The coastal breeze drifted through gauzy linen curtains, curling softly around the room like a whisper. The estate was still—too still.
Elena stirred first, blinking into the filtered light, her hand instinctively reaching across the bed.
Empty.
Cassian was gone.
She sat up slowly, letting the silk sheet fall from her shoulder. Her heart was still a battlefield—tender from what was said the night before, raw from what hadn't been. They had kissed like two people daring to forget, held each other like they wouldn't get another chance. But even now, distance clung to him like a second skin.
She rose, wrapping the sheet around her like armor and padded barefoot toward the open balcony.
Below, the sea churned against the cliffs, a thousand white-capped waves colliding and retreating.
And there he was.
Cassian stood on the overlook, shirtless, bruises scattered across his back like ghosts of battles past. He was holding something—an envelope. Old. Worn. Hand-delivered.
He didn't see her watching.
He unfolded the letter with reverence, his jaw tightening as his eyes scanned the page. The wind pulled at his dark hair, but he didn't move.
Elena's breath caught. Whatever was written there wasn't good.
Cassian read it again.
Cassian,
You weren't supposed to find her. Not yet. Not this way. The deal we made still stands, but there are pieces you haven't seen—pieces that will destroy her if you're not careful.
If she remembers too much too quickly, you'll lose more than her trust. You'll lose her. Entirely.
Burn this when you've read it. And don't come looking for me again.—D.
He folded the letter slowly, crumpling the edge in his hand. His first instinct was to protect her. His second was to run.
Elena was remembering fragments. Dreams. Scars that weren't physical. She didn't know the full extent of what had been done to her in the name of keeping her family safe. But someone did. And that someone was still pulling strings in the dark.
He couldn't let her find out everything. Not yet.
By the time Elena joined him outside, Cassian had already burned the letter in the fireplace behind the garden wall.
"I woke up alone," she said, stepping beside him, arms crossed against the chill.
"I couldn't sleep," he replied, voice neutral.
"I noticed."
She leaned on the stone ledge beside him, not quite touching.
"I had a dream," she said. "Of my father. He was sitting at that same desk in the estate's west wing. Only… the desk was covered in files. Not financials. Not contracts. Blueprints. Names."
Cassian didn't answer.
"I think he was hiding something from me, Cassian. Something I was never meant to see."
He swallowed hard. "Maybe he was trying to protect you."
"Or control me."
The wind picked up. The silence between them grew weighted.
Finally, he said, "There are things we can't unlearn once we know them."
She looked at him sharply. "You're not talking about my father anymore, are you?"
His eyes didn't meet hers. "No."
They heard the engine before they saw it.
A black car pulled up the gravel road that wound down to the estate, tires crunching slowly, deliberately.
Cassian immediately stepped in front of Elena. She didn't argue.
One guard appeared from the trees, another from the garden path—guns lowered, uncertain. They weren't expecting anyone.
The car stopped.
A woman stepped out. Late forties. Blonde streaks in her hair, a trench coat too clean for a coastal hideaway. Her eyes scanned the estate like she already knew its blueprint.
"I'm here to speak with Elena Marquette," she called out.
Cassian didn't move. "You're not on the list."
"I shouldn't be. That's the point."
The woman held up a small object. It caught the morning light.
A crest.
Elena's breath hitched. "That's my mother's family seal."
Cassian's expression darkened. "That house was dissolved after the Marquette alliance was signed."
"Exactly," the woman replied. "And I know what really happened when it was."
In the drawing room, the woman sat at the edge of a leather chair, sipping untouched tea.
"My name is Sabine Duclare," she said. "Your mother's cousin. Which makes me your only surviving blood relative on her side."
Elena narrowed her eyes. "That side was erased. Publicly."
"Not erased. Bought out. Silenced."
Cassian leaned against the mantle, arms folded. "Why are you here now?"
Sabine met his gaze without blinking. "Because Elena's father made enemies on both sides of the aisle. The deal he struck to protect her is unraveling. The families are splitting."
She turned to Elena. "You have allies you never knew existed, Elena. But they won't follow you unless they see the truth."
Elena's voice was barely a whisper. "What truth?"
Sabine leaned forward.
"That you're not just your father's daughter. You're your mother's heir."
That night, Elena sat by the fireplace alone, the crackle of flames the only sound in the room.
Cassian entered quietly. No walls. No guards. Just him.
"You were right," she said without turning. "There are things we can't unlearn."
He crossed the room, sat beside her. "I never wanted to lie to you."
"But you did."
"Yes."
She looked at him, eyes soft but wounded. "And you still are."
"I'm trying to protect you."
Her smile was small. Sad. "You can't protect someone from who they are, Cassian."
He reached for her hand.
"I'm not leaving," he said. "Not now. Not until this ends."
She nodded. "Then we burn the past down together."
Somewhere deep in the city, a vault opened.
Inside, a ledger was removed. Leather-bound. Marquette seal etched in gold.
A man in shadow flipped it open, revealing rows of names—Marquette, Duclare, Romaris, Linneaux.
And at the very end, one name freshly written in red ink.
Elena Duclare-Marquette.
He smiled.
"The blood debt is active. Let the reckoning begin."