LOGINI had been living at Rathcliffe Manor for one week.
Seven days of careful steps and measured words. Seven days of Emma quietly offering advice in shadowed corridors on how Lord Rathcliffe preferred his tea, how he disliked the curtains drawn before dusk, how he noticed everything. Especially mistakes. And he always found one. Every afternoon, without fail, I was summoned to his study. Beneath the heavy scent of leather and cigar smoke, he would list my shortcomings in a voice so calm it felt deliberate. “You are too informal with the children.” “Too hesitant with the staff.” “You need to act like a lady. Take accountability.” The worst part was not his criticism. It was the composure. He never raised his voice. Never spoke with venom. He delivered each correction with the patience of a man disciplining a child as though I were something to be refined, reshaped, improved. This morning, however, was different. Sunlight spilled across the dining room, soft and golden, making the heavy curtains of Rathcliffe Manor seem less oppressive than usual. For the first time since my arrival, Lord Rathcliffe was away on business, and the absence of his watchful presence gave the house a strange, fragile lightness. I poured myself a cup of tea and took a seat at the breakfast table, my thoughts unusually calm. Emma had already arranged the morning tray with freshly baked goods and fruit. She glanced at me with a faint smile understanding the quiet relief I felt. “Shall I help you with anything?” she asked softly, as though unsure what to do with the peace. “No, thank you.” I took a small sip of my tea. The warmth eased something tight inside me. “It feels… quieter this morning.” Emma’s lips curved knowingly. “Enjoy it while it lasts.” I nodded. There was comfort in her steadiness. In a house built on rules, she felt like the only constant kindness. “Where are the children?” I asked. “Katherine and David had an early breakfast, ma’am.” Even they had sensed the opportunity. A rare deviation from the rigid schedule. After breakfast, I wandered the corridors, trying to familiarize myself with the manor’s endless halls. Laughter echoed faintly in the distance. It was light, unrestrained and refreshing. I followed the sound until I found them in a sunlit room I had not noticed before. David looked up first. “Belle,” he grinned. “What mischief are you two up to so early?” I asked. “This is our playroom,” Katherine explained. “It’s the only room in the house we’re allowed to play in.” Her words unsettled me. My sisters and I had been allowed to play anywhere. Creativity had been encouraged, not confined. Here, everything felt measured. Controlled. Even joy had boundaries. I stepped further inside, my gaze drifting across scattered toy soldiers on the carpet until it landed on something that made me stop entirely. A piano. It stood near the window, polished wood gleaming faintly beneath a thin veil of dust. I approached it slowly, as though it might disappear if I moved too quickly. My fingers brushed over the surface. “Oh,” I breathed. “It’s beautiful.” Katherine’s voice softened. “It was my mother’s. No one has played it since… since she died.” She hesitated. “I want to. I’m just afraid I won’t be good.” My heart tightened. “Shall we try?” I asked gently. She nodded. Her small fingers hovered uncertainly over the keys, and I guided her hands into a simple melody. My mother had taught me how to play piano. She used to be a pianoforte instructor. It was one of my fondest memories I had of her. It saddened me Katherine was missing out on those memories. The first notes were uneven, timid but they were alive. David crept closer, wide-eyed and curious, and soon the three of us were bent over the piano together, coaxing hesitant music from it. The room filled with laughter and wrong notes and fragile courage. For the first time since my arrival, Rathcliffe Manor felt warm. I was mid-song when I heard hurried footsteps in the doorway. The music faltered. “Who is playing?” William’s voice. He stepped inside and froze. His eyes widened as they landed on the piano, then on us. Shock crossed his face, raw and unguarded, as though he had walked into a memory he had not prepared himself to face. For a brief second, I saw grief. Then it hardened. “I was just showing them...” I began gently. His expression darkened. He strode forward, jaw tight, then stopped abruptly. “You think you can do as you please?” His voice was strained with anger. “Who told you you could touch it?” “Brother, we are sorry,” Katherine whispered. His face shifted instantly as he turned to look at her. “No, Katy,” he said, his voice softening. “I’m not angry at you.” “But you’re shouting.” Her lip trembled as she reached for David. Frightened, the two of them hurried from the room. The door shut behind them. Silence fell. “William,” I said carefully, “it was an honest mistake. I did not mean to anger you.” He turned on me, his expression a storm of resentment and grief. “Do not think that because you married my father, you have the right to touch my mother’s things.” “I understand you’re upset...” “My brother and sister may be fooled by you,” he cut in sharply, “but I am not a child. I see you for what you are. I know why you’re here.” His lip curled faintly. Before he could say another word. The door opened behind him. Emma stood there, having clearly heard the raised voices. William glanced at her, then back at me, his stare cutting, lingering before he walked out. The echo of the door closing seemed to hang in the air long after he was gone. I did not ask Emma why he reacted so violently. Unknowingly I had crossed a line. And just like that the natural order of misery was restored. Every word he spoke had settled somewhere deep inside me. I should have cried. I should have defended myself. I should have been angry. But what use would it be? He saw me as he chose to see me. And perhaps, in some ways, the situation was hard for him to understand because in truth I couldn't understand it myself. I was nineteen. William looked only a few years older than me. He would never respect me. I moved to leave. "Belle," Emma placed a hand on my shoulder. I gave her a weak