The Leonidus villa had changed.
At least, it felt that way to Aiden.
The walls did not shift, the marble stairs remained the same cold stone, and the chandeliers still glistened above with their usual brillianceâbut the rhythm was different.
The mornings no longer carried the same stale quiet of a household held together by rigid order. Now there was flow. A subtle current that moved to his pulse.
He felt it in the way the maids lowered their eyes when he passed, in the way Lady Catherineâs laughter often carried an unnatural note of gleeful brightness, and in how even the lord himselfâtowering, brooding Augustusâlingered with doubt when Aiden dropped whispers.
There was serenity, yes, but not for all. It was serenity carved for him alone.
Aiden strolled down the corridor with that triumph burning in his chest, a faint grin tugging his lips, his golden eyes carrying the weight of command. His ember pulsed with steady warmth, filling him with something more dangerous than arrogance: the illusion of inevitability.
The platinum coin he had exchanged through Flora now flowed in his pockets as a sea of gold.
Hundreds of coins. Enough to turn heads. Enough to tip balances. Enough to lay bricks for the foundation of power. His fingers brushed over the purse hidden in his coat, the satisfying jingle inside grounding him.
It was not just wealthâit was validation. A reminder of a past life, when the first hundred thousand dollars had set him aflame with ambition. That same thrill coursed through him now, that same dangerous high. Money was not just survivalâit was leverage.
And leverage, in this house, meant control.
He already decided where it would be spent. Not on luxury. Not on indulgence. Those were for fools. No, Aidenâs sights rested on something far more crucial: the Leonidus military arm. The private force that lent weight to the familyâs nobility, the very knights and soldiers who once aided the novelâs protagonist in battles to come.
He would not touch the main figuresâhe was not reckless. But he would feed seeds, water doubts, and bend loyalties before anyone realized roots had shifted.
Knock. Knock.
The sound reverberated into the lordâs study.
"...come in."
The hoarse voice belonged to Augustus Leonidus.
Aiden stepped in, chest slightly puffed, grin faint and measured. His stride was confident, but not arrogantâsubmissive enough to keep suspicion at bay. He carried a patch of documents in hand.
The lord looked up from his seat, surprise flickering across his face. "Oh. Aidenâitâs you. I thought Gerald came."
"Yes, my lord," Aiden replied smoothly, bowing. "Gerald intended to come, but I insisted I pass these documents to you myself." His voice carried soft notes of devotion, a hint of loyalty painted over calculated intent.
Augustus leaned back, curiosity flashing in his tired eyes. "You... know about these documents?"
The manâs tone carried faint disbeliefâdid this boy even read?
Aiden allowed himself a small smile. "Yes, my lord. This is the monthly budget detail. Below that is the record of the previous month. And another documentâ"
"Okay, okay," Augustus cut in, raising a hand, though his lips curled faintly with approval. "Youâve talent. Gerald is grooming you well." He nodded. "Thank you, Aiden. You may go."
Aiden bowed low, placing the papers gently on the desk. But as he turned to leave, he let a whisper slipâsoft, careless, like a murmur meant only for himself:
"...but there was something strange. This monthâs budget was nearly double the previous. Could there be some... corruption?"
The words hung heavy in the room, carried by silence sharper than any blade.
Aiden closed the door with quiet finality, a small smile twitching at the corners of his lips.
Seeds planted well as Doubt was the most fertile soil.
The weight of the hundred platinum coins in his pocket was intoxicating. A fortune most nobles would hesitate to carry so freely, and yet it sat with him, hidden under layers of obedience and bowing courtesy.
He knew where they had come fromâthe Viscountessâs purse, taken with reason she could no longer remember. She looked worried at times, brow furrowing as though trying to recall a memory deliberately erased. Erased by him of course.
That made him grin. He had wiped her mind, erased the trail, and slid the expenditure neatly into the military budget with Geraldâs trusting help. The old steward had no suspicion.
In his own coat lay a copy of the documentsâthe key to further manipulations.
But business could wait. It was tea hour, and where there was tea, there would be women of power. And where there were women of power, there was opportunity.
He made his way to the kitchen, already knowing what heâd find.
There she was.
Akidna.
Bent slightly as she prepared the trays, her wide hips framed perfectly by her uniform, the fabric clinging as though conspiring to tempt him. Her dark hair fell neatly against her shoulders, her glasses perched at the tip of her nose.
Every movement she made had a rhythm, almost domestic, almost innocentâbut to Aiden, she looked like prey offering itself willingly to the hunt.
Maids flitted nearby, carrying out duties. But most were already hisâunder charm or temporary possession. A simple flick of his hand sent them scattering quietly, one by one, until the kitchen air grew still.
He stepped closer. His palm itched.
Slap!
"Ahh!" Akidna gasped, her body jolting from the burning slap against her backside. She turned sharply, anger flashing in her eyesâonly to soften the instant she recognized him.
"Who darâoh. Aiden." Her tone melted, shifting from fury to delight with startling speed.
Her lips quirked into a smile. "I thought you were busy, helping Master Gerald."
Aiden didnât answer. Instead, he stepped closer, pressing against her back, arms sliding around her waist. His nose brushed her neck, inhaling her scentâa soft mix of lavender and sweat, sharp enough to spike his hunger. His ember pulsed low, his restraint thinning.
"Aiden..." she breathed, voice soft, conflicted. "I... I have work to do." Her protest trembled, weak and pliant, her hands fumbling against the counter as his lips grazed her skin.
He didnât reply. His hand traveled upward, grasping at her chest, squeezing as her muffled moan escaped.
"Ahh..." she gasped, biting down on her lip, glasses fogging from the sudden heat. "Aiden..."
His body pressed harder against her, his bulge pushing against her back, igniting her restraint into trembling need.
"Come here," he commanded, spinning her gently to face him. Her eyes, hidden behind fogged glasses, gleamed with hunger of their own.
Their lips met, his tongue forcing past her parted lips. Her moan vibrated into his mouth as his hand squeezed her again, dragging her closer until not even air dared remain between them.
"Mmm..."
When he finally pulled away, strands of saliva connected them briefly before breaking.
"Delicious as always," Aiden murmured, licking the corner of his lips. He reached casually for the tray of teapots she had prepared. "Iâll handle this one. Donât worry."
Her chest rose and fell rapidly, glasses askew, lips trembling. "But, Aiden... itâs for the Duchess. And for Lady Catherine."
He smirked. "Yes. And you already know ....theyâre quite fond of me."
She adjusted her glasses, biting her lip, watching him leave with the tray. The heat in her chest twisted into a hollow ache. It had been days since he truly visited her, days since he gave her more than teasing hunger. She knew why
âFlora. Always Flora.
âMaybe... Iâm not important enough,â she thought, her smile fading as she touched her own lips.
.
.
Aiden knew her loneliness, her ache. But plans had layers, layers so deep, even he felt he would fall in the pit. But that was it. If he would fall, he would fall alone, not let someone he held dear fall with him.
âone pit at a time..â he thought, looking at the tea pot.
[Aura of allure activated]