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Fragility of Glass

Author: BlackFire
last update Last Updated: 2025-11-05 15:13:09

The world snapped back into focus with a dizzying, painful clarity. The serene ballroom was a warzone of splintered crystal, overturned tables, and the panicked cries of the city’s elite. The air was thick with dust, choking and sweet.

But for Lucian, the world had narrowed to the crimson line marring the pale skin of Ivy’s arm.

“Medic!” His roar cut through the chaos, a sound of pure, undiluted authority that brooked no argument. He was still crouched over her, his body a cage shielding her from the ongoing confusion, his hand a viselike band around her uninjured wrist as if she might vanish.

“Lucian, I’m fine,” Ivy insisted, her voice shaky. She tried to sit up, but a wave of dizziness and the firm pressure of his hand on her shoulder held her down.

“You are not fine,” he bit out, his eyes blazing. The blood from the cut on his temple was now a dark, drying trail. He ripped the pristine white pocket square from his tuxedo jacket with a violent jerk and pressed it against the gash on her arm. “Hold this. Apply pressure.”

His commands were automatic, but the touch of his fingers as he guided her hand was startlingly gentle. The contrast sent a jolt through her system.

Within moments, two event medics were at their side, looking terrified to be tending to Lucian Thorne himself. He barked orders at them, his voice cold steel, but he never moved from his protective stance over Ivy.

“Sir, you’re injured too,” one medic ventured, gesturing to Lucian’s head.

“It’s a scratch. See to her.”

They cleaned and bandaged Ivy’s arm, declaring it a deep laceration that would need stitches but, miraculously, had missed any major vessels. Through it all, Lucian watched, his jaw clenched so tight a muscle ticked relentlessly. His silence was more unnerving than his anger.

When they tried to suggest going to a hospital for a check-up, Lucian dismissed them with a single, sharp gesture. “No. We’re going home.”

The ride back to the penthouse was a study in tense silence. Ivy sat huddled in the corner of the Rolls-Royce, his tuxedo jacket which he had wordlessly draped over her shoulders swallowing her whole. It carried his scent, the sandalwood now mixed with the acrid smell of dust and a faint, metallic hint of blood. Her arm throbbed in time with her heartbeat.

He didn’t look at her. He stared out his window, his profile a mask of stone, but his left hand restlessly clenched and unclenched on his knee.

Arriving home, the sterile perfection of the penthouse felt different. It was no longer just a cage; it was a sanctuary, violated by the night’s events. The moment the elevator doors closed, sealing them in, the dam broke.

“What the hell were you thinking?” Lucian’s voice was low, dangerous, as he turned on her.

Ivy flinched. “What?”

“You stumbled. Just before it fell. You were distracted. Why?” He advanced a step, his eyes searching her face, not with concern now, but with a furious, forensic intensity. “What is it that you’re not telling me that nearly got you killed tonight?”

Her heart plummeted. He had noticed her moment of weakness, and he was connecting it to the accident. The secret of Calla felt like a live wire in her chest. She couldn’t tell him the noise had reminded her of the hospital, of her daughter’s fragility.

“I was just… overwhelmed. The crowd, the noise…” It was a weak excuse, and they both knew it.

He let out a short, harsh breath of disbelief. “Do not lie to me, Ivy. That chandelier didn’t just fall. I’ve had security at that event for years. Everything is inspected, triple-checked.”

A new, colder fear trickled down her spine. “What are you saying?”

“I’m saying that accident might not have been an accident at all.” He raked a hand through his hair, dislodging more dust. “And your little performance before it happened makes me wonder if you knew something was going to happen.”

The accusation was so unfair, so shocking, it stole her breath. “You think I did it? How dare you! I was directly underneath it!”

“And I was the one who was supposed to be standing there!” he fired back, his control finally snapping. “I was talking to Griffiths. I moved to get to you. If I hadn’t…” He didn’t finish the sentence. The unspoken words "you would be dead" hung in the air between them, more terrifying than the collapse itself.

The realization dawned on her, cold and horrifying. The target might not have been her. It might have been him.

He saw the understanding in her eyes and his fury seemed to bank, replaced by a weary, grim tension. “Go to your room,” he said, his voice flat. “I’ll send a private doctor to suture your arm. Don’t argue.”

Ivy, too shaken and exhausted to fight, simply nodded. She turned and walked toward her wing, his jacket slipping from her shoulders. She didn’t pick it up.

