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She turned her face away. "Goodbye, Your Grace. I trust you can see yourself out."

Adrian stood there for another long moment, memorizing the sight of her; pale and fierce and utterly beyond his reach. Then he turned and left, moving through the modest rooms down the narrow stairs where each step felt like a retreat from a battlefield where he had been thoroughly routed.

Miss Fairweather was waiting in the entrance hall. She took one look at his face and sighed.

"I did warn you," she said, not unkindly.

"You did," Adrian agreed. His voice sounded strange to his own ears, hollow and defeated. "Tell me, Miss Fairweather, am I truly as blind as she believes?"

She studied him for a long moment. "I think," she said carefully, "that you are a man who has lived so long within walls of your own making that you've forgotten there's a world outside them. You see everything through the lens of your own experience, your own expectations, your own needs. It's not malicious, but it is... limiting."

"And Eveline sees differently?"

"Eveline sees a world where women must make impossible choices, where independence comes at the cost of security, where every offer of protection carries the threat of imprisonment. Her clarity comes from having lived outside the walls you take for granted."

Adrian absorbed this in silence. Then: "Will she... that is, the fever..."

"She'll recover," Miss Fairweather assured him. "She's stronger than she looks. Stronger than you know."

Stronger than I deserve,Adrian thought but didn't say.

"What will she do?" he asked instead. "The scandal..."

"Is hers to navigate," Miss Fairweather interrupted gently. "Just as her life is hers to live. Your part in her story may be over, Your Grace. What happens next is not for you to know or control."

It was a dismissal as clear as any Eveline had given. Adrian nodded, placed his hat on his head, and moved toward the door. But something made him turn back one last time.

"Tell her..." He paused, searching for words that might convey even a fraction of what he felt. "Tell her I understand. Not everything, perhaps not even most things. But I understand why she refused me. And I... I honour her for it."

Miss Fairweather's expression softened slightly. "I shall tell her," she promised.

Adrian left then, stepping out into a morning that had turned grey and drizzling. His carriage waited where he'd left it, his coachman patient despite the weather. But Adrian found himself walking past it, needing the cold rain on his face, the discomfort of wet clothes, the physical reminder that he was still capable of feeling something.

He walked without direction or purpose, his mind replaying every word of his disastrous proposal. Eveline had been right about everything. He had come toher out of duty, offering marriage as a solution to a problem rather than a declaration of feeling. He had spoken of need without recognizing the difference between needing someone and loving them. He had tried to fit her into his world without considering whether his world was worth fitting into.

I would rather be ruined than pitied.

The words echoed with each step. She would rather face social ostracism than accept a proposal that diminished her. She would rather build a new life from the ashes of scandal than accept the golden cage he'd offered.

And what had he offered, really? His name, his protection, his wealth—all the things that meant everything in his world and nothing in hers. He hadn't offered to change, to grow, to become someone worthy of the remarkable woman who quoted Ovid and lost herself in ancient texts. He had offered her a place in his life without questioning whether that life was worth sharing.

By the time Adrian finally returned to Everleigh Manor, he was soaked through and shivering. Mr. Graves, ever efficient, took one look at him and began issuing quiet orders for hot water and dry clothes. But Adrian waved him off, retreating instead to his study where he could be alone with his failure.

The room felt different now. Too quiet, too empty, too perfectly ordered. He thought of Eveline's small chamber with its worn furniture and careful economies, how it had felt more alive than all the grandeur of his ancestral home. She had built a life of meaning from very little, while he had inherited everything and made it meaningless through his own emotional parsimony.

He poured himself a brandy, then set it aside untouched. Alcohol wouldn't numb this particular pain, wouldn't erase the memory of her pale face and fevered eyes, wouldn't silence the echo of her refusal.

No.

Such a small word to carry such weight. But in that single syllable, she had reclaimed herself, had chosen her own path regardless of the cost. He had offered her everything he thought mattered, and she had shown him how little it was worth.

Adrian moved to his desk, pulling out paper and ink without quite knowing what he meant to write. A letter of apology? An explanation? Another plea? But as he sat with the quill pen poised over blank paper, he realized there was nothing more to say. Eveline had refused him, and in doing so, had given him an unexpected gift; the knowledge of what he had become and the chance, perhaps, to become something else.

Whether he would take that chance remained to be seen. For now, he could only sit in his perfect, empty study and confront the truth she had forced him to see. That he was exactly what she'd accused him of being: a man so bound by his own limitations that he'd tried to bind her with them too.

Outside, the rain continued to fall, washing London clean for another day of scandal and whispers. But Adrian barely noticed. He was too busy cataloguing his failures, examining them with the same careful attention he'd once reserved for rare manuscripts.

And finding himself, in every particular, wanting.