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The Devil's Heir at Blackwell Academy
img img The Devil's Heir at Blackwell Academy img Chapter 4 The Sound Of Glass Breaking
4 Chapters
Chapter 8 The Shadow Of The Mountain img
Chapter 9 The Anatomy Of A Threat img
Chapter 10 The Gala of Glass Masks img
Chapter 11 The Aftermath Of Echoes img
Chapter 12 The Architecture Of Truth img
Chapter 13 The Architecture Of Resignation img
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Chapter 4 The Sound Of Glass Breaking

The door to Richard's Mercedes didn't just close; it sealed.

The heavy thud of German engineering cut off the noises of the Blackwell parking lot-the shouting of boys, the revving of engines, the distant whistle of the soccer coach.

Inside, silence filled the car, immediate and suffocating.

Richard didn't look at me.

His hands were firmly gripping the steering wheel, knuckles white against the black leather.

He prided himself on staying composed, on being the calmest person in any room.

But today, the tension in his jaw made him look much older.

"Richard?" I asked, my voice small. "What happened? Is my father okay?"

He didn't pull out of the parking lot. He just sat there, staring through the windshield at the red-brick façade of the school.

"There was a fight, Jane. A disturbance at the correctional facility. Your father was... involved."

My heart did a slow, painful turn in my chest.

My father wasn't a fighter.

He was a man who read history books and often forgot to pay the electric bill.

He had always found himself in the wrong place at the wrong time with the wrong people, or so he told me every visiting day for three years.

"Is he hurt?"

"He's in the infirmary," Richard said, finally turning to look at me.

His eyes were soft with sympathy, but there was something else-a flicker of calculation. "He's stable.

The warden called because I'm now listed as your emergency contact. Your mother was... unavailable."

A hot rush of shame spread through me.

My mother wasn't unavailable; she was likely at a spa or a charity luncheon, trying to scrub off the "prison-wife" scent to fit better into Richard's world.

She had started ignoring calls from the facility weeks ago.

"I need to see him," I said, reaching for the door handle.

"You can't," Richard said firmly. "The facility is on lockdown.

No visitors for seventy-two hours. And Jane, we need to discuss what this means for you."

"What it means for me?" I echoed. "My dad is bleeding in a prison hospital, and we're discussing my 'situation'?"

Richard sighed, rubbing his nose. "Blackwell is a small community, Jane.

People talk. If word gets out that your father was involved in a prison riot, the scholarship board and the parents will make your life impossible.

I'm doing everything I can to keep your name out of the police report, but you have to be careful. You can't be seen as a liability."

The word hit me hard-liability. Not a girl, not a daughter, but something to manage on a balance sheet.

"I understand," I whispered, though I wanted to scream.

The drive to the mansion flew by in a daze. When we got there, the house felt colder than usual.

I skipped the kitchen, ignoring my mother's voice about a new caterer she'd hired, and went to the only place where I could breathe: the back gardens.

The Hale estate was sprawling, looking more like a park than a backyard.

I walked past the infinity pool and the tennis courts until I reached the edge of the property where the woods began. There was a stone bench hidden behind a weeping willow.

I sat down and finally let the tears flow. They weren't quiet, cinematic sobs.

They were ugly, racking cries for the father I missed, for the mother I didn't recognize anymore, and for the exhausting weight of pretending I was okay.

"You're making a mess of yourself."

I jumped, nearly falling off the bench. Edmund leaned against the trunk of the willow tree, arms crossed over his chest.

He wasn't wearing his blazer anymore; his white dress shirt was unbuttoned at the collar, sleeves rolled up to reveal lean, muscular forearms.

"Go away, Edmund," I choked out, wiping my face with my hand.

"My father was idling in the driveway for twenty minutes before he came inside," Edmund said, ignoring me.

He stepped into the space beneath the willow branches, sunlight filtering through the leaves to cast shadows across his face. "He looked like he'd just lost a court case. What did he tell you?"

"Nothing that concerns you."

Edmund took a step closer. The air shifted between us as it always did. He didn't offer me a tissue or a hug.

He just watched me with intense focus.

"He told you about the prison," Edmund stated, not asking.

I froze. "How do you know about that?"

"I know how my father works. He collects information like others collect stamps.

He knew about your father's 'incident' before the warden even hung up the phone. And I know because I make it my business to learn everything that happens in this house."

"Then you know I don't want to talk to you," I said, standing up to leave.

He caught my arm. His grip wasn't painful but firm. His skin felt warm, a striking contrast to his usual icy demeanor.

For a moment, everything around us faded away.

"Wait," he said, his tone unexpectedly soft.

I looked at him, eyes still blurred with tears. "What? Do you want to tell me how this affects the Hale name? Do you want to remind me that I'm a charity case?"

"I was going to say," he began, lowering his voice to that deep pitch that resonated in my bones, "that my mother didn't just leave. She was sent away."

I stopped struggling. "What?"

Edmund looked away, staring at the distant trees. "Richard doesn't like liabilities.

When my mother started having... episodes, when she became 'difficult' for his image, he found a very quiet, very expensive place for her to live.

He tells everyone she's traveling. He tells me she doesn't want to see me."

The vulnerability I had seen in him before was back, but now it felt weaponized.

He was showing me his scars so I would understand the seriousness of his warning.

"He's doing the same to you, Jane," Edmund continued, turning back to me.

"He's wrapping you in silk so no one can see the bruises.

But the moment you become too much of a problem, the silk becomes a shroud."

I looked at him and realized his arrogance wasn't just a shield; it was a survival tactic.

He wasn't the prince of the castle; he was its most prominent prisoner.

"Why are you telling me this?" I asked. "I thought you hated me."

Edmund let go of my arm and shoved his hands into his pockets.

The mask slipped back into place so quickly that it was almost jarring.

"I don't hate you. I just don't want to see another person crushed by this house. It's boring."

"You're a liar," I said, a small, sad smile creeping onto my lips. "You care."

"Don't get ahead of yourself," he snapped, but there was no real heat in it.

"The party is still happening tomorrow. You're still going.

And you're going to wear something that doesn't look like it came from a fire sale."

"I don't have 'party clothes,' Edmund. My wardrobe is all jeans and things that belonged to my aunt."

He sighed, dramatically exhaling in frustration. "Go to your room.

There will be a box on your bed in an hour. Don't thank me. In fact, if you mention this to anyone, I'll tell the whole school you cry like a toddler."

He turned and walked back toward the house with a confident stride.

I watched him go, feeling a strange and confusing flutter in my chest that had nothing to do with my father and everything to do with the boy who was supposed to be my rival.

An hour later, I pushed open my bedroom door.

True to his word, a large, matte-black box sat on my bed.

There was no card, no ribbon.

Inside, wrapped in layers of white tissue paper, was a dress.

It was silk, the color of crushed emeralds, with delicate straps and a hemline that seemed designed to catch the light.

Beneath it lay a pair of silver heels that looked more expensive than my father's car.

I picked up the dress, the fabric feeling like water in my hands.

As I lifted it, a small piece of paper fell out of the folds.

It wasn't a note.

It was the photograph from the library, the one showing the man standing in front of the prison.

Now I saw what I had missed in the dark. On the back, in cramped, hurried handwriting, were the words: He wasn't there for your father. He was there for mine.

The realization hit me hard.

The man in the photo wasn't a stranger.

He was Richard's private investigator.

My father's "incident" wasn't just a random prison fight; it was a message.

As I stared at the green silk in my hands, I understood that the party tomorrow night wasn't just a social debut.

It was a battlefield.

I walked over to the mirror, holding the dress up against my body.

The emerald green made my eyes look darker and my skin look paler. I looked like I belonged in the Hale mansion. I looked like a girl with no secrets.

But as I gazed at my reflection, I didn't see a debutante.

I saw a girl who was finally starting to grasp the rules of the game.

Edmund was right; this house was built on secrets, and Richard Hale controlled them all.

But Richard had made one mistake. He had brought me here.

I sat on the edge of the bed, the silk dress pooling around me, and waited for the sun to go down.

The house was quiet, the type of quiet that comes before a storm. Down the hall, I heard the faint sound of a door closing-Edmund was retreating into his own fortress.

I realized then that we were two sides of the same coin. We were both playing roles we hadn't chosen, trapped in a gilded cage that was slowly closing in on us.

I reached for my phone and called the correctional facility. I didn't expect anyone to pick up, and they didn't. But I left a message anyway.

"Dad," I whispered into the receiver. "I'm going to find out what happened. I promise."

I hung up and stared at the black box. The party was in twenty-four hours.

Jessica would be there. Richard would be watching. And Edmund... Edmund would be the only one who knew that the girl in the green dress was carrying a match, ready to set the whole thing ablaze.

The wind picked up outside, rattling the heavy glass panes of my window. In the distance, a dog barked, a lonely, mournful sound echoing through the trees. I lay back on the bed, the scent of the new dress-expensive, clean, and completely foreign-filling my lungs.

Tomorrow, the acting would start in earnest. But tonight, in the dark, I allowed myself one last moment of being Jane Carter from Lincoln High.

I reached under my pillow and pulled out a crumpled wrapper from a piece of gum my father had given me during our last visit.

I held it until the crinkle of the plastic was the only sound in the room, a tiny, cheap anchor in a world of sinking gold.

As I drifted off to sleep, my last thought wasn't of the dress or the party.

It was of the photograph. If Richard's man was at the prison, it meant my father wasn't just a liability; he was a witness.

And in this world, witnesses didn't last very long.

I woke up at 3:00 AM to the sound of something breaking downstairs.

It wasn't a loud crash-more like delicate glass hitting a hard floor. I stayed perfectly still, my heart pounding against the mattress.

I waited for the sound of footsteps, for Richard's voice, for my mother's anxious chirp. But there was nothing.

Just the heavy silence of the mansion and the feeling that, somewhere in the dark, the first piece of our lives had just shattered beyond repair.

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