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Chapter One: The Letter
The envelope was pressed with a wax seal the color of dried blood.
Evelyn Roth turned it over in her gloved hands, noting the lack of a return address, the unfamiliar script curling like ivy across the thick parchment. Her name-just her name-had been inked in a slanted, almost romantic hand. No title. No location. Not even "Miss" or "Madam." Just:
Evelyn Roth
-as if whoever had written it knew precisely who she was, and knew she would come.
She broke the seal with her letter opener, careful not to tear the paper. A single sheet folded inside, crisp and clean, smelling faintly of sandalwood and age.
> You are formally invited to Silkenmoor Manor to undertake the restoration of a private collection of vintage gowns. All travel arrangements have been made. Compensation will be generous. Discretion is required. You will find a train ticket enclosed.
Silkenmoor waits.
No signature. No date. No details on how she'd been found-or why she'd been chosen. Just that name again: Silkenmoor.
Evelyn sat back in her worn armchair, the letter trembling slightly in her grasp. Outside the rain skittered against her attic window like restless fingers. Her kettle whistled in the kitchen, forgotten. She didn't move.
The name stirred something in her. Not a memory, exactly, but a sensation-like the ache of a bruise you don't recall getting. Silkenmoor. She'd heard it spoken once, years ago, in hushed tones at a gallery party in South Kensington, passed between two antique dealers who shared smirks over crystal glasses. The place was mythic among collectors and curators. A manor by the sea. A recluse lord. Gowns so rare and storied, they were said to bleed history when touched.
She stood, then, and crossed to the small box on her worktable where her father's tailor's shears rested beside a faded photograph of her mother, laughing in the summer light. Her life had grown so small in recent years-reduced to fabric, thread, and the silence of old things. She restored for museums, collectors, sometimes even theater companies. But this? This was something else.
A challenge.
A mystery.
A way out.
Evelyn folded the letter and packed a small bag before the tea even cooled.
---
The train wound through countryside lost in fog, the windows frosted and breathless. Evelyn watched as civilization thinned into marshes and thickets, each mile carrying her further from the echoing streets of London. She wore her mother's wool coat and a scarf dyed with cochineal. Her fingers itched with anticipation-or maybe it was dread. She couldn't tell the difference anymore.
The station where she arrived had no nameplate. Just a platform with cracked stone tiles and a single man waiting beneath an iron gas lamp.
"Miss Roth?" he asked, voice sharp with the sea. He wore a driver's cap and a coat too fine for a common servant.
"Yes," she said.
"This way."
The car that awaited was long, dark, and gleaming, like something out of a noir film. Inside, the seats smelled of leather and salt. They drove for nearly an hour, winding up cliffs that rose like jagged teeth along the edge of the sea.
When Silkenmoor finally appeared through the mist, Evelyn gasped.
It was a cathedral disguised as a house. A gothic fever dream, perched at the very edge of the world. Iron turrets pierced the sky. Crimson silk banners-torn by time-fluttered from stone balconies. The windows were tall and narrow, glowing faintly behind velvet drapes. It looked not built, but summoned.
The driver said nothing as he pulled into the arched courtyard and opened her door.
A man stood at the entrance.
Evelyn knew it was Lord Alaric Thorne before he spoke. His presence was unmistakable. Immaculate in black, with silver-threaded cuffs and a face carved from something colder than marble. Handsome didn't begin to describe him-he was haunting.
"Miss Roth," he said, voice low and precise. "You've arrived."
"I wasn't given much of a choice," she said, before she could stop herself.
One of his eyebrows twitched, as if mildly amused. "Choices are overrated."
He turned and entered the manor. Evelyn followed.
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