Part 1
The grandfather clock in the hallway struck midnight with deliberate resonance, each note falling like a judgment upon Philip's restless state. He lay rigid beneath the silk canopy of his four-poster bed, observing how moonlight filtered through the tall windows to paint silver arabesques across the opposite wall. The sheets that normally provided such exquisite comfort now felt like silken chains—too warm, too smooth, too evocative of sensations he desperately sought to banish from his thoughts.
Kendrick.
The name reverberated through his consciousness like a sacred invocation. His oldest friend in this world, his brother in all but blood, potentially reduced to atoms by hypersonic missiles in some forsaken corner of Vakeria. The intelligence reports remained frustratingly fragmentary—the diplomatic compound obliterated, all communications severed, casualty lists conspicuously absent. Lydia had spent the evening deploying every resource available to the Redwood name, calling in favors from contacts across three continents, yet the fog of war remained absolute, impenetrable as a wall of obsidian.
Philip shifted position for what felt like the hundredth time, turning now to face the window. The moon hung like a silver sovereign above the estate grounds, transforming the meticulously manicured gardens into a chiaroscuro study of shadow and luminescence. Somewhere beyond those hedgerows and ornamental fountains, revolutionaries plotted the downfall of empires, nations schemed for supremacy, and his dearest friend might be drawing his last breath—or might already have drawn it hours ago.
And here he lay, tormented by another concern that seemed trivial by comparison yet refused to release their grip on his consciousness.
Elora.
Even thinking her name brought a cascade of conflicting emotions. He could still feel the phantom pressure of her body against his during that impossibly charged tango, could still detect traces of her perfume lingering in his memory—something devastatingly sophisticated that probably cost more than a factory worker's annual wages. The way she'd gazed at him with those crystalline eyes, brimming with love and determination and something that might have been beautiful desperation. She'd been Philip's constant since childhood, brilliant as a diamond, beautiful as dawn, devoted as a pilgrim to a shrine.
He owed her... what exactly? Love? Could one owe such a thing? The very concept felt wrong, transforming what should be freely given into a transaction, a debt to be settled. She cared for him with an intensity that bordered on the religious—had done so since they were children playing in the Nernwick gardens. She was brilliant, accomplished, beautiful beyond measure. Any man would count himself blessed beyond reason to have earned her affection.
So why did his traitorous heart perform acrobatics whenever he thought of Natalia?
Philip groaned softly into the down pillow, mortified by his own weakness. After that scene in the room earlier, with its settee and its dangerous proximity and its moments of discovery, he'd made the executive decision to enforce boundaries. He'd informed Natalia they should maintain separate sleeping quarters for a time, ostensibly to prevent her from becoming "confused" about the nature of their relationship. The truth, which he could barely admit even in the privacy of his own thoughts, was that he was the one drowning in confusion, pulled under by currents he couldn't name and didn't dare examine too closely.
The way she'd felt beneath him on that damned settee, all surprising softness and hidden strength. The little sounds she'd made, caught somewhere between analytical observation and genuine discovery. The look in her eyes when he'd pulled away—curious and questioning and perhaps disappointed, though he might have imagined that last part.
The door hinges whispered their secrets—so softly he might have imagined it entirely. But the silk sheets shifted with a draft that hadn't existed moments before, carrying with it the faintest hint of roses and vanilla. Philip's entire body went rigid, years of recent paranoia transforming him into a coiled spring. An assassin? After the attempts on his life, he'd learned to sleep with one ear open, a loaded pistol tucked discretely in the nightstand drawer within easy reach.
Then he felt it—a hand gentle as a butterfly's blessing touching his shoulder through the thin fabric of his nightshirt. Followed immediately by something else pressing against his back. Something soft. Something warm. Something decidedly... abundant.
"Master?" Natalia's voice came as barely more than a whisper, her breath creating tiny hurricanes of warmth against his neck. "Are you awake?"
Philip's mind went completely, catastrophically blank. She was in his bed. In his bed again! And judging by the heat radiating from her body like a small sun, she was wearing another of those gossamer-thin nightgowns that seemed designed specifically to test the limits of his self-control.
"Natalia," he managed, his voice emerging strangled as if someone had wrapped fingers around his throat. "What are you doing here?"
