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The moment Amelia Godric stepped into Fairfax House, she felt a strange heaviness settle in her chest. Above her, chandeliers cast a warm glow over the crowded ballroom. Music drifted through the air, and laughter rolled across the polished floor. The spring ball was meant to be an evening of beauty and celebration for London society. For Amelia, however, something felt wrong, even before she understood why.

She stood near the refreshment table, absently touching the lace of her pale blue gown. At 22, she possessed a quiet, gentle beauty that revealed itself gradually. Her soft brown hair framed her face in a style both simple and elegant, and her usual smile had a way of putting others at ease.

Tonight, she struggled to summon it.

Lady Harrington, sharp-eyed and observant, approached her and placed a gloved hand lightly on her arm. She studied Amelia with careful attention.

“You look troubled, my dear,” she said. “A bride-to-be should be full of joy.”

Amelia forced a small smile. “I am only overwhelmed by the crowd, I think.”

Lady Harrington leaned closer. “You had better adjust quickly. As the future Countess of Fairfax, you will host evenings far grander than this.”

The reminder weighed heavily. Amelia’s engagement to Edmund Fairfax had been arranged long ago by their families. He would gain her father’s respected connections. She would gain his title. It had never been intended as a marriage of love. She had accepted that.

Still, the unease in her stomach deepened when Lady Harrington continued.

“I haven’t seen your fiancé in some time,” she said. “Nor Miss Ashworth.”

Amelia’s heart tightened.

Viola Ashworth had been her closest friend since childhood—beautiful, lively, admired by everyone. Recently, Amelia had noticed Edmund watching Viola more often than propriety allowed. She had dismissed it, convincing herself it meant nothing.

“Perhaps they stepped out for air,” Amelia said, though even to her own ears, the explanation felt hollow.

Lady Harrington sighed softly. “My dear, I have lived a long time, and no man should look at his betrothed’s friend the way Edmund looks at Miss Ashworth.”

The words struck sharply. Before Amelia could respond, Lady Harrington drifted away, leaving her alone with a growing sense of dread.

She needed to find Edmund. She needed to see Viola.

Moving through the ballroom, she kept her expression composed, though her pulse quickened. She checked the card room. They were not there. The terrace stood empty. The hallways were quiet.

Then she noticed the library door, slightly ajar, a thin line of golden light spilling into the corridor.

As she approached, voices reached her—familiar voices.

Viola’s voice trembled. “Edmund, this cannot continue. It isn’t right.”

Edmund replied in a low, dismissive tone. “My engagement to Amelia is a business arrangement, nothing more.”

The world seemed to tilt beneath Amelia’s feet. She pressed her hand against the wall to steady herself.

“But she trusts us,” Viola said, her voice breaking.

“Love is for fools,” Edmund answered. “Titles and power matter. Amelia serves her purpose. You hold my heart.”

The words cut deeply. Amelia had never believed Edmund loved her, but to hear herself reduced to a mere convenience—to hear him speak of her as a tool—burned through her with a quiet, devastating force.

And Viola—Viola, who had been her friend for years—spoke with a longing that shattered something inside her.

She should have walked away. She should have spared herself what came next.

Instead, she pushed the door open.

Edmund and Viola sprang apart. His hand had been at Viola’s waist. Viola’s face drained of color.

“Amelia,” Viola whispered.

“Please,” Amelia said softly, struggling to steady her voice, “do not lie to me.”

Edmund straightened, his expression hardening. “You are making a scene over nothing.”

“Nothing?” Amelia echoed. “I heard everything.”

He frowned. “This engagement benefits us both. You knew it was not about affection.”

“I knew it lacked love,” Amelia replied. “I did not know it lacked respect.”

Viola stepped forward, tears streaming down her face. “Amelia, I never meant to hurt you.”

“How long?” Amelia asked.

Silence followed, heavier than any answer.

“6 months,” Edmund said at last, without shame.

A soft, broken sound escaped Amelia. She turned and walked out before her tears could fall.

