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Chapter Ten: The Blue Tie

Author: Caroline
last update publish date: 2026-05-16 05:28:56

The silk felt like a confession.

Elias stood in his dressing room, the air thick with the scent of expensive cologne and the sterile chill of the air conditioning. Laid out on the velvet-topped island was his tuxedo—a custom-tailored masterpiece in midnight navy—and beside it, the tie Damien had demanded. It was a deep, iridescent blue, the color of a bruise or a late-night sky.

He hadn’t planned to wear it. He had spent two hours convincing himself that he would wear the silver tie his father had approved, the one that matched Sophia’s gown. That would be the safe choice. That would be

the Hawthorne choice.

But every time he reached for the silver, his skin crawled. He could still feel the phantom heat of Damien’s breath against his ear, the weight of the command he’d received via text. *I want to see how you look when you break.*

"Elias? The car is downstairs."

Sophia’s voice drifted through the door, sharp and punctual. She didn't wait for an invite; she stepped in, her heels clicking a rhythmic, military cadence on the hardwood. She was stunning in a floor-length gown of silver silk that made her look like a statue carved from moonlight.

She stopped, her eyes dropping to the blue tie in his hand. Her brow furrowed, a tiny crease of confusion marring her perfect composure. "That isn't the tie we picked, Elias. It clashes with the embroidery on my bodice."

Elias looked at her, really looked at her, and for a second, he felt a wave of genuine pity. She was playing the game so perfectly, never realizing that the board had been flipped over days ago.

"I wanted something different tonight," Elias said.

His voice was low, lacking the practiced brightness he usually reserved for her. "The silver felt... hollow."

Sophia stepped closer, her hand reaching out to touch the lapel of his jacket. She smelled of peonies and hairspray—a safe, curated scent. "You’ve been acting strange all day. Ever since that meeting with Blackwood. He got under your skin, didn't he?"

"He didn't get under my skin, Sophia. He just reminded me of the stakes." Elias turned back to the mirror, his fingers working the silk of the blue tie into a knot. His hands weren't shaking now. They were cold, steady, and certain. "Go on ahead. I’ll be down in a minute. I need to finish this."

Sophia hesitated, her reflection in the mirror looking small and distant behind him. "Don't be late. Your father wants us to enter together. The press is already lining the foyer."

"I won't be late," he promised.

When the door clicked shut, Elias let out a breath he felt like he’d been holding since Chapter Six. He looked at himself—the blue tie stark against the crisp white of his shirt. It was a signal. A beacon. He was walking into a room filled with his father’s allies, his fiancée, and his legacy, and he was wearing a mark of his enemy’s control.

The gala was held at the Pierre, in a ballroom that felt more like a fortress of gold leaf and crystal. As the town car pulled up to the curb, the flashbulbs began to pop—staccato bursts of white light that felt like silent explosions.

Elias stepped out, the cool night air hitting his face. He felt the familiar weight of the "Perfect Son" mask settling over his features. He reached back into the car to take Sophia’s hand, his movements fluid and practiced.

*Smile. Wave. Don't blink.*

They moved through the gauntlet of reporters. The questions came in a chaotic roar: *“Elias, thoughts on the Blackwood audit?” “Sophia, is the wedding still on track for June?” “Hawthorne Group, any comment on the port delay?”*

Elias ignored them all, his gaze fixed on the heavy oak doors of the ballroom. He felt like he was walking into a trap he had helped build.

Inside, the room was a sea of black ties and shimmering gowns. The hum of conversation was low and expensive, punctuated by the occasional clink of a champagne flute. Victor was already there, standing in the center of the room like a king holding court. When he saw Elias, his eyes immediately went to the tie.

The temperature around Victor seemed to drop. He didn't say a word, but the slight tightening of his jaw spoke volumes. He turned back to the senator he was talking to, dismissing his son with a cold flick of his eyes.

"Stay here," Sophia whispered, her voice tight with social anxiety. "I need to find my mother. She’s worried about the floral arrangements."

Elias nodded, letting her drift away. He found himself standing alone by a marble pillar, a glass of vintage champagne in his hand that he had no intention of drinking. He felt exposed. Every person who looked at him felt like they were peeling back a layer of his skin.

He scanned the room, his heart starting a slow, heavy thud against his ribs. He was looking for the charcoal suit. He was looking for the man who had promised to break him.

Then, the room went silent.

It wasn't a sudden hush, but a ripple that started at the entrance and moved inward, a wave of shock that left a trail of whispers in its wake.

Damien Blackwood had arrived.

He didn't belong here. This was a Hawthorne event, a coronation of the status quo. Damien was the outsider, the disruptor, the man who had just filed a federal audit against the host. Yet, he walked in as if he owned the foundation the building stood on.

He wasn't wearing a tuxedo. He was in a black suit, no tie, the top two buttons of his shirt open. It was a deliberate insult, a middle finger to the rigid formality of the night. He looked raw, dangerous, and entirely out of place in the glittering room.

His eyes moved through the crowd, ignoring the glares and the hushed insults, until they landed on Elias.

