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The air in Alia’s study was colder than the corridor outside, a palpable chill that had little to do with the lack of a fire in the grand, shadowy hearth.

The scent of roses, usually so cloying and sweet, mingled with the dry, papery aroma of forgotten lore and sothing else… sothing faintly tallic and unsettling, a signature of the West Wing.

Lord Alaric Valerius stood just inside the threshold, Lady Iris a half-step behind him, her hand gripping his arm with a desperate tightness. Mr. Finch had lted back into the shadows of the corridor, the heavy oak door closing behind them with a soft, ominous click that echoed the finality of a trap sprung.

Alia sat enthroned behind her massive oak desk, a portrait of serene, regal power. Her golden hair was intricately braided, catching the faint candlelight like a halo. Her clear blue eyes, however, held no celestial benevolence; they were fixed on Alaric with an intensity that felt like a physical weight. Freya’s letter lay open on the polished surface before her.

“You summoned us, Lady Alia,” Alaric began, his voice comndably steady, though the writing implents he carried – a small, portable lap desk with fresh parchnt, quills, and an inkpot – felt impossibly heavy in his suddenly nerveless hands.

“Indeed, Alaric,” Alia purred, her voice a low, silken drawl that sent shivers down Iris’s spine. She gestured with a slender, pale hand towards two stiff-backed chairs placed before the desk. “Do not be so… rigid. This is not a formal audience. We are family, are we not? Have a seat. Both of you.”

The invitation was a command. They sat, the ancient wood of the chairs cold and unyielding against their backs. The silence stretched, taut and agonizing, broken only by the frantic, silent screaming within Alaric’s own chest.

Alia’s gaze remained fixed on him. Then, with a flick of her wrist, so casual it was insulting, she sent Freya’s letter skittering across the polished surface of the desk towards him. It stopped just short of the edge. “Read it, Alaric,” she commanded, her voice soft, yet each syllable imbued with an icy authority. “Read what your… perceptive daughter has penned for her ‘Dearest Sister Alia’.”

Alaric picked up the parchnt, his fingers trembling almost imperceptibly. The elegant, newly acquired script was unfamiliar, yet undeniably Freya’s. The simple address, “Sister Alia,” sent a fresh wave of dread through him. To read his daughter’s private words now, words she had likely penned with such care and hopeful intention, under Alia’s cold, watchful gaze, felt like a profound violation, a fresh flagellation.

He forced himself to unfold the crisp paper, his heart sinking as he prepared to learn what Freya had dared to write. As his eyes scanned the lines detailing life in the capital, the carefully worded apologies, the expressions of affection for her “sister,” a knot tightened in his stomach. Each word felt like a tiny, innocent misstep into a carefully laid snare.

When he looked up, his face pale, Alia’s lips were curved into a faint, chilling smile. “She persists, does she not?” Alia mused, her voice dangerously smooth. “Dearest Sister Alia. After all that has transpired. After her… dramatic departure and its preceding revelation. What say you to that, Alaric? To your daughter’s continued… charade?”

“It is not a charade, Lady Alia,” Alaric said, his voice quiet but firm, a spark of defiance igniting within the terror. He had to defend Freya, however perilous the attempt. “Not in her heart. Freya… she may have known the truth of your… of our lineage, that you were not her sister by blood. But she also saw… she believed she saw a sadness in you. A loneliness. She wanted to bring you happiness, to see you smile. Her affection, however… however naively expressed, was genuine.”

Alia’s perfectly sculpted eyebrow arched. “Happiness?” she echoed, the word a delicate, almost curious sound. “And why, pray tell, would I require the contrived happiness offered by a child’s misplaced pity? My existence is not asured by such fleeting, mortal sentints.”

“Freya did not see it as pity, Lady Alia,” Iris interjected, her voice trembling but finding a desperate courage. “She saw… she saw what she believed was a reflection of her own feelings. She saw the darkness that hangs over this house, over all of us. She felt your isolation. She… she truly believed you were suffering, much as we were.”

“Suffering?” Alia’s laugh was a soft, dry rustle, like autumn leaves skittering across a tombstone. “The child has a vivid imagination, it seems. And you, her parents, nurtured it with your silence, your fear. So, are we to continue this… performance? This play of sisterly affection, now that the principal actress has admitted she knew the script was false all along?”

“No,” Alaric said, taking a deep breath. “No, Lady Alia. The pretense… it should end. Freya is a young woman now. She is in the capital, learning about the world. It is ti for childish things to be put aside. The… the ‘sister’ charade served its purpose, however flawed our initial intentions. It should cease.”

Alia’s eyes narrowed, a dangerous glint appearing within their clear blue depths. “End?” she repeated, her voice dropping to a silken whisper. “Just like that? You decree its end, Alaric? But it was you who began it, was it not? You who wove the lie into the fabric of your daughter’s childhood. It involved . Your deception directly involved . You fed your daughter falsehoods about my very identity within these walls.”

“Forgive us, Lady Alia,” Alaric said, his voice strained. “Our motives, however misguided, were born of a desire to give Freya… a semblance of a normal childhood. To shield her from the… the harsher realities of this house for as long as possible. We wanted what was best for her.”

“Best?” Alia’s voice dripped with scorn. “You speak of ‘best’ for her childhood. And what of her future, Alaric? Do you also intend to secure the ‘best’ for that, whilst still adhering to the terms of our… ancient understanding? Whilst fulfilling the obligations of the pact?”