As she passed through the ballroom, heads turned. Whispers rose behind her like smoke, suffocating and cruel. She moved quickly toward the garden, needing air, needing distance, needing anything to keep from breaking in front of the entire room.

Outside, the night was quiet. The scent of roses lingered in the air, and moonlight rested softly on her shoulders. For the first time that evening, she allowed her pain to surface.

A voice spoke behind her.

“Miss Godric, are you unwell?”

She turned.

George Cavendish, the Duke of Asheford, stood before her. He was tall and composed, his presence commanding in a way that subtly shifted the atmosphere around him. He was known for his power, his distance from society, his avoidance of entanglements. He was not a man who showed interest in anyone.

Yet his eyes held only concern.

Amelia quickly wiped her tears. “Your Grace, forgive me. I did not see you.”

“No apology is needed,” he said. “But you are clearly in pain.”

His words, simple as they were, broke through the fragile composure she had tried to maintain.

“My fiancé and my closest friend,” she said quietly. “I found them together.”

The Duke regarded her for a moment, then gave a slow, understanding nod.

“Pain caused by betrayal is the sharpest pain of all,” he said. “And it is never the fault of the one betrayed.”

His voice was steady, calm, and unwavering. It made her feel, for the first time that night, less alone.

“You deserve better than this,” he added.

Her breath caught. She barely knew him, had exchanged little more than polite greetings in the past. Yet he spoke as though he saw her clearly—not as a source of scandal, not as a social arrangement, but as a person.

A faint rustle sounded behind them. The Duke glanced toward the ballroom doors.

Edmund and Viola had stepped outside.

The Duke turned back to Amelia. “If you wish,” he said quietly, “I can give them something to look at. Something they do not expect.”

Amelia blinked. “What do you mean?”

He extended his hand.

“Walk with me, Miss Godric.”

His voice was steady, certain. Something in his gaze suggested that this moment would alter the course of everything that followed.

Amelia hesitated, the distant music from the ballroom drifting into the garden. She had spent the last hour overwhelmed by humiliation and heartbreak. Now, a man of immense power stood before her, offering something she did not yet fully understand.

“Walk with me,” he repeated.

She placed her hand in his.

His grip was warm and grounding in a way she had not anticipated. He guided her toward the terrace steps at an unhurried pace, as though allowing her the space to gather herself.

At the ballroom entrance, he paused. Edmund and Viola lingered nearby. Edmund’s expression darkened at the sight of Amelia beside the Duke. Viola looked stricken, caught between shock and guilt.

“You are about to be the center of attention,” the Duke said quietly. “If you wish to leave, tell me now.”

Amelia lifted her chin. For the first time that evening, she did not want to disappear. She did not want to be seen as broken.

“I’m ready,” she said.

A faint hint of approval touched his expression.

“Very well.”

Together, they stepped into the ballroom.

The effect was immediate. The music faltered. Conversations ceased. Heads turned in a ripple across the room. Even the dancers slowed as whispers spread faster than the orchestra could recover.

The Duke of Asheford—distant, unapproachable, and the most sought-after bachelor in London—was escorting Amelia Godric.

Lady Winslow gasped. Lord Carmichael nearly dropped his drink. Mrs. Everett leaned toward her daughter, whispering in astonishment.

The Duke ignored every stare. His attention remained fixed on Amelia as he guided her toward the center of the room with quiet authority.

When they reached it, he signaled the orchestra. The musicians stopped mid-melody. A hush fell over the ballroom.

He turned to face the crowd.

“Ladies and gentlemen,” he said, his voice carrying effortlessly, “forgive the interruption.”

Amelia’s heart pounded. This was far beyond what she had expected.

“I wish to make something clear,” he continued. “I have found Miss Amelia Godric to be the most remarkable woman in this room.”

A wave of murmurs swept through the audience.

Amelia stared at him, stunned. There was no trace of pretense in his words.

