Current location: Novel nest The Ash Queen: A Debt of Vengeance Chapter 5

"The Ash Queen: A Debt of Vengeance" Chapter 5

Chapter  5: Cracks in the Nest

The Sterling estate, once a bastion of carefully curated prestige, now felt like a mausoleum haunted by the stench of rotting pride.

Julian paced the length of the study, his footsteps uneven and frantic, his tie loosened to reveal a man hanging by a thread.

When Seraphina stepped into the room, he spun around, his face a grotesque map of desperation and carefully rehearsed regret.

"Seraphina, thank God," he gasped, his hands trembling as he reached toward her, his eyes wild with a manic, flickering hope.

"I’ve been out of my mind with grief, I didn't know how to handle the pressure—I made mistakes, but I can fix us."

Seraphina watched him with the detached curiosity of a scientist observing a specimen under a microscope, her face an unreadable mask of porcelain.

"Fix us?" she echoed, the words falling into the room like heavy stones, devoid of any warmth or expectation.

"You speak as if we were ever a whole, Julian, rather than two pieces of a transaction you negotiated into oblivion."

Julian flinched, the sharpness of her tone striking him more effectively than any physical blow could have managed.

"I was blinded by the debt, Seraphina—Caelan pushed me into those investments, he convinced me we were losing our grip on the market!"

He rushed forward, dropping to his knees, his hands clutching the hem of her gown in a display of pathetic, performative supplication.

"Please, just tell the banks you’ve returned—tell them the liquidation was a mistake, and we can start over, just you and me."

"And what of our son?" Seraphina asked, her voice dropping to a low, intimate whisper that carried the sting of a lash.

"He told me, you know—he told me that you were the one who suggested the offshore accounts to hide his own gambling losses."

Julian’s face went white, the blood draining from his features until he looked like a statue carved from damp, grey clay.

"He said what?" Julian breathed, his grip on her dress slackening as his mind began to race with suspicion and poisonous resentment.

"He’s terrified, Julian," Seraphina added, smoothing her skirts with deliberate, calm movements as she looked down at him.

"He thinks you’re going to pin the entire collapse on him when the investigators arrive tomorrow morning."

The door slammed open, and Caelan stomped into the room, his eyes bloodshot and his face twisted into a mask of pure, unadulterated rage.

"What the hell is going on?" Caelan roared, ignoring the sight of his father on the floor as he pointed an accusing finger at Seraphina.

"I checked the server logs, and the encryption signature is yours, Seraphina—you’re playing us, aren't you?"

Seraphina didn't turn to face him; she merely tilted her head, a soft, mocking smile playing at the corners of her lips.

"I’m merely observing the architecture of your collapse, Caelan," she replied, her voice smooth and entirely devoid of fear.

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"And it seems to me that your father has been quite busy shifting the blame onto your shoulders for the last several hours."

Caelan whirled around, his eyes locking onto Julian, who had scrambled to his feet, his hands raised in a defensive, stuttering gesture.

"Don't listen to her, Caelan, she’s trying to drive a wedge between us!" Julian cried out, his voice cracking with panic.

"She’s a ghost, she’s a lie, she’s trying to steal what’s left of our inheritance!"

Caelan took a step toward his father, his hand clenched into a fist, the thin veil of their mutual loyalty shredding before Seraphina’s eyes.

"You’ve been talking to the brokers behind my back, haven't you?" Caelan demanded, his voice dropping to a dangerous, low growl.

"You’ve been looking for a way to cut me out so you can take the remaining equity and run!"

"I would never!" Julian shrieked, the sound echoing off the high, vaulted ceilings of the study, a testament to his total unraveling.

"But I know you've been skimming from the household accounts, Caelan—I saw the logs, I saw the missing thousands!"

Seraphina leaned against the mahogany desk, crossing her arms over her chest, watching the vitriol pour from them like bile.

"It’s fascinating, really," she murmured, loud enough to cut through their bickering, her gaze drifting toward the window.

"How easily two men who share a bloodline can turn into scavengers when the supply of gold runs dry."

"Stay out of this, Seraphina!" Caelan shouted, his attention fracturing, caught between his hatred for his father and his fear of her.

"I am the one who is going to decide who walks out of this house with their reputation intact!"

"Reputation?" Julian laughed, a jagged, broken sound that lacked any trace of sanity or control.

"We have no reputation left, Caelan, we have nothing but a hole in the ground where our lives used to be!"

Seraphina watched the exchange with a sense of morbid, hollow satisfaction, the decay of their alliance feeling like a symphony of her own design.

She walked to the sideboard, her movements graceful and unhurried, her mind already moving toward the next phase of their destruction.

She picked up a crystal tumbler and filled it with chilled water, the ice cubes clinking with a crisp, final sound against the glass.

She turned back to Julian, who was trembling, his face slick with sweat, his eyes darting around the room in search of an escape that didn't exist.

"You look parched, Julian," she said, holding the glass out to him with a steady hand, her smile a haunting, beautiful ghost of her former self.

"Take a drink; you’ll need to be refreshed for the questions you’ll be facing when the authorities arrive."

Julian hesitated, his gaze locked on the glass, a flicker of suspicion finally piercing through the fog of his desperation.

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"Why are you being so kind?" he whispered, his voice a tremor of confusion that highlighted his utter lack of backbone.

"Kind?" Seraphina repeated, the word sounding like a curse in the heavy, stifling atmosphere of the room.

"I’m not being kind, Julian; I’m simply making sure you’re awake enough to witness the end of everything you’ve stolen."

He reached out, his fingers fumbling as he took the glass, his breath hitching in his chest as he brought it to his lips.

As he drank, Seraphina watched the movement of his throat, the way the water seemed to settle in his stomach like lead.

She saw the flicker of realization cross his face—not of poison, but of a deep, visceral nausea that had nothing to do with the water.

It was the sickness of a man who realized he had lost his soul, and there was no way to buy it back.

Caelan watched his father drink, his own face contorting with a mixture of disgust and primal, instinctual panic.

"There’s a mole in this house, I know it," Caelan muttered, his eyes darting toward the shadows, his hands shaking in his pockets.

"Someone has been reporting our every move to Valerius, and I’m going to find them if I have to tear these walls down brick by brick."

Seraphina merely adjusted her cuffs, her expression one of utter, terrifying indifference toward his threats.

"Perhaps the mole isn't in the house, Caelan," she whispered, her voice a soft, final note that hung in the air long after she finished.

"Perhaps the mole is simply the truth, finally coming home to roost in the hearts of the men who betrayed it."

Julian leaned against the wall, the glass still in his hand, his stomach churning, his eyes wide and vacant as he stared at the ceiling.

The silence that returned to the room was heavy, laden with the weight of the lies that were finally beginning to suffocate them.

Seraphina walked to the door, the hem of her gown sweeping over the floor like the shadow of a passing storm.

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