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A Vision In Smoke

last update Last Updated: 2026-01-06 14:34:53

A shape slips into my thoughts, late on a Thursday. It does not knock.

Up there in the sunroom, I hold a plant book but do not really read. Light pours down through the panels, heating my arms. A drawing catches my eye - strange flower, opens only at night - and then everything splits apart.

A shape appears - soft, light-colored flower parts. Then without warning, the air carries a burnt scent.

Smoke stings my eyes instead of warm woodsmoke. Burning paper mixes with something sour - like melted bindings. Light shifts, first amber, then deep crimson, flickering like breathless pulses. A wave rolls across the skin, thin and harsh, nothing gentle about it. Far off, fire hisses like starving teeth while voices yell into the smoke. A hammer hits inside my skull, each blow drilling through the back of my sight.

Smoke first. Then flames reached the Royal Archives. Not just any room - the west wing burned. Those old land grant scrolls? Gone. The ones needed for the Rothmere case disappeared in ash.

Now it hits. Not through thinking - straight into my bones. A cold sureness: this is real. Happening here. This moment.

The book falls from my hands. A sharp crack echoes as it hits the ground. Suddenly I am standing, breath ragged, pulse hammering under my skin. Smoke lingers in memory, thick behind my eyes. Stumbling forward, I yank the door wide - Mrs. Greyson stands there, inches away.

“Miss Rimestone! What is the - ”

“The Duke,” I gasp, my voice raw. My hands are shaking. “I need to see the Duke. Right now. It’s urgent.”

Her gaze lingers on how white I look, how startled my eyes are. Maybe it’s the way I’m standing that tells her I mean it. She begins to speak but hesitates. The words come slow: “He’s inside, talking with Captain Starwood.” A pause hangs heavy. Then she adds, voice lower, “You shouldn’t go in.”

Out the way. I shove by her, a thing I’ve always been too scared to try. Rules mean nothing now. That warmth sticks to me like smoke. Down the hall I go, dress bunched tight in both hands, gasping with every step. The men posted at the west entrance blink fast as I blur through.

The door flies wide before I even think of knocking. His study lies there, caught off guard.

Above the scattered papers, two pairs of eyes lift toward the door. Annoyance grips Noah’s features right away. Alex moves his fingers close to the blade strapped at his side.

“The Royal Archives,” I blurt out, leaning against the doorframe, dizzy. “It’s on fire. Right now. The west wing. The Rothmere land grants. Someone’s trying to burn them.”

Silence.

His gaze hits me like a wall. That irritation? Gone. In its place - something sharp, something cold. Questions don’t come. Not one. He just takes it in. What I said. Even though it makes no sense. It registers. As truth.

He moves.

He snaps the name like a warning shot. Moving fast, he circles the desk without pause. The coat comes off the chair in one motion. Six soldiers from the barracks are enough. Get them moving right away. Put out the flames first. Protect the papers at all costs. Grab every person found close to the west wing. Every single one

“Yes, Your Grace,” he says before vanishing. The sound of footsteps races away down the corridor.

Out of nowhere, Noah looks my way. Fast movements. Cold eyes. His voice cuts through the air - stay right here. Don’t step outside this room. A finger swings toward a dark wooden chair near the dead hearth. Get in it. Don’t shift an inch

Just like that, he vanishes - the door cracks shut, echoing through the room. The quiet swallows everything. His study feels vast now, empty in a way I didn’t expect.

---

Fires still climb near the top floor - west side - but soldiers already hold them back. Not calm here, though everyone follows orders fast. Smoke pushes into gray sky through broken glass up high. Water passes hand to hand without stopping. Smell sticks: soaked charcoal mixed with sweat and panic.

Alex meets me at the entrance, his face grim. “We got the scrolls. They’re safe. Minimal damage to the room. We caught one man. A junior clerk named Evard. He’s… not talking. Yet.”

“Where is he?”

“In the gatehouse store room.”