Edmund pushed through the crowd, his expression tight with anger. “Your Grace, I must speak with Amelia at once.”

The Duke did not look at him. “You may speak when she requests it,” he said.

Edmund froze.

The Duke turned back to Amelia.

“Miss Godric,” he said, “would you grant me the honor of this dance?”

Every eye in the room settled on her.

She could feel Edmund’s anger, see Viola’s distress, sense the crowd waiting for her to falter.

She did not.

She placed her hand in his.

And stepped forward.

A soft murmur of approval rose from the edges of the ballroom as the orchestra resumed, this time with a slower, gentler waltz. George Cavendish guided Amelia across the floor with practiced ease, his hold firm yet never forceful. Each step felt deliberate, steadying her in a way she had not expected.

“You are doing beautifully,” he said quietly.

“It feels like a dream,” she replied.

“I assure you, this is no dream.”

Around them, the whispers shifted. What had begun as shock softened into admiration.

“Look how he holds her.”

“She looks radiant.”

“Perhaps she was the right match all along.”

Amelia heard none of it clearly. She was aware only of the steady rhythm of the music and the quiet certainty in the Duke’s presence. She had entered the ballroom feeling diminished and exposed. Now, she was being regarded as though she held a place of significance.

When the dance came to an end, applause spread through the room, hesitant at first, then growing stronger. Amelia felt warmth rise to her cheeks, but it was no longer the flush of humiliation. It was something closer to pride.

George bowed over her hand. “Thank you for trusting me.”

She studied him, still trying to understand. “You hardly know me. Why would you do all of this?”

A faint shadow crossed his expression. “I have very little patience for cruelty,” he said. “And even less for men who do not value what they have.”

Before she could respond, her mother hurried toward them, her expression a mixture of confusion and excitement.

“Amelia, my dear,” Mrs. Godric whispered urgently, “what is happening? The Duke of Asheford—this is—oh, heavens, I cannot even say it.”

George inclined his head politely. “Mrs. Godric, your daughter is a woman of great character.”

Her mother nearly lost her composure at the statement.

Amelia felt heat rise again to her face. “Your Grace, this is all too much. You do not need to pretend interest for my sake.”

He leaned slightly closer, lowering his voice so only she could hear. “I do not pretend, Amelia.”

Her breath caught.

The moment fractured as Edmund’s voice cut through the air.

“Enough of this.”

He approached them, fists clenched, his expression tight with humiliation. “Amelia, come with me now.”

George stepped forward without hesitation, placing himself between them.

“She is not going anywhere with you,” he said.

Edmund’s jaw tightened. “We are engaged.”

“Not anymore,” Amelia said.

The words surprised even her. Yet once spoken, they did not falter.

“Our engagement ended the moment you betrayed me.”

Edmund stared at her, momentarily stunned. Behind him, Viola appeared, pale and shaken.

“Amelia, please,” Viola said. “Let us explain.”

Amelia felt the familiar ache of what had been lost, but it no longer held power over her.

“There is nothing left to explain,” she said.

The surrounding crowd watched in silence, drawn into the unfolding confrontation.

Edmund stepped closer, his tone shifting to urgency. “You cannot throw everything away over a misunderstanding.”

“A man who hides in the shadows,” George said evenly, “has no place demanding loyalty in the light.”

A collective gasp moved through the room.

Edmund’s anger sharpened. “You think you can take what is mine?”

Amelia moved slightly closer to George, drawn by instinct to the steadiness he offered.

“I was never yours,” she said.

The words settled with finality.

For the first time, she saw Edmund without illusion—not as the future she had accepted, but as a man who demanded control without offering respect, who sought admiration without loyalty.

George’s expression softened as he looked at her. “You are free of him,” he said quietly.

The words carried a quiet certainty that settled over her like warmth.

He extended his hand once more.

“Miss Godric, if you are willing, I would like to call upon you tomorrow.”

The ballroom fell silent again.

It was not a proposal, but it was unmistakably a declaration—public, deliberate, and impossible to ignore.

