The knock came at the hour when decent visits have already ended.
Feby was at the little table with her one good blouse laid out over the chair back, pressed twice and inspected three times, and a borrowed almanac of New Avalon's great firms open to the chapter on the Regent Group.
She had read the same page four times without retaining a word of it. Tomorrow sat in her chest like a swallowed coal — bright, secret, hers.
She had told Alex nothing. He had asked nothing, which was its own kind of noticing.
Three knocks. Softer than Wilhelmina's, more certain than a stranger's. Feby knew the hand before she reached the door.
"Mother."
Adeline Rydell-Steinmeyer entered the way she entered everywhere — perfume first, apology never.
Her eyes made the same slow circuit of the flat that Wilhelmina's had, arriving at the same verdict by a politer road. Then she stepped aside, and the doorway filled with a man.
Tall. A charcoal traveling coat with silver thread worked through the collar, cut by someone who charged by the stitch.
A chronometer chain crossed his waistcoat, and at the end of it, when he moved, swung a watch of pale gold with a sliver of captured moonstone in the face — old imperial work, the kind of piece that cost more than the building they were standing in and was worn precisely so that everyone would know it.
"Febyella." He smiled with excellent teeth. "It's been too long."
"Wendell Ashcombe," Feby said. It was not a greeting. It was an identification, the way one names a draft coming under a door.
"Wendell insisted on coming," Adeline said, glowing, arranging herself beside him as though the two of them were the portrait and everything else in the room was the frame.
"When he heard about your situation — Febyella, he came the same evening. The same evening."
"My situation."
"The document, sweetheart. The thirty days." Adeline's voice dropped into the register she used for funerals and money. "Everyone has heard by now. Your uncle made sure of that — you know how he is when he's won."
Alex sat at the counter with a fundamental basic of magic book he did not close, marking his page with one finger. Wendell's gaze passed over him the way a lamp passes over furniture, and moved on.
"May I sit?" Wendell asked, and sat. He set his gloves on the table beside Feby's pressed blouse, one atop the other, unhurried, a man planting a small flag.
"Febyella, I'll be direct, because I respect you too much for anything else. The condition your family set is not a condition. It's a joke with a legal seal on it. A manager's post at the Regent Group in thirty days — there are clerks who have waited in that tower's queue for ten years. Sons of good Houses. Certified level-four magicians. You are —" he paused, and let the pause do the insulting for him — "an uncertified young woman with a rented room and no patron."
"You've counted my assets very thoroughly," Feby said.
"Someone should." He leaned forward. "So forget it. Forget the inheritance. It has been poisoning your life for four years, and your family will spend another four inventing conditions faster than you can meet them. Walk away from the whole rotten game.
" His voice warmed. "Marry me."
Adeline made a small sound, the kind other women make at fireworks.
"Marry into House Ashcombe," Wendell went on, "and the question of your father's money becomes what it should always have been — trivial. You would want for nothing. And your family —" his smile sharpened — "your grandmother, your uncle, all of them — would spend the rest of their lives bowing to you at the door and hoping you'd forgotten how they treated you. I'd make certain you had ample opportunity to not forget."
"He's offering you a life, Febyella," Adeline breathed. "A real one."
Feby said nothing yet. Alex turned a page.
The small sound seemed to remind Wendell that the furniture was listening. His eyes went to Alex at last, and stayed there with the particular attention a man gives something he has decided to step on.
"And you would be the fiancé," he said. "The one who unloads crates."
"That's me," Alex said pleasantly.
"Mm." Wendell turned back to Feby as though the exchange had concluded itself.
"There's more, and I'll share it because it concerns your future either way. The trade rows are full of it this week — the Regent Group is preparing something enormous. A new line. An expansion the likes of which this state has never seen, and with it, publicity contracts that will make and unmake fortunes."



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Comments
The readers' comments on the novel: The Almighty Dominance (by Sunshine)
Leon never learns😂😂...
Please upload next chapter...
I wish his nascent core wasn't compromised, it defeats the purpose of him spending years cultivating it just to have it stripped away from him in just an encounter. Sigh and to think he's strong enough to change the political situation in Prussia and he can't protect his core...
Time to begin stacking up knowledge, let's gooooo! But I wish his nascent core wasn't compromised tbh, feels like all his cultivation was for waste...
Time to begin stacking up knowledge, let's gooooo! But I wish his nascent core wasn't compromised tbh, feels like all his cultivation was for waste...
Let's gooooo Alex, make the Dukes payyyyy🔥🔥🔥😤...
Please Alex come to Prussia and save your wifeeeee...
Next is Prussia, lfg🔥🔥...
Alex the emperor.🔥🔥...
Foolish emperor, he is still a boy...