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The Ruined Heiress's Deal With The Regent

The Ruined Heiress's Deal With The Regent

Author: Alfred
Genre: History
Elara carried a dormant second self-Sloane, forged from a year of border warfare after cousin Lydia sold her into slavery. Rescued and amnesiac, Elara forgot it all-until Lydia's poison shattered her gentle host, unleashing the soldier. But she barely had time to reclaim her dark instincts before a grimy groundskeeper lunged at her in the dark woods. Her sweet, smiling cousin Lydia hadn't just poisoned her with the deadly Scarlet Heat toxin. Lydia had paid this man to defile her, wanting Elara's reputation completely annihilated before the poison finally stopped her heart. As the agonizing heat threatened to cook Sloane's brain, Lydia burst into the clearing with a crowd of royal guards and exquisitely dressed nobles. "Oh, Elara! How could you? With a common servant. Have you no shame?" Lydia played the horrified sister perfectly, weeping and screaming about Elara's unimaginable depravity. In the eyes of the disgusted onlookers, Elara's already-tarnished reputation was dead and buried. She should have suffered and died as a destitute orphan, but Lydia stepped over her body, replacing her to become her fiancé's beloved. It was a flawless, vicious trap designed to destroy a helpless noble girl. But Lydia didn't know that the soul inside Elara's body was a battle-hardened soldier. And she certainly didn't know that the "common servant" Sloane had just desperately kissed to survive the poison wasn't the groundskeeper. The crowd's whispers died instantly as the man in the shadows stepped forward, his glacial eyes sweeping over them. It was Damian Sinclair, the terrifying Prince Regent himself, whom Lydia had just accused of being a lowly servant engaged in filth. Sloane crossed her arms, a cold, mocking smile touching her lips as she watched her cousin collapse in terror. The real show was just beginning.
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Chapter 1

Elara carried a dormant second self-Sloane, forged from a year of border warfare after cousin Lydia sold her into slavery.

Rescued and amnesiac, Elara forgot it all-until Lydia's poison shattered her gentle host, unleashing the soldier.

But she barely had time to reclaim her dark instincts before a grimy groundskeeper lunged at her in the dark woods.

Her sweet, smiling cousin Lydia hadn't just poisoned her with the deadly Scarlet Heat toxin.

Lydia had paid this man to defile her, wanting Elara's reputation completely annihilated before the poison finally stopped her heart.

As the agonizing heat threatened to cook Sloane's brain, Lydia burst into the clearing with a crowd of royal guards and exquisitely dressed nobles.

"Oh, Elara! How could you? With a common servant. Have you no shame?"

Lydia played the horrified sister perfectly, weeping and screaming about Elara's unimaginable depravity.

In the eyes of the disgusted onlookers, Elara's already-tarnished reputation was dead and buried.

She should have suffered and died as a destitute orphan, but Lydia stepped over her body, replacing her to become her fiancé's beloved.

It was a flawless, vicious trap designed to destroy a helpless noble girl.

But Lydia didn't know that the soul inside Elara's body was a battle-hardened soldier.

And she certainly didn't know that the "common servant" Sloane had just desperately kissed to survive the poison wasn't the groundskeeper.

The crowd's whispers died instantly as the man in the shadows stepped forward, his glacial eyes sweeping over them.

It was Damian Sinclair, the terrifying Prince Regent himself, whom Lydia had just accused of being a lowly servant engaged in filth.

Sloane crossed her arms, a cold, mocking smile touching her lips as she watched her cousin collapse in terror.

The real show was just beginning.

------------------------

"Stop this meaningless struggle, pretty little lady."

A crude, leering voice sliced through the twilight. Heavy footsteps crunched over dry leaves, shattering the quiet of the forest.

A huge, menacing shadow fell over Elara Voss, pinning the frail noble girl to the cold ground.

Jed Tucker, the estate's drunken, vulgar stablehand, knelt above her. His grimy, calloused hands brushed shamelessly across her bare shoulder. Every touch was raw, insulting, and full of degrading malice.

A filthy grin stretched across his rough face. Yellowed teeth glinted in the dim light, his breath reeking of stale alcohol and rot.

"Your cousin Lydia told me everything," he sneered. "Spoiled little noble girl pretending to be pure. She said you're starving for a man's touch. That your pretty title hides nothing but a shameless, desperate whore."

He tore her silk gown apart with a brutal yank. Fine fabric split open, baring her skin to the chilly evening air. His eyes roved over her greedily, filled with vile possession.

"Once I'm done with you, no lord will take your hand," he snarled. "You'll lose your title, your betrothal, everything. This is what you get for crossing Lydia."

