Beranda / Mafia / Claimed as the Wrong Bride / Chapter 3: Bastien Leclair

Share

Chapter 3: Bastien Leclair

last update Tanggal publikasi: 2026-05-13 14:50:16

The city looked different from forty floors up.

Not better, necessarily. Not worse. Just different in the way that distance always changed things, flattening the texture, reducing the noise, turning the specific and the complicated into something that read as pattern. Tripicity from the penthouse floor of the Alderton was a grid of light and geometry, the streets legible from above in a way they were not from inside them, the logic of the city visible in a way the city itself seemed determined to obscure.

Bastien Leclair found this useful.

He stood at the window with a glass of something he had not drunk yet and looked at it. The particular quality of his attention when he looked at things he intended to acquire was something the people who worked for him had learned to recognize and to give space to. It was not aggressive. It was not impatient. It was simply complete, the way the attention of a man with a long memory and no particular urgency about time was complete. He saw everything. He filed it. He decided what to do with it at the appropriate moment.

He had been looking at Tripicity for four months.

"The car is confirmed for eight-fifteen," Adler said from somewhere behind him. Adler said most things from somewhere behind him, which was a function of his role and his preference and the particular way he inhabited a room, which was to say thoroughly but without taking up more space than the situation required. Bastien had known him for eleven years and in that time had formed the view that Adler was the most useful person he had ever employed and one of the three people alive whose opinion he took seriously, which was not a distinction he handed out carelessly.

"The Maddox family confirmation?"

"Received this afternoon. Olivia will be there."

Bastien looked at the city.

The Maddox territory was a strip of grey zone real estate that sat between his current holdings and the eastern edge of Blackwing's reach, seven square blocks of mixed commercial and residential that was not impressive on its own terms and was significant in every way that actually mattered. Whoever controlled it controlled the access point. Whoever controlled the access point controlled the conversation about what came next. The Maddox family had held it for two generations through a combination of strategic neutrality and the particular talent for survival that came from being the smallest entity in a room full of larger ones. They were not powerful. They were positioned, which was a different thing and often a more durable one.

The marriage had been Adler's idea, which was the kind of thing Adler was good at, the solution that was technically available and that no one else had thought to reach for. An alliance through marriage. The Maddox territory absorbed through a union that cost neither side what a conflict would cost and gave both sides something they could not get alone. The Maddox family got protection and proximity to a rising power. Bastien got the access point.

He had agreed to it with the same absence of feeling he brought to most business decisions, which was not coldness so much as clarity. He was not opposed to marriage as a concept. He simply had not encountered a reason to be interested in it until it became strategically useful, at which point he treated it the way he treated everything strategically useful, which was to say seriously and without sentimentality.

He had not met Olivia Maddox. He had read the relevant information about her, which was sufficient for his purposes. She was twenty-six, educated in London, had returned to Tripicity three years ago to manage the family's legitimate holdings. By all accounts she was capable and pragmatic. These were the qualities that mattered. Everything else would be worked out in the normal course of events.

"Rook," he said.

"Present," Rook said, from a position Bastien had not registered until now, which meant Rook had been quiet for longer than usual, which meant Rook was either bored or thinking, and with Rook the distinction was not always clear.

"Your assessment of the venue."

"The Carmine Gallery." Rook appeared at his left, hands in his pockets, looking at the city with rather less gravity than Bastien was applying to it. "Good choice on their part. Neutral territory aesthetically. Old money clientele, which is the audience you want for this kind of announcement. The gallery owner has no particular allegiances to anyone in this room, which means the setting reads as Maddox confidence rather than Leclair arrangement."

"Which is the correct reading."

"Technically. Also technically, you're the one who suggested the venue."

"The Maddox family suggested the venue. I agreed with the suggestion."

"After suggesting it to them."

Bastien said nothing, which was the response Rook's more lateral observations generally received and which Rook had long since stopped expecting to improve upon.

The truth was that the venue mattered more than the Maddox family understood it mattered. An event like this one, the first public appearance of the alliance, the first time the two names would exist in the same sentence in a room full of people who reported back to other rooms, required a setting that communicated the right things without saying them. The Carmine Gallery communicated legitimacy. It communicated taste. It communicated the kind of confidence that did not need to announce itself because it had never had to.

Bastien communicated these things already, as a matter of course, because he had been raised to and because it was useful and because he had never seen a reason to stop. But the setting reinforced it, and reinforcement was never wasted.

"Vex," he said.