Amelia felt something within her steady, reshaping into something new.

“You may call upon me,” she said.

A faint smile touched his lips. “Then I shall.”

Whispers rose again, moving through the room with renewed intensity. Amelia Godric had not simply endured humiliation—she had emerged from it transformed. And the Duke of Asheford had chosen her.

The following morning, sunlight filled the Godric townhouse, casting a warm glow across the drawing room. Amelia stood near the window, her hands folded, trying to steady her thoughts.

The Duke of Asheford was coming to call.

Sleep had eluded her. Each time she closed her eyes, she saw the events of the previous night—the ballroom, the stunned faces, Edmund’s anger, and above all, the way George Cavendish had looked at her, as though she mattered in a way she never had before.

Her mother adjusted the tea tray once more, her movements restless. “Do sit, Amelia. You will worry yourself ill.”

“I am fine,” Amelia said, though she was not certain it was true.

Her father entered with the morning paper in hand. “Your dance with the Duke is printed here,” he announced. “Front page. Entire columns devoted to it.”

Amelia flushed. “Father, please do not read it aloud.”

He appeared tempted, but refrained.

Before he could speak again, the butler entered. “His Grace, the Duke of Asheford.”

Amelia’s heart quickened.

George Cavendish entered with composed confidence. He wore a dark blue coat, his appearance precise, his expression calm. When his gaze settled on Amelia, something softened—something steady and attentive.

Mrs. Godric curtsied. “Your Grace, what an honor.”

“Mrs. Godric,” he said politely, before turning to Amelia. “Miss Godric, thank you for receiving me.”

The atmosphere in the room shifted subtly.

“Shall we take a walk in the garden?” he asked.

Amelia nodded, grateful for the opportunity to step away from the intensity of her parents’ attention.

Outside, the garden was quiet, the sunlight warming the gravel path beneath their feet.

“Are you well this morning?” George asked.

“I am,” she said. “Though there is much to consider.”

He inclined his head. “Last night was… intense. I did not intend to create such a public display. But when I saw you alone, I could not ignore it.”

She looked at him carefully. “You hardly know me.”

“I hope to change that,” he replied.

They reached a stone bench beneath a blooming rose bush. He waited for her to sit before taking his place beside her, leaving a respectful distance between them.

“Amelia,” he said after a moment, “I want to be honest. I did not intervene only to spare you embarrassment.”

She turned toward him, attentive.

“There is something I saw in you,” he continued. “Something I did not expect.”

“What do you mean?”

“You carry yourself with quiet strength,” he said. “Even in pain. Even under scrutiny. Most would have left that ballroom. You remained.”

She lowered her gaze. “I felt as though I was breaking.”

“That is not weakness,” he said. “It is bravery.”

The words settled deeply.

No one had ever spoken to her in such a way—without expectation, without calculation.

“I would like to court you properly,” he continued. “Not as a gesture. Not for appearances. A true courtship.”

Her breath caught.

“A true courtship,” she repeated softly.

“That is what I intend.”

She felt the shift within her again, no longer rooted in hurt, but in something cautious and unfamiliar.

Before she could answer, the garden gate opened.

Viola Ashworth stepped inside.

Amelia stiffened.

Viola hesitated when she saw them, her face pale, her eyes rimmed with red.

“Amelia,” she said quietly. “May I speak with you?”

George rose at once. “I will give you privacy,” he said. “I will remain nearby.”

He moved a short distance away, close enough to observe but far enough not to overhear.

Viola approached slowly, stopping several feet from Amelia.

“You look well,” she said. “Better than I deserve to hope.”

Amelia remained composed. “Why are you here?”

Viola clasped her hands together. “I came to apologize again. I know I may not deserve forgiveness, but I could not remain silent.”

Tears gathered in her eyes.

“Edmund is not the man I believed him to be,” she said. “He used me. He used you. He uses anyone who offers him advantage. When I believed he cared for me, he turned cold. I see now that I was wrong.”