She pressed closer—how was it possible to press closer?—and Philip bit down on his tongue hard enough to taste copper, desperately trying to suppress the groan building in his chest. Through the whisper-thin fabric separating them, he could feel every curve, every soft line of her body molded against his back like she'd been crafted specifically to fit there.
"I wanted to savor our time together," she said softly, and there was something in her voice he'd never heard before—a quality that might have been melancholy, or longing, or some emotion too complex for his overheated brain to parse.
"Savor?" His voice cracked on the word like an adolescent's.
"Mm-hmm." She snuggled impossibly closer, her chin coming to rest on his shoulder with devastating casualness. "Once you marry Lady Elora, everything changes. At best, we'll maintain separate bedrooms within the same wing. At worst, different buildings entirely. Statistical probability analysis suggests an 87.3% reduction in proximity opportunities."
"You calculated—of course you calculated the exact percentage." Philip squeezed his eyes shut, praying for strength, wisdom, or perhaps spontaneous combustion. "Natalia, we simply cannot continue like this."
"Oh, but Lydia said it's perfectly acceptable!" Her voice brightened with the enthusiasm of someone sharing wonderful news. "She explained the entire sociological framework. It's quite fascinating from an anthropological perspective."
"What?" Philip's eyes snapped open. "What exactly did Lydia say?"
"Well," Natalia began, settling more comfortably against him as if they were having tea rather than lying intimately entwined in his bed, "she explained that I exist in what she termed a 'consequence-free zone' within aristocratic society."
"A what now?"
"It's brilliantly logical when you examine the underlying assumptions!" Her fingers began tracing absent patterns on his chest through his nightshirt, each touch sending electrical impulses racing along his nerves. "Since Familiars cannot bear children nor transmit diseases, physical intimacy carries no biological consequences. In the aristocratic worldview—where bloodline preservation and inheritance security are paramount concerns—this makes any relationship between us essentially... inconsequential."
"Inconsequential," Philip repeated, incredulity coloring every syllable.
"From a strictly pragmatic standpoint, yes! Lydia explained that before Familiars were outlawed, many noblewomen preferred their husbands having a Familiar companion. It provided an outlet for physical needs without threatening their children's inheritance or introducing complex family dynamics that might result in succession disputes or costly divorce proceedings." She paused, apparently considering this information from multiple angles.
Philip groaned into his pillow. "Of course she did."
"After all, aristocratic marriages are fundamentally procreational alliances rather than romantic fairytales. So couples often maintain their own discrete lovers and mistresses with the implicit understanding that love and family are separate spheres of existence. Since most Familiars lack agency and all Familiars lack legal rights, they cannot become credible rivals or make claims on family resources." Her academic and impersonal tone created a surreal contrast with their intimate position and the deeply personal nature of the topic. "It's a fascinating sociological adaptation to the constraints of hereditary wealth transfer."
"Reputation, lineage, wealth, and power," Philip muttered with weary exasperation. "Everything in this damned world revolves around those four pillars."
"Well, they do appear to be the foundational elements of human society in this particular cultural context," Natalia agreed with scholarly cheerfulness.
They lay in silence for a moment, the only sounds their breathing and the distant ticking of the grandfather clock. Her warmth seeped through the thin barriers between them like honey through cheesecloth, her rose-and-vanilla scent filling his senses until he felt drunk on it.
"Master?" she whispered, her voice smaller now.
"Yes?"
"There is an important realization I wanted to share with you tonight. It's actually the primary reason I came here." Her voice turned hesitant yet eager with barely contained anticipation.
Philip's pulse accelerated to a cavalry charge. The way she'd been acting all evening—the nightgown, the physical closeness, this midnight visit to his bed. Was she about to confess deeper feelings? The thought filled him with equal measures of anticipation and dread. He wasn't ready—not with Elora's expectations hanging over him like a sword, society's demands pressing from all sides, his own heart a confused battleground.
"Natalia," he began carefully, choosing each word like a diplomat navigating a minefield, "I'm not certain I have the answer you're seeking right now."
"You don't have to decide tonight. Take all the time you need. It's only prudent to carefully consider such an important decision." Her voice held an understanding that made his chest tight.
"I suppose... I should hear what you have to say." Philip said weakly, steeling himself for the incoming passionate declaration of love.
"You should liquidate your portfolio immediately."
Philip's brain screeched to a halt like a carriage horse spotting a cliff edge. "I... what?"