"The security perimeter is set." Her voice came from the far end of the room, near the door, which was where Vex generally positioned herself in any room she was not required to be in the center of. She had been there since Adler had arrived forty minutes ago and had said approximately eight words in that time, which was slightly fewer than average. "Two of ours at the entrance, two inside. The gallery's own security is adequate but not exceptional. I've spoken to their lead. We have an understanding."

"The Maddox security?"

"Three. One outside, two in. Competent. We won't have a problem."

Bastien nodded once, which was the acknowledgment Vex's reports generally received. She delivered information the way a good instrument delivered a measurement, precisely and without editorial, and he had learned long ago not to burden precision with unnecessary response.

He turned from the window.

The room was everything the Alderton's premium rate implied, which was to say large and tasteful and entirely without personality, the kind of space designed to accommodate whoever occupied it without leaving a mark on them or being marked by them. Bastien had been in it for four months and had done nothing to change it, which was either a statement about the room or about him and he had no strong opinion on which.

His jacket was on the back of the chair nearest the window. He picked it up and put it on with the unhurried efficiency of someone who had been dressing well for long enough that it required no thought, straightened the cuffs, looked at nothing in particular for a moment.

"The artist," he said.

Adler's pause was very brief. "I'm sorry?"

"The exhibition. There's an artist whose work is being shown tonight. The gallery contact mentioned it. Something about the collection being built around a local artist." He had read this in the gallery's correspondence and filed it and was retrieving it now for reasons he had not entirely articulated to himself. "Do we know anything about them?"

Another pause, marginally longer. "I can find out."

"Don't bother." He picked up the glass from the windowsill and finally drank from it, something single malt and peated that the Alderton's bar had produced without being asked, because the Alderton's bar was very good at its job. "It was a peripheral observation."

Rook was looking at him with the particular expression that meant Rook had filed something away for future reference. Bastien was aware of this and chose not to engage with it.

"Eight-fifteen," he said.

"Eight-fifteen," Adler confirmed.

The Carmine Gallery on the corner of Alderton and Vane was exactly what it presented itself as, which Bastien found mildly remarkable in a city where most things presented themselves as something adjacent to what they actually were. It was an old building that had been a gallery for forty years and intended to remain one, the kind of institutional continuity that came from never having needed to be anything else. The pale stone facade caught the light from the street lamps in a way that suggested it had been designed with that specific light source in mind, which it had not been, but the effect was the same.

The car stopped at the kerb and he got out without waiting for anyone to open the door, which was a habit his security staff had made their peace with years ago. The evening air was cool and carried the particular quality of a Tripicity night, the layer of sound and light that the city produced as a constant byproduct of its own existence, pervasive and strangely comfortable in the way that the sounds of a place you know well were always strangely comfortable.

Rook fell into step at his right. Adler was already moving toward the entrance with the purposeful efficiency of a man who believed that arriving at a venue before your principal was a basic professional courtesy. Vex was somewhere Bastien did not need to look to confirm, which was the point of Vex.

Through the gallery's glass frontage he could see the opening was already at temperature, the room holding that particular density of bodies and conversation that indicated a successful event, people moving with the loose purposeful energy of those who were there to be seen being interested in art. The collection on the far wall was visible from outside, a series of dark canvases with something on them he could not resolve from this distance, catching the light in a way he did not immediately recognize as paint.

He stood on the pavement for a moment and looked at it.

Then he went in.

The room received him the way rooms received him, which was to say it noticed. Not loudly. He did not require loud. But the particular current of attention that moved through a space when someone walked into it who commanded attention moved, and he was aware of it without being interested in it, the way a person was aware of weather without finding it surprising.

He took a glass from a passing tray, surveyed the room, and began to do what he had come to do, which was to be exactly who he was in a room full of people who needed to understand what that meant for the city they all shared.

He did not see her yet.

He would.

Lanjutkan membaca buku ini secara gratis
Pindai kode untuk mengunduh Aplikasi

Bab terbaru

  • Claimed as the Wrong Bride   Chapter 9 Part 4: Mona Lick Returns

    She went on at nine. The room received her the way the room always received her, with the particular quality of attention that meant Mona Lick was on and the evening had properly begun. She took the pole. Started slow. Let the music do what the music did and let her body do what her body knew.The thinking part of her mind ran its separate track in the background.Track one: the warehouse number and the probate dispute and how long she had before circumstances changed in a direction she couldn't counter.Track two: Bastien Leclair and the twelve month binding period and what a practical management strategy actually looked like for a legal problem she had not yet fully mapped.Track three: the specific and inconvenient memory of a courtyard and precise patient fingers and the way he had watched her the entire time without looking away once.She shut track three down. She was working.She climbed. The pole cold and familiar in her grip, the muscle memory taking over the moment her hands