She leaned forward, her gaze pinning him. “I have endured generations of Valerius n. So were fools, so were competent. None, until your generation, Alaric, has so thoroughly managed to wound my pride, to make a pawn in their dostic deceptions, through the ignorance you cultivated in your own child.”

The unspoken accusation – that he had failed to instill the proper fear, the proper respect for her dominion – hung heavy in the air.

“Now that we all understand the truth,” Alia continued, her voice regaining its chilling composure, “now that Freya has revealed her hand, the pretense of sisterhood, as you so rightly suggest, Alaric, shall indeed cease in its current form.” She paused, a slow, predatory smile beginning to form. “But the… happy family, ah, that we shall endeavor to maintain. For Freya’s sake, of course.”

Alaric’s blood ran cold. “What… what do you an, Lady Alia?”

“I will, naturally, pen my own response to Freya’s… charming epistle,” Alia said, waving a dismissive hand towards the letter. “However, your own correspondence with your daughter will require… a certain finesse.” Her gaze sharpened. “All future letters from Freya are to be brought to , unopened, the mont they arrive. Similarly, any letters you or Iris pen to her will be submitted for my… approval before they are dispatched. No communication will pass between this estate and the capital without my scrutiny.”

Iris gasped, her eyes widening with a horrified understanding that stole her breath. “But… why?”

“Why?” Alia echoed, a flicker of cold amusent in her eyes. “Because, dear Iris, I wish to ensure Freya receives a… consistent narrative. A portrayal of life here that is conducive to her continued peace of mind, and to the… harmonious atmosphere we all desire for her return.”

“You an… you want us to lie to her?” Alaric’s voice was hoarse. “To continue a deception, even now?”

“Deception is such a harsh word, Alaric,” Alia purred. “I prefer to think of it as… curating her experience. Guiding her perceptions. We must all play our parts in maintaining this… happy family illusion. For Freya’s well-being, naturally.”

“I… I cannot,” Alaric said, the words torn from him. “What is the point of this, Alia? She knows! Why force us to perpetuate more falsehoods?”

Alia’s smile vanished. “The point, Alaric,” she said, her voice dropping to an icy whisper, “is that after your fleeting lifespan concludes, after Iris fades, Freya remains. Freya, with her potent Valerius blood, will be the one to uphold the legacy, the pact, the traditions of this house. Would it not be… better for her, for all of us, if she approaches that destiny with a sense of familial warmth, of connection to , rather than with the terror and resentnt your unvarnished truth would undoubtedly instill?

“You cast in the role of ‘sister’ for years, Alaric, a role I played with considerable… patience, considering the initial deceit. Now, it is rely your turn to perform, to ensure the narrative I deem appropriate continues. Think of it as a consequence, a balance for the years of your own family’s carefully constructed play.”

“This ‘deception,’ as you call it, serves a purpose far greater than your imdiate discomfort. It serves the future. It serves as a reminder, to you both, of her inescapable fate, and the necessity of… cooperation.”

She leaned back, her fingers steepled. “You will continue your correspondence with your daughter, naturally. However, from this point forward, I will be… assisting with the composition. You will write what I dictate regarding certain matters. We must ensure Freya receives a… consistent and accurate portrayal of life at Valerius, and of my well-being, of our continued… familial bond.” Her eyes glinted. “Tell her amusing anecdotes about the estate. Describe the changing seasons. Reassure her of our collective contentnt. Paint a picture, Alaric. A masterpiece of dostic tranquility.”

This is monstrous,” Iris whispered, tears streaming down her face, each one a testant to their shattered hope. “To use our love for her, our letters, as… as tools for your manipulation.”

Alia rely smiled, a cold, unfeeling curve of her lips. A subtle pressure seed to emanate from her, the very air in the room growing heavier, a silent reminder of the ancient power that coiled beneath her serene facade. "Generations of Valerius have accumulated wealth, lands, and influence under my... consideration," she mused, her voice soft yet carrying the weight of centuries. "And yet, you both struggle so profoundly with this... simple charade? A performance for your own child, to secure a future you profess to desire for her?"

“Monstrous? Perhaps. Effective? Most certainly. It is, as you have so astutely observed, my dear Iris, a way for to… guide Freya’s understanding from afar. To ensure her return to Valerius is… seamless. That she is prepared for the role she must eventually play.”

Lord Alaric stared at Alia, at the absolute, unyielding power in her gaze. He saw the abyss before them, the utter helplessness of their situation. They were trapped, their love for Freya now the very chains Alia would use to bind them to her will. Every word they wrote, every carefully crafted sentint, would be a betrayal, a lie designed to lure their daughter further into the shadow of the Valerius curse.

“You understand your instructions, then?” Alia asked, her voice soft, almost gentle, the implied threat more potent than any shout.

Alaric looked at Iris, at her tear-streaked face, her slumped shoulders, and a wave of profound, soul-crushing despair washed over him. He nodded slowly, the movent feeling as if it cost him the last remnants of his strength. “We understand, Lady Alia.”

“Excellent.” Alia’s smile was one of pure, chilling satisfaction. “Then you may begin. The writing implents, Alaric. I believe Freya is due a response, is she not? Let us compose one together. A letter filled with… sisterly affection.”

The faint, cloying scent of roses seed to intensify, pressing in on them, a fragrant, inescapable prison.

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