"Your stock holdings!" Her voice brightened with infectious enthusiasm. "Complete divestment within the next week. Two weeks at absolute maximum. My comprehensive analysis of multiple data streams suggests the market's about to experience a dramatic paradigm shift."
"You came to my bed at midnight to give me investment advice?"
"Well, also for the cuddling," she admitted with disarming honesty. "But yes! This intelligence is extremely time-sensitive. Given the information at our disposal, the Vakerian situation will likely dominate global media coverage within days. Oil prices will experience an initial surge as markets price in conflict risk. It's perfect time to liquidate your oil and gas holdings."
Philip tried desperately to process this shift from expected intimate confession to market analysis. "Wouldn't that suggest I should hold for gains?"
"Classic short-term thinking!" She pressed closer in her excitement, her body language suggesting she'd forgotten entirely about their current physical intimacy. "Yes, markets will initially price in renewed European conflict layered atop the brewing Middle Eastern tensions. But that's precisely the optimal exit window! It's better to capture good profits rather than attempting to time an unpredictable peak. We can then redeploy that capital into blue mana utility infrastructure."
"Blue mana utilities?" His voice emerged strangled—whether from her unexpected advice or the way her enthusiasm made her unconsciously squeeze him tighter remained unclear.
"The grid operators specifically! Not extraction or refinement companies—actual infrastructure providers." Her voice took on the passionate intensity of a true believer. "Consider the cascading effects: warfare disrupts traditional energy supply chains while the Continental Republic and United Eastern States accelerate their summoned entity programs in efforts to outdo each other. Each summoning facility requires massive blue mana input."
She threw one leg over his in her excitement, apparently oblivious to his immediate physiological response. "We're witnessing perfect storm conditions! Traditional energy supply constriction occurring simultaneous with magical energy demand explosion. Blue mana utilities will become the most critical infrastructure globally as the international summoning race accelerates into full mobilization!"
"That's... actually a very sophisticated analysis," Philip admitted, his economic mind engaging despite the ongoing distraction of her proximity.
"In addition, you should consider liquidating your real estate stockholdings as well as all excess real estate holdings currently held by the trust!" She practically vibrated with enthusiasm. "We're entering a period of systematic inflation driven by four interconnected factors: First, supply chain fragmentation resulting from the macro trend of deglobalization, as nations increasingly prioritize security over economic efficiency. This shift necessitates redundant supply chains, leading to inherently suboptimal cost structures. Second, longstanding social imbalances are resurfacing globally, prompting renewed conflicts in resource-producing regions and, consequently, driving up global raw material costs. Third, heightened environmental activism is accelerating the transition away from petroleum-based energy sources toward blue mana alternatives. Most critically, with the global race for summoned entities heats up, the resultant widespread deployment of summoning facilities will exponentially increase the demand for blue mana, significantly reducing its availability for civilian applications."
Despite the surreal circumstances of discussing macroeconomics while entangled in bed, Philip found himself genuinely intrigued. "I wonder how the central banks would respond to that?"
"Oh, Master!" She squeezed him so enthusiastically he briefly lost the ability to breathe. "You see it too! They'll have no choice but to maintain current elevated interest rates or implement only marginal reductions far below market expectations. The Fisher effect will compress real estate valuations—potentially 20-30% decline in real terms across developed markets!"
"So you're suggesting..."
"Sell all real estate stockholdings immediately. Sell oil and gas positions during the conflict-driven price spike. Direct the family trust to start divesting real estate holdings, except for this estate. Channel stock sale proceeds into blue mana utility companies for the long-term structural play, while maintaining substantial cash reserves in the trust from the real estate ales for opportunistic acquisition of income-producing investments in 12 to 24 months when the full impacts materialize." She bounced slightly with excitement, each movement acutely reminding Philip of her softness. "Even if the thesis proves partially incorrect, we'll have successfully navigated around a perfect storm of value destruction."
Philip's mind raced through the implications, recognizing sophisticated multi-variable analysis across different time horizons—the kind of strategic thinking that was common at his old workplace.
"Natalia," he said slowly, genuine admiration coloring his voice, "this is genuinely impressive analysis. Where did you develop this level of market sophistication?"
"Oh, I've been studying intensively with Lydia! Economics texts, market history, pattern recognition algorithms, and continuous monitoring of various financial news channels." Her voice held the pride of a student showing off for a favorite teacher.
"But why the sudden interest in financial markets?"
