Cecil lowered her hand. The whirlwind died instantly, the debris clattering to the floor around her like fallen soldiers. She stepped forward, the heavy velvet of her gown brushing against the ruined floorboards.
She stopped directly in front of Aedan. He was shaking, his head bowed, his breath coming in short, ragged gasps. He didn't dare look up at those glowing golden eyes.
Cecil reached out. Her fingers, cold as ice, pressed firmly against Aedan's sweaty forehead.
A jolt of heat shot through Aedan's skull. It wasn't painful, but it was invasive. It felt like a searchlight rummaging through the dark corners of his mind, flipping through his memories, his thoughts, his very essence. He saw flashes of his own life, but from her perspective: the roar of a car engine, the artificial flash of a camera, the garbled noise of a thousand voices screaming from a flat, glowing rectangle. Countless chaotic images and words flooded her consciousness... a public trial ceremony called a "reality show," a system of digital currency, the complex web of a thing called "Hollywood." He tried to pull away, but his body was locked in place, paralyzed by the simple touch of her fingertips.
A faint, golden light seeped from beneath her fingers, casting strange shadows on Aedan's face.
Cecil closed her eyes, her expression unreadable. She held the connection for a long, agonizing moment. Then, her brow furrowed. A deep, disgusted crease appeared between her eyebrows.
Her eyes snapped open, the gold burning brighter. "Sanguis... hic tenuescere?" she whispered, the words ancient and sharp. Then, as the new language settled into her mind, her voice became clearer, laced with an archaic cadence. "The bloodline... has thinned to this? It is an insult to the family."
Aedan stared up at her, his eyes wide with shock. He understood her. And the words hit him harder than his grandfather's cane ever could. He opened his mouth to argue, to scream, to defend himself, but his throat was sealed shut. Not a single sound could escape.
Bang. Bang. Bang.
The muffled sound of heavy boots and shouting came from the hallway outside. The sealed doors shuddered in their frames.
"Security! Break it down!" a voice shouted from the other side.
The oak doors splintered inward. The cameraman Aedan had shoved earlier, his face scraped and bruised, rushed in, flanked by two burly security guards. He was holding a backup camera, the red recording light blinking furiously.
"Get off him, you freak!" the cameraman yelled, pointing the lens directly at Cecil and the kneeling Aedan.
The camera's focus locked onto Cecil's face. The golden eyes. The ancient dress. The glowing hand on Aedan's forehead. It was a viral moment captured in high definition.
Cecil turned her head slowly toward the intruders. The golden light of her eyes reflected in the glass lens of the camera.
The cameraman flinched, his hands trembling, but he kept the camera rolling. The live feed was broadcasting to the world.
Cecil stared at the black box in his hands. She could feel it. The subtle, invasive sensation of being watched by thousands of unseen eyes. The device was stealing her image, dissecting it, broadcasting it.
Her eyes narrowed. A dangerous, cold fury crossed her features.
She raised her free hand, her palm facing the camera.
The air in the room changed. It became charged, heavy with static. The hair on Aedan's arms stood on end. A sharp, metallic smell filled his nostrils-the smell of an impending storm.
The lights in the gallery flickered wildly. The electricity in the walls hummed a deafening pitch.
Inside the camera, the circuit board began to overheat. Smoke poured from the vents. The cameraman yelped, the plastic casing burning his hands.
A blinding blue arc of electricity erupted from the wall outlet. It wasn't a natural spark; it was a controlled, violent strike. The lightning bolt shot across the room and slammed into the camera.
The cameraman screamed, the shock throwing him backward. The camera was ripped from his hands and hurled into the air.
But the lightning didn't stop. The blue arc twisted in mid-air, deflecting off the exploding camera, and lunged straight for Cecil.
"Watch out!" Aedan tried to scream, but it came out as a hoarse, breathless croak.
Cecil didn't flinch. She didn't move her hand from Aedan's forehead. She didn't even blink. A faint, cruel smile touched the corners of her lips.
The lightning struck her open palm.
Instead of charring her flesh, the violent electrical current simply... vanished. It flowed into her skin, absorbed like water into a sponge. The blue light traveled up her arm, illuminating the veins beneath her pale skin, before dissipating into her core.
The golden glow surrounding Cecil flared, bright enough to cast harsh shadows across the entire room. The sheer power radiating from her was suffocating.