Amelia listened, her emotions shifting between hurt and a distant sense of pity.

“He is furious,” Viola continued. “Furious that you have the Duke’s attention. He has spent the morning searching for something he can use against him.”

Amelia’s expression sharpened. “What do you mean?”

“He is looking for a way to harm him,” Viola said. “And to harm you through him.”

A chill moved through Amelia.

“Why?” she asked.

“Because he cannot bear to lose,” Viola said. “And losing you to a duke has wounded his pride beyond reason.”

Amelia closed her eyes briefly. Edmund’s cruelty no longer surprised her, but the thought of him turning his anger toward George unsettled her.

“Thank you for telling me,” she said.

Viola nodded, her voice soft. “I know I have lost your friendship. But I hope that someday you might remember who I once was.”

Amelia did not offer forgiveness, but neither did she turn away.

Viola left the garden quietly.

When she was gone, George returned at once, reading Amelia’s expression with immediate understanding.

“What did she say?” he asked.

Amelia told him everything.

He listened without interruption, though his jaw tightened slightly.

“I suspected he might attempt something,” George said. “He is a man of arrogance, not intelligence.”

Amelia looked at him with concern. “You must not let him harm you.”

George reached for her hand, his touch steady.

“He will not harm me,” he said. “And he will not harm you again.”

His words were not spoken with force, but with certainty.

A sense of calm followed.

“Now,” he said after a moment, “before we are interrupted again, I must ask you something important.”

Amelia looked at him.

He leaned slightly closer, his voice quiet but resolute.

“Will you allow me to court you officially, with the intention that, should our affection grow, I may one day ask for your hand?”

Her heartbeat quickened.

This was not a gesture. It was not an arrangement. It was a choice.

“Yes,” she said softly. “I would like that.”

A rare smile crossed his face, carrying warmth and unmistakable relief.

“Then I am honored,” he said.

Before the moment could continue, raised voices sounded from inside the house. Footsteps hurried across the hall. Her father’s voice called out sharply.

George’s expression sharpened.

“Stay here,” he said.

Amelia rose beside him. “No. If this concerns Edmund, I will not hide.”

Together, they returned inside.

In the foyer, Edmund stood wild-eyed, disheveled, and furious. Two footmen restrained him, though he struggled against their hold with little dignity left to preserve.

“You think you’ve won?” he shouted at Amelia. “You think he will marry a woman cast aside? You are nothing without me.”

George stepped forward with a cold composure that altered the entire atmosphere.

“Release him,” he said.

The footmen obeyed at once.

Edmund straightened his coat, attempting to recover some measure of control. “You cannot take what is mine.”

George moved to stand in front of Amelia, his voice low and unwavering. “Amelia was never yours. Leave this house immediately.”

Edmund let out a bitter laugh. “Or what? You will challenge me? Fight me?”

George met his gaze with terrifying calm. “No. I will ruin you, and unlike you, I have the power to do it.”

Silence filled the foyer.

Edmund’s face lost its color.

George did not raise his voice. “If you speak her name again, if you whisper a single lie or threat, I will make you disappear from every hall, club, and business in London. You will become a ghost in a world that no longer sees you.”

Edmund’s breath shook.

“Now leave,” George said.

For a moment, Edmund seemed uncertain whether to answer. Then he faltered, turned, and stormed out through the door.

The house fell quiet.

George turned immediately to Amelia, concern replacing the coldness in his expression. “Are you hurt?”

She shook her head. “Not anymore.”

And in that moment, she understood it with complete clarity. The life she had expected was gone. The heartbreak that had defined the previous night had ended. Before her stood a path she had not been given by arrangement or expectation, but one she had chosen for herself.

George took her hands gently.

“Amelia, may I call on you again tomorrow?”

She smiled—truly smiled—for the first time in days.

“Yes, George, you may.”

As he bowed over her hand, she felt the first real warmth of hope settle quietly and firmly in her heart.