Agony and humiliation crashed over her, but the timid, gentle shell of Elara had faded away completely.

A hidden alter ego named Sloane woke up inside her. Born from childhood trauma, Sloane was forged by brutal border combat and medical training after Elara was betrayed and trafficked by Lydia years ago. Elara lost all memories after being rescued, leaving Sloane dormant all these years. The poison and ambush today finally woke this ruthless second personality.

The root of Lydia's continuous harm lies in the exalted status held by Elara. Elara, with her noble aristocratic title and a seemingly perfect fiancé, has lived a lucky life that has long stirred Lydia's cousin's jealousy and ambition. To seize Elara's status and future, Lydia designed a cruel trap.

She secretly poisoned Elara with Scarlet Fervor, a forbidden toxin that burned like liquid fire inside the veins, slowly draining strength and sanity. To completely ruin her rival, she bribed the greedy, violent Jed to ambush Elara in the isolated woods. Lydia's plan was simple: disgrace Elara publicly, destroy her reputation, and steal her entire life overnight.

Fire blazed relentlessly in Sloane's body, but fear never touched her eyes. She had survived countless deadly battles in the borderlands. This petty, underhanded scheme could never break her.

"You think this dirty trick can ruin me?" Her voice was hoarse from the scorching poison, sharp with unyielding resolve. "Lydia's money only bought you disaster. I don't bow to threats-and I never lose."

Jed froze, stunned by her fierce defiance. He burst into mocking laughter, reaching out to pin her wrists down and subdue her completely.

It was his fatal mistake.

Sloane twisted sharply under his weight, using his own forward momentum against him. With brutal, clinical precision honed by years of harsh border combat experience, she drove her knee into his most vulnerable spot.

A tortured gasp tore from Jed's throat. His arrogant grin vanished in an instant. He doubled over in crippling agony, clutching his injury, all his strength vanishing instantly.

Before he could recover, Sloane's elbow crashed into the base of his skull. A hollow thud echoed through the trees. The brute crumpled unconscious into the leaf litter.

"You deserved it." Sloane's tone was cold and unforgiving. She would never spare anyone who tried to degrade and destroy her.

But the fierce counterattack exhausted her last strength, triggering a full outbreak of Scarlet Fervor.

The internal fire exploded into a raging inferno, searing every vein in her body. Black spots blurred her vision. Her breathing grew shallow and ragged. Trapped in the lonely forest with no help and no antidote, she could feel death closing in.

As her consciousness faded, a low, pained groan drifted from the nearby thicket.

It was a sound of frigid, bone-deep suffering, entirely different from her burning torment.

Driven by desperate survival, Sloane staggered to her feet. Thorns tore her tattered gown, but she barely felt the wounds through her overwhelming feverish pain.

She stumbled into a quiet elm clearing and halted abruptly.

Against an ancient twisted tree leaned a tall, solitary man. He wore regal black velvet embroidered with silver. His skin was unnaturally pale, and delicate frost glistened across his clothes and skin, wrapping him in endless cold.

With solid medical knowledge gained from border training, Sloane identified his curse instantly. He suffered the ancient Frostbite Curse, a hex that froze his body from the inside out, torturing him with eternal icy agony.

Their afflictions were polar opposites-one burning, one freezing. As a seasoned battlefield medic forged by harsh border battles, she realized the forbidden truth in a split second: their curses could neutralize each other. His cold could quench her fiery poison, and her warmth could melt his fatal frost.

He was her only chance to survive Lydia's betrayal.

His arctic-blue eyes fluttered open. A terrifying, predatory aura swept over the clearing. Though weakened by his curse, he remained lethally dangerous. His gaze held arrogance, wariness, and a clear murderous warning-one wrong move, and she would die instantly.

Sloane had stared death in the face countless times during her border survival years. She felt no fear, only desperate certainty.

"I mean you no harm," she breathed shakily. "Your frost can save me. My heat can ease your curse. We can heal each other."

The man rumbled a low, imperious growl, ordering her to retreat at once.

But death left no room for hesitation.

Sloane discarded her ruined gown and pressed her trembling, burning body against his frozen rigid frame.

The moment their flesh touched, piercing cold flooded her veins, calming her raging fire. In return, her scorching warmth melted his frost, soothing his bone-deep freeze.

Yet this shallow balance only delayed death. To live, they needed deeper fusion.

Ignoring his furious, stunned glare, Sloane braced her palms on his icy shoulders and pressed her lips to his frozen ones.

This was not desire. It was a ruthless bargain with fate.