smile. "Well it's quiet alright." But it was anything but alright. Through all this darkness I missed my family. Though we had struggled financially atleast our house was filled with happiness. I returned to my room and closed the door hoping, foolishly, that it might shut the world out with it.The house in the countryside had a way of making time feel soft. That is exactly why I had chosen it over the city when William asked me where I would like to live after we wed. I stood by the window longer than I needed to, watching sunlight spill over the fields outside. Everything looked impossibly green. Alive in a way that made my chest tighten sometimes, not with fear anymore—but with something I was still learning how to hold.Peace, I think.Still unfamiliar on my tongue.Behind me, I heard it before I saw it. A small laugh. Then another. William’s voice followed immediately after, strained in the way it always became when he was pretending to be serious.“Henry Rathcliffe, you are absolutely not supposed to be awake yet.” A delighted squeal answered him.I smiled before I even turned around.When I did, I leaned quietly against the doorway and watched them.William was sitting on the nursery floor, sleeves rolled up, hair messier than he would ever admit to liking. Henry sat
The moment I heard his name, everything inside me moved before I did. I was already running.Not away.Toward.The garden path blurred beneath my steps as I hurried through the doors of the house, my breath catching somewhere painfully in my chest. The sunlight outside suddenly felt too bright, too sharp, as though the world itself had shifted without warning.William.It could not be.It should not be.But the moment I stepped into the foyer, I saw him.Standing there.Real.Not memory. Not dream. Not grief disguised as longing.William Rathcliffe.He looked different and yet exactly the same in ways that made my heart ache so violently I almost stumbled.And then I saw them. “Katherine—David—”The words left me before I could stop them.Katherine let out a small cry and ran first.“Belle!”I barely had time to open my arms before she collided into me, her small arms wrapping tightly around my waist. The force of it nearly knocked the breath from me.David followed immediately, slowe
It was my birthday. I did not tell anyone. Not John. Not the servants. Not even the quiet corners of the house that had begun to feel familiar in the way old grief sometimes does—softened at the edges, but never gone. I woke before sunrise. For a moment, I simply lay still beneath the thin linen sheets and listened to the world outside my windows. France sounded different from England.Gentler, perhaps. The vineyard breeze moved through the open shutters like a breath rather than a command. Birds called to one another somewhere in the distance. The house below me was already waking—soft footsteps, distant clatter of pots, the smell of bread drifting faintly through the floorboards. And for the first time in what felt like years, I did not wake with dread. I woke… with something close to peace. It unsettled me more than I expected. Because peace had become unfamiliar. I pressed a hand lightly over my stomach without thinking. The movement had become instinct now, something I d
The following morning I found John exactly where I expected him to be. The library.Sunlight spilled through the tall windows while he sat in one of the armchairs near the fireplace reading correspondence. A half-finished cup of coffee rested beside him while several opened letters lay scattered across the small table.He looked up immediately when I entered.Something in my expression must have told him why I was there. Because he slowly set the papers aside. "You've decided?"The certainty in his voice made my stomach twist. I wasn't entirely sure I had decided anything. That was the problem. I crossed the room slowly before lowering myself into the chair opposite him. For several moments neither of us spoke.John simply waited.Patient as always.Finally I took a breath. "I thought about what you said. I barely slept With how much I thought about it.""I figured as much." Despite myself, I laughed softly. The smile faded quickly. Silence settled between us again. Then I looked dow
I spent most of the afternoon staring out the window.The conversation with John's mother continued replaying endlessly inside my mind no matter how many times I tried to focus on something else.You are not a burden here.John had said the words so easily.So sincerely.Yet I could not silence the growing certainty that eventually I would become exactly that.The estate gardens stretched below my bedroom window, bathed in late afternoon sunlight. Servants moved through the pathways tending flowers while fountains glittered softly between rows of lavender.It should have been peaceful.Instead my thoughts remained trapped somewhere between England and France.Between William and John.Between the life I had left behind and the uncertain future waiting ahead. I pressed my hand lightly against my stomach.The baby had become impossible to ignore now.Every decision I made no longer affected only me.Soon enough my condition would become obvious.People would ask questions.And eventuall
The following morning arrived bright and warm beneath clear French skies. I stood beside John along the garden paths while sunlight filtered through the trees overhead, casting soft gold across the winding stone walkways beneath our feet. Lavender swayed gently in the breeze around us while fountains glittered quietly farther down the estate grounds.France truly was beautiful.I understood now why John preferred it to England.Nothing here felt heavy.Nothing felt haunted.And yet somehow I still carried England with me everywhere I went.I wrapped my shawl slightly tighter around my shoulders as we walked slowly between rows of climbing roses.“You are thinking again,” John observed beside me.I glanced toward him faintly. “You say that as though it is a criminal offense.”“In excess, it absolutely is.”A reluctant smile touched my mouth. John possessed a quiet ease that softened rooms without demanding attention from them. Even his silences felt comfortable now..Especially after







