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Chapter 12 - Inheritance

  Dashiel

  returned to the vendor and placed her bundled coveralls on the stall

  counter.

  “Dispose of these,” she said, setting a silver coin beside

  them.

  The vendor’s gaze drifted from the clothes to Dashiel’s newly

  cleaned hands, then to Gaston. A slow, knowing smile curved her

  mouth.

  “Got it,” she said lightly. “You two have fun in the

  Spires.”

  Dashiel did not react. The implication passed through her without

  acknowledgment. She turned to Gaston instead.

  “The Old Noble Quarter. Do we hail a taxi here, or do you know a

  less conspicuous route to the nearest transit hub?”

  Gaston stepped to the curb and raised a hand. A sleek gunmetal

  hover-taxi peeled out of the traffic stream and glided to a silent

  halt beside them. The driver was older, weathered, with a modest

  interface jack behind his ear—functional, not ornamental.

  “Destination?” he asked.

  “The Rudrick estate,” Gaston replied evenly. “Thirty now.

  Ten on arrival. No questions.”

  Gold exchanged hands. The driver weighed the coins, then the two

  of them—Gaston’s bearing, Dashiel’s plain attire—before

  keying the route without further comment.

  The taxi lifted smoothly, merging into late-afternoon traffic and

  leaving the Ironworks Bazaar behind.

  Dashiel watched the city through the tinted glass.

  “He’s taking the Foundry District route,” she said after a

  moment. “Then crossing Aethelgard Bridge into the Quarter. Standard

  path. No deviations.”

  Industrial ferrocrete and iron gradually yielded to aged stone and

  ornamental metalwork. Streets widened. Trees lined the avenues, their

  branches skeletal against the cooling sky. The estates stood behind

  high walls crowned with dormant anti-intrusion glyphwork—grand,

  neglected, still formidable.

  Marbleview Promenade opened before them in a broad circular sweep.

  The taxi slowed and stopped beside a towering wrought-iron gate

  set into moss-dark stone. A tarnished bronze plaque remained barely

  legible.

  RUDRICK.

  Heavy chains bound the gate. A mag-lock sealed it.

  Gaston paid the remainder and stepped out. He pressed his

  comm-bracelet to the lock.

  The mechanism shuddered, then disengaged with a resonant metallic

  thud that vibrated through the iron. For a fraction of a second, a

  faint sigil flared along the inner arch of the gate—an old ward

  reacting to blood it recognized.

  It guttered and died.

  Beneath his ribs, something older stirred in quiet approval.

  Chains slithered to the ground. The gates groaned inward.

  Behind them, the taxi lifted and departed immediately, as though

  eager to distance itself from old ruin.

  Silence reclaimed the promenade.

  From an upper window of a neighboring estate, a curtain shifted

  slightly.

  Then stilled.

  Gaston stepped through first.

  Dashiel followed.

  Dust lay thick across the entry hall, dulling the marble floors

  and muting the once-bright murals overhead. Their footsteps disturbed

  the quiet in slow echoes.

  Dashiel moved carefully, cataloging the room without appearing to

  do so.

  “Security wards?” she asked.

  “Dormant,” Gaston said. “Most of them.”

  He paused, scanning the dark stairwell.

  “For now.”

  Dashiel nodded once, accepting the uncertainty without comment.

  “You said you haven’t opened the box,” she murmured. “But

  you’ve felt it. You know it responds to ambition. Control.

  Connection.”

  This content has been unlawfully taken from Royal Road; report any instances of this story if found elsewhere.

  Her voice was quieter now.

  “For the next three days we need a middle ground,” she

  continued. “Not strangling it. Not allowing it to flare brightly

  enough that every Crimson Sigil scanner in the Mid-Spire thinks a god

  just woke up.”

  She rose from the chair and crossed toward him.

  “I can guide you,” she said. “But you have to listen. Not

  command. Not overpower.”

  She stopped in front of him.

  “Listen.”

  Gaston studied her for a long moment before answering.

  “Guidance isn’t the same as control,” he said quietly.

  “No,” Dashiel replied.

  Their eyes held.

  “That is why it works.”

  Gaston stripped the final dust cover from the bed and shook it

  aside.

  “Control happens after the Gala,” he said. “It stays

  sealed.”

  He gestured toward the adjoining chamber.

  “The arcane generator should still have enough power to draw a

  warm bath if you want to wash properly. I think my mother’s soaps

  and cosmetics are still in the cabinets.”

  He glanced toward the doorway.

  “I’ve only been gone from this place for six years.”

  Dashiel watched him, her expression unreadable.

  “Suppressing the power completely is strain,” she said. “You

  felt that in the bar. It pushes back. Eventually it will force its

  way out.”

  She did not press the argument further.

  The promise of a real bath cut briefly through her professional

  composure.

  “The bath would be… efficient,” she conceded. “Removing

  all traces of the Ironworks and the warehouse is tactically sound.”

  Gaston led her into the en-suite bathing chamber.

