The revelation clanged inside him; he felt as though he’d just stumbled into state secrets scaled behind velvet rope.
They reached the private suite. Fabian set Auric in the seat beside Julius, then straightened. “Master Whitethorn, I’ll wait outside. Call if you need anything.”
Julius gave a barely perceptible nod; Fabian slipped out, the door closing with a hush.
“What would you like to cat?” Julius asked Quinn his baritone lowered as though the question were private currency.
“Anything is fine,” she murmured. “My stomach’s small right now–just a few light bites.” The manager, hovering with a digital pad, noted the fragility in her voice. pot of Julius selected a gentle roster–steamed vegetables, clear–broth fish, and a small stomach–soothing porridge, each choice spoken without hesitation, as though he already knew her limits.
Minutes later the dishes arrived, steam curling into quiet spirals beneath the chandelier.
Julius lifted the porcelain pot, ladled porridge into a small bowl, and stirred until the vapor gentled. Only when the surface merely wisped did he set it before Quinn.
“Slowly. It’s still hot,” he warned.
For a heartbeat, Whitethorn seemed caught off guard, eyes blinking once in quick confusion. The manager blinked too, shaken by the softness sliding beneath the man’s steel veneer.
It was as though Whitethorn’s body remembered a life the world had never been allowed to see.
Quinn drew in a steadying breath. Warmth fluttered through her chest as she lifted her chin, letting the single syllable float out, “Alright.” The corners of her mouth curled, soft and careful, as though the smile might shatter if she pressed harder.
Across the table Harlan’s voice sliced through the air, thin and chilled. “Julius, after everything, why are you suddenly playing the attentive husband?” The question dripped like ice onto Quinn’s skin, raising a line of goose–bumps along her arms.
Julius didn’t bother to straighten in his chair. He only lifted his lashes, the movement indolent, almost bored. “Whether I’m attentive or not is between my wife and me, Young Master Ingram. It has nothing to do with you.” Each word landed with the unhurried weight of a man flicking dust from his cuff.
Harlan’s lashes hardly stirred, yet his next sentence found the tender spot none of them named. “Then tell me, Julius, when exactly do you plan to unlock the memories you buried under hypnosis?” The air seemed to bow inward around Quinn, as if the room itself was waiting for the answer.
Julius’s mouth flattened until it was a blade. Shadow crawled across his features, and Quinn felt it steal a shade of light from the lamps as well.
Conversation collapsed. Even the faint hum of the ventilation sounded loud, like paper tearing in a library.
Laura’s bracelets clinked as she leaned forward, forcing a bright smile that wobbled at the edges. “Dawn, sweetheart, why don’t you tell us about life overseas with your mom?” The invitation sounded like a life ring tossed into rough water.
Dawn’s eyes lit up. She nodded with the brisk confidence of someone accepting a mission. Counting on her small fingers, she began, each memory dropping like colored marbles onto the table–how she and Quinnie made beds at the orphanage, how mornings smelled of disinfectant, how evenings ended with lullabies hummed into sterile air.
Quinn watched Laura’s smile fade, realizing the woman had meant the question as a harmless detour, not a guided tour through hardship.



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