She opened her hand. Tiny blue arcs of electricity danced across her fingertips like playful pets. She had tamed the lightning.
The security guards and the cameraman didn't wait to see what she would do next. The cameraman, his eyes wide with terror, tried to scramble up, but his limbs wouldn't obey. The guards grabbed him under the arms, his body limp, and dragged his unconscious form from the room. They fled through the broken doors, their screams echoing down the hallway.
Cecil turned her gaze to Sterling, who was still prostrate on the floor. "Remove the insects," she commanded, her voice echoing with authority.
Sterling scrambled up, his joints cracking. "Yes, Matriarch," he stammered, his voice trembling. He hurried out of the room, shouting orders to clear the hallway.
Cecil looked back down at Aedan. She pulled her hand away from his forehead. The golden light faded, the oppressive pressure vanished.
Aedan collapsed onto his hands and knees, gasping for air. His lungs burned. His whole body was trembling. He stared up at the woman who had just caught lightning with her bare hands.
His mind, his reality, everything he thought he knew, shattered into a million pieces.
The gallery was silent again, save for the soft hiss of the ruined camera smoldering on the floor. The smell of burnt plastic and ozone hung heavy in the air.
Cecil stood over Aedan, her expression one of cold assessment. She looked at him the way one might look at a broken tool.
Aedan pushed himself up onto his knees. His legs were weak, his heart still racing. He stared at her, his voice a shaky whisper. "Who... what are you?"
Cecil didn't answer his question. Instead, she took a step closer. She didn't raise her hand this time. She just looked at him.
The air around Aedan thickened. An invisible, crushing weight settled over his shoulders, pushing him down. It felt like a physical hand was pressing on the top of his skull, forcing him toward the floor.
His bones groaned under the pressure. His lungs constricted, refusing to expand. It was like being submerged a thousand feet underwater. He gasped, his hands clawing at the polished wood.
His legs gave out again. His knees slammed back down onto the floor with a sickening thud. This time, it wasn't instinct. It was absolute, undeniable force.
"I am the origin of this family," Cecil said, her voice cutting through the silence like a blade. "And you are the disgrace that will end it."
Aedan tilted his head back, the veins in his neck bulging. He tried to fight it, tried to push back against the invisible weight, but it was useless. He was an ant trying to move a mountain.
Cecil leaned down. Her cold fingers touched his chest, right over his heart.
A sharp, pulling sensation gripped Aedan's chest. It wasn't physical pain; it was something deeper. She was reaching into him, searching for something.
Her brow furrowed again. The disgust on her face shifted into something darker. Shock. Anger.
The light inside him, the Marshall family gift, the potential that should have burned brightly, was barely a flicker. It was a dying ember in a vast, dark void. And worse-much worse-she could see the marks. Tiny, invisible tendrils wrapped around the fading light, siphoning it away. Stealing it.
Cecil yanked her hand back as if she had been burned. The crushing pressure on Aedan intensified tenfold.
Aedan let out a strangled cry, his vision blurring. He thought his ribs were going to crack.
Miles away, in the digital world, the storm was just beginning.
The few seconds of footage captured by the backup camera had made it to the live feed before the explosion. The clip was isolated, clipped, and uploaded to Twitter.
A blurry image of a woman in an ancient dress, with glowing golden eyes, her hand on a kneeling Aedan's forehead. A flash of blue light. A scream.
The hashtag AedanMysteryGirl began to trend within minutes.
The comments were a frenzy of speculation and disbelief.
Is this a movie stunt?
What is she wearing? That's authentic 18th-century silk!
Look at his face! He looks terrified!
She's controlling him. That weirdo finally found someone crazier than him.
He's definitely being held hostage. Or PUA'd. That's an abusive relationship if I've ever seen one.
The narrative spun out of control. The truth of a supernatural awakening was buried under the modern assumption of toxic romance. The public didn't see a matriarch; they saw a captor.
At the Marshall estate, Julian Fletcher sat in his office, his face buried in his hands. His phone was ringing off the hook. Every major news outlet, every gossip blog, every concerned fan was calling. The PR nightmare was a category five hurricane.
Back in the gallery, Cecil finally released the pressure.
Aedan collapsed onto his side, his body soaked in sweat. He curled into a fetal position, his chest heaving, his muscles twitching.
Cecil turned her back on him. She walked over to the fallen portrait, her footsteps silent on the wooden floor. She knelt beside the torn canvas, her fingers gently tracing the painted threads.
