el
on the gravel path. The Nightingale Pavilion glowed ahead, a jewe
. The warmth of the room, combined with the drug, was a potent cocktail. Agnes swayed on her feet, her eyes glazing over. She took two s
g her pulse. She was in
heart, only the cold precision of a surgeon. I unfastened the top buttons of her drab servant's un
y fingers closed on a delicate lace appliqué. With a sharp tug, I rip
gnes's limp hand, a piece of manufactured e
vy, urgent footsteps
ilt
ied with the same drugged wine by Apr
ered one of the glass walls, my heart a steady,
ded with lust and alcohol. He didn't even seem to notice the face of the wom
ow, guttural g
of tearing fabric, a muffled groan fro
my hand finding the hidden latch of a small service door I
the filth of the scene I'd just orchestrated. I took a deep breath,
ss in the open garden, but potent in the enclosed pavilion. Anyone who lingered too long in that room would be uncons
for A
intercept Aniyah halfway. Autumn would claim there had been a change of plans, that I had moved to the east rose garden instead. A secluded spot, far from the main festivities, far from any witness. T
s way: isolate my only ally, then destroy me in
ardens with a purpose that belied
n me genuine kindness in that suffocating Sullivan household.
is arches draped in climbing roses, then the stone benches tuc
ses. I couldn't see the face from this distance-just the outline of a woman
crunching beneath my slippers, my breath coming
h had mended three times rather than ask the Sullivans for a replacement. And on the bench besi
as A
shaking fingers to her throat. Her pulse was slow-too slow-steady but faint, like the heartbeat of someone in a drugged sleep rather
I had to hold my own to detect it. I pulled her upright against the bench back, arranging h
from my past life-how its victims looked exactly like this: peaceful, motionless, utterly unreachabl
, my mind racing through a dozen half-formed plans. N
lt it before I saw it-a presence, heavy and watchful, the
ned m
the clearing, cloaked in the deep shadows cast by the
ane. Each step was measured, controlled-the gait of someone who had learned to turn weakness into a weapon. The silver handle of his cane ca
eel the weight of his presence-a quiet, suffocating pressur
ght his face, and
milton. It w
s left temple-details I remembered from another life, from whispered court gossip and distant glimpses across crowded throne rooms. But standing this close, those details co
ht in my throa
d "crippled" Alpha who had been exiled to the borders, on
laid plan had just collided with th
as low, smooth as aged whiske
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