Lucian watched her go, the sight of her retreating back, the white bandage stark against her skin, sending a fresh, unfamiliar pang through his chest. He looked down at his own hands, now smudged with dirt and her dried blood.

The revenge plot, the cold contract, the carefully constructed walls it all felt like the shattered crystal on the ballroom floor. Broken. And in the wreckage, all he could see was the terrified look in her eyes when he’d shielded her, and the devastating crimson of her blood.

The game had changed. Someone had made it personal. And the woman he had married for revenge was now, inexplicably, a vulnerability he could not afford to lose and his enemies knew that.

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  • The IronClad Vow   Fragility of Glass

    The world snapped back into focus with a dizzying, painful clarity. The serene ballroom was a warzone of splintered crystal, overturned tables, and the panicked cries of the city’s elite. The air was thick with dust, choking and sweet.But for Lucian, the world had narrowed to the crimson line marring the pale skin of Ivy’s arm.“Medic!” His roar cut through the chaos, a sound of pure, undiluted authority that brooked no argument. He was still crouched over her, his body a cage shielding her from the ongoing confusion, his hand a viselike band around her uninjured wrist as if she might vanish.“Lucian, I’m fine,” Ivy insisted, her voice shaky. She tried to sit up, but a wave of dizziness and the firm pressure of his hand on her shoulder held her down.“You are not fine,” he bit out, his eyes blazing. The blood from the cut on his temple was now a dark, drying trail. He ripped the pristine white pocket square from his tuxedo jacket with a violent jerk and pressed it against the gash on

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    The Hamilton Charity Gala was a sea of glittering jewels and murmured lies, and Ivy was drowning in it. The emerald gown, a masterpiece of silk and structure, felt less like armor and more like a cage of someone else’s making. At her side, Lucian was a king holding court, his hand a firm, impersonal pressure on the small of her back, guiding her, possessing her for the watching world.“You’re staring at the champagne flute as if it’s a venomous snake,” his voice, low and meant only for her, cut through the symphony of string quartets and polite conversation. “Relax. Smile. You’re supposed to be enchanting the masses, not conducting a chemical analysis.”Ivy forced her lips to curve, a brittle, practiced gesture. “I’m simply calculating how many of these flutes it would take to pay for a new pediatric wing. The number is… enlightening.”A flicker of something, amusement? crossed his features before being schooled back into impassivity. “A pragmatist. How refreshing.” He nodded toward a

  • The IronClad Vow   A Clash of Coffee and Wills

    The first morning in the Thorne penthouse dawned with a silence that was anything but peaceful. Ivy woke in the vast, unfamiliar bed, the sterile luxury of the room feeling more like a hotel suite than a home. For a disorienting second, she didn’t know where she was. Then the memory of the cold wedding, the loosening wedding band on her finger, and Lucian’s impassive face crashed down on her.She dressed in her own simple clothes, a soft, grey sweater and dark slacks, a small act of defiance. When she ventured out into the main living area, she found him already there, a fortress of concentration behind his tablet, a half-empty cup of black coffee at his elbow. The morning sun carved his profile in light and shadow, making him look both formidable and, annoyingly, perfectly composed.He didn’t look up as she entered. “The chef is in the kitchen. Tell him what you want.”Ivy hesitated, then moved toward the sleek, state-of-the-art kitchen. A man in a crisp white uniform gave her a poli

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  • The IronClad Vow   A Proposal Forged in Ice

    The rain didn't fall on New York; it assaulted it. Each drop was a bullet against the panoramic glass of Lucian Thorne’s penthouse, a sixty-fifth-floor fortress where the sounds of the city were nothing more than a muted, distant hum. He preferred it that way. Distance was power. Control was everything.Ivy Quinn felt like a ghost in the cavernous space, her reflection a pale, shimmering smudge in the dark glass. She clutched the worn fabric of her coat, a threadbare shield against the glacial air conditioning. The room was a testament to its owner: sleek, expensive, and utterly devoid of warmth. A single monolithic desk of obsidian, a few angular leather chairs, and a breathtaking, terrifying view of the storm-lashed skyline. No personal photos. No art. Just power, stated plainly.“Let’s dispense with the pretense, Miss Quinn.”His voice was not loud. It was a low, resonant vibration that cut through the room, bypassing her ears and settling like a weight in her chest. He stood with

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