He did not move. Not toward me. Not away.
And so I crossed the distance. One step. Then another until there was no space left between us.
Slowly, he lifted his hand to my cheek, fingers barely grazing my skin. His breath left him in a shaky exhale, as though he only just allowed himself to believe I was real.
His thumb trembled as he traced the curve of my lips.
“Monroe…” my name stumbled from his lips. “You shouldn’t have come.”
His jaw tightened, and for a moment I saw it—the war inside him. Duty. Loyalty. Want.
“I couldn’t stay away,” I told him.
“Alexander is a great man,” he said hoarsely. “He can provide for you everything that I cannot.”
I covered his hand still resting gently on my cheek with my own. “All I want, Aiden… is you.”
His breath caught.
His eyes searched mine as if trying to find something he did not dare believe.
For weeks I had tried to fulfill my duty as Princess, as future queen, but I knew that life was no longer mine.
My heart had long since made its choice, and I could not deny it what longed for.
Him. Aiden.
I let him see it.
His hand slid from my cheek to the back of my neck, not pulling me closer, just holding me there. Like I was his anchor as much as he was mine.
He pressed his forehead to mine. “My heart is yours, Monroe. Always.”
My fingers fisted in his tunic.
“And mine has only ever been yours.”
I rose onto my toes.
Aiden stilled.
For one suspended heartbeat, the world held its breath with us.
Then I kissed him.
It was not tentative. It was not careful. It was every stolen glance, every restrained touch, every word left unsaid set free all at once.
Whatever restraint he had left shattered.
Aiden’s mouth claimed mine. His hand tightened at the back of my neck as the other slid to my waist. He pulled me flush against him, and my hands threaded into his hair.
He nipped at my lower lip, drawing a soft sound from me, and a low approving grumble reverberated in his chest.
Aiden’s hands moved over my back, my shoulders, my arms, as if he were mapping out my body to commit the feel, the shape of me, to memory.
I clung to him, my fingertips digging into his biceps, only breaking away long enough to steal a breath.
Beneath the starlit sky, it was only Aiden and me—hands twisting in hair, fingers clutching fabric, breathless ravenous kisses.
Aiden broke our kiss with a groan, as if stopping was agony.
Our uneven breaths mingled in the space between us.
“Monroe,” he murmured, sending goosebumps across my skin.
He rested his head atop mine, his fingers still pressing into my skin.
“I can’t lose you,” he said, the words rough and uneven.
I looked up at him, my hand cupping his cheek. “You won’t. I choose you, Aiden.”
His lips curved before he leaned in and brushed a soft, delicate kiss to my mouth.
He took my hands and held them between us. “I have to tell Alexander,” he said, his voice steadying.
“We will tell him,” I said. “Together.”
Aiden and I paused at the edge of the forest path, looking up at the dark silhouette of Castle Bedford rising in the distance.
He squeezed my hand once before releasing it, and together we stepped onto the stone path.
We walked side by side, close enough that the heat of him brushed my skin, yet careful not to touch.
The night air was cool, but I barely felt it. Every nerve in my body thrummed, alive with the knowledge that everything was about to change.
We passed guards, their gazes following Aiden and me, but none made a move to stop us. No one suspected the fracture we were about to carve into the foundations of Bedford.
Aiden halted just before a long corridor, his fingers closing gently around my wrist. “Are you certain?” he asked quietly. “If he strips me of everything—”
I held his gaze, letting him see the unwavering truth in mine. “Then we shall have nothing. Together.”
He held my gaze a moment longer. Then he nodded once, slow and decisive, and he laced his fingers through mine.
At the end of the corridor, the parlor doors stood slightly ajar, a shaft of firelight spilling across the stone floor.
We shared one final look, a silent confirmation.
Aiden brought his hand up to the door, but before his knuckles even grazed the wood, Alexander’s voice drifted from within.
“Enter.”
Aiden pushed the door open.
A fire crackled softly in the hearth, casting warm light across the parlor. Prince Alexander sat in a high-backed chair, one ankle crossed over his knee, a glass untouched at his side.
