Emilia
The days since my attempted escape pass in a tense silence, with Damien barely speaking to me except for clipped commands or occasional glances that leave me more unsettled than comforted. I haven't forgotten his anger, the barely restrained rage in his eyes when he caught me, or the look of fear that crossed his face after he read that mysterious letter. Part of me wants to demand answers, but another part—the wiser part—tells me to tread carefully.
It's late in the evening when he finally speaks to me, as if by some unseen agreement. We sit across from each other in the dimly lit study, where he's been nursing a glass of brandy for what feels like hours, staring into the flickering firelight with an expression that looks more pained than angry.
"I know you're afraid, Emilia," he begins quietly, catching me off guard with the softness in his voice. "And you have every right to be. My family… well, they're not the kind of people you'd call warm or forgiving."
I nod slowly, unsure how much I should reveal of my own fears. "I know there are things you're not telling me, Damien. I can't be here, in this marriage, with so many secrets hanging over us."
He glances at me, his gaze guarded but softening just a bit. "I'm not asking you to trust me blindly. But there are things I can't tell you—not yet. For your own safety." He pauses, his fingers tracing the rim of his glass. "But… I can tell you a little. Perhaps it's time."
I lean forward, my heart pounding, finally sensing a chance to understand this man who's kept so much hidden from me.
"When I was young, I thought I could trust my family," he begins, his voice low and edged with bitterness. "My father was… a man who ruled by power and fear, not love. When he died, my older brother inherited everything. I thought things would change, that my family would become my allies. But I was wrong."
There's a flicker of pain in his eyes, the briefest glimpse of a wound he keeps well hidden. I realize, with a pang of sympathy, that Damien isn't just a stranger who's hard and cold—he's a man carrying a past filled with hurt.
"Your brother… he's the one who's trying to take your title?" I ask softly.
Damien nods, a bitter smile playing on his lips. "Among others. He isn't content with what he already has. He's used every means at his disposal to ruin me, to make me a prisoner in my own home. The rumors… the stories you've heard about me being 'crippled' or 'disfigured'—those were his doing, spread to tarnish my name and turn people against me."
My heart twists at the thought. "And Seraphina?" I whisper, glancing at him carefully. "What happened to her?"
A shadow crosses his face, his gaze dropping to his glass. "She was… someone who got caught in the crossfire, in a way. My brother manipulated her, drove a wedge between us until she could no longer stand by my side. In the end, she paid the price for his cruelty."
There's something raw in his voice, something that reveals the depth of his sorrow. I don't know if it's grief or guilt that I hear, but I sense it weighs on him deeply.
As he speaks, I feel a strange sympathy stirring in me, an understanding of the man behind the mask. I realize that perhaps Damien isn't just the cold figure I thought he was. He's a man who's endured loss, betrayal, and a lifetime of fighting to survive in a world that wants to see him fall.
"I'm sorry," I say quietly, surprising myself. "For everything you've had to endure. No one deserves that."
He looks at me, and for the first time, I see a hint of softness in his gaze. "Thank you, Emilia. I don't expect you to understand everything, but… knowing that you don't despise me—that means something."
His words hang in the air between us, and for a moment, I feel as though we're no longer enemies or strangers, but two people bound by the weight of circumstances we can't fully control.
Then, just as the silence begins to feel comfortable, a flicker of doubt creeps into my mind. I want to trust him, to believe that he's telling me the truth, but something about his story feels incomplete. There are still secrets hidden behind his words, shadows lurking that he's yet to reveal.
Later that night, as I prepare for bed, I find another slip of paper folded under my pillow. The message is written in the same dark, spidery handwriting as the first, and as I unfold it, a chill runs down my spine.
"He'll use you. Don't let him fool you."
I stare at the words, my heart sinking. Just when I began to feel a sliver of connection, of understanding, with Damien, this note has cast doubt once more. The warning feels urgent, like a lifeline thrown at me from some unseen place, trying to pull me back to reality.
I slip the note back under my pillow, lying down with a mind full of questions. I don't know who to trust anymore, or if trusting Damien is even an option. His kindness, his pain—it all feels real, but so does the danger that surrounds him, that surrounds us both.
As sleep pulls me under, one thought lingers in my mind, haunting and inescapable: Who is lying, and who is telling the truth?