Longing crashed over him, relentless as a tidal wave.
How long had it been?
How long since he'd last seen Mila Sutherland?
He ached to hold her. To kiss her.
Once, he could kneel for hours with his back straight and his face expressionless. Now, his features were drawn and weary, his fox-like eyes flickering with confusion, candlelight dancing in his pupils—unsteady, wild, in time with his racing heart.
Seven days and seven nights.
He’d been on his knees in the family chapel, facing the memorials of generations past. Grief and yearning howled through him, deafening and all-consuming, shaking him to the core.
Bang!
Bang! Bang!
Bang! Bang! Bang!
Each strike thundered through the quiet, and at last, he understood what he wanted.
All those moments of instinctive attraction, unconscious closeness, the ever-growing hunger, the calm that came from her touch… In this moment, it all made sense, all of it real and undeniable.
His eyes grew red, rimmed with the sting of unshed tears.
He bowed his head, staring at his open palm, his vision blurring. Why had it taken him this long? Maybe ignorance would have been kinder.
What had he done?
He pressed his hand over his face, doubling over with his forehead against the polished floor, the silent memorials before him heavy with judgment.
For a long time, he stayed that way.
At last, a low, broken laugh slipped from his lips.
It was laughter laced with pain, edged with madness.
But it didn’t matter. She was his now—his, for as long as the chain held, for as long as his will stayed strong. He’d never let her go.
Even if it was all built on a lie, he’d carry that lie for a lifetime.
He had no regrets.
On the seventh morning, the chapel doors creaked open. Sunlight spilled in, stretching Lysander’s shadow long and thin across the floor. At the threshold stood his grandfather, cane in hand.
“Have you made up your mind?” the old man asked.
Lysander kept his gaze on the row of memorial plaques. He looked exhausted, lips dry and trembling, but a faint smile tugged at the corners of his mouth. His words came out hoarse, but unwavering.
“I only want her.”
Dreams? Ambitions? None of it mattered. Once he held the reins of the family, he could do anything he pleased.
But Mila… This was his one chance. That woman’s heart was locked away, and if he let this slip by, he’d never get another opportunity—never one so perfect.
The timing was right. He couldn’t let it go.
Crack!
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