d and smelling of old leather and cigar smoke. He sat behind a massive des
he had spent years learning the contours of this man's pride. She knew what made him
ead, she framed it as a matter of legacy. A son of his blood, even a bastard, being educated by
tap-tap-tap against the polished wood of his desk. He cared little for Tristan's future. But the idea of his own name attached to such a connection-that was so
and knew she had him. Not full
istair Thorne. She painted a picture of a naive child, overwhelmed by the pressures of high society, clinging to the familiar world she
completely concealing Aurelia'
did not like being led. He did not like his mistress telling him what to do with his own dau
name was a door h
dom's most respected academic circle? That could elevate the Beaumont name in ways a simple marriage alliance never could. It
gh his voice carried a gru
anor standing discreetly to one side. They exchanged
ned girl before an intimidating patriarch. But beneath her lowered lashes, her eyes were moving-reading her father's posture, the tension in his j
arried the weight of a man not used to being questioned. "Tell me abou
debt of honor. She portrayed her adoptive father as a man of simple, unwavering integrity, a man who valued
delivered the
rest wish was for my brother to inherit his learning, not his ledgers. I suppose..." She paused, ducking her head as if embarrassed to have said so much
it was
ing groomed for academia instead of trade. Not just a single favor, then. A door t
she was using it to rebuild her adoptive family's legacy, to make the world see them not as common merchants but as people of hidden value-pe
innocence, but behind it, she wa
ith new eyes. The wariness was still there. He was not
nally-though it was not warmth, only the faint acknowledgment of a useful tool. "As
y. She kept her face bright with timid, grateful surprise. "Thank you,
sh on her tongue. But
d, unremarkable steps, her head still bowed. Only when the
e whispered, her voice tight with admiration. "He is more i
nt proof. He'll send someone to verify the token. We have days-perhaps les
s without giving us what we need first," Elea
lf the faintest smile
of an available path to Professor Carlisle, however slim,
er chambers, her maid, Hazel, was
y wrapped parcels on the table. "Gifts have a
ly acknowledged her existence at dinner, who had looked through her as if
ver in her hands, feeling the weight of the expensive
thing but silence and cold stares now circled with gif
it. "Leave them on the table, Hazel. I
, mi
ll wooden token she had given Eleanor was no longer just a token. It was the center of a vortex
diverted their attent
ource of something they wanted. That made her dangerous. That made her val
ss. They thought they were circling her. They
/1/121247/coverbig.jpg?v=4de302ae7ca329a3f61d18e1f1cc48ca&imageMogr2/format/webp)