The room smelled like secrets and scorched perfume. Velvet curtains clung to the windows like bruised lovers; the chandelier above trembled slightly, as if even it knew something unholy was about to happen.
And then he stepped in.
Aiden.
Not dead. Not a ghost. Not quite a man anymore either.
Ash-gray hair, longer than she remembered. It framed his face like smoke around a fire that refused to die. She shouldâve gasped. Shouldâve screamed. Shouldâve run.
Instead, Flora whispered, "John said you were dead."
Soft. Sweet. Laced with something molten.
Aiden smiled the way knives do. "Still breathing. Still standing." He walked toward her like a slow-spilling sin.
Behind him, the maidâsmall thing, nervous thingâbacked away like the air was too hot to breathe. She knew what this man brought. Knew where this was heading. There was always skin. Always sweat. Always sin.
Flora sat up straighter, spine ironed by disbelief. Her eyes flicked up to his face, to the hairâwhite as regret and just as heavy.
"...it suits you," she said. The words were treason, but her voice was poetry.
Aidenâs hand brushed the ends of his hair. Chin-length. Just the way she liked. He hated it.
Didnât matter.
He sat beside her. No invitation. No manners. Like the couch was his own battlefield and he already owned the blood on it.
She blinked. Once.
"You grew.... bold," she muttered, trying to hide the tremor in her voice. "You know, if anyone saw thisâyour disrespectâyouâd be hanged. Tortured. Branded a traitor."
He didnât blink. Didnât flinch.
"Only if they find out," he said, voice a thread of fire. "Until then..."
He looked at the gap between them. It wasnât much. Still too much.
"Until then...?" she asked, eyes narrowing. She was intrigued. She hated being intrigued. It made her feel like prey.
"We can..."
"...what?" She leaned closer, confused. Foolish. Curious. Vulnerable.
His hand was already behind her neck. Not rough. Not gentle. Just inevitable.
He pulled.
She fell into his chest with a gasp. Everything in her rebelledâand wanted.
"I said," he whispered against her ear, "we can have times neither of us will. ever. forget."
Floraâs heart punched her ribs. She could smell him. Heat. Sweat. A bit pungent. But there was something more, something that stuck with her, she could not name it but felt it, making her feel..... different.
She sat up too fast, pretending elegance. Pretending control. "You...you ne..." she stammered.
He tilted his head. "...Didnât hear you."
He moved again. Closer. No gap now. Touching. Her silk brushing his leather. Her breath trying not to hitch.
He inhaled. Her perfume. Jasmine twisted with power and blood money. Made for women born above consequences. Born above poverty, Born above everyone else.
But her scent stung, The hunger hit againâsharp, real. Not for food.
For her...maybe. but he stayed still, not even showing an ounce of his hunger.
"You... youâve changed," she whispered. No thunder now. Just velvet unraveling.
"....Because of you," he said. Like a confession whispered at the gallows. "And I think... you like me better this way."
His fingers hooked beneath her chin, pulled her gaze up. She didnât fight it.
She shouldâve. But didnât.
Her eyes locked with his.
Gold. Glinting. Not with charm. Not even with love.
With need...and a bit ... vulnerability?
And it broke her.
She leaned in. So did he. Their lips almostâ
KNOCK. KNOCK. KNOCK. KNOCK.
The sound shattered the spell.
They jerked apart like theyâd been caught sinning under Godâs watchful eye.
"My Lady! Lady Flora!" The voice was desperate. Gail.
Flora groaned, pinched the bridge of her nose. "Itâs not even noon and heâs already fucking singing....."
"Howâd he get through?" she asked the maid, who looked two seconds from quitting.
"His lord gave him .....clearance," the maid mumbled.
"ohh....Daaaad." Floraâs voice cracked with the fury of a spoiled goddess denied her chaos.
Aiden clenched his jaw. One. Fucking. Inch. Thatâs all heâd needed.
Heâd kill the bastard. Not out of jealousy. Out of principle. But he stayed bound for now.
