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Too late to regret
img img Too late to regret img Chapter 2 The Blue Silk Handkerchief
2 Chapters
Chapter 6 The Thorne Proposal img
Chapter 7 The Master of the House img
Chapter 8 The Morning After img
Chapter 9 The Language of Power img
Chapter 10 The Shore of Something Real img
Chapter 11 The Elite Standard img
Chapter 12 The Cracks in the Gold img
Chapter 13 The taste of blood img
Chapter 14 The Monte Carlo debut img
Chapter 15 The Ghost in the Machine img
Chapter 16 The King's Favorite img
Chapter 17 The Judas Kiss img
Chapter 18 The Ghost of the Past img
Chapter 19 The Strategy of Shadows img
Chapter 20 The Cost of a Sterling img
Chapter 21 The Desperate Gamble img
Chapter 22 The Boardroom Massacre img
Chapter 23 The Price of the Throne img
Chapter 24 The Silence of the King img
Chapter 25 The Reckoning at Saint-Luc img
Chapter 26 The Red on My Hands img
Chapter 27 The Blood Doesn't Lie img
Chapter 28 The Lions of London img
Chapter 29 The Ohio Box img
Chapter 30 The Paperwork and the Poison img
Chapter 31 The Viper in the Hallway img
Chapter 32 The voice of the ghost img
Chapter 33 The Four Walls of Failure img
Chapter 34 The Battle for the Queen img
Chapter 35 The Gilded Cage of One's Own img
Chapter 36 The Shadows of the George V img
Chapter 37 The Blackwood Whirlwind img
Chapter 38 The Serpent's Last Dance img
Chapter 39 The North Star img
Chapter 40 The 40,000-Foot Siege img
Chapter 41 Turbulence and Truths img
Chapter 42 The Ghost on the Horizon img
Chapter 43 Into the Abyss img
Chapter 44 The Obsidian Stand-Off img
Chapter 45 The Crushing Dark img
Chapter 46 The Architect of Ruin img
Chapter 47 The Weight of the Crown img
Chapter 48 The Knights of the Shopping Bag img
Chapter 49 The Emerald Coronation img
Chapter 50 Sun, Sand, and Security Risks img
Chapter 51 Sun, Sand, and Security Risks( continued) img
Chapter 52 The Shadow of a Doubt img
Chapter 53 The Coldest Dawn img
Chapter 54 The Constellation of Us img
Chapter 55 The Flight of the Wolves img
Chapter 56 The London Ambush img
Chapter 57 The Lioness and the Vipers img
Chapter 58 The Echo of the Glens img
Chapter 59 The Black Label img
Chapter 60 The Milanese Gambit img
Chapter 61 The Crimson Harvest img
Chapter 62 The Aegean gauntlet img
Chapter 63 The Iron Sovereign img
Chapter 64 The Alpine Fortress img
Chapter 65 The Wolf in the Ball img
Chapter 66 The Whiteout img
Chapter 67 The ghost in the house img
Chapter 68 The House of Broken Glass img
Chapter 69 The Whispers in the Wall img
Chapter 70 The Fog of War img
Chapter 71 The Fog of War img
Chapter 72 The Architect of the Aftermath img
Chapter 73 The Sanctuary of Silence img
Chapter 74 The Gilded Cage img
Chapter 75 The Ordinary Day img
Chapter 76 The Court of Public Opinion img
Chapter 77 The Invisible Guest img
Chapter 78 The Ash and the Altar img
Chapter 79 The Blood of the Architect img
Chapter 80 The Iron Veins img
Chapter 81 The Iron and the Blood img
Chapter 82 The Weight of the Water img
Chapter 83 The Ghost Protocol img
Chapter 84 The Uninvited Guest img
Chapter 85 The Ice King's Thaw img
Chapter 86 The Gala of Thorns img
Chapter 87 The burnt offering img
Chapter 88 The Calm Before the Gala img
Chapter 89 The Fake Smile img
Chapter 90 The Devil in Gold img
Chapter 91 The Shattered Mirror img
Chapter 92 The White Silence img
Chapter 93 The Oxygen of Truth img
Chapter 94 The Phoenix Protocol img
Chapter 95 The Iron Veil img
Chapter 96 The White Isle img
Chapter 97 The Glass Hive Massacre img
Chapter 98 The Midnight Meridian img
Chapter 99 The Bloodline Ledger img
Chapter 100 The Rehearsal of Shadows img
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Chapter 2 The Blue Silk Handkerchief

The bass from the club below thrummed through the soles of my heels, a rhythmic reminder of a life I no longer felt part of.

"To Maya! To freedom and getting rid of dead weight!" my best friend, Sarah, shouted over the music, hoisting a neon-colored shot glass.

I forced my lips into a practiced curve-the same fake smile I'd been wearing for the last three hours. "To freedom," I echoed, tilting the glass back. The liquid burned, but it didn't touch the cold void in my chest.

My friends meant well. They thought a night at The Onyx was the cure for a three-year secret marriage ending in a cold-blooded divorce. They didn't know that every time a slow song played, I could still feel Julian's hand on the small of my back. They didn't know that the "settlement" check sitting in my purse felt like blood money."I'm just going to the restroom," I whispered to Sarah after another thirty minutes of pretending to dance.

