Power was supposed to feel solid-unyielding, unquestioned, immune to doubt.
That was what Seraphine had believed long before she learned how heavy it truly was.
The office was dark except for the muted glow of the city beyond the glass. Rain traced slow, deliberate paths down the window, blurring lights into soft halos that pulsed like distant stars. The building had emptied hours ago, yet she remained, seated behind her desk with untouched documents spread before her, her victory still fresh and strangely hollow.
Today had been decisive.
She had spoken, and the room had listened. Allies had nodded, rivals had retreated, and for once the outcome had bent to her will.
And still-
Her chest felt tight.
Seraphine leaned back, closing her eyes as exhaustion crept into her bones. Power demanded composure, demanded certainty. There was no room for hesitation, no space for vulnerability. Not here. Not now.
Yet in the quiet, doubt found her anyway.
Had she pushed too hard?
Had she crossed a line she couldn't uncross?
Her fingers tightened around the edge of the desk, grounding herself in the cool surface. She had fought too long, sacrificed too much, to let uncertainty undo her now.
A knock sounded softly at the door.
Her breath caught-not in surprise, but in recognition.
She didn't answer immediately. She didn't have to.
The door opened with measured restraint, and the room changed. Not dramatically, not loudly-just enough for her to feel it in her spine, in the subtle easing of the tension she hadn't realized she was holding.
Kael stepped inside.
He didn't speak at first. He rarely did when words weren't needed. Instead, he closed the door behind him and leaned against it, watching her with that steady, unreadable gaze that had seen her at her strongest-and at her most unguarded.
"You should be resting," he said quietly.
She let out a breath that sounded too close to a laugh. "You sound like my conscience."
"Someone has to," he replied, moving closer. "Yours works overtime."
She turned her chair to face him, studying the sharp lines of his expression softened by concern. It struck her, not for the first time, how differently he looked at her compared to everyone else. Not with awe. Not with fear. But with understanding.
"You heard the vote passed," she said.
"I did."
"And?"
"And you were brilliant," he said without hesitation. "Terrifying, too. Half the room looked like they were deciding whether to applaud or flee."
That earned a faint smile from her-brief, but real.
Kael stopped beside her desk, resting his hand on its surface, close enough that she could feel the warmth of him without touching. It was always like this between them-close, careful, restrained by lines neither of them dared cross too quickly.
"You don't look victorious," he added.
Seraphine looked away, her gaze drifting back to the rain-soaked city. "Victory is loud. This-" She gestured vaguely. "This is what comes after."
He followed her gaze, then spoke more softly. "You don't have to carry it alone."
That did it.
The walls she kept meticulously intact cracked, just a little.
She stood, stepping closer until the space between them thinned to something fragile. Her voice dropped. "Do you ever worry," she asked, "that one day all this will cost more than it gives?"
Kael met her eyes, searching, honest. "Every day."
Her pulse quickened.
"But I also know this," he continued. "You're not losing yourself to power, Seraphine. You're shaping it. And you're still you."
Her throat tightened. She hadn't realized how desperately she needed to hear that-from him.
Without thinking, she reached out, her fingers brushing his sleeve. The touch was light, tentative, but it sent a quiet current through them both. Kael stilled, his breath hitching almost imperceptibly.
For a moment, the world narrowed to the space between their hands.
Slowly, deliberately, he turned his wrist so their fingers aligned, not quite entwined, but close enough that the promise of it lingered. "You don't have to choose between strength and feeling," he said. "You never did."
Seraphine swallowed, her voice barely above a whisper. "And what if feeling makes me weak?"
His gaze softened. "Then I'll stand where you can lean."
The silence that followed was thick-charged with everything unsaid. They stood there, caught between restraint and longing, knowing that whatever this was between them was no longer something either could ignore.
Power had never felt like this before.
It had a pulse now.
And it beat dangerously close to her heart.
...
The silence lingered long after Kael's words settled between them.
Seraphine was acutely aware of everything all at once-the warmth of his hand near hers, the faint scent of rain and clean linen clinging to him, the way the city lights outside seemed to dim as if the world itself had stepped back to watch.