"Lady Flora..." came the knock again, wet with devotion.
Aiden turned to her. His voice dropped, low and lethal. ".....You want him gone?"
Flora narrowed her eyes. "desperately....why?...You have a plan?"
Aidenâs grin was all wolf.
"ohh.....I have a plan."
He leaned in. Whispered... Each word a sin wrapped in silk and gasoline.
Floraâs eyes slowly widened. Her face flushed. She covered her mouth like she might laughâor scream.
"...thatâs cruel," she whispered. ".....but....but I love it."
He didnât answer. Didnât need to.
She pulled out a handkerchief. Pale, elegant, embroidered with roses. She wrote a few lines. Signed it with her lipsâred as betrayal.
"Lisa," she said sweetly, "give this to Sir Gail."
The small maid, Lisaânervous, doe-eyed, and trembling like a candle in a windstormâstepped forward. Her slippers barely made a sound on the marble, but each step felt like it echoed through a cathedral of sins.
She bowed low, the way sheâd been taught: as if touching royalty might turn her to ash. Her fingers reached for the handkerchief with reverence, lifting it like it was a holy relic and not a trap wrapped in lace and lipstick.
Then she turned.
Each step to the door dragged like fate behind her heels.
A pause. A breath. Then the creak of the door opening.
She passed the handkerchief to Knight Gail with all the solemnity of a queen signing a death sentence.
He took it.
Held it like a man clutching salvation.
"Ohhh!!" he gasped, voice cracking with too much hope. "
Finally
... Oh, the Lord has
heard
my prayers... yesss!!"
He kissed the cloth. Loud. Sloppy. Reverent.
Then he turnedâchest puffed, eyes sparkling, limbs moving like heâd just been knighted by God Himselfâand walked away, grinning like a fool blessed by the divine.
Inside, silence. Thick. Humid with held laughter and unspoken cruelty.
Flora leaned back first. Then Aiden. Both wore smilesâwide, slow, and venomous.
Not sweet. Not loving.
Predatory.
Even Lisa, still standing beside the closed door, looked at them with quiet terror.
She had no idea what was coming.
But whatever it was...
...it wouldnât be kind.
Aiden looked at Flora. She looked at him.
They smiled.
Not sweet smiles. Not kind ones.
The kind of smiles you wear when youâve buried someone in the garden.
"Youâre insane," she whispered.
"Youâre worse," he replied.
They leaned in again.
No knock came to save them this time. No voice from behind the door. No interruptions. Just the air between themâcharged, hot, and trembling with everything unsaid.
Aiden moved first.
Slow. Certain. Like a man claiming something long denied. His eyes half-lidded, lips parted. His breath ghosted against hers, and for a secondâjust one intoxicating secondâhe could taste her in the air. Warm. Floral. Laced with danger.
He leaned in, heart thrumming like war drums in his chest.
And thenânothing.
No lips. No warmth.
Just the soft press of a single finger against his mouth.
He opened his eyes.
Flora was staring at him, smirking like a cat whoâd caught the canary and decided to keep it alive just for fun. Her fingertip rested against his lipsâlight as a whisper, firm as a command.
"Not in the mood right now..." she murmured, voice dipped in honey and wrapped in thorns.
She said it slowly. Elegantly. Like she was tasting every syllable, savoring the way it crushed him.
Aiden paused. Blinked once.
Then leaned back, lips curling into a smile that didnât quite reach his eyes.
Outside, he was calm. Polished. Regal, even.
But insideâinsideâhis blood was fire.
His heart beat like it was trying to claw its way out.
Every inch of him burned.
Not from rejection.
From restraint.
He wanted her. Not just the kiss. All of her. The war in her veins, the thunder in her tongue, the ruin in her smile.
But he waited.
Because predators knowâsometimes, the hunt is better than the kill.
Flora sat like a queen, eyes still on him, lips still curved. She knew what sheâd done.
And Aiden?
Aiden smiled right back.
Burning. Still.