Ravenwood residence was quiet in the way only old money and private security could make silence feel expensive.
Liam stood in the entrance hall with his coat already removed, his collar still high enough to hide most of Arik’s mark, and the expression of a man who had walked into his own execution because every alternative was sohow worse.
Douglas Stanford stood half a step behind him.
Outwardly, Stanford looked perfectly composed.
Inwardly, he had already inford zos, reviewed three possible extraction routes, identified five Ravenwood security layers hidden in the walls, and prayed to any god old enough to understand bonded alphas that Arik Oberon Lyon remained trapped in the secure eting with his parents.
Because His Highness had not permitted Lord Liam to go anywhere outside Lab V.
That had been the understanding.
Lab V was work. Lab V was necessary. Lab V was within the agreed route.
Ravenwood Residence was none of those things.
Unfortunately, Lord Liam Sienna Canmore had not asked permission.
He had simply looked at the family ssages flooding his business account, gone very still, and announced that he was going ho before his mother decided to arrive at Lab V herself.
Stanford had objected.
Politely.
Lord Liam had acknowledged the objection.
Briefly.
Then he had proceeded to dismantle it with the calm cruelty of a man who had built an illegal civilian ether grid beneath a hostile capital and therefore found one diplomatic security officer’s concerns rely irritating.
He had private access codes.
He had Ravenwood clearance.
He had a personal route that did not touch palace surveillance.
He had, most offensively, been correct.
So now they were here at Ravenwood Residence without Arik’s explicit permission.
Stanford’s comm remained silent in his palm.
That worried him.
zos should have responded by now.
Unless zos was busy stopping His Highness from leaving the secure room.
Or His Highness had already left.
Stanford refused to consider that option in detail.
It was bad for operational morale.
Liam stared at the double doors leading into the inner sitting room.
He did not look nervous.
That was how Stanford knew he was.
The hesitation lasted less than a second. A tightening around the mouth. A faint shift of his fingers at his side. Then Liam’s spine straightened, pride sliding into place like armor.
"Stanford," he said.
"Yes, Lord Liam."
"If Arik storms here—"
"When," Stanford corrected before he could stop himself.
Liam turned his head slowly.
Stanford looked back with professional calm.
Liam narrowed his crimson eyes. "If Arik storms here, you will not ntion that I ca voluntarily."
"That would be inaccurate."
"You work in diplomacy. Lie better."
"I work in protection."
"Then protect from consequences."
"That is not currently within my mandate."
Liam looked deeply betrayed.
Before he could answer, the doors opened from within.
Henry Ravenwood stood on the other side.
He looked calm, but Liam knew that it had been built by standing near Enia Ravenwood for years and surviving.
His gaze moved over Liam once, pausing briefly at the high collar, then shifted to Stanford.
"Mr. Stanford."
Stanford inclined his head. "Lord Ravenwood."
Henry’s mouth twitched faintly. "So Agaron sent supervision."
Liam sighed. "Security."
"That is what I said."
"Henry."
"Liam." Henry stepped aside. "Your mother is in the sitting room."
Liam closed his eyes.
"And Mirelle?"
Henry’s expression turned sympathetic.
"In the sitting room."
"That was not the answer I wanted."
"It was the only available one."
From sowhere inside, Enia’s voice floated out, elegant and calm enough to make the entrance hall feel colder.
"Liam, darling. Do co in before your aunt begins naming strategies."
Liam opened his eyes.
Stanford, who had faced hostile courts, ard corridors, and several forms of diplomatic collapse, felt a deep and imdiate respect for Lady Enia Ravenwood.
Liam walked inside.
Stanford followed.
The sitting room was full.
Enia sat near the window in pale green, red-gold hair pinned with immaculate severity, one hand resting over the arm of her chair. Mirelle occupied the sofa opposite her, elegant as a blade wrapped in velvet. Several relatives Stanford did not yet know stood or sat around the room with varying degrees of curiosity, restraint, and shaless interest.
Liam stopped just inside the threshold.
His face went blank.
"You ford a reception committee."
Mirelle smiled. "No, darling. If this were a committee, there would be minutes."
Enia’s gaze moved to his collar, paused, then returned to his face.
Her smile remained beautiful.
Terrifyingly beautiful.
"Liam," she said softly. "How kind of you to rember where we live."
Liam looked at his mother across the sitting room and, despite the incoming disaster, found the strength to look mildly offended.
"In my defense," he said carefully, "just days ago you explicitly said you did not mind if I left Wrohan with Arik for Agaron."
The room went quiet.
Mirelle slowly turned toward Enia.
Henry looked at the ceiling with the exhausted patience of a man who had married into this willingly and now had to survive the consequences.
Enia did not blink.
"That," she said calmly, "was before you vanished for three days, bonded the Crown Prince of Agaron, ignored every family communication channel, and apparently decided your emotional coping strategy should involve hiding inside an illegal ether facility."
Liam folded his arms. "Lab V is not hiding."
"Darling," Mirelle said gently, "you emotionally barricaded yourself behind a turbine."
"That is a very dramatic interpretation."
"It is an accurate interpretation," Henry said.
Liam looked betrayed all over again.
Stanford remained near the doorway with the stillness of a man witnessing a family argunt and recognizing it as significantly more dangerous than most diplomatic conflicts.
Enia’s red eyes narrowed slightly.
"I approved of the possibility of you leaving Wrohan because I trust your judgnt," she continued. "I did not approve of you disappearing into what was apparently a pheromone-induced courtship spiral and resurfacing with an imperial bond mark."
Several cousins imdiately failed to hide their reactions.
One of the Ravenstones choked on tea.
Mirelle looked delighted.
Liam pointed at her. "You are enjoying this too much."
"I have not experienced joy like this in years."
"That is deeply concerning."
"No," Mirelle corrected. "This is deeply romantic."
"It is dically catastrophic."
"It can be both."
Henry pressed two fingers against the bridge of his nose. "Please stop encouraging him to describe his engagent like an industrial accident."
"I am not engaged," Liam said automatically.
The entire room looked at him.
Liam paused.
Then, slower, "I am... politically entangled."
Mirelle’s smile sharpened instantly. "Oh, he’s gone for the prince."
"I hate all of you."
"That’s hereditary," Enia inford him.
Liam opened his mouth to defend himself and stopped abruptly when his comm pulsed faintly in his pocket.
The bond ward at nearly the sa mont.
Stanford went still.
Very still.
Then his comm vibrated once.
He glanced down.
zos: His Highness has concluded the eting.
A second ssage arrived imdiately after.
zos: Is Lord Liam still at the Ravenwood residence?
Stanford closed his eyes briefly.
Across the room, Liam looked up slowly as the bond had shifted to sothing warm, focused, and closer by the second.
"Oh no," Stanford said under his breath before professionalism could stop him.
Every eye in the room turned toward him.
Liam stared.
Stanford straightened imdiately. "Your Highness appears mobile."
Mirelle blinked once. "Mobile."
Henry looked tired already.
Enia set her teacup down with elegant calm. "How long until the Crown Prince arrives?"
Stanford hesitated for exactly one second too long.
Liam’s face went blank with horror.
Mirelle sat forward visibly delighted. "Oh, this is becoming an event."
"It is not an event," Liam snapped.
The bond pulsed again.
Closer.
Stanford looked toward the entrance hall like a soldier hearing distant artillery.
"With respect, Lord Liam," he said carefully, "I believe it may already qualify as one."
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