Interim Chancellor
Location: Restraint Aurelian... Restraint.
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Aurelian didn't need to say a word to convey his satisfaction. His smirk alone did the work of ten smug monologues. When Sibylla lifted her chin and primly declared she did not play on command, his brow arched in lazy, delighted mockery. He knew he had won the exchange, because not three seconds later, she turned and placed her hands on the keys.
He didn't call her on it. His silence was far worse. He simply shifted deeper into the couch. His gaze fixed on her like a man settling in to enjoy his favorite performance, and then she began to play.
The first sharp notes hit him like sparks of fluster and indignation, mingled with something wild and bright. His grin faded slowly, replaced by something heavier and more reverent settling into him. He watched her with a stillness he rarely possessed.
Sibylla poured herself onto the keys. Every rush and tremor of feeling she refused to speak aloud burst free in the music instead. Aurelian felt her with startling clarity. He heard the frustration he'd caused her, the stubbornness, the fire, and the low heat she tried desperately to deny. The tension thickened between them with every rising swell of the melody.
The rhythm suddenly faltered. "I am not thinking about those daydreams," she declared.
His eyes narrowed. The smirk returned. "Surely not."
Her ears flushed pink. The melody had betrayed her.
He dragged a slow breath into his lungs, trying to steady himself. If he didn't, he knew he would cross the room, sweep aside that piano bench, and ruin any hope of gentlemanly conduct. Instead, he let the tension burn, letting it coil low and slow inside him while she played.
This room, her sanctuary, took clearer shape in his mind the longer he watched. A lifetime of Sibylla's worries and hopes poured into these keys. Every choice, every doubt, every secret she'd never voiced aloud. He understood it in ways he hadn't expected. He wondered how many nights she had sat exactly there, shoulders tense, using the piano to quiet everything clawing at her, rebuilding herself note by note.
He saw her more clearly, not just as a noblewoman or political heir, but as a woman who carried far more than she ever let show. And stars, it undid him. He could picture her in Parrlay, sunlight on her hair, a room he would have redone just for her; mahogany floors, tall windows, the piano she deserved. She would play, and he would sit with a glass in hand, pretending to read while watching her with this same quiet hunger. His throat tightened. His pulse thudded in a rhythm completely unrelated to the melody.
When she hit a particularly fierce run of notes, he inhaled sharply. His composure frayed. He leaned forward on the couch, elbows resting on his knees, his gaze fixed on her with unguarded intensity.
"You..." he said, his voice low, warm, and unbearably sincere, "...you play beautifully."
He leaned closer, then continued in a softer tone, laced with mischief and heat. "Truly. If this is how you sound when you're flustered, then I may make it a personal mission to keep you that way." The corner of his mouth tugged up, dangerous and affectionate all at once. "But do continue, my heart. I'm enjoying myself immensely."