âIt was you who drove Madam Loren away.â
Anblin was rendered speechless; her eyes and cheeks flushed crimson.
âYou havenât forgotten, surely?â Edgar asked, a faint smile masking clear contempt in his eyes.
Anblinâs pale neck turned bright red.
âIs there more to say? Iâm a bit busy,â she spat, her words sharp.
The crimson sunset bathed Edgarâs composed face in its lightâstunning yet suffocating.
âEverything⌠itâs all my fault, Ed. Please forgive meâjust once. You loved me, after allâŚâ
He sighed with cold cynicism, his voice low and dry. She, who had ended their relationship out of ambition for becoming crown princess, had no right to speak like thatâunless conscience still stirred within her.
âI admit you werenât bad to me,â Edgar rose wearily. The princessâs performance had dragged far too long today.
âHow could you say thatâŚâ Anblinâs face whitened, her voice quivering.
How indeed?
In that moment, the feverish dreams of first love sharply cooled. Something luminous and blind shattered like thin glass, clarity finally piercing her mindâit had never been love.
Her racing heart stilled; the emotional fog long numbed.
Anblin closed her eyes, then opened them deliberately, brushing away the tears brimming at her lashes. Her pale features, bathed in the dying light, glowed with fierce dignity.
I wonât forgive you. Never.
She dabbed her face with a cream-colored handkerchief, raising her half-lowered eyelids with poised grace.
âYouâll regret this,â she declared.
âIf you wish,â Edgar said, a crisp smile parting his lips.
âAs much as you want,â he added, unfazed by her arrogance. The sunset spread across her faceâtwo souls cleaved apart by an irrevocable river.
The cell was dark even in daylight, the only light entering through a small, palm-sized window.
Diane lay on a worn mattress, staring blankly at a patch of sunlight on the stone floor.
The rusty springs pricked through the frayed fabric, but she felt nothing.
She had stopped counting the days. Stopped trying to bribe the guardsâpointless without the mercy of Johan Leopold.
âDiane Brook. Move forward,â the guard barked, unlocking the door with jangling keys.
She remained motionless until he seized her arm roughly and pulled her to the interrogation chamber. Her bony legs trembled in gray trousers.
They were preparing to continue questioningâtorture in all but name.
At the knock, the door swung open. Diane trembled like a would-be sacrifice, pushed inside and forced to stand with head bowed.
Then she saw the gleam of polished shoes under the low ceiling light. A familiar scent reached her.
â!â Dianeâs gaze fixed on Johan Leopoldâs shoes. Her heart pounded, and she lifted her face.
He looked as flawless as ever, arms folded, eyes closed in that quiet eleganceâreminding her of his office at Great Hill. If only time could turn backâŚ
âI have brought her, Your Grace.â The guardâs voice broke the silence, and Johan slowly opened his silver-gray eyes.
With a nod, Diane was pulled before him and made to kneel. The scrape of chair legs filled the hush.
âDuke,â she managed to whisper as his cool presence washed over her.
âOther than forging a report⌠nothing. I swear it,â she said, her voice low.
She didnât ask for forgivenessâshe knew he would never grant it. She merely confessed, knowing it might be her last chance. She didnât want to die over embezzlement.
âThatâs it, then,â he said, voice crisp. Dianeâs lips snapped shut, her eyes burning.
âI swear on the honor of House Brookâmy only wrongdoing was giving those goods to a fence. Thatâs all. Please believe me.â
Her words fell in the stale air. It had all been a wrong stepâno escape forward or back.
âVery well.â Johan nodded. Maurice placed a document on the table.
âIf you see this, youâll have no objections to accepting your death.â
Dianeâs face remained frozen, heart thudding, body trembling.
âWhat is this?â she asked, eyes fixed on the papers.
He waited, cold silence filling the room.
The lampâs light glinted between his furrowed brows as Diane squeezed her eyes shut again.
She had bribed House Brookâs physicianâan almost perfect plan to discredit Olivia Blanchet, to brand her mentally unstable and commit her.
But Olivia was far from fragile; the womanâs mind resisted even the greatest humiliation.
And then, that lakeside incident shattered it all.
âI⌠didnât know anything, Duke,â Diane said. Mauriceâs document detailed the prescriptions given to the duchessâprescriptions for psychosis, migraine-inducing drugs, and infertility side effects, all evidence of poisoning.
âWhy?â Diane demanded, meeting his gaze. âWhy would I do that?â
âDid you covet the duchessâs position?â Johan asked, his voice icy.
Diane inhaled sharply, as if touching that brutal sun.
He glared at her: âYou almost destroyed herâmy duchess.â
Memories floodedâEdgarâs message, the maidâs cries in that hidden night, the confessions that filled the void.
Dianeâs mind cracked. She saw herself plunging from the edge of a cliff into darkness.
âIf this tragedy demands a soul⌠itâs not me. Itâs you, Duke,â she hissed, voice dropping into maniacal laughter.
Polished features cracked. He tugged at his tie, angry yet composed.
Even that disturbed him. The glint of his Patek âNew Watchâ caught the lightâheâd always insisted only on his mother’s heirloom.
She sneered inwardlyâhe deserved punishment first.
âIf anyone deserves Hell for thisâitâs you.â
Her mad laughter echoed, then stopped.
A few days later, on a rainy dayâthe missing maidâs body was found at the hillside.
âI, Diane Brook, pushed Madam by the lake, I swear on my honor⌠if I die, uncover the injustice.â
These were the words of the maidâs noteâher final threat, her death.
Greed turned deadly.
The day of Diane Brook’s secret trial, the rain fell without pause. She was found hanged in her cell by a guardâdead upon discovery.
That was enough. Johan quietly brought the matter to an end.
I thought Diana was no more. Hahaha. So, the lake thing wasn’t something Olivia wanted?