  • Claimed as the Wrong Bride   Chapter 30 Part 4: Silverpine

    "Fine," I said through gritted teeth. "Handle him. But he doesn't die. Not yet. Elowen deserves to see him answer for what he's done."Sylvia nodded. "Understood."We talked for hours. House Varen's movements. The other packs' likely responses to my return. The logistics of a coronation. The question of what to do about Elowen's human family, her human friends, her human life.By the time Corvin finally led me back to the royal suite, my head was spinning.The bedroom was empty when I entered, but I could hear water running. The bathroom door was cracked open, steam curling out."El?""In here."I pushed the door open and found her in the walk-in shower — massive, all stone and glass, with multiple heads and a built-in bench. She was sitting on the bench, her wounded leg stretched out carefully to keep weight off it, bandages removed, letting the hot water run over her.She looked up at me, wet hair plastered to her face, and smiled tiredly. "I couldn't take it anymore. I smelled like

  • Claimed as the Wrong Bride   Chapter 9 Part 3: Mona Lick Returns

    The Meridian on a weeknight had its own particular rhythm, lower in volume than the weekend, more consistent in temperature. The regulars came on weeknights. Men with established patterns, familiar faces, who knew the rules and followed them and came because this was part of the structure of their lives rather than an occasion. She understood this. Structure was something she had built for herself from nothing and she did not judge the forms other people's took.She was early enough to have the dressing room mostly to herself. She changed into the red set, checked the garter straps, hung her bag in the locker with the practiced efficiency of someone for whom this sequence was as automatic as breathing, and sat down at her mirror.Priya came in while she was starting her eyes, dropping into the chair two seats down with the specific quality of someone who had been waiting to say something and was deciding how to say it."You were off," Priya said."I had things.""Three days of things.

  • Claimed as the Wrong Bride   Chapter 9 Part 2: Mona Lick Returns

    The third day she went back to The Meridian because she had a shift. The world did not stop for illegal marriages. Mona Lick had regulars who would notice an absence, and she was not in the business of being noticed for the wrong reasons.But first, the materials.The address Sol had given her was a courier depot on the west side of the grey zone, the kind of facility that handled specialist deliveries and asked no questions about the contents as long as the paperwork was in order. Legitimate. Neutral. The kind of location that had been chosen by someone who understood that it needed to be somewhere she could not reasonably refuse without breaching the contract.She went at seven in the morning when courier depots were busy and staffed by people who had been on shift since five and were not interested in anything except processing the queue. She wore the gym clothes, hair up, no eyeshadow. Nothing that read as the woman from the gallery. She paid cash for a transit card two stops from

  • Claimed as the Wrong Bride   Chapter 9 Part 1: Mona Lick Returns

    Three days was as long as she could afford to stay off the floor.She had spent the first day at the warehouse, which was where she went when she needed to think without the city interrupting her. She thought. She painted. She arrived at the following conclusions in the following order.One, the marriage was real. Contesting it immediately voided the commission.Two, the commission was the warehouse. The warehouse was the one thing she had been building toward for eight months. She was not going to let it disappear because a man she had slept with in a gallery courtyard had produced a marriage certificate alongside the morning after pill.Three, she was not going to think of him as a man she had slept with in a gallery courtyard. She was going to think of him as a legal problem with good cheekbones.Four, legal problems with good cheekbones still needed to be managed, and she did not yet have a management strategy beyond the one she had been using since the window, which was to not be

  • Claimed as the Wrong Bride   Chapter 8: Adler's Problem

    Adler had been doing this job for eleven years.In that time he had managed the legal aftermath of three territorial disputes, two hostile acquisitions, one extradition attempt that had required creative interpretation of four separate jurisdictions, and a situation in Monaco that he did not discuss and had expunged from every record he could reach. He had negotiated with people who wanted Bastien dead and people who wanted Bastien to owe them something, which were often the same people at different stages of the same conversation. He had drafted contracts that held and contracts that were designed to appear to hold and contracts that existed purely to give someone the dignity of a document when the actual agreement lived somewhere else entirely.He was not easily rattled.He was currently sitting in the back of the car outside the Carmine Gallery at eleven-forty with a legal pad on his knee and the expression of a man reviewing a problem he had not anticipated and was not certain cou

Bab Lainnya
Jelajahi dan baca novel bagus secara gratis
Akses gratis ke berbagai novel bagus di aplikasi GoodNovel. Unduh buku yang kamu suka dan baca di mana saja & kapan saja.
Baca buku gratis di Aplikasi
Pindai kode untuk membaca di Aplikasi
DMCA.com Protection Status