His mouth opened, closed, then opened again without producing sound.
The Grand Reserve was supposed to be a gesture of respect, a demonstration that the Starfells still maintained quality befitting nobility.
Instead, it had been chugged like cheap ale and dismissed as flavorless.
Celeste placed the glass down, a subtle chuckle escaping her as she realized she had just resolved a minor, albeit montarily perplexing, enigma.
"He’s being polite, Starfell," she added helpfully, gesturing toward S as she returned to her chair. "He ans your wine tastes like the gutter you’re about to live in. But honestly? I think he’s giving it too much credit. At least gutter water has flavor. This was just... sad."
She settled back into the expensive chair, feet coming up to rest on an ottoman that probably wasn’t ant to be used as a footrest. Her posture communicated she was getting comfortable for whatever ca next.
The Earl’s hand completed the pour through nothing but muscle mory, filling a second glass despite knowing that nobody would touch it.
The decanter returned to the table with slightly more force than necessary, crystal clinking against wood in a sound that echoed through the silent drawing room.
"I..." he started, then stopped as his voice failed to produce anything beyond a strangled sound that conveyed humiliation without forming actual words.
Victoria’s hands clenched where they were folded in front of her, knuckles going white as she watched her father’s systematic destruction.
Her expression mixed horror with vindictive satisfaction.
This was the man who’d spent an hour blaming her for the family’s collapse, now reduced to speechlessness by a Kaiser half his age.
The Countess remained perfectly still in her chair, hands folded in her lap, face carefully blank. She’d learned decades ago that silence was the safest response when her husband’s pride was being dismantled in real-ti.
S remained perfectly still, his eyes tracking from the wine to the Earl’s face with clinical detachnt that made the rejection feel less like a personal insult and more like a simple statent of observable fact.
He wasn’t trying to hurt the Earl. He was acknowledging the reality that the Earl’s offerings were beneath Kaiser standards.
"Shall we discuss business?" S asked, his tone was reasonable, even if his smile looked too clean.
The Earl nodded mutely, his hand gesturing toward the chairs in invitation that had beco a desperate plea for this eting to proceed with at least so semblance of structure that might preserve his remaining dignity.
Celeste was already comfortable, her position in the chair communicating complete ownership of space.
She’d produced a small coin from sowhere and was flipping it absently, the gold catching candlelight as it spun through the air and landed back in her palm with quiet tallic sounds.
S moved to stand beside her chair rather than sitting himself, his posture remaining rigid as he produced a leather docunt case from inside his jacket.
The case was expensive. Dark material tooled with silver threading that caught the candlelight.
This one item costs more than everything in this room combined. And was purposely brought to show the Earl his place.
His gloved hands opened the case with precise movents, extracting a folded parchnt sealed with wax bearing Jack Kaiser’s personal mark.
A stylized K overlaid on what looked like either a crown or perhaps flas, depending on how the light struck the red wax.
He held the docunt without offering it to the Earl, his eyes tracking across the text as if confirming its contents before proceeding with whatever announcent would change the Starfell family’s existence forever.
"Jack Kaiser has decided to resolve the Starfell situation," S stated, his voice carrying the clinical precision of a dical diagnosis. "Your debts, your failed obligations, and your continued existence as liability rather than asset have required intervention that benefits all parties involved."
The Earl’s breathing had beco shallow, his face pale as he recognized that whatever ca next would change everything, and there was nothing he could do except listen and accept.
"The situation will be resolved through marriage and succession," S continued, each word delivered with the sa flat tone he might use to discuss weather or furniture arrangents.
"Victoria Starfell will marry Laurence Bale within the month. Upon marriage, Laurence will be elevated to the rank of Earl and assu all Starfell lands, titles, responsibilities, and debts."
A profound silence enveloped the drawing room, punctuated only by the subtle crackle of the fireplace and Victoria’s audible gasp, a clear indication of her astonishnt at the unexpected turn of events.
The Earl’s mouth opened, closed, then opened again as his mind tried to process what had just been announced and determine whether there was any version of this where he could object without making things catastrophically worse.
"You..." he started, his voice erging as a raspy whisper. "You’re replacing . With Laurence Bale. A Baron."
"Indeed," S affird, his tone implying this was an evident conclusion rather than a surprising disclosure. "Laurence Bale has demonstrated competence, loyalty, and capability. He manages his province effectively, fulfills his obligations without requiring supervision, and maintains relationships with Jack Kaiser based on mutual benefit rather than accumulated betrayal."
His eyes tracked to the Earl and examined him as if he were an unimpressive specin under a magnifying glass.
"You, by contrast, have demonstrated none of these qualities. Your guards abandoned Jack Kaiser during the Marcus Thorne war. Your business ventures have failed spectacularly. Your debts compound faster than you can calculate them. And your continued authority over Starfell lands serves no purpose except prolonging the inevitable collapse that threatens regional stability."
Celeste had stopped flipping her coin, though her fingers continued playing with it absently. She’d produced the silver letter opener from the Earl’s own desk.
Nobody had seen her take it, but there it was in her hand, being examined with casual interest while S delivered his clinical assessnt of the Earl’s failures.
"So we’re fixing the problem," S concluded, his tone making the solution sound obvious and reasonable. "Laurence becos Earl. Victoria becos his wife, maintaining the bloodline. And you..."
He paused, pulling another docunt from the case.
"You and the Countess will retire to a small estate in the countryside. You’ll live out your remaining years with enough resources to maintain a modest lifestyle but without any political authority, business influence, or ability to create further problems for anyone."
The Earl’s face had gone from red to white to red again as the full scope of what was being proposed registered like a series of slaps, each one landing before he’d recovered from the previous impact.
"You’re stripping of everything," he whispered, his voice carrying disbelief that transcended rage. "My title, my lands, my authority... Everything my family built across generations!
"Your failures," S interrupted, his tone sharp enough to cut through the Earl’s rising hysteria. "We’re stripping you of the responsibilities you’ve proven incapable of managing. The ’everything’ you’re mourning is actually just accumulated debt and deteriorating reputation that threatens economic stability across three provinces."
He took one step forward, his presence sohow filling more space.
"We’re being generous by allowing you to retire rather than face the alternative consequences of betraying Jack Kaiser during warti and subsequently destroying your own economic base through catastrophic mismanagent."
Victoria’s voice erged for the first ti since the Kaisers had entered, sharp and clear despite the trembling underlying each word.
"You can’t do this!"
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