She should have moved away.
She didn't.
Her fingers tightened just slightly, a subconscious betrayal of the composure she had perfected over years of political warfare. Power had taught her how to command rooms, how to silence opposition with a single look-but it had never prepared her for this. For the way one man standing too close could unravel her far more effectively than any enemy.
Kael noticed.
Of course he did.
His gaze dropped to their hands, then slowly lifted to her face. Something shifted in his expression-something unguarded. Not urgency. Not hunger. Something quieter. More dangerous.
Care.
"Seraphine," he said, her name low and steady, like an anchor.
She exhaled shakily. "You shouldn't say things like that."
"Why?" he asked, not moving away. "Because they're untrue?"
"No," she admitted. "Because they make it harder to pretend."
The corner of his mouth curved-not a smile, but something close. "I was wondering how long you planned to keep pretending."
Her heartbeat stumbled.
She turned her face slightly, breaking eye contact before it could pull her under completely. "This isn't simple," she said. "Nothing about this-about us-can be."
"I know," he replied. His voice softened. "That's why I haven't crossed the line."
Her eyes flicked back to him. "And do you want to?"
The question hung between them, fragile as glass.
Kael didn't answer immediately. Instead, he lifted his hand-slowly, deliberately-giving her time to pull away. When she didn't, his fingers brushed a loose strand of hair near her cheek, not tucking it back, just touching. A whisper of contact that sent heat spiraling through her chest.
"Yes," he said quietly. "Every day."
The honesty in his voice stole her breath.
She swallowed, her resolve fraying at the edges. "Then why haven't you?"
"Because you're building something that matters," he said. "And I refuse to be the man who makes you question your footing."
Her throat tightened.
"No one has ever worried about that," she murmured.
His hand lingered, thumb grazing her cheekbone so lightly it was almost imagined. "They should have."
Her pulse roared in her ears. The distance between them had shrunk to inches-close enough that she could feel his breath, warm and steady, close enough that leaning forward would end the tension entirely.
She didn't move.
Neither did he.
Instead, Kael lowered his forehead until it hovered just short of touching hers. The intimacy of it was almost unbearable-closer than a kiss, because it was chosen restraint rather than impulse.
"If I kiss you," he said softly, "I won't be able to pretend it doesn't mean something."
Her hands clenched at his jacket, gripping fabric like it might steady her. "And if you don't," she whispered, "I'll spend the night wondering what it would have felt like."
Their breaths mingled. Time slowed.
For a heartbeat-a dangerous, fragile heartbeat-she tilted her chin upward.
Kael's breath hitched.
His thumb pressed more firmly against her cheek, his other hand bracing against the desk behind her, trapping her gently between conviction and desire. His gaze flicked to her lips, then back to her eyes, as if asking permission one last time.
Then-
A sharp buzz cut through the moment.
Seraphine stiffened as the sound of her secure line vibrating against the desk shattered the fragile cocoon around them. Reality rushed back in, loud and unforgiving.
Kael froze, jaw tightening.
She closed her eyes briefly, steadying herself before pulling back. When she opened them, the politician was back in place-composed, guarded, impeccable.
"I have to take that," she said quietly.
"I know," he replied, stepping away immediately, giving her space without resentment.
She answered the call with practiced calm, discussing schedules and opposition maneuvers, her voice cool and controlled. Yet beneath the surface, everything had shifted.
When she ended the call, the room felt different-emptier, charged with what had almost happened.
Kael stood near the door again, hands in his pockets, the picture of restraint.
"This doesn't change anything," she said, though she wasn't sure if she meant to reassure him or herself.
His gaze held hers. "No," he agreed. "But it confirms it."
Her breath caught.
He opened the door, pausing just long enough to look back. "Goodnight, Seraphine."
"Goodnight, Kael."
The door closed softly behind him.
She stood alone in the quiet office, heart racing, the ghost of his touch still burning on her skin.
Power no longer felt distant or cold.
It felt personal.
And dangerously close to becoming something she could no longer deny.
...