  The room was white marble gone grey with dust, dominated by a

  large sunken tub. He pressed a sequence of runes along a brass

  control panel.

  Deep within the house something awakened.

  The dormant arcane generator stirred with a low hum. Pipes

  groaned. A moment later steaming water poured from a gargoyle-shaped

  spout into the tub.

  The cabinets were still stocked.

  Lavender soap wrapped in paper. Bottles of floral shampoo and

  conditioner. Small pots of cold cream and cosmetics.

  Untouched.

  Preserved in cool darkness for six years.

  Dashiel set them carefully beside the tub.

  “I’ll be by the fire,” Gaston said.

  He left her to it.

  Back in the bedroom he replaced the dusty coverings with cleaner

  linens from a chest at the foot of the bed. The fire gradually

  strengthened in the hearth, pushing warmth back into the

  long-abandoned room.

  About twenty minutes later Dashiel returned.

  Her damp hair was slicked back from her face, and she wore an

  embroidered robe that had clearly once belonged to the household.

  Clean skin replaced soot and grime. The bruises across her collarbone

  stood out starkly now.

  She sat opposite him.

  “Three days,” she said. “We finalize our story. Ashton

  Plowfield and aide.”

  Gaston did not hesitate.

  “To sell the distraction, you’re not just an aide,” he said.

  A brief silence followed. “You’re my lover.”

  The word hung between them. Dashiel did not flinch.

  Instead she held his gaze longer than necessary, studying him with

  quiet calculation.

  “You say that very easily,” she said.

  “Either you’re reckless… or you trust me more than you

  should.”

  Gaston leaned back slightly. Silence stretched between them.

  “Which do you prefer?” he asked.

  Dashiel considered the question.

  “Neither,” she said. “But both are believable.” She

  crossed one leg slowly.

  “We aren’t selling crude lust,” she continued. “We’re

  selling hunger sharpened by restraint. That kind of tension convinces

  observers they’re intruding.”

  Gaston watched her carefully.

  “You’re very certain.”

  “Certainty,” Dashiel replied, “is what makes manipulation

  convincing.”

  “Or dangerous.”

  A flicker of something unreadable passed through her eyes.

  “Yes,” she said quietly.

  “It is.”

  The fire cracked softly behind them.

  For a moment neither spoke.

  Then Dashiel leaned forward slightly.

  “There’s one more problem with the lover story.”

  Gaston raised an eyebrow.

  “What’s that?”

  “If we’re convincing,” she said calmly, “we’ll have to

  behave like lovers when people are watching.”

  “And when they’re not?” he asked.

  Her gaze held his. “That depends.”

  “On what?”

  “On whether either of us forgets it’s a performance.”

  Silence stretched again.

  Outside the estate, somewhere beyond the darkened walls of the

  Noble Quarter, a distant bell rang.

  Three days until the Gala. Gaston held her gaze.

  For the first time since entering the house, Dashiel looked away

  first.

  The

  fire cracked softly behind them. For a

  moment neither spoke.

  Then Dashiel leaned forward slightly. “There’s one more

  problem with the lover story.”

  Gaston raised an eyebrow. “What’s that?”

  “If we’re convincing,” she said calmly, “we’ll have to

  behave like lovers when people are watching.”

  “And when they’re not?” he asked.

  Her gaze held his.

  “That depends.”

  “On what?”

  “On whether either of us forgets it’s a performance.”

  Silence stretched between them again.

  Dashiel rose slowly from the chair.

  Gaston didn’t move as she stepped closer, the faint rustle of

  her robe the only sound in the quiet room. Firelight moved across the

  marble floor between them.

  She stopped within arm’s reach.

  “Public scrutiny will be intense,” she said softly. “Eyes

  everywhere. Nobles are trained to detect false intimacy.”

  Her fingers brushed the edge of the table as she leaned slightly

  toward him.

  “We’ll need to convince them,” she continued. “Not with

  declarations.”

  Her gaze flicked briefly to his mouth.

  “With proximity.”

  Gaston watched her without retreating.

  “How close?” he asked.

  Dashiel stepped the final half pace.

  Close enough now that the warmth from the fire mingled with the

  warmth of her breath.

  Her voice dropped almost to a whisper.

  “Close enough that no one doubts it.”

  She reached up, lightly catching the front of his shirt.

  Not pulling.

  Just holding.

  Testing.

  “Observers will watch for hesitation,” she said. “For

  distance. For restraint.”

  She lifted her eyes back to his.

  “If we stop too early—” Her lips hover a fraction from his. “—we pass.”

  The estate creaks softly around them.

  “Decide,” she says against the heat between them. “Am I your

  aide?”

  A pause.

  “Or am I yours?”

  The silence between them stretches.

  Then—

  The sound of a blade dropping to the floor rings out in the quiet

  halls beyond the master suite.

  Both of them freeze.

  A voice follows from the corridor outside.

  “Young Master Gaston?”

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