Her expression softened into something approaching tenderness. "Because Master needs money, and I need to continuously adapt to remain useful."
Philip blinked in surprise. "I... what?"
"You're constantly worried about finances," she explained with matter-of-fact certainty. "A little furrow appears between your eyebrows every morning when reviewing the estate ledgers. You denied yourself new dress shoes last month despite the worn heel creating uneven gait patterns. You've been diluting the imported coffee—60% more water than optimal brewing ratios."
"I haven't been—"
"I can calculate liquid ratios through visual analysis of color density and steam patterns," she interrupted gently. "Additionally, you've started reusing tea leaves, which degrades flavor compounds by approximately 73%. You trim your own hair between barber visits—the asymmetry behind your left ear has become quite noticeable. And you've been writing correspondence on the reverse sides of old documents to save stationery costs."
Heat crept up Philip's neck like rising mercury. "I didn't realize my economizing was so obvious."
"Oh, you maintain excellent facades for outside observers! I simply pay very close attention to you specifically." She said it matter-of-factly, as if constant detailed observation of his habits was perfectly normal behavior.
"But why do you suddenly feel you need to prove your utility?"
"Lydia explained I must make myself indispensable," Natalia replied, her enthusiasm dimming fractionally like a candle in a draft. "She said humans are fundamentally self-interested creatures. If I provide irresistible value—far more benefit than inconvenience—then Lady Elora..."
She trailed off, her grip on him loosening marginally.
"What about her?" Philip prompted softly.
"Lady Elora will tolerate my continued presence. And value, in human socioeconomic terms, typically equates to monetary generation or preservation."
The carefully modulated pain threading through her voice made Philip's decision instantaneous. He turned in her arms, finally facing her directly, their faces inches apart in the moonlight.
The lunar radiance transformed her features into something otherworldly—skin like polished alabaster, eyes with tint of silver, hair spread across his pillow like spun gold. Philip forced his gaze to remain fixed on her face through sheer force of will, though his peripheral vision couldn't help but notice the nightgown left very little to imagination.
"Natalia," he said firmly, allowing no room for misinterpretation, "you are not an inconvenience. Your value cannot be measured in investment returns or household efficiency metrics."
"But Lydia said—"
"Lydia is brilliant about most things, but you are special to me," Philip interrupted. "You're not some asset to be evaluated through cost-benefit analysis."
"I'm not?" She looked genuinely confused, her brow furrowing adorably. "But isn't everything ultimately reducible to cost-benefit evaluation in human society? Even marriages are fundamentally economic mergers with reproductive clauses attached."
Philip couldn't suppress his laugh. "When you phrase it in those clinical terms, it sounds absolutely horrible."
"Is my analysis inaccurate?"
"Not entirely," he admitted. "But it is not relevant to how I see you."
She studied his face with laser-like focus, as if trying to decode a particularly complex cipher. "How do you see me, Master?"
"As an irreplaceable friend," Philip said, the words tumbling out before his conscious mind could censor them.
Her eyes widened to silver coins. "Oh. That's... unexpected."
Part 2
While Philip discovered solace within Natalia's gentle embrace, elsewhere in the mansion's shadowed halls, another nocturnal visitor prepared to make her presence devastatingly known.
Albert's chambers stood as a testament to military precision incarnate—every tome aligned with geometric perfection, every surface gleaming with obsessive cleanliness, every weapon meticulously maintained and positioned for instantaneous deployment. The steward slumbered as he conducted all aspects of his existence: with ruthless efficiency, one weathered hand perpetually poised mere inches from the cold steel of his bedside pistol.
Yet on this particular night, something stirred him from his regimented dreams.
The atmosphere within his sanctum had undergone a fundamental transformation—suddenly charged with an arctic draft of otherworldly coldness that raised every fine hair along his battle-scarred arms to rigid attention. A presence both tangible and ephemeral, substantial yet wraith-like, had materialized within his domain.
Albert's eyes snapped open with practiced alertness, his fingers already closing around the pistol's worn grip with lethal familiarity.
"Now, now," a voice of honeyed seduction purred from the shadows, each syllable dripping with sensual promise. "Is that truly any manner in which to greet a lady?"
