The streets of Leonidus still breathed with the aftertaste of dawnâwet cobblestones glimmering like a field of obsidian under the pale light.
The city murmured in its restless rhythm: the blacksmithâs first strike, the muffled prayer of a merchant, the low laughter of thieves who had outlasted the night.
Through those alleys walked Aiden, hood drawn low, the faint shimmer of his gaze catching like a knifeâs reflection beneath it. He had long learned how to walk unseen among those who desired him most.
His faceâa curse carved by the gods to undo mortalsâwas a burden of power. Every glance he allowed was an invitation to ruin, woman after woman trailing his gaze, every smile a confession of dominance.
He kept his head bowed as he moved through the marketâs edge, his cloak whispering across the stone. A few vendors turned toward him instinctively, sensing that gravitational pull that always followed him, though they could not name why.
Aiden ignored them. His thoughts were elsewhereâon the mansion, on the woman waiting inside, and on the shadows that had begun to gather around his growing ambition.
He walked. The rhythm of his boots kept pace with his heart: calm, deliberate, inexorable. The city had not yet forgiven him, nor forgotten.
The House of Wessex had once stood as a proud emblem of nobility and heritage. Now it was little more than a hollow monumentâa carcass of stone draped in ivy and silence.
The banners had been torn down; the crest melted from the gates. What had once been a seat of honor had turned into a refuge for secrets.
Aiden paused at the gate. His hand brushed the iron latticework, rough with rust. The scent of rain lingeredâearth and iron and old memory.
Augustusâs shadow still lingers here, he thought. But his house... his legacy... now burns in my name.
He entered.
Inside, the mansion was dim but alive. The scent of candle wax and polished wood hung thick. Dust caught the sunbeams that filtered through the arched windows like golden smoke. A single figure waited in the foyerâTanya, one of the maids.
She stood with her hands clasped before her, eyes low, yet trembling faintly at the edges of her composure. Her dark hair was bound in a ribbon, but a strand had fallen loose against her cheek.
"Aiden," she murmured, stepping forward. "Youâre early."
He tilted his head, faint surprise threading through his voice. "Itâs your day off. I told you to rest. Spend the day with your family."
Tanya hesitated. The silence that followed was not of obedienceâit was the fragile pause before confession.
"I... have no family to return to anymore....." Her voice wavered but did not break. "He left. My husband. Or ratherâhe was made to leave. The fault was mine."
Aidenâs eyes narrowed, though his heart knew the truth before she spoke it aloud. You mean because of me.
He let the words rest on his tongue but did not speak them. Instead, he crossed the space between them with slow precision.
"Why?" he asked softly, as though he didnât already bear the weight of the answer.
Tanyaâs lips trembled. "Because I couldnât bear another manâs touch. Because Iâve already given myself... in heart, if not in name. I chose this, Aiden...I....I chose you... Donât make it sound like a wound."
There was a shimmer of something in her toneâdefiance wrapped in devotion.
Aiden exhaled. His hand lifted, fingers tracing a line down her arm, a gesture less of affection than acknowledgment. "Then youâve chosen the harder path."
Tanya smiled faintly, tears glistening at the edge of her lashes. "I donât regret it. You told me once that all strength is born of sacrifice. This is mine."
She bowed her head thenânot as a servant, but as one who had already given something deeper.
Aiden stood there for a long moment, his own thoughts a silent storm. Her devotion stirred something inconvenient in him. He was a man forged in conflict, sharpened by betrayal, and bound to ambition. Yet moments like theseâraw, unadornedâthreatened to dull his edge.
He forced his focus back to purpose. "Go. Rest in the upper quarters. Donât worry, Iâll see that your children are taken care ofâeducation, home, all of it. Theyâll never know the hunger you once did."
Tanyaâs tears fell then, soundless against the polished floor. She pressed her forehead to his hand brieflyâa gesture of faithâand withdrew into the shadowed hallways.
The silence that followed was heavy, like a heartbeat trapped inside stone.
From the upper corridor, a voice echoedâa lilting, composed tone edged with practiced grace.
