it cracked sothing.

Valeria’s gaze turned to them—calm, precise, and colder than any winter breath.

"If there is a reason for my sword to co for your family," she said, voice as still as a drawn blade, "then I would never hesitate. Whether you are my friend or not."

The air snapped taut.

No smiles now. No coy tilts or polite laughter.

Just the unblinking stillness of those who’d just realized a line had been crossed.

But before any could speak, Valeria straightened.

And her voice, softer now, carried all the more weight for its clarity.

"However... you are right."

A few brows arched. A few expressions flickered—surprise, calculation, the faintest thread of concern.

Valeria’s gaze drifted again to that corner.

To the solitary figure standing beneath the glowless edge of the chandeliers.

Lucavion. Still alone. Still watching.

She exhaled once through her nose—quiet, centered.

"I should greet my friend indeed."

The silence behind her felt like the edge of a blade.

Tense. Watching.

But Valeria didn’t look back.

She had made her decision.

And while it was true this choice could harden things—cast shadows deeper, draw lines darker—she refused to be ruled by fear.

She was not a coward.

Not now.

If she couldn’t even stand beside the storm, how could she ever hope to weather one?

The murmurs trailed behind her like a dying tide. The hall, once full of velvet pretense and polished artifice, faded to the edge of her awareness. The marble under her heels echoed—soft but resolute—each step a thread tying resolve to action.

And then, she stood before him.

And then, she stood before him.

The distance was gone.

Only a breath remained between them.

Valeria looked up, letting her gaze finally, fully take him in.

He was still him—Lucavion.

But...

From up close, the changes were more than just ti.

The scar that had once split above his right eye—gone. Replaced by unbroken skin, smooth and strangely untouched, as if history had been rewritten while she wasn’t looking.

But it hadn’t.

His presence still held the weight of a blade not drawn, but ready. Still carried that casual defiance, the unbothered stance that dared the world to try harder.

But the light in his eyes had changed.

Sharper now. Cooler. Less like a fla and more like steel catching light.

Her breath caught just slightly.

"Oh..." she murmured.

And that was when he smiled.

That smirk.

The exact curl of mouth that used to infuriate her after a sparring match, after a reckless act, after he did sothing utterly foolish and made it look like poetry.

"What do we have here?" he said, voice low, unhurried.

His gaze t hers—not just the surface, but beneath it. That sa old habit of looking too far in, too quickly.

"It’s been a while, hasn’t it?"

She didn’t answer imdiately.

Didn’t need to.

Silence, between them, was never just silence.

And then he tilted his head, eyes narrowing with that unmistakable amusent, voice dipping with mock-ceremony.

"Lady Knight," he said. "Or should I say... Pink Knight?"

The title slid between them like a dare.

Like a mory resurrected without permission.

A challenge.

A greeting.

A question.

And in the subtle pull of his smile, there was no mistaking it.

He rembered everything.

Just as clearly as she did.

"I have been waiting for you."

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