Firelight traced the sharp line of his profile as his gaze lifted slowly from the flames, settling first on our joined hands.
“I wondered when this moment would come,” he said.
His attention returned to the hearth, the quiet snap of burning logs stretching between us.
“I admit,” he continued evenly, “I had hoped you would choose me.”
He rose then, unhurried, setting the glass aside without looking at it.
When his gaze met mine fully, there was no accusation there, only clarity.
“But I see now, you would only have resented me.”
Something in my chest tightened. Not with fear, but with understanding. For the first time, I saw him not as a prince, not as an obligation, but simply as a man who had misjudged love… and knew it.
“I tried,” I said softly.
“The fault is mine, Your Majesty,” Aiden said.
Alexander lifted a hand, not sharply, not in reprimand, but in quiet refusal. “No,” he said. “No, the truth is no one’s fault.”
His gaze moved between us, not as a ruler assessing subjects, but as someone finally seeing what had always been there. “You love each other.”
We did not deny it.
A faint curve touched his mouth. It was not quite a smile, but something like acceptance.
“You are released from this arrangement,” he said, his attention returning to me. “I will dissolve the engagement. The rest, I will manage.”
Silence settled in the parlor again, only broken up by the soft crackle of the fire.
Then, softer, Alexander said, “Go.”
I released Aiden’s hand and stepped forward. “Thank you,” I said.
Behind me, Aiden bowed. “Your Majesty.”
Alexander inclined his head once, then turned away, his hands clasping behind his back.
Aiden and I left the parlor, hand in hand, moving silently through the corridor.
Perhaps we did not trust the moment to hold. Or perhaps we could not yet believe we had walked away without consequence.
When the carriage waiting in the drive came into view, something inside me began to ease.
There were no gloved attendants, no line of guards standing at attention as there had been the day I arrived. No banners. No procession.
There was only Aiden and me in the hush of dawn, stepping into something entirely our own.
I did not allow myself to look back at first. But as the carriage wheels began their steady rhythm over stone, carrying us through the outer gates, I could not help myself.
I turned.
High above, framed by stone and morning light, Prince Alexander stood at the balcony.
He did not wave. He did not call out. He simply watched.
Our eyes met across the distance. He inclined his head. Not as a prince to a subject. Not as a man to a possession. But as an equal.
The gates closed, and Bedford receded behind us.
Aiden took my hand in his, and brought it to his lips, placing a gentle kiss to my knuckles.
I leaned my head against his shoulder and closed my eyes.
I did not know where the road ahead would take us, but as Aiden’s thumb traced slow, lazy circles over my hand, I knew one thing with absolute certainty—wherever it led, we would meet it together.
***
Pinpricks of sunlight filtered through the broad canopy overhead, dappling the meadow below.
I wandered along the bank where wildflowers grew in abundance, their petals brushing my ankles.
Aiden was stretched out comfortably on the blanket, boots discarded, one arm propped behind his head. He watched me with an expression so open, so unguarded, it made my chest tighten. As though I were not merely his wife, but a miracle he still could not quite believe was his.
I returned to the blanket and settled beside him. He gathered me close, his strong arms wrapping around me without hesitation, as though some part of him still feared I might vanish if he did not hold me there.
His fingers curled beneath my chin, tilting my head back until our gazes met. “Are you happy?” he asked.
“Better than happy,” I said, smiling. “With you, I am whole.”
“Always so poetic, Princess.”
I smiled wider, brushing my fingers over his jaw. “I am no princess.”
“You are whatever you chose to be, and you have always been more than a crown.”
He kissed me slowly, reverently, like he had all the time in the world.
“I love you, Monroe.”
“I love you, Aiden.”
He kissed me again, then tucked me close against him and held me there.
I gazed across the meadow at our cottage tucked amongst the trees. The light struck it just so, and I thought of the painting in Bedford’s gallery.
I had once believed it beautiful in theory. I had not known it could be lived.
Here, there were no nooses disguised as duty. No crowns masquerading as destiny. Only the steady rush of water, wildflowers at my feet, and the man who had chosen me as fiercely as I had chosen him.
The End