Chapter One

627 Words
Sansa had learned long ago that men mistook silence for weakness. Captain Rowan Blackwood made that mistake the moment he saw her. She stood at the tall window of the governor’s estate, moonlight spilling over her pale blue gown, her posture calm and composed despite the storm raging outside and the far more dangerous one behind her. “You shouldn’t be here,” she said without turning. Rowan shut the door slowly, the click of the latch final. “I was invited. Sansa faced him then, dark hair falling loose down her back, eyes sharp with intelligence and defiance. “By a man who has no authority over me.” Rowan’s gaze lingered, unapologetically. “Every man has authority over something.” “Not me.” A flicker of amusement crossed his face. He removed his gloves deliberately, as though he had all the time in the world and intended to use it. “That,” he said, stepping closer, “remains to be seen.” She refused to retreat, even when he stopped mere inches away. His presence was overwhelming, broad shoulders, rain-dark hair, the unmistakable air of command earned through battle and bloodshed. He smelled of sea wind and leather and danger. “You look at me like I’m already conquered,” Sansa said. Rowan leaned closer, his voice low. “No. I look at you like a woman who’s never been challenged properly.” Her breath betrayed her, catching despite her will. “You presume too much.” “I observe,” he corrected softly. “And I see a woman aching to break free of the rules that cage her.” Heat flared in her chest, anger, yes, but something else too. Something that made her pulse quicken and her fingers curl at her sides. “You’ll leave,” she said. “Now.” Rowan’s hand lifted not touching her, not yet but close enough that she could feel the warmth of him. “Say it again,” he murmured. “And mean it.” She opened her mouth and failed to speak. The silence stretched, thick and intimate, charged with things neither dared name. His knuckles brushed her wrist accidentally…or not and the brief contact sent a shock straight through her. Sansa drew her hand back sharply. “This is improper.” Rowan smiled, slow and knowing. “You don’t believe that.” “You don’t know what I believe.” “I know what you feel,” he said, his voice roughening. “Because I feel it too.” The storm outside cracked with thunder, echoing the tension between them. Rowan’s fingers gently but firmly caught her chin, lifting her face. His touch was commanding yet careful, as though he understood exactly how close he was to crossing a line. “You should hate me,” he said quietly. “And yet…” “And yet,” Sansa whispered, her voice betraying her resolve, “I don’t.” That truth hung between them like a confession. Rowan released her abruptly, stepping back as though restraint cost him dearly. “This is dangerous,” he said. “For both of us.” “Yes,” she agreed. “That’s why you must go.” His eyes burned into hers. “I will,” he said. “For tonight.” Relief and disappointment tangled painfully in her chest. “But, Sansa,” he added, his gaze promising far more than words ever could, “I always claim what I want.” And then he was gone leaving the room colder, quieter, and utterly changed. Sansa pressed her hand to her racing heart, knowing with terrifying certainty that her life had just veered onto a path from which there would be no graceful retreat.
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