Chapter 224: Chapter 224: Malachai’s Terms
Eve’s POV
The eastern wing smelled different.
She noticed it the moment Malachai’s people led her through the boundary of his faction’s territory.....something in the air that was older, heavier, like the stone here had absorbed forty years of one particular presence and stopped being neutral about it.
She kept her face even and kept walking.
Damian and Damon had argued about this for twenty minutes that morning. Coming alone, into his territory, with no backup inside the room. Raphael had been quieter about it which meant he was more worried, not less. She’d listened to all of it and then she’d said....he invited me. He won’t touch me here. It would cost him everything the moment it became known.
She’d been right. She was fairly sure she’d been right.
The study was at the end of a long corridor. Dark wood door, no markings. One of Malachai’s people knocked, opened it, and stepped aside.
Eve walked in.
It was a smaller room than she’d expected.
Books, like Seraphine’s....but organized differently. Not lived in. Arranged. Everything in the room was arranged, chosen, positioned with the specific deliberateness of someone who understood that spaces communicated things and wanted control of the communication.
Malachai was behind the desk when she entered. He stood when she came in, which she hadn’t expected, and gestured to the chair across from him.
"Lady Evangeline. Thank you for coming."
"Lord Malachai."
She sat down and he did the same. The desk between them was old and dark and very solid.
He looked at her for a moment with that same expression from the outer hall....warm, unhurried, genuinely pleased. It was worse in a small room. Harder to hold at the distance it deserved.
"Can I offer you anything?" he said. "Tea, water...."
"No," she said. "Thank you."
He nodded. Folded his hands on the desk. "I’ll be direct then, since I think you’d prefer that."
"I would."
"I want to resolve this," he said. "Simply. Without further....escalation." He said the word like it was distasteful to him. Like escalation was something that happened to other people’s situations and he found himself regrettably adjacent to it. "You have something I want. I have something you want. That’s a negotiation, not a war."
Eve looked at him. "Go on."
"Your friend," he said. "Maya. She’s uncomfortable and she’s frightened and she wants to go home. I understand that. I take no pleasure in her situation,,,,she’s a civilian, she has nothing to do with Court politics, and the fact that she’s here at all is....." A small pause. "....an unfortunate necessity that I’d like to conclude as quickly as possible."
"You’d like to conclude it," Eve said.
"Yes."
"By returning her."
"Yes. Unharmed. Immediately, if you choose." He held her gaze steadily. "In exchange for one thing."
The room was quiet. freēwebnovel.com
"Your claim," he said. "A formal, public renunciation. Filed through the Court’s proper channels, witnessed, on record." He said it the way you’d say something reasonable. Something obvious. "You step back from the succession. You return to your life....your pack, your mates, everything you’ve built. Protected. I give you my personal guarantee of safety, yours and everyone connected to you." A pause. "You get Maya back. You get your life back. And this....." he gestured vaguely at the space between them, at the Court, at everything it represented, ".....ends."
Eve looked at him.
He looked back at her with the expression of someone who had genuinely convinced himself this was generous.
"You think that’s a fair offer," she said.
"I think it’s a good one," he said. "Better than you’d get from continued conflict." His voice remained warm. Entirely without threat. "You’re talented, Lady Evangeline. Genuinely....the trial demonstrated capability that surprised everyone, myself included. You have good instincts, good allies, good support." A pause. "But this Court has been operating for five centuries. The people in it have been navigating its politics since before your parents were born. You’re twenty-three years old and you’ve been awakened for months." He said it without cruelty. Just....evenly. "The odds are not in your favor. I’d rather you understood that before someone gets hurt."
"Someone already got hurt," Eve said. "You took my friend."
He absorbed this without flinching. "Yes. I did. And I’m offering to return her, unharmed, today." He held her gaze. "That offer exists because I’m trying to resolve this without further harm. Not because I couldn’t pursue other approaches."
There it was. freewēbnoveℓ.com
Not a threat exactly. Just a door left open so she could see what was behind it.
She held it where it was and didn’t react.
"My parents," she said.
Something shifted in his face. Barely.
"What about them," he said.
"You knew them," she said. "Raphael told me. You were at Court when they were here." She watched him. "What happened to them wasn’t an accident. It wasn’t random. Someone made sure the people who could have helped them were looking elsewhere." She paused. "That was you."
The room was very quiet.
Malachai looked at her for a long moment. Something moved through his expression that was....complicated. Not guilt exactly. The specific expression of someone who had made a decision a long time ago and had finished grieving the necessity of it and arrived somewhere that wasn’t quite peace but functioned like it.
"Your father," he said carefully, "was going to change this Court in ways that would have destabilized it for generations. His intentions were good. They always were....Azrael was never anything but sincere." A pause. "Sincerity without wisdom is dangerous. He had powerful people frightened and frightened powerful people make catastrophic decisions." He held her gaze. "I made sure the catastrophic decision was contained. Controlled. Rather than allowed to play out in ways that would have cost far more lives."
"You decided that," Eve said. "Alone."
"Someone had to."
"And my mother."
His jaw tightened. Fractionally. "Lilith was...collateral. That was never the intention."
The word landed in the room between them.
Collateral.
She breathed in once. Held it. Let it out.
She kept her face even through everything it cost her to do that and filed the fury away somewhere it would be useful later.
"I see," she said.
He looked at her carefully. Reading her the way he read everything.....with the patient attention of someone who had been doing it for centuries. "You’re not going to make a decision today," he said. It wasn’t a question.
"No," she said.
"How long do you need?"
"I’ll send word," she said.
He nodded slowly. Accepting this. "Maya’s situation remains unchanged while you consider," he said. "She’s not in danger. I want that to be clear."
"It’s clear," Eve said.
She stood up and He also stood up...that courtesy again, the grandfather warmth, the genuine-seeming regard that made her skin crawl in a way nothing cold ever had.
"One question," she said.
He waited.
"The room she’s in," Eve said. "Is she comfortable? Enough light? She doesn’t do well in dark spaces."
He looked at her. Something in his eyes — assessing, processing the question, deciding what it meant that she was asking it. "Third level," he said. "East corridor. The room at the end has a window." A pause. "She has light."
"Thank you," Eve said.
She walked to the door.
"Lady Evangeline."
She stopped. Didn’t turn.
"I am sorry," he said. "About your parents. I mean that."
She stood in the doorway for a moment.
"I know you do," she said. "That’s the part I find hardest to forgive."
She left.
The corridor outside was empty except for Malachai’s two guards who fell in to escort her back to the neutral threshold. She walked between them and kept her face composed and her breathing even and her hands loose at her sides.
Third level. East corridor. Room at the end.
He’d told her.
He’d been so focused on reading her — on assessing whether she was considering his offer, on managing the conversation, on performing the warmth that was his most effective weapon — that he’d answered her question without registering that it wasn’t about Maya’s comfort.
It was about Maya’s location.
She knew exactly where her friend was.
She kept walking and didn’t let any of it show until she was through the boundary of his territory and into neutral ground and completely alone.
Then she stopped.
Breathed.
Collateral, he’d said. About her mother. Like Lilith Seraphim had been an administrative inconvenience.
She held the fury for a moment. Let herself feel the full weight of it — not managed, not filed away, just present and real and completely valid.
Then she folded it back up.
She had a location.
She had a plan.
She started walking.