A slow, predatory smile spread across Damien’s face. He didn't move toward the bar or the host. He walked straight toward the pillar where Elias stood.

"You wore it," Damien said as he came to a stop, his voice a low rumble that cut through the noise of the ballroom.

Elias gripped the stem of his champagne glass. "I felt like being honest tonight."

"Honesty looks good on you, Elias," Damien said. He stepped closer, well within the boundaries of "polite" social distance. He smelled of rain and dark coffee, a scent that shouldn't have existed in this room of floral perfumes. "Though I think your father might disagree."

"My father is currently imagining ten different ways to have you removed from this building," Elias replied, his eyes locked on Damien’s.

"Let him try," Damien said softly. "I'm not the one he should be worried about. I'm just the mirror. He’s the one who’s afraid of what’s reflected in it."

Damien reached out, his hand hovering near Elias’s chest. It was a terrifyingly public gesture. People were staring. Sophia was watching from across the room, her face a mask of frozen horror. Victor was mid-sentence, his gaze fixed on them like a hawk.

Damien’s fingers brushed the silk of the blue tie, a light, lingering touch that sent a jolt of electricity through Elias’s body.

"It’s the exact color of the shadows in that room,"

Damien whispered. "Did you choose it for that? Or did you choose it because you wanted me to know you were thinking about it?"

"I chose it because I'm done pretending, Damien," Elias said, his voice shaking with a sudden, violent honesty. "I'm done being the son he manufactured. If you're going to ruin me, then do it. But don't play with me."

Damien’s expression shifted. The predatory amusement vanished, replaced by something much darker and more intense. He leaned in, his mouth inches from Elias’s ear.

"

I'm not playing, Elias. Ruining you would be easy. I could have done that years ago. I'm doing something much more difficult."

"What?" Elias asked, his breath hitching.

"I'm waking you up," Damien said.

He pulled back, his eyes searching Elias’s face for a long, agonizing moment. Then, he turned and looked at the room—the wealth, the power, the lies.

"Look at them, Elias," Damien said, gesturing to the crowd. "They’re all wearing masks. Every single one of them. You’re the only person in this room who is actually here."

Before Elias could respond, Victor appeared. He didn't walk; he materialized, his presence a cold, suffocating weight.

"Blackwood," Victor said, his voice a razor blade. "I believe you’ve mistaken this for a public park. This is a private event. You weren't invited."

Damien turned to face the older man, his posture relaxed and unimpressed. "Actually, Victor, I’m a +1. Your lead architect invited me. We’re discussing the environmental impact of the harbor. He seems to agree with my assessment."

Victor’s face went pale with rage. "Leave. Now. Or I’ll have security escort you out in front of the cameras."

"I was just leaving," Damien said, completely unfazed. He looked back at Elias, his gaze lingering on the blue tie. "The lighting is exactly as I promised, Elias. Revealing."

He turned and walked away, his departure as disruptive as his arrival. He didn't look back once.

Elias stood there, his heart hammering against the blue silk. He felt Victor’s hand clamp down on his shoulder—a grip that was meant to be paternal but felt like a shackle.

"Go to the bathroom," Victor hissed, his voice trembling with fury. "Change that tie. Now. If I see you in that color again, I will strip you of every title you have before the sun comes up. Do you understand me?"

Elias looked at his father. He looked at the man who had spent twenty-eight years telling him what to feel, what to wear, and who to be. He looked at the man who thought he could control the tide.

"No," Elias said.

The word was small, but in the silence of their shared space, it sounded like a building collapsing.

"What did you say to me?" Victor asked, his eyes wide with disbelief.

"I said no," Elias repeated, his voice gaining strength.

He reached up and straightened the blue tie. "I like the color. It suits me."

He turned and walked away from his father, leaving Victor Hawthorne standing alone in the center of his golden empire.

Elias didn't go to the bathroom. He didn't find Sophia. He walked straight out of the ballroom, through the oak doors, and out into the night.

The flashbulbs went off again, a chaotic storm of light, but for the first time in his life, Elias didn't hide. He didn't smile. He just walked.

He reached the sidewalk and stopped, the cool air filling his lungs. He felt light. He felt terrified. He felt like he had just jumped off a cliff and hadn't hit the ground yet.

His phone buzzed in his pocket. He pulled it out.

*“Meet me at the pier. Pillar 42. Come alone.”*

Elias looked at the message. He looked back at the hotel, where the "Perfect Son" was supposed to be celebrating his engagement. Then he looked toward the harbor, where the darkness was waiting.

He didn't hesitate. He stepped into a taxi and gave the address.

The suspense wasn't in what Victor would do next. It wasn't in the port deal or the audit. It was in the realization that Chapter Ten was the end of the performance. The mask wasn't just cracked; it was gone.

And as the taxi pulled away from Pierre, leaving the lights and the lies behind, Elias Hawthorne realized that the ruin Damien had promised wasn't an ending. It was the beginning.

He was going to the pier. He was going to the man who had seen him in the dark. And he was going to find out exactly what happens when the Perfect Son finally decides to stop being a ghost.

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