The Golden Debt

1184 Words
The drive back to the Blackwood Estate felt like a descent into a grave Evelyn had sealed with her own hands. Rain lashed against the windshield, blurring the city into streaks of silver and shadow. The ruined obsidian gown clung cold and heavy to her skin, stiff with her son’s blood. Every red stain was a reminder. Sixty minutes. She did not call ahead. She did not warn him. She drove through the iron gates that once imprisoned her, past manicured hedges and stone fountains that had watched her cry in silence five years ago. The estate loomed ahead. Grand. Untouched. As if no one had ever burned inside it. Inside the study, Damian Blackwood stood before the floor-to-ceiling windows, watching the storm fracture across the glass. Lightning illuminated his reflection in harsh flashes. He looked older. Not in years. In weight. A glass of amber liquor trembled in his hand as he was lost in thought. But his soul had not left that trauma bay. The study doors creaked open. “I told the guards to let no one in,” he said without turning. “He’s dying, Damian.” The glass shattered against the marble floor. He turned slowly. Lightning split the sky behind her, casting Evelyn in white fire. Her hair was damp from the rain. Her gown was ruined. Her pride visible even now hung by a thread. For the first time in five years, her voice broke. “The doctors say he needs Golden Blood,” she whispered. “Rh-null. Victor isn’t a match. I’m not a match.” Damian took a step forward. “Evelyn… what are you saying?” Her throat worked. This was the last thing she had left. The lie that protected her son. “He’s not a Kane,” she choked, the confession tearing out of her like glass. “He never was.” The silence that followed felt heavier than the storm. “I told the world he was Victor’s to keep him away from you”.Her breathing grew uneven. “But now only you can keep his heart beating.” She met his eyes. Just a mother. “Please. Save your son.” The word landed like a detonation. Your son. Damian staggered back a half step as if struck. A thousand fragmented memories collided at once. The hospital fire. Her voice on the phone. The date of her pregnancy. His hands began to shake. “He’s mine,” he said, but it wasn’t a question. “Yes.” Five years of absence condensed into it. He didn’t reach for his coat. He didn’t speak again. He walked past her. And for the first time since their wedding day, they moved in the same direction. The hospital room was dim and quiet, the machines humming in a steady rhythm. Two beds were pushed together. On one lay Silas small, pale, frighteningly still. On the other hand, Damian Blackwood the titan of industry stripped down to a hospital gown, sleeve rolled back, veins exposed. A clear tube connected them. Crimson flowed. Thick. Rare. Golden blood. Damian didn’t look at the needle piercing his arm. He watched the slow, fragile return of color to his son’s cheeks. His son. The word felt foreign and sacred at once. Each pulse of blood through the line felt like a confession. Like penance. Evelyn stood at the foot of the beds, arms crossed tightly as if holding herself together by force. Her face was carved in stone again. But her eyes never left Silas. Hours passed. The storm outside thinned into pale morning light. Damian’s head grew heavy, but he refused to close his eyes. He memorized the boy’s features instead. The curve of his lashes. The stubborn line of his jaw. The faint crease between his brows was so much like his own when irritated. How had he missed this? How had he not searched harder? “The transfusion is complete,” the nurse said softly. “He’s responding well. He should wake soon.” Relief moved through the room like a fragile breath. Evelyn exhaled slowly. Then she looked at Damian. “You’ve given the blood,” she said, voice cool once more. “The debt is paid. Leave.” He turned his head toward her. His skin looked paler now, but his eyes burned brighter than they had in years. “I’m staying.” “You have no place here.” Her voice sharpened. “You signed the papers five years ago. You chose Aria. Go back to your empire.” “I am not leaving my son.” The word son did not tremble. It anchored. Evelyn’s composure flickered. “You don’t get to decide that.” “I already decided once,” he said, low and raw. “I won’t make that mistake again.” Silence crackled between them. For five years she had built herself into something untouchable. Now he had bled into her child. Biology did not care about pride. A small groan broke through the tension. Silas’s fingers twitched. Both parents moved at once. But it was Damian’s thumb that the boy caught. Silas’s eyes fluttered open slowly, adjusting to the sterile light. No sunglasses shielded them. Violet.Clear. Father and son stared at each other. It was like looking into a mirror split by time. The same shade. The same depth. The same royal curse of the Blackwood bloodline. Damian felt something c***k open in his chest. Silas blinked weakly. “Are you… the angel?” The innocence of it sliced clean through him. Damian bowed his head, pressing his forehead gently against the small hand gripping his. Hot tears slipped free before he could stop them. “No,” he whispered roughly. “I’m just a man who took too long to find his way home.” Evelyn turned away sharply. She had prepared herself for rage. Not for this. Not for the way Damian’s shoulders shook silently beside their child. Her heart did something dangerous. It softened. Outside the glass partition, Victor Kane stood motionless. He had watched the entire transfusion. Watched the blood connect them. Watched the moment Silas chose Damian’s hand. Watched the shift in Evelyn’s posture. It was subtle. But he saw it. Her anger was no longer sharp. It was conflicted. The blood is washing it away, Victor thought grimly. He hadn’t spent five years rebuilding her into a queen just to see her return to being a wife. He remembered the hospital fire. The night he had orchestrated chaos to break Damian. When he pulled her from the smoke, unconscious and fragile, something inside him had changed. He told himself saving her was redemption. But it had also been possession. She had become his second chance. And he would not lose her to biology. Victor pulled out his phone. Typed one encrypted message. Phase Two. Leak the fire investigation files tonight. Make sure she sees that the “gas leak” was a Blackwood-ordered cover-up. If she won’t destroy him for the boy, she’ll destroy him for betrayal. He hit send.
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