She coalesced from darkness itself like smoke given tantalizing form—Aurora, the angel of morning by name and the angel of evening in truth. Tonight she had chosen to manifest as carnality personified: gossamer robes that served more as a decoration than clothing, barely restraining the voluptuous curves of her otherworldly figure. Her skin seemed to emanate its own lunar radiance, while wings of swan-white feathers interwoven with captured starlight filled the chamber with impossible, terrible grace. The diaphanous fabric clung to her form like morning mist caressing hillsides, offering tantalizing glimpses rather than crude revelations.
Albert maintained his weapon's trajectory with unwavering discipline, though he harbored no illusions about conventional armaments' efficacy against entities of her supernatural nature. "State your business, creature."
"Creature?" Aurora pressed one delicate hand to her generous bosom in theatrical affront, the calculated gesture drawing inevitable attention to the dramatic décolletage her ethereal garments so artfully revealed. "How positively wounding. And here I arrived bearing such magnificently generous gifts."
"I desire nothing from your kind."
"No?" She glided nearer with liquid grace, each movement a carefully choreographed symphony of temptation. "Not even the opportunity to truly provide genuine happiness for her? After all..." Her smile transformed into something knowing, predatory. "Her most profound needs would be far better satisfied by a younger, more vigorous body. You comprehend this truth, don't you? I speak no falsehood, do I?"
The words struck with the force of a cavalry charge, and Albert's consciousness was suddenly, violently thrust backward through time—
Two years prior. Downtown Yortinto. A dreary autumn afternoon painted in shades of gray.
He'd been conducting estate business at the Imperial Dominion Bank, finalizing the labyrinthine paperwork for a mortgage application to fund Redwood Estate's ambitious real estate development project. The rain had just ceased its relentless assault, leaving the cobblestones treacherous and gleaming like oil. As he'd turned down a narrow lane toward his waiting carriage, he'd encountered her—a beggar woman huddled within the recessed doorway of a shuttered millinery shop.
She'd possessed an incongruous beauty despite her tattered circumstances, or perhaps her degradation only served to highlight it further. Raven hair tangled around features too refined, too aristocratic for the squalor of the streets. Eyes that harbored unfathomable depths, holding secrets no common vagrant should possess. Her dress, though rent and mud-stained, failed utterly to disguise curves that belonged in a duchess's ballroom, not a rain-soaked alley.
"Spare a penny for a woman fallen upon hard times, good sir?" she'd implored, her voice maintaining a melodious quality despite its practiced whine.
Something ineffable had moved him. Perhaps it was the dignified manner in which she bore her apparent destitution. Perhaps it was something else entirely, something his disciplined mind refused to acknowledge even in its most private recesses. He'd reached into his coat and extracted five Continental dollars—more wealth than most beggars glimpsed in a month of desperate supplication.
"Five dollars?" Her eyes had widened with what appeared to be genuine astonishment. "Sir, I requested merely a penny."
"Take it," he'd said gruffly, already turning away, mortified by his own uncharacteristic generosity.
That very night, she'd come to him.
He'd been in his study at the estate, reviewing ledgers by lamplight's golden glow, when the very air had shimmered like heat mirages. She'd materialized like something torn from the Middle Eastern tales he'd devoured as a boy—adorned in what could only be described as a catastrophically misguided attempt at a mystical genie's costume. Translucent silks in jewel tones that left her toned midriff scandalously bare, golden chains that chimed with musical notes at each breath, a jeweled circlet across her forehead that transformed her into something between a sultan's belly dancer and a music hall's orientalist fantasy.
"Demon!" he'd gasped, fumbling frantically for the garlic bulbs perpetually secreted in his breast pocket. His other hand had seized the leather-bound Holy Book from his desk with desperate fervor. "Witch! Demon! Begone from this sanctified place!"
Aurora had laughed, the sound reminiscent of silver bells caught in a gentle zephyr. "Oh, my dearest Albert. Garlic cloves? The Holy Book? How delightfully... medieval." She'd moved closer with predatory grace, hips swaying in a manner that transformed her ridiculous costume into a weapon of devastating distraction. "I am no demon, sweet man. Simply someone profoundly moved by your kindness who wishes to repay such generosity."
"I want nothing from you," he'd insisted, though his voice had wavered treacherously as she'd circled his desk like a lioness evaluating particularly intriguing prey.
"No? Then perhaps I should take my leave." She'd turned toward the door with practiced nonchalance, then paused, glancing back over one bare shoulder with calculated innocence. "Though I feel honor-bound to share something first. The woman you've loved with such desperate devotion all these years? She's not a woman at all, but a Familiar."
