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e Seraphina before t
ate avenue, trembling through the glass window
hed once, then went still, the gentle rocking motion gone. Ou
rom the driver's seat. "M
as less than a mile from Ironwood, the Beaumont estate, where she was supposed to marry Da
de the delicat
hing she sa
hat a bride was expected. The road ahead was filled with men and women dressed in mourning black, moving with slow, solemn steps to
e afternoon. Ironwood had decided
formed in Sera
prone to dramatics, peeked out from
voice trembling. "Duke Alistair Beaumont. The war
h every whispered discussion of the Beaumont family-powerful, feared, half-myth, half-warning. He
had reached Ironwo
e silence inside thick with unspoken anxiety. Seraphina's patience, already thin, f
ad, and their carriage crawled the fin
en fastened to the iron gates. The servants on the front steps wore black gloves and lowered eyes. Somewhere behind the stone w
nite stood waiting on the steps. Her black d
urmured, his voice tight with
Seraphina, a flicker of disdain
ked," Seraphina sa
r tardiness," the woman sn
te border estate. Raised among muddy fields, hunting dogs, and old rifles instead of music tutors and dancing masters. Useful with a bow, hopeless with poli
de. She was a rough country girl dre
will see you in your suite. Tr
l, her jaw tight. The air inside was heavy and oppressive. Servants moved silently, their faces etched with grief. There we
he bridal suite. Master Damien's rooms are connected through the inner door." She
pushed the
e grand marble fireplace had burned down to gray embers. A tray
shed over her. She had b
ous thumping of her heart. She smoothed her dress,
wa
nd from the adjoining su
la
with sickening familiarity. A sound that had
Her st
toward the connecting door, her feet silent on the thick carpet. Her hand tr
d through
chaise lounge. And in his arms, her stepsister, Isolde, clad in a scandalously thi
her voice dripping with false sympathy. "Tha
ce I secure the inheritance from my uncle's death, I'll annul the marriage. I'll
and against the cold wall to keep from collapsing. The air
. The betrayal.
ember of rage. She was not some lamb to be led to slaughter. She had fought her wa
m
ng table. There, laid out on a swath of velvet, was the bridal veil. An exquisite crea
l of he
ld fireplace. A box of mat
ll flame flickered to life, casting a demonic glow on her face. She touched
oft and delicate and suddenly unbearable, as if the whole Beaum
tation, she thrust it i
erupting in a whoosh of fire. The pe
scream. She
calmly tossed the flaming, melting ma
the room. It coiled towards the ceiling, w
h and magical, split t
d at the servants whose heads were now poking out of doorways
reamed, a raw, desperate so
ir
ning forgotten in the face of immediate danger. They burst i
a beautiful, t
it, the connecting d
a mess. Behind him, clutching at his arm, was Isolde, her silk
nded second,
e room
at Isolde's nightgown, then at Damien's bare throat, then at Seraphina standing alone in her untouched wedding dress. The truth passed through the room faster than the
iable, exploded in the fac
Her face was pale, her wedding dress pristine against the
riumphant light
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