"But I want to say this clearly. Whatever I thought about the marriage, Vespera Ashborn is the victim here. I was the secret who knew and turned a blind eye to everything. Only me, the opportunistic bitch, and the man who kept that secret are the ones who should answer for what happened. That’s why I must apologize to you, Kaiden Grey, and especially you, Lady Ashborn."
Natasha lowered her head. On camera, in front of millions, the woman with the cosmetics billboard face and the silk robe and the heavy-lidded blue eyes bent at the waist until her forehead nearly touched her knees. A full bow. The kind that left nothing to interpretation.
She held it.
Kaiden said nothing for a long moment. His arm was still around Vespera. His expression was hard to read. The anger from earlier hadn’t left, but something else sat beside it now. A woman who had wronged his mother was apologizing to her, and he couldn’t hate her for that even if he wanted to.
He didn’t feel justified in hating this woman. He simply didn’t know her well enough. For all he knew, this woman had her own circumstances and her own desperation that a silk robe said nothing about.
What she did wasn’t something he’d ever respect. But that didn’t mean he knew enough to condemn her.
After getting to know the stories of his three Valkyries, Kaiden was not the man who’d seethe blindly.
Not at her, at least.
Magnus had zero justification for what he did, and all the power to not make it happen.
Vespera’s chin dipped by a fraction. Then she was still again, and that was all Natasha Volkov would ever receive from the Shadow Monarch.
Magnus’s eyes narrowed.
That wasn’t how Natasha talked. Natasha Volkov was smart, sharp, and knew exactly what she wanted. She was not the guilt-ridden, trembling waif she was performing right now, and she certainly didn’t structure sentences like a press release drafted by a crisis communications team.
Every word coming out of Natasha’s mouth was optimized. Maximum damage to him. Zero collateral to Vespera. A real scorned mistress would be angry, messy, unpredictable. This one was surgical.
"I also want to share something," Natasha continued. "Because I know claims like this need proof."
She tapped her phone. The stream overlay shifted as Natasha shared her screen, and a video file began playing in a second window beside her face.
Security footage. High angle, wide lens, the kind of shot produced by a camera mounted near a ceiling and forgotten. It showed the interior of an apartment. The living room he’d sat in dozens of times, the couch, the kitchen island, the hallway leading to the bedroom.
Magnus walked into frame. Unmistakable. His build, his face, his coat. He set a bag on the counter. Natasha entered from the hallway, kissed him, and his hands settled on her waist.
The footage cut to another clip. Different angle, different night. Magnus at the kitchen island, shirt untucked, pouring wine into two glasses while Natasha leaned against the counter and laughed at something he’d said.
Another clip. Another night. Him leaving through the front door at an hour the timestamp confirmed was past midnight.
The chat went ballistic.
At the same time, Magnus’s legs went numb.
"I checked," he whispered. The words fell out of him before he could stop them. "I swept that apartment myself!"
Grace glanced at him.
"Every corner, I checked!" His voice was climbing. "I found nothing!"
But there had been. Artifacts so far above the grade of anything a civilian could acquire that his sweep hadn’t registered them. The kind of surveillance equipment that existed in the inventories of S-tier operatives, intelligence divisions, and people whose resources extended beyond anything money could buy.
The kind of equipment Vespera Ashborn could produce with a single conversation.
She’d bugged the apartment years ago. She’d watched him come and go, pour wine and untuck his shirt and kiss another woman in a living room wired without either of them knowing. She’d collected hundreds of hours of footage and stored it somewhere he would never find.
She never cared about the affair, that much was true. At least, not emotionally.
From the perspective of leverage, however...
Vespera Ashborn wouldn’t be who she is if she didn’t pounce on an opportunity to collect leverage, especially when it was handed to her on a silver platter like this. All she needed to do was spend some pocket change and put some cameras into the apartment, knowing that Magnus’s hubris would let her get away with it.
After all, Magnus was a fighter, not a detection specialist. If he had called upon actual professionals, they would’ve found the cameras. But Magnus, looking at Natasha as a commoner who wouldn’t dare, and living a life of indulgence where everything bent the way he wanted them to, was exactly the kind of arrogance that ensured he would believe his own sweep was enough.
On the feed, the footage stopped. Natasha’s face returned, and whatever composure she’d been holding began to fracture.


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