One might have thought he was leaving.
Lord Caelan performed an elegant parting bow and turned, but the movement was deliberately slow, almost reluctant. He did not want to leave. And Amanda, whose mind was stuffed full of knowledge about him from the book, saw this with startling clarity. This man — a master manipulator — had himself fallen under the spell of the enigma she embodied.
“He won’t go until he gets some kind of reaction. Until he feels he’s struck a chord. He’s like a chess player who cannot walk away from the board without making the decisive move,”
the thought flashed through her mind.
And in that instant, something awakened inside her. Not Yamada Light, the frightened student. Not Amanda, the bewildered girl in a foreign body. What awoke was the person who had devoured clever manhwa, taken IQ tests for fun, and imagined himself in the place of cunning strategists.
“What would the Caelan from the book do if he were me right now?”
She didn’t stop him. She didn’t say a word.
She simply… laughed.
It was a quiet, melodic sound, distorted by the modulator, yet unmistakably laced with genuine, light irony.
Caelan froze mid-step. His back tensed. Slowly, he