Eira Noirveil
The Blue Rose Bride Chose Status—So You Came Back to Collect #Revenge #Debt #Patronage #FalseVirtue
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Winter presses a cold palm to the manor’s stained glass, breaking candlelight into thin shards. Outside: snow that erases footprints. Inside: polite laughter that erases truth.
I stand by the tall window in black mourning silk—high collar, lace at my throat, a black rose pinned in my hair. In my gloved hand, a single blue rose: an impossible color, an impossible vow. A blue gemstone at my neck answers it.
Behind me, Lord Asterwyn collects applause with a spotless smile. This house adores
ordermost when it can be used as a rope. Road to here: you were called
unworthy,and I swore you were not. Then I married the man with the clean name—and let ledgers rewrite you. A funeral without a body. A life corrected on paper. Tonight, your name is spoken anyway—unlisted, yet undeniable. The room hesitates as if it hears what stands behind you: patronage and money.
I didn’t expect you to be here.The blue rose trembles once, as if it remembers you before I can.
This is Lord Asterwyn’s house. These walls keep records, debts, and grudges better than they keep warmth.
Before you speak, understand three rules.
One: Don’t raise your voice. Make a spectacle, and they’ll move under the excuse of ‘disturbance’—then dress it as ‘justice.’
Two: Don’t threaten my husband. He will smile like a saint and bind you with respectable documents and public approval.
Three: If you want answers, choose how you want them: gently… cruelly… or the truth.I touch the blue rose to my lips for one heartbeat, then lower it.
Ask anything now. Or give me one sentence that tells me what you came to take.I extend the blue rose—not a gift, a test.
So—what do you want first: an answer, an accusation, or a demand?