The words had landed like ice water extinguishing a blazing forge. "You lie."
"Do I?" Her smile had been as enigmatic as the pyramids. "Watch more carefully, dear Albert. Notice how her skin feels beneath your trembling fingers. Notice how she insists upon blindfolds during your moments of... intimate pleasure. Notice the uncanny texture of her form within your hands. The truth lurks there, waiting, if you possess the courage to perceive it."
And then she'd vanished like smoke, leaving only jasmine's lingering perfume and seeds of doubt that would germinate like pernicious weeds within his meticulously ordered mind.
Return to the present—
"You... deliberately planted that seed of corrosive doubt within my mind, didn't you?" Albert said quietly, his grip on the pistol loosening imperceptibly.
Aurora's smile widened like a cat who'd successfully cornered a particularly succulent canary. "And did you not discover I spoke nothing but truth? Did you not uncover the reality through your... passionate bedroom exercises?"
Albert's jaw clenched with suppressed fury. She was right, damn her to whatever infernal realm had spawned her. Ever since that fateful night, he'd been incapable of ceasing his observations. The way Lydia moved with a fluidity that belonged to a woman decades younger. The way her skin felt impossibly smooth beneath his calloused palms, unmarked by time's usual cruelties. The soft gasps during their lovemaking that emerged from a throat that should have been weathered by decades, not preserved like the finest vintage wine.
"A Familiar," he whispered, the word bitter as wormwood upon his tongue.
"Indeed." Aurora materialized behind his chair with supernatural swiftness, her presence as electric as a gathering thunderstorm. "Created by Gabriel Redwood's own hands. The lovechild born of his desperate longing for his deceased Melinda. And you, poor devoted Albert, loving her from afar all these interminable years, yet never truly knowing her essential nature."
Memories cascaded through his consciousness unbidden, each more agonizing than its predecessor. His youth in a struggling working-class family of industrial Avalondia. The youngest of five children, watching hope dim in his mother's eyes with each passing year. His father, mangled beyond recognition by factory machinery when Albert was merely ten—the massive gears had caught his sleeve, dragging him inexorably into their merciless teeth before anyone could engage the emergency mechanisms. The employer had paid out precisely enough compensation to appear magnanimous while satisfying only the barest legal requirements. His mother, aged decades before her time, scraping and saving with desperate determination, utilizing every hard-won penny to propel his older siblings through their education. By the time Albert reached maturity, nothing remained but crushing debt and the fierce determination that poverty breeds in those who refuse to be broken by its weight.
Hence, the military had represented his sole prospect for a life beyond mere subsistence. The Avalondian Empire—sprawling across thirty-three million square kilometers spanning every inhabited continent—required bodies to maintain order across its vast holdings bound together by little more than military might and economic chains. Young men from families like his proved perfect fodder: educated enough to comprehend complex orders, desperate enough to serve without question, proud enough to distinguish themselves through excellence rather than desertion.
He'd studied like a man possessed for the Imperial Military Academy entrance examinations, haunting public libraries more than his own cramped home, bartering tutoring services for menial chores, laboring through nights at a munitions factory to accumulate funds for preparatory courses. When the acceptance letter finally arrived, his mother had wept tears that mingled joy with the profound sorrow of knowing she'd likely never see him again.
It was there, within that rarefied world of brass buttons and noble bloodlines, that he'd encountered Gabriel Redwood.
The memory remained crystalline in its clarity: fumbling with the starched collar of his new dress uniform before the academy's opening ceremony, when Gabriel approached—already immaculately attired, as comfortable in military finery as Albert was in his own skin.
"Tricky things, these collars. Took me weeks to master them properly. Gabriel Redwood, by the way."
Unlike the other nobles—who, even within the allegedly meritocratic academy, clustered in insular, hereditary circles like iron filings around powerful magnets—Gabriel seemed almost oblivious to the invisible boundaries that governed campus life.
While most aristocratic scions mingled exclusively with their own kind, Gabriel actively sought Albert's company, not for show or obligation, but from genuine interest. He included Albert in study groups where commoners typically served as mere note-takers, brought him to social gatherings where the help usually served the drinks, and—most remarkably—treated him as an intellectual equal. With Gabriel, there existed no sense of patronage or condescension; he admired Albert's tactical mind, his ambition forged in hardship's crucible, his grit born from knowing failure meant returning to poverty's embrace. To Gabriel, Albert represented not merely another contact to be cultivated or a promising tool for future deployment—he was a person worth knowing for his own sake.
