Page 130 of My Bargain with the Unyielding Viscount

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“It grants me the right to prevent you from approaching her in any manner that is unwelcome.”

“And you presume it is unwelcome.”

“I do not presume anything,” Julian replied. “I observed you both.”

“You misinterpret the situation.”

“No,” Julian said. “I understand it perfectly. You will leave her be.”

It was not a suggestion. Halford held his ground for a fraction of a second longer, as though weighing whether to resist, whether to press the matter further in a setting that no longer favored him. His attention flickered briefly, not to Eleanor, but to the growing awareness around them, to the eyes that had begun to linger, the conversations that had quieted just enough to listen in.

“This is not concluded,” he said at last, though the certainty in it had diminished.

He turned and walked away, with the unmistakable understanding that he had been removed, not dismissed. The space he left behind did not immediately settle. For a moment, the garden remained suspended, the quiet disruption lingering before conversation resumed, careful at first, then gradually returning to its previous rhythm.

Nothing outwardly had changed, and yet everything had.

Julian did not turn at once. He remained where he stood, the line of his shoulders still set, the position he had taken between Eleanor and Halford had gone unbroken, as though ensuring that the distance now established would hold.

Only after a moment did he shift, just enough to acknowledge her presence behind him without fully stepping aside.

“Are you harmed?” he asked.

The question was quiet, controlled, but no less direct. Eleanor answered just as steadily.

“No.”

She did not know what else to say. She did not know why he had come, but that did not make her any less grateful for what he had done for her. Anne stepped slightly closer, speaking while Eleanor could not.

“He was overstepping.”

“He will not do so again.”

There was no doubt in the words. Eleanor looked at him then, properly. This was not the man who had told her to leave,not the one who had spoken of distance and practicality and arrangements that required nothing beyond convenience.

This was something else entirely, and for the first time since she had left the estate, uncertainty returned, because whatever he had just done could not be dismissed as obligation, and it could not be undone as easily as his words had been.

The garden resumed around them, but Eleanor did not feel it return. Her hands remained still at her sides, though she became aware of the tension in them only when it began to ease, slowly, as the immediate pressure of the encounter faded.

Julian had not moved far. He remained near enough that she could still feel the steadiness of his presence. Anne watched them both for a moment, her attention moving carefully between them before she spoke.

“I will give you a moment,” she said.

“You do not need to–”

“I do,” Anne replied, cutting her off gently but firmly. “You will not have this conversation in halves.”

There was no room to argue that. Anne stepped away without waiting for agreement, leaving them standing where they were, the distance she created not large, but enough to make the separation clear.

Eleanor drew a breath, slower than she intended, her thoughts still unsettled, not only by what had just occurred, but by the shift that had followed it.

“Eleanor.”

His voice was quieter, stripped of the authority he had used moments before, though it was no less certain in its intent.

She turned to him fully. He was not distant, not in the way he had been when he spoke to her before she left the estate. Something had changed, and it was not subtle.

“I was wrong,” he said. “What I said to you, what I allowed you to believe… it was not truth. It was fear. I told myself I was protecting you, that distance would prevent something worse, that keeping everything defined and contained would ensure neither of us would be harmed by what this could become. In truth, I was protecting myself.”