Lady Rosetta Halstead was at the height of the highborn nobility and was on her way become the Duchess of Riverdale. But one day her fiancee, Lucas Carleton fell in love with the King Mistress's daughter! Rosetta's heart determined that Lucas still remained her.
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The market was alive today—louder, busier, and more dangerous than usual—which made it perfect for stealing anything. But I didn’t have a choice. The hunger was worse today—sharper and crueler. I clutched my stomach as it twisted on itself, hollow and aching like a rusted blade scraping bone. Each breath felt heavier, as if the air itself had weight, pressing me down while the scent of roasting meats and sugared fruits drifted through the crowd like a curse. I kept my head low beneath my tattered cloak, slipping through bodies like smoke. I’d learned how to move without being seen. How to make myself forgettable. The cloak helped—it was too big, threadbare at the hem, and smelled like mildew and ash—but in a place like this, poor and invisible were sometimes the same thing. Noble witches glided past me, their silk gowns rustling like leaves, their jeweled hands clutching polished parasols or crystal vials that shimmered with liquid magic. Velvet cloaks swept the cobblestones, and perfumes hung in the air like spells cast on the wind. Their laughter—bright, lilting, untouched—rattled something inside me. I tried not to look at the food. Really, I did. But the vendor’s cart was stacked high with fresh bread—still warm, steam curling faintly from the crust, golden and perfect. One bite would’ve been enough to quiet the beast gnawing at my ribs. Just one loaf. The merchant was distracted, arguing with a customer over the price of enchanted thyme. His round face was flushed and furious. His coin purse jangled as he gestured wildly, fat fingers flashing with cheap rings. Opportunity whispered. I moved closer, weaving between robes and boots, ignoring the press of magic thick in the air. My fingertips grazed the crust of the nearest loaf. Smooth. Quiet. Quick. The bread vanished beneath my cloak like it had always belonged there. I turned to leave. And then— A hand closed around my wrist like iron. I gasped as I was yanked backward, my hood falling. The sun hit my face and I froze. “Thief!” the merchant roared, voice cracking with outrage. “Guards! Guards!” My heart kicked into a sprint. I thrashed, tried to wrench free, but he was too strong. Too angry. Around us, heads turned. Gasps. Whispers. A child pointed. Someone laughed. The red cloaks were already pushing through the crowd. Witch guards. Their armor gleamed—layered black leather etched with runes, crimson cloaks billowing behind them. Gold insignias glinted like curses on their chests. Power radiated from their boots as they stomped toward me, magic gathering in tight fists. Not again. I kicked the merchant’s shin—hard enough to hear him yelp—but it only earned me a sharper grip. Two guards grabbed me from behind, dragging me down to my knees. My cloak twisted, arms pinned. "Street rats like you never learn," one snarled, twisting my arm behind my back until my shoulder shrieked. “It was just bread!” I choked. “Please—I’m starving.” The second one laughed. “Then die hungry,” he said, as if it were a mercy. My fingers clenched around the stolen loaf, still hidden in my cloak. Pathetic. A crime of survival, and they’d still rather see me bleed for it. “She stole under protective wards,” the merchant said, voice puffed with pride. “I demand full punishment. She’s marked for conscription.” Everything stilled. Conscription. The word was a blade. Not prison. Not lashes. Not even the gallows. The guard’s grin widened, slow and cruel. “A fitting punishment,” he said. “No—” I began, but a hand shoved my head down until I tasted the stone. I’d heard of the Warborn Accord in whispers—always whispers, never shouts. No one wanted to speak of it too loudly. It was a law passed in shadow, forged in the blood of criminals, rebels, orphans. If you were of age and convicted of any crime… You weren’t jailed. You were claimed. Shipped off to Warborn Academy. Where witches and werewolves were trained as weapons. Together. The thought alone made my stomach churn. They marched me through the market with my arms twisted behind me like a captured beast. Bystanders gawked as I passed—some sneered, others just turned away. But some stared too long. Recognition flickered in their eyes. Not just pity. Thornbrook. The name still carried weight, even if it had long since rotted. The war drums started just as we left the square—low, pounding, ancient. Not near, but close enough to remind me where I was going. Where I now belonged. The tower loomed ahead like a shadow swallowing the sun—black stone spiked with iron, each slab etched with runes that glowed faintly beneath the guard’s touch. The doors opened at their command. Inside, it was colder than the street. The High Council chamber. Seven figures stood above the dais, blood-red robes pooled around them like rivers. I barely saw them. My gaze locked on her. High Priestess Morganna. She sat in the center, a crown of bone and garnet coiled in her ink-dark hair, her emerald eyes sharp enough to flay skin from bone. The guard spoke, but I barely heard it. “Your name?” she asked. I swallowed hard. “Arielle Thornbrook.” There was a pause—long enough to make my stomach flip. Then she smiled. “Thornbrook. Once of noble blood. Now, gutter filth.” I straightened my spine, refusing to flinch. If she wanted to see fear, she’d have to look elsewhere. “You’ve been found guilty,” she said, bored already. “But the Council has no use for more prisoners. Our kingdom requires soldiers.” I didn’t breathe. Soldiers. The Accord. She continued, each word dropping like stones. “By decree of the Warborn Accord, all criminals of age shall serve the realm at Warborn Academy. You will