"So, the prodigal knight returns," said Countess.
Aiden turned. She descended the grand staircase with deliberate poise, emerald hair cascading in artful curls, the green of her gown mirroring her eyesâeyes that gleamed with calculation beneath a mask of charm. The scent of lilac preceded her, subtle yet commanding.
"Youâve kept me waiting," she said, pausing on the final step. "Do you make every lady wait this long, or am I the special one?"
Aidenâs lips curved faintly. "Patience suits you, Countess. It sharpens your beauty."
Her laugh was soft, measured. "Flattery from you, Sir Aiden, is like gold dustâit dazzles, but one never knows its price."
They stood a moment in silenceâtwo predators circling civility.
The Countess had always known that Aidenâs rise meant danger to the old bloodlines. Yet she found herself drawn to him, compelled by the dangerous symmetry of his ambition.
He had once advised her to cede the mansionâs ownership to a name beyond reproach, a gesture of survival disguised as generosity. Aethal and herâthe family who now held the title on paperâwere merely masks. Beneath it all, Aidenâs will was the true master here.
And she knew it.
"Youâve come for the meeting," she said. "The others are ready. Even the elf."
At that word, Aidenâs gaze sharpened. "Good. Then letâs begin."
He followed her down the hall into the heart of the mansion.
The meeting room had once been a libraryâits walls lined with shelves of forgotten wisdom. Dust motes spiraled in the dim candlelight, and a single stained-glass window painted fractured colors across the floor. In the center, a round table waited, already set for six.
At its far end sat the Elf motherâtall, slender, her skin luminous even in shadow. Her hair, emrald as the forest, fell around her shoulders like water. Beside her sat her child, a small girl of perhaps ten, studying a book of human script with intense concentration.
Aiden paused at the threshold. The sight drew a flicker of emotion across his composed maskâsomething between reverence and longing.
Even with their ears bound by spellcraft, their beauty bleeds through.
He entered. The air shifted subtly as the elf rose in greeting.
"My lord," she said softly, her accent carrying the cadence of old forests. "Your home has been most kind. My daughter learns quickly. She will speak your tongue soon."
Aiden inclined his head. "Good. Sheâll need it in the days to come."
He studied the room, the faces within itâthe Countess , the Elf mother, the young child, and in the corner, two more women: veiled and watchful, and Arina, a warrior of the slayer guild, and of course, his lovely amber. Each of them bound to Aiden by different threadsâloyalty, debt, desire, or shared rebellion.
He took his seat at the head of the table.
For a moment, no one spoke. The mansion itself seemed to hold its breath.
Then Aiden began.
"You all know why weâre here, my future predictions, you all heard it.." he said. His voice was calm, but beneath it pulsed the quiet force of conviction. "The old world is crumbling. The nobles hide behind their banners, the Church prays for power, and the Slayers divide strength among themselves. None see whatâs coming."
He leaned forward slightly, eyes burning in the candlelight. "But I do."
A murmur passed through the group.
Arina arched a brow. "And what do you see, Aiden?"
"A future that no longer separates sword from scripture, or crown from cause. Weâve been taught that power must be divided to remain pure. I say it must be unitedâor it will devour itself."
The countess tilted her head, green strands catching the light. "You wish to forge a union between the guilds, the nobles, and the church? Thatâs a dream poets die for."
"Dreams are for those who can afford them," Aiden replied. "I deal in inevitability."
There was silence againâthis time heavier, charged.
I will be the forge that binds their fates, he thought. And if it costs me my soul, so be it.
He stood, pacing slowly around the table. "The Slayer Guild has lost its teeth.
The Church fears what it cannot control. And the nobility rots behind ceremony. But togetherâ" His hand brushed the back of Arinaâs chair as he passed, the briefest whisper of touch.
"âtogether, they could rule the shape of the world. And I will see to it that they do."
Amber spoke, her voice cautious. "And you, Sir Aiden? What will you take from this unity?"
He smiled, the expression quiet and dangerous. "Only what is owed."