Chapter 690: Conversation with Kraven’s mother - I
Chapter 690: Conversation with Kraven’s mother - I
"If he is as intelligent as he is now presenting himself to be, he may suspect," Vanessa said, her voice hard, almost clinical. "But men—" she paused, letting the word hang for emphasis, "—men suspect, and yet they proceed anyway." Her eyes met Sera’s directly. "The bait only has to be good enough. You.... my dear Seren... are good enough."
A long silence stretched between them.
"You want everything," Sera said finally. "Not just impressions. Not just vague ideas. You want—" she hesitated, measuring each word carefully, "—specific words. Specific moments. Every fragment of it."
Vanessa leaned forward slightly, her hands joined together. "I want to be able to close my eyes," she said, "and see the inside of that conversation as though I were present for it myself."
Sera was quiet for another heartbeat, her mind working rapidly behind calm eyes. Then she gave a slow nod. "Yes, my lady."
Without another word, she stood, moved towards the door, and slipped out.
**
Time passed like a blur in the duchy and before Julian knew it, the sun had already begun to set. He spent the hours locked inside Kraven’s room, looking around for anything interesting.
Well he did find something interesting.
Leather cuffs. Whips. A silk blindfold, folded with specific care of something used regularly and valued. Several other items that required no explanation and received none.
He understood Kraven’s appetites well enough by now. The room simply added texture to what the memories had already established.
He bathed after that — the castle’s hot water was reliable and the oils provided were expensive — and changed into the silk nightwear he had found folded in the wardrobe. It was dark, well-fitted, the kind of thing bought for comfort.
He was sitting in the chair beside the window, looking at the lights beginning to appear in the darkening city below, when the knock came.
knock knock
"Come in," he said, without turning around.
The door opened.
He heard the footsteps enter. It was measured, careful and carried the specific hesitation of someone who had decided to do something and was still negotiating with that decision in real time.
Olivia stood inside the doorway.
She did not close the door and left it open behind her.
Julian glanced at the open door and then at her standing there. A feeling stirred in his chest—one that didn’t quite belong to him, but to Kraven’s body, as if it carried its own memory and instinct. He noticed the reaction, acknowledged it, and then deliberately set it aside
She was dressed far more simply than she had been in the hall, her hair falling freely over her shoulders. Somehow, she managed to look both more composed and more vulnerable at the same time, as if the two states were locked in quiet struggle. The open door behind her was doing a great deal of work explaining which of those side was winning.
She was scared.
Julian said nothing.
Olivia’s eyes moved over him briefly — the silk nightwear, the chair, the general picture of a man who had been sitting quietly in the dark — and then settled on his face.
"Why did you burn him alive," she said.
Her voice was steady. She had prepared that sentence before knocking.
"He was speaking about you," Julian said.
"I know what he said." She stepped further into the room. "The entire castle knows what he said within an hour of it happening. That is the problem, Kraven."
"One of the problems," Julian said. "The other problem was the thing itself."
Olivia looked at him. "What he said was ignorant and disrespectful. Men like that say things like that. It doesn’t require—" She stopped. Chose a different word. "We cannot afford to do this. Do you understand what you’ve given Liam? He has been waiting for exactly this kind of—"
"I know what I’ve given Liam," Julian replied calmly.
She paused.
"Then why," she asked.
Julian leaned forward in the chair, rested his forearms on his knees and looked at her with the same level attention he had given everyone in this castle since arriving.
"Because he said Liam was going to take you," Julian began. "He didn’t phrase it carefully. He didn’t imply it. He stood in the main corridor of our family’s home and said that when the dust settled, you would fall under Liam’s hand. And the way he said it—" He paused. "You understand how he said it."
Olivia’s jaw tightened slightly.
"I understand," she said quietly.
"Then you understand that what he was truly saying was far more than disrespect—it was that you were to become a possession, an object to be passed from one man’s household to another, just like the furniture, the banners, or even the soldiers who served under them."
Julian held her gaze.
"He was calling you a whore in every sense that matters without using the specific word. In front of soldiers from both factions, a knight, and a young man who has been in this castle for only twenty days—but who will remember everything he witnessed."
Olivia said nothing.
"Am I supposed to simply hear that," Julian said. "Walk past it. Continue down the corridor."
"Yes," she said, but the word had lost some of its conviction.
"It would have been the politically careful thing to do," Julian acknowledged. "I’m aware of that."
"Then why—"
"Because careful has a cost as well," he said. "If I walk past it, every man in this building learns something about what I will and won’t tolerate. And the thing they learn is that my mother’s name can be used that way in my presence and there will be no consequence." He sat back. "That’s not a lesson I’m willing to teach."
Olivia stood in the middle of the room and looked at him.
The expression on her face had been shifting throughout the conversation. The fear that had kept the door open when she entered had changed — not gone, but different, reconfigured by something she hadn’t been expecting to find on the other side of this conversation.
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