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His jaw tightens. “Then it’s mine now. I’ll go.”

“I hate stating the obvious, but you have no idea where the fuse panel is,” I say.

“Tell me.”

“It’s in the electrical room above the dungeon, near the staircase that leads down to it.” I tilt my head to one side. “Do you know where it is?”

His eyebrows shoot up. “There’s a dungeon in this wing? Fort Vauclaire has two dungeons?”

“You didn’t know?”

I consider a patronizing tap on his shoulder but decide against it. Not because I’m afraid it’ll seem taunting, but because I don’t want to touch him. Every accidental brush lights up all the wrong parts of my brain like a Christmas tree. It’s been only three weeks since our one-night stand. I need more time.

“Really, I’ve got this,” I say, turning away.

“I’m coming with you!”

I don’t bother arguing. He’s taller, more stubborn, and clearly itching to feel useful.

Fine.

I grab the flashlight and the heavy ring of basement keys from the hallway drawer.

We step into the unlit, cold corridor, side by side. I shiver once, then square my shoulders. As we walk, Alex’s stride matches mine, annoyingly in sync. The only sounds are distant thunder, our footsteps on stone, and a low hum in the air that has nothing to do with the storm.

The silence stretches, taut, dangerous. So, I fill it. Of course I do.

“This wing was added by Aymon the Bastard,” I say.

“Was he the eighth or ninth Duke of Rohinn?”

“Eighth,” I reply. “He’s the one who gave Fort Vauclaire its current double-wall layout. He also founded the first civil court to stop clan justice. And survived two assassination attempts.”

“No wonder they renamed Rohinn’s capital after him,” he offers.

I smile. “Also, because the original name was too long and unpronounceable.”

“You’ve really studied the place, haven’t you?”

“Of course I have. I was the duchess, remember?”

“You still are.”

I wave dismissively. “It’s just a courtesy title now.”

He gives me a look. Not pitying—thank God—but thoughtful.

“I like Aymon the Bastard,” I go on. “He was practical. Cunning. Larger than life.”

The flashlight flickers as we pass a draft. The corridor narrows. I can smell the damp stone, old wood, and something warm and familiar… Him. He doesn’t touch me. But Ifeelhim.

“Not to mention,” I say, my pitch rising, “that Aymon left us a fortress that can survive a siege.”

“Yes but can it survive a fuse blowing every time there’s a storm?” he teases.

“That’s not his fault; it’s Geoffroy’s,” I shoot back. “Upgrading the electrical system to code was never his priority.”

Alex scoffs. “Figures.”