There he is, crouched on a wooden box, the store worker - hard to picture later, really - the kind you’d pass on the street without notice. His skin glistens, coated in grime and damp heat. Shaking runs through him like wind through thin cloth. Above, one of my soldiers looms, still as stone.

“Who gave you the money?” I speak low. That happens every time anger runs too far under skin.

His face goes pale. The man behind the counter doesn’t look at me - he stares past, frozen. Fear fills his gaze, but it isn’t aimed my way. Something behind me holds his attention, unseen.

Close by, Alex opens a little leather bag. Out spill the contents onto his hand. There are gold coins, still shiny from recent making. Mixed in, just one ring stands out. It does not carry a lord’s symbol. Instead, a trader’s stamp lies on it. That mark - I’ve seen it before. Now here’s the truth - it sits under a group fighting over Rothmere ground. Ground I found proof should go back to royal hands.

Fire didn’t start by chance. Someone aimed straight at what I build. Straight at who I am.

Frost spreads through my blood like a slow stain. Whoever chose those files had clear intent. Every step I took was watched ahead of time. Someone from within set this up - funded, informed, hungry to stop me before I could finish.

The one who realized the papers were in danger... sat right now in my study, that girl.

---

Time slips by. Evening comes as daylight weakens. Sitting still in the chair - just like told. Not shifting at all. Eyes follow the dark lines stretching over the thick rug in his room. A hum hangs in the air, thick like dust. From far off comes the murmur of guards swapping posts, their voices low under the eaves. Floorboards creak on their own, as if remembering weight.

Thoughts sprint through my head. Could they have halted it? Were the messages fast enough? Maybe I made an error. Perhaps that glimpse wasn’t real - only worry wearing a mask.

At last, the door swings open. Into the room steps Noah.

The door clicks shut behind him, gentle but firm. Not a glance comes my way just yet. Over to the desk he moves, pressing both palms down on the smooth surface, lowering his body into a slouch. His head hangs low under the weight of silence. That coat stays on, damp with evening chill, carrying traces of burnt embers from somewhere far off.

“You were right,” he says, his voice flat, drained of all emotion. “The fire was set. The documents were the target. We stopped it. We have the man who lit the match.”

A wave hits, sudden, making my legs tremble though I’m seated. “Finally,” slips out

A chair scrapes back as he rises. The room holds just one pool of yellow glow, cutting his features into sharp lines and hollows. My name doesn’t soften his stare. What sits behind it feels colder than silence.

Footsteps creep closer. One after another, measured, sinking into the plush carpet. The silence between us tightens like a wire. Closer he comes, without pause, until shadow swallows my view. His frame looms above the seat, motionless. My neck bends, eyes lifting, meeting his gaze from below.

Smoke hangs heavier in the air today. Closer to his skin. This isn’t imagined.

The money reached the clerk,” he murmurs, words slow like distant thunder. Backed by traders feasting off Rothmere soil - soil my findings could shake loose. He lowers himself, palm pressing into the chair’s ornate edge, closing space between us. Fingers lift next, settling under my jaw, firm without crushing, guiding my gaze straight to his. Only one soul beyond my inner guard held that secret - the fact those papers mattered - and it was you

Fires burn in his eyes, locked on me. Gone now - the icy logic - replaced by something sharper, wilder. What's left? Not calm. Not control. A storm of questions tearing through anger. Need claws at him, raw and unrelenting.

Now then - Paige," he says low, so close the air between us trembles. My name on him feels like something cracked open, raw. "Did what you see mean danger coming? Or were you meant to check how I'd hold up?" One hand moves slow along my face, soft where everything else pulls tight

There it is - the unspoken thing floating in the quiet between us. Not sparks from the flames, but tension thick enough to touch. He stops looking at my eyes, shifts down to my lips. A single beat passes where distrust flickers, then catches fire with hunger so real I forget how to breathe. That moment drags on, sharp and sudden.

Waiting for a reply, he stands still. Caught not in his hold, yet pulled tight by the wild warmth glowing from his stare.

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