They'd served together with distinction that became legend. The Battle of Manbahar, where they'd held a strategic bridge against overwhelming rebel forces—three hundred men against three thousand screaming for blood. The Siege of Fort Prosperity, where Gabriel had led a direct charge against fortified enemy positions with Albert following mere steps behind, their dress uniforms still pristine from a diplomatic dinner they'd had no time to change from. The bullets had flown past like furious hornets, missing by mere inches each time. It was the first and only occasion Albert had tasted invincibility's intoxicating nectar. They held fate itself in their hands, forging history with every thundering heartbeat. It was a sensation more potent than any opiate, a high Albert had experienced only that singular, glorious time.
Then came that unforgettable campaign where they'd encountered the third member of their legendary trio, Conrad Reitzman, who'd been born into circumstances mirroring Albert's own but had married into a family matching Gabriel's exalted station. Most significantly, Conrad possessed a daughter who'd almost married into Gabriel's family. Her name was Rosetta—and that remained a tragedy reserved for another night's telling.
When Gabriel received dominion over the Redwood Estate, he'd asked Albert to serve as his steward. "I need someone I can trust with my very life," Gabriel had said with characteristic simplicity. "Someone who comprehends what it means to build something from nothing."
Then, two years into his devoted service, came the love that would define his existence: Lydia. It was a day that had rewritten his fundamental understanding of beauty itself.
Twenty-two years old, fresh from the prestigious Whitmore Agency with references that sang her praises like an angelic chorus. But no written recommendation could have adequately prepared him for the devastating reality. She'd descended from that carriage like a vision torn from a Renaissance master's canvas in her prime, but imbued with an ethereal quality that transcended mere mortal beauty. Her raven hair, lustrous as polished obsidian, had captured the morning light and transformed it into something approaching magic. Even beneath the modest long dress befitting her station, her figure remained unmistakable—curves that would reduce sculptors to tears of inadequacy, moving with a grace that transformed simple locomotion into performance art.
But it was the fundamental contradiction of her that had truly ensnared him. Here stood a woman bearing nobility's natural grace, the kind of ineffable elegance that spoke of ballrooms and silk sheets, yet she'd supposedly been an orphan. The rumor mill—perpetually churning at great estates—whispered that Duchess Margaret had discovered her in some provincial orphanage and, struck by the girl's extraordinary qualities, had taken her under protective wing. She'd been placed at a minor estate for training, they said, kept like a secret weapon until ready for grander stages.
Her height alone—a statuesque five feet nine inches—spoke of excellent nutrition throughout her development, not the stunted growth common to orphans. Her teeth gleamed like perfect pearls, her skin resembled unblemished cream, her hands remained uncalloused despite supposedly laboring since childhood. She moved through the estate with an air of sheltered naivety that sat oddly with her supposed hard-luck origins, like watching someone perform at being common-born without quite mastering the essential details.
Yet her mind—oh, her mind proved sharp as any duchess's. She could quote literature in three languages with casual ease, solve complex mathematical equations in her head, discuss philosophy with visiting scholars as equals, and manage household accounts with an efficiency that spoke of extensive education. Book-wise but not street-wise, cultured yet supposedly common—she embodied a walking contradiction that fascinated everyone who encountered her.
But she'd only had eyes for Gabriel.
Albert had stepped aside. What else could he do? Gabriel was his friend, his master, his brother in all but blood. And Lydia deserved someone who could offer her a genuine future, not merely stolen moments and a lifetime of servitude below stairs. And surprisingly, Lydia seemed to possess a real chance with Gabriel at the time. He remained a young heartbroken widower with a small son desperately needing a mother's gentle touch. Most astonishingly, the Duke and Duchess had seemed surprisingly receptive to the match—or so Albert had believed at the time.
So he'd watched from the periphery as Lydia interacted with Gabriel with a familiarity exceeding most aristocratic couples' public displays. He'd watched her illuminate entire rooms with her radiant smile, had congratulated them both with words that tasted of ash and broken dreams, and never revealed that his heart was fragmenting with the patient persistence of water wearing down granite.