"Someone has stolen the light of the Marshalls," she murmured to herself, her voice low and dangerous.
She turned her head, looking over her shoulder at the trembling wreck of a man on the floor. The disgust was still there, but now it was tempered by a cold, hard resolve.
She had to intervene. She had no choice.
Cecil stood alone in the study, the floor-to-ceiling windows framing the dark grounds of the estate. The night sky was clear, but she wasn't looking at the stars. She was looking at the glass.
She reached out and pressed her fingertip against the cold pane. A faint ripple, like a drop of water hitting a still pond, spread out from the point of contact.
Her golden eyes glazed over. The present faded, and the future rushed in.
She saw trees. Tall, imposing pines. A steep, rocky cliff. The roar of the ocean far below.
She saw Aedan, wearing a microphone pack, his face pale with terror. He was stumbling backward, his foot slipping on the loose gravel.
He fell. He tumbled over the edge, his scream swallowed by the wind.
And standing at the top of the cliff, looking down, were two figures. A man with a smug smile and a woman with cold, calculating eyes. Grove Greene and Katia Ramsey. The cameras around them were rolling, capturing the tragedy, their faces perfectly composed for the audience.
The vision shattered.
Cecil pulled her finger back from the glass. Her jaw clenched. The air around her crackled with residual energy.
She turned and strode out of the study, her velvet gown sweeping behind her. She followed the sound of shouting.
In the grand living room, Aedan was pacing like a caged animal. His hair was a mess, his shirt untucked. Sterling sat in a high-backed chair, his face like thunder.
"I want her out!" Aedan yelled, pointing at the doorway. "I don't care who she says she is! She's a lunatic! She's a witch! Call the police, call the Vatican, just get her out of my house!"
Sterling didn't move. He simply raised his hand and backhanded Aedan across the face.
The slap was loud and sharp. Aedan stumbled, his hand flying to his cheek, his eyes wide with shock.
"You will show respect," Sterling said, his voice trembling with rage. "To the First Matriarch."
Aedan opened his mouth to argue, but the words died in his throat. The temperature in the room had dropped.
Cecil walked into the room. She didn't look at Sterling. She looked only at Aedan.
The silence was immediate and oppressive. Aedan took a step back, his hand still pressed against his stinging cheek.
"You are participating in a public spectacle," Cecil said. It wasn't a question. The term 'television program' felt alien on her tongue, but the concept, gleaned from his mind, was clear: a ritual of judgment before a faceless crowd.
Aedan swallowed hard, trying to regain some semblance of control. He puffed out his chest, a desperate attempt at bravado. "It's a reality show. It's my job. It's my chance to fix my image, to get my career back."
Cecil let out a short, humorless laugh. "Fix your image? That program is the beginning of your end."
Aedan glared at her. "You don't know anything about Hollywood! This is how things work here!"
Cecil ignored his outburst. She turned her gaze to Sterling. "Inform the production team. His partner has changed."
Aedan blinked, confused. "Partner? I don't have a partner. It's a solo show."
"It isn't anymore," Cecil said smoothly. "It's me."
Aedan stared at her for a second, then burst out laughing. It was a high-pitched, slightly hysterical sound. "You? On reality TV? You're out of your mind!"
Sterling, however, was already nodding. "It will be done, Matriarch."
Aedan's laughter cut off abruptly. He spun to face his grandfather. "Grandpa! You can't be serious! You can't let this crazy woman ruin my show!"
"Silence!" Sterling bellowed, rising from his chair. "The Matriarch's word is law in this house!"
Aedan stood there, his mouth agape, looking between the two of them. He was completely cornered.
Cecil walked over to him. She reached out and took the collar of his rumpled shirt in her hands. She straightened it, smoothing the fabric with slow, deliberate movements.
The touch was gentle, almost intimate. But Aedan froze. His entire body went rigid. The memory of the crushing pressure, the feeling of her inside his head, was too fresh.
Cecil leaned in close. Her lips brushed his ear. Her breath was cold, sending a shiver down his spine.
"From this moment on," she whispered, "you are my shadow."
She released him and turned away, walking out of the room without a backward glance.
Aedan stood in the middle of the room, his heart pounding, his skin crawling. He looked at his grandfather, hoping for some sign of reprieve.
Sterling simply sat back down and picked up his newspaper.
The reality show had just become a prison.