"Don't be long! The DJ is about to play your favorite!"

I nodded, keeping the smile tucked into place until I turned the corner toward the VIP hallway. The air was cooler here, dimmed by velvet wallpaper and soft gold lighting. I didn't head for the restroom. Instead, I pushed open a heavy oak door to a darkened lounge, desperate for a single moment where I didn't have to perform.

The room was silent, smelling of expensive cedar and aged bourbon. I leaned against the back of a leather armchair, and finally, the mask shattered.

The first sob felt like a physical tear in my throat. Then came the rest-a silent, shaking deluge of three years of suppressed loneliness, of being a secret, of being discarded for a woman who "fit the image." I gripped the leather until my knuckles turned white, my head bowed as I cried my eyes out for the girl who had been foolish enough to believe in fated love.

I was so lost in the sound of my own grief that I didn't hear the leather creak.

I didn't notice the shadow moving in the corner of the room.

Not until a hand appeared in my peripheral vision-large, steady, and holding a square of pristine blue silk.

I froze, my breath hitching in a jagged gasp. My eyes, blurred with tears and ruined mascara, followed the arm up. He was sitting in the shadows of a high-backed wing chair, a glass of amber liquid resting on the side table.He didn't say a word. He just kept the handkerchief stretched in my direction.

"I-I'm sorry," I stammered, frantically wiping at my cheeks with my palms, only making the black streaks worse. "I didn't realize anyone was in here. I'll leave."

"The silk is better for the skin than your hands," a voice rumbled. It was deep, smooth, and held a command that made the air in the room feel heavy.

I hesitantly reached out, my fingers brushing his. A small jolt of electricity-sharp and unexpected-snapped through my skin. I took the handkerchief; it was warm and smelled faintly of sandalwood and something dangerously expensive.

"Thank you," I whispered, dabbing at my eyes.

"He isn't worth the ruined makeup," the man said.He leaned forward slightly, the dim light catching the sharp line of a jaw and eyes that seemed to read every secret I was trying to hide. "Whoever he is."

I stiffened, my pride flaring up through the sadness. "You don't know anything about it."

"I know that a woman who cries in the dark is usually mourning a ghost," he replied calmly. He stood up, and I realized just how much he towered over me. He was broader than Julian, more imposing, with an aura of raw power that made the penthouse I'd just left feel like a dollhouse. "Go back to your friends, Maya Thorne. The world is too small to hide in for long."

My heart stopped. "How do you know my name?"

He didn't answer. He simply picked up his glass, took a slow sip, and gestured toward the door. "Keep the handkerchief. You look like you might need it again before the night is over."I clutched the silk handkerchief, my heart hammering. "How do you know my name?" I repeated, my voice barely a whisper. "I've never met you."

"I make it my business to know the players in this city," he said, stepping fully into the light. He was devastatingly handsome, but in a way that felt dangerous-like a storm barely held in check by a three-piece suit. "And while your 'husband' kept you in the shadows, I've always found the shadows to be where the most interesting people hide."

He knew. He knew about the secret marriage. The humiliation I thought I was burying rose up, hot and stinging. "If you're looking for a scandal to use against Julian, you're too late. He's already moved on to his 'perfect' bride.""Is that what you think she is?" A ghost of a smirk played on his lips. He walked over to the small bar in the corner and poured a second glass-not bourbon, but a clear, sparkling water with a twist of lime. He held it out. "Drink. Dehydration makes for a terrible comeback story."

I took the glass, my fingers brushing his again. That same spark flared, but this time I didn't pull away. I took a sip, the coldness helping to settle the fluttering in my stomach.

"Julian Vane is a man who counts his coins and misses the gold," the stranger said, leaning against the bar with an effortless grace. "He thinks he traded up. In reality, he just traded a rare diamond for a piece of glass that shines only because of his family name."

I looked down at the blue silk in my hand. "You're very confident for someone I just met.""I'm Cyrus," he said, his eyes locking onto mine with an intensity that made me forget how to breathe. "And I'm not confident. I'm just observant. For instance, I noticed that you've been 'smiling' for three hours, but your eyes haven't crinkled once. It's an impressive performance, Maya. You should retire it. It doesn't suit you."

I felt a genuine, small huff of a laugh escape me-the first one in weeks. "Is that your professional opinion, Mr. Cyrus?"

"It's my personal one," he replied, and for the first time, his expression softened. "There. A real smile. It's a start. It's much more expensive than anything Julian could ever buy Isabella."

The mention of my name and that slight jab at Julian's new life felt like a secret weapon being handed to me. For the first time since signing those papers, I didn't feel like a discarded object. I felt seen.

"I should go," I said, setting the glass down. "My friends will be looking for me."

"Of course," Cyrus said, bowing his head slightly. "But remember, Maya-the next time you want to cry, do it because you're winning. It's much more satisfying."

As I turned to leave, his voice caught me at the door one last time.

"Keep the handkerchief. Consider it a down payment on our next meeting."

I walked back into the loud, pulsing heat of the club, but the noise didn't bother me anymore. I felt the weight of the silk in my pocket-a blue promise from a man who seemed to know my worth better than the man I had been married to for three years.

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