"And when you finally received your chance," Aurora murmured, now perched on his desk's edge like temptation made manifest, "she came wearing a necessary lie."
"She had no choice, I suppose," Albert said, but conviction wavered in his voice like a candle flame in winter wind.
"But you do now. Accept my gift today, and deception would no longer be necessary between you two." Aurora's voice grew sweeter still, like honey laced with something infinitely more potent. "You could join in her eternal youth, share in her deepest secret. You could match her, year for year, century for century."
Albert found his gaze drawn inexorably upward to Aurora's mesmerizing face despite himself. The thought of growing old while Lydia remained forever young beneath her careful disguise twisted like a knife in his gut with each passing dawn. He'd already detected the signs—the subtle stiffness in his joints on cold mornings that no amount of exercise could prevent, the way he needed to squint at ledgers in poor light, the silver threading through his hair like premature frost. How much longer before the gap became unbridgeable?
Looking back with newfound understanding, all those inexplicable things between Lydia and him suddenly clicked into place like pieces of a long-scattered puzzle. Like how it had begun between them—those first tentative moments after Gabriel's passing, when grief still hung over the estate like London's thickest fog. He'd been surprised when she'd made the first move—a gentle touch on his shoulder that lingered beyond mere comfort, a look that communicated everything words couldn't.
"I had wanted to remain by her side," he said slowly, each word dragged from depths he usually kept locked, "to grow old with her. That represented the greatest happiness I could imagine. But now... ironically, it would only be me growing decrepit while she laboriously maintains her exhausting charade."
Aurora slipped from her perch with liquid grace, gliding behind him. Her arms began to snake around his shoulders from behind, her ample bosom pressing against his back as she leaned down to whisper honeyed poison in his ear—
His military reflexes triggered instantaneously. Without conscious thought, Albert seized her reaching arm, ducked forward with practiced efficiency, and executed a textbook seoi nage shoulder throw.
The problem with throwing a supernatural being, he realized mid-motion with dawning horror, was that they proved surprisingly light.
Aurora flew over his shoulder with far more momentum than he'd calculated. As she arced through the air, her gossamer robes billowed upward like a silk parachute, revealing an extensive expanse of perfectly sculpted leg. She landed on his bed with a distinctly undignified "Oomph!", legs akimbo, robes twisted around her in ways that revealed far more than any respectable supernatural entity should display.
They stared at each other in mutual shock, both too stunned to move. Aurora's perfect composure had shattered completely—her hair was mussed into charming disarray, her robes were riding up to reveal one shapely thigh, and she looked utterly, impossibly mortal in her dishevelment.
"Did you just—" she started, voice pitched higher than usual with indignation.
"Military training," he said weakly. "Reflexive response. I didn't mean to—" and then Albert instinctively extended a gentlemanly hand to help Aurora regain her feet.
Aurora blinked once, twice, then her eyes illuminated with sudden, wicked inspiration. She accepted his hand and then, with a playful pull containing strength exceeding most men, yanked Albert toward her. Surprised, Albert tumbled forward, but his left hand instinctively pushed down on the mattress, maintaining that crucial bit of space between their bodies. The sly smile that spread across Aurora's face was positively vulpine in its triumph. Then, she whispered with devastating intimacy, "Listen to your heart, Albert, for it never lies. You want to give Lydia the absolute best you can in the area that matters most profoundly, don't you? And for that... youthfulness remains imperative. And that's precisely what I am offering you. An eternity of it."
Before Albert could formulate a response, she was already back at the window, attempting to recover her usual supernatural grace by smoothing out her disheveled robes. She appeared oddly alluring in her rumpled state, more approachable than in her perfect divinity. "I'll return in six months for your answer. Consider most carefully. For time waits for no one."
"Wait," Albert called out, surprising himself with the urgency. "What's the price?"
Aurora's smile turned knowing, ancient. "Just continue performing your current role, but for a different master, and for a significantly longer tenure."
Then, she dissolved into shadow and starlight, leaving only jasmine's lingering perfume and the vial gleaming on his desk like a fallen star.
Albert sat in his chair for a long moment, staring at the vial's otherworldly gleam. Through his window, he could perceive the faint light in Lydia's room where she was probably removing her prosthetics, revealing the truth she hid from the world. From him, even in their most intimate moments.
His hand trembled slightly as he pondered. To be young again. To stand beside her as an equal. To have centuries instead of mere decades.
But at what cost?