be trained for battle alongside your… counterparts.” She waited. Then: “Werewolves.” The world fell silent. Werewolves. Monsters. Beasts. The ones who slaughtered my kind. The ones who started this war. The ones I’d been raised to hate. And now I was going to live beside them? Train beside them? Bleed beside them? “No…” I whispered, too soft to matter. Morganna smiled like a wolf. “You’ll serve the realm, street rat. Or you’ll die trying.” The guards grabbed me again, dragging me backward through the chamber. My boots scraped stone, my mind already spinning. Conscription. Academy. Warborn. Werewolves. The doors slammed behind me with a sound like a tomb sealing shut. Somewhere beyond the tower, a transport waited. It would take me out of the city. From the only life I’d known. To war. To wolves. To whatever came next. And no matter what I wanted, I was already theirs.Rosetta fixed the white cravats on Lucas’s neck, as well as his undercollar clothing. But how that possible happen when Lucas’s personal butler was a perfectionist about putting his clothes on?“It’s …,“ Lucas avoided the look by Rosetta.“Oh, never mind. Come sit. By the way I want to say something to you,“ Rosetta says. Smiling sweetly at the joy of waking.“Incidentally, I also have something to talk to you about,” Lucas said as well.Rosetta frowned. During the course of the conversation, Lucas never once looked her in the eye as usual. The young man was busy turning his eyes, or glancing at the door. The previous thought faded, giving way to curiosity.“Uh, what is it?“ ask Rosetta.This time Lucas really looked over. “Come on in.”Rosetta followed Lucas’s gaze. From a door opened by Alden, st
His male instinct said Lucas had to kiss those sensual thin lips. So he did. At first he intended to stick it for a while and then apologize, but the sweet look of the princess melting because the kiss made Lucas feel even more alive.It’s a big mistake, Lucas knows that. But he doesn’t care at all. To hell with the future Duke Riverdale. Don’t care if he’s Rosetta’s fiance. Lucas wants this girl.Princess Sonya doesn’t know what else to say but enjoy drowning in Lucas’s tongue games. The young, golden-haired hansome man who was always with Lady Rosetta now kissed her full of love.“Your Majesty,” whispered Princess Sonya in the middle of the kiss. Her face heated and their breath met.On the other side, Flora rushing went into the room. He saw Alden that didn’t leave his place on the Rosetta’s side.“Did she really wake up now?“ asked Flora.
Flora scoffed, looking hesitantly at the basket. Though, she accepted it.“Okay. You can wait in the living room,” Flora said. Escort Lucas and Princess Sonya to a room next to Rosetta room.“Thank you, Flora,” said Princess Sonya, sitting down and widening her smile. Was countered by that cynical look from the instant maid.“I’m quite sad. Lady Rosetta was very ill. I fear the lady will never awaken again.”Suddenly Princess Sonya broke down and took a handkerchief from her pocket to cover her nose.“Lady Rosetta is a strong girl. She’ll recover soon,“ Lucas replied, “I know that.”Princess Sonya was stunned. Looking at Lucas telling of the diseases Lady Rosetta had been able to cope with. That tone implied pride was curiously painful for Princess Sonya.The girl with short hair touched her left chest. All the while her h
Lucas's feet steps to the hall of Rosewood castle. As expected, the knight at the entrance is holding back a girl who insisted.“Please help me!” The girl yelled, insistent.“No way!” The two soldiers were ready to drag the girl away, before Lucas emerged from the hallway.“Stop!” shouted Lucas. His heart pounded as he looked out at the front door, watching over whoever was there.Two uniformed knights carrying a girl with short black hair. Lucas’s heart seemed to burst as soon as it did.“Did you not know that she was King Nicholas’s daughter?” asked Lucas. His pace steadily approaches.The two soldiers looked puzzled. They were ordered to close the doors for any guests except the nearest one. Even so, they also ordered by Alden that the Princess must not come.“Sorry, Your Highness. She could not come in,“ replied one of
The young man with golden hair and deep black eyes gazed at his beloved’s face in bed. Her cheeks were flushed with fever, and a small towel was wet to her forehead.In these circumstances, Rosetta looks pretty weak. So different from the independent, elegant, and beautiful impression that is usually seen when she appears in public.Who would have thought that a beautiful girl, the Marchioness and Duchess Riverdale to-be had frail bodies? Even today, the doctor has given up to check what is wrong.Guilt got into Lucas’s heart. He didn’t expect the misunderstanding made Rosetta got sick like this. Because Lucas couldn’t explain what had happened properly, Rosetta got miserable.“Leave us alone,” Lucas instructed all the maids in the room.“Yes, Your Majesty.”Five minutes later, the room was empty. Leaving Lucas holding Rosetta’s hand tighter while kneel
“They said lady Rosetta, your fiancee, did not wake up after having fainted a week ago.”The Head of the Household, Maximilian Ash, reporting to Lucas. The tall man in the glasses who had been serving Carleton's family for twenty years felt compelled to tell the rumors he had heard.Lucas who had previously looked out of the window turned immediately. His facial expression stiffened and his jaw hardened.“Did something bad happened before?” asked Max, his nickname. “They said Lady Rosetta was too shook up of something so be that way.”“Prepare the horses! I’m leaving to Grasswall right now,” Lucas said shortly.Despite his confusion, Max hunched in and turned out to do the young master’s bidding.Meanwhile, Lucas turned to the waiter to pick up his official clothes and robes. In castle Coldine, Lucas was alone because his father and stepmother wer
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