Two cursed strangers, hanging between life and ruin, clinging to the only salvation that could save them both.

Chapter 2

The equilibrium was a fragile, humming thing.

A current of energy flowed between them, a silent conversation between two opposing poisons. Sloane felt the inferno recede, banking into manageable embers. Her heart slowed to a steady rhythm. Clarity returned like sun through smoke. She had control. She was alive.

The man beneath her-Damian-felt a similar, shocking relief. The creeping ice that had been encasing his organs halted its advance. A slow, spreading warmth seeped into him, agonizingly thawing frozen tissues. Feeling returned to his hands, his feet. The world swam back into focus.

And the first thing his clearing vision saw was the face of the woman pressed against him.

Her eyes were closed, brow furrowed in concentration. Strands of dark hair clung to her sweat-sheened skin. And he knew that face. Oh, he knew it.

Elara Michael-the Prime Minister's granddaughter, Aethelgard's most notorious woman. A punishment for them both.

His body went rigid. The color that had just begun to return to his face drained away again, replaced by something far colder than the curse. His jaw clamped shut, and the look in his eyes as they fixed on her was pure, undiluted hatred. She'd seen that look before-on prisoners who realized they'd been captured by the enemy. Fury, yes, but beneath it, a raw, bleeding humiliation. He had been found at his weakest, and this shameless woman had taken advantage. Every rigid line of his body screamed it: defiled.

At the same moment, Sloane's borrowed memories clicked into place. The face beneath her resolved into a clear identity: chiseled jaw, imperious brow, ice-blue eyes blazing with cold fire.

Damian Sinclair. The Prince Regent. The Iron Duke.

The most powerful, and most dangerous, man in the empire. The man who had publicly declared he would rather marry a goat than have his name sullied by the likes of her.

Her heart, which had just settled into a life-affirming rhythm, gave a hard, sickening lurch. Of all the people in the world, it had to be him.

She had survived, yes. But she had just invited a whole new kind of death.

Before either of them could speak, the night's stillness was shattered.

A cacophony of voices. The crunch of boots on dry leaves. The bobbing, intrusive glare of torches.

"Sister! Elara, are you out here? I was so worried!"

The voice was sickly sweet, a perfect imitation of concern. Lydia Michael.

Sloane's blood ran cold-not the curse. This wasn't a rescue; it was the final act.

Torchlight flooded the small clearing, painting the scene in stark, unforgiving shades of orange and black. It caught them in a perfect, damning tableau.

Sloane was still half-sprawled across Damian's lap, her dress in disarray, her hair wild. His velvet tunic was open, her hand resting on his bare chest where she had sought the most direct contact. To any observer, it was a scene of raw, illicit passion.

A collective gasp rippled through the crowd of nobles and guards, followed by scandalized whispers. Eyes fell upon her with a mixture of shock, disgust, and cruel satisfaction.

Lydia stepped forward, her hand flying to her mouth in a flawless performance of horror.

"Oh, Elara... how could you?" she whispered, her voice carrying to every corner of the clearing. "With a... a servant?"

Sloane pushed herself off Damian, mind racing. A perfect trap: the poison, the thug, the public shaming. Lydia hadn't just wanted to hurt her; she wanted to annihilate her.

Damian tried to rise, his muscles still weak and unresponsive. A low growl of pure fury rumbled in his chest, but he couldn't yet command his body. He was trapped, a spectator in his own humiliation.

Two of Lydia's guards moved forward, grabbed Sloane's arms with rough, punishing grips, and hauled her away from the Prince Regent.

"Let her go," Damian's voice was a low rasp, but it held the unmistakable edge of command. The guards hesitated, confused.

Lydia, high on victory, didn't notice. She glided towards Sloane, face a picture of sorrowful disappointment.

"I can't believe this," she said, shaking her head. "I know you have your... ways, sister. But to stoop so low? In the woods, like an animal?"

She was ignoring the man against the tree. In her script, he was supposed to be Jed Tucker or some faceless commoner; the Prince Regent's presence was a complication too arrogant to consider.

Sloane said nothing. She simply watched, a cold, calculating calm settling over her. No panic, no fear. Only the chilling focus of a strategist seeing an opponent's fatal flaw.

With the help of his captain, Gavin Hayes, who had finally pushed through the crowd, Damian got to his feet. He was unsteady, but his height and the sheer force of his presence made the whispers die in people's throats. The air grew thick and heavy.

Lydia, however, was still lost in her moment. "Imagine, what would your perfect fiancé say if he heard you hanging out with a stablehand?"

Sloane finally smiled. It was a small, sharp, dangerous thing.

She let her gaze drift from Lydia's triumphant face to the towering, silent figure now standing in the full glare of the torchlight.

Sloane's voice was quiet, yet it cut through the tension like a razor. "Lydia, dear cousin. Take a good look. Do you recognize the 'stable boy' I've been rolling in the dirt with?"

Lydia scoffed, ready with another barb. She turned, her eyes flicking dismissively towards the man.

And then she saw him.

Her gaze met the frozen, murderous stare of Damian Sinclair.

The smug satisfaction on Lydia's face didn't just fade. It shattered.

---

Chapter 3

The blood drained from Lydia's face in an instant. Her lips, parted to deliver another insult, froze in a silent 'o' of horror. Her eyes widened, pupils shrinking to pinpricks.

She knew that face. Every citizen did-stamped on coins, carved on busts, staring from royal proclamations with cold, unyielding authority.

Damian Sinclair. The Prince Regent. The man she had just accused of being a common servant, a partner in a sordid tryst.

The silence that fell over the clearing was absolute, heavier than stone. Nobles who had been whispering moments before now stared at the ground, at the trees, anywhere but the Prince Regent's face, as if avoiding his gaze could save them from the storm they knew was coming.

Damian's eyes, like chips of arctic ice, swept over the crowd. Each person he looked at flinched as if struck.

His captain, Gavin Hayes, a man built like a fortress, dropped to one knee. "Your Highness," he said, his voice a low rumble of shame. "I failed in my duty. I ask for punishment."

The title-Your Highness-was the final nail in Lydia's coffin. It echoed in the dead quiet, confirming the impossible truth.

Lydia's knees gave out. She crumpled to the ground, a heap of fine silk and shattered ambition. A choked, whimpering sound escaped her throat, the only noise in the petrified forest.

Sloane watched it all unfold, a flicker of grim satisfaction in her eyes. She crossed her arms, the rough grip of the guards on her biceps a minor annoyance. This was better than she could have planned.

Damian's gaze finally landed on her-a complex, unreadable look, fury warring with grudging acknowledgment. He knew, on some level, that the searing heat of her body had just saved him from a fate worse than death. And now, thanks to this idiotic plot, their shames were inextricably linked.

The reputation of the royal family was paramount. This could not be seen as assault. It had to be controlled.

For a long moment, he simply stared at Sloane, his eyes like shards of ice. Then something shifted in his gaze-something cold and calculating clicking into place. His jaw tightened, and he turned just enough to address his captain, voice dangerously soft.

"Gavin. Escort our guests back to the lodge. No one is to leave until I have concluded this matter."

His personal guard moved with swift, disciplined efficiency, herding the terrified nobles away.

Damian's attention turned to the trembling girl on the ground. "You," he said, his voice dropping another degree. "What did you call me?"

Lydia flinched violently. She scrambled forward on her knees, forehead hitting the dirt. "Forgive me, Your Highness! I am blind! I saw nothing! I know nothing!" she babbled, her mask of innocence ripped away.

Sloane chose that moment to sigh, a sound of theatrical disappointment. "Lydia, what's wrong? Weren't you looking for me? You seem to have lost your tongue."

Damian's eyes narrowed. The pieces clicked into place with chilling speed: the convenient arrival, the feigned concern, the immediate assumption of a low-born lover. He hadn't stumbled upon a scene; he had been cast as an unwitting actor in a play designed to destroy Elara Michael.

And in doing so, this foolish child had dared to use the Prince Regent of the Empire as a prop. An insult so profound it bordered on treason.

He stopped looking at Lydia then, dismissing her as one might dismiss a fly. She was already dead; she just didn't know it yet.

He walked towards Sloane, his presence sucking the air from around her. He stopped directly in front of her, so close she could feel the residual cold radiating from his body. The guards holding her arms released her instantly, stepping back as if repelled by a physical force.

He leaned down, his voice a menacing whisper meant only for her.

"You have ten seconds to give me a reason why your fate should not be the same as hers."

Sloane didn't flinch. She met his icy gaze, her own eyes clear and steady. The adrenaline and lingering poison had sharpened her senses to a razor's edge.

"Because I saved your life, Your Highness," she whispered back, her voice equally quiet but firm. "Just as you... saved mine."

She emphasized the word saved. A statement of fact, a reminder of the debt between them.

Damian's pupils contracted almost imperceptibly.

He had expected tears, pleas, denials. He had not expected a declaration of equality.

He realized, with a jolt of unwelcome clarity, that this woman-this disgraced, scandalous woman-was far more dangerous than he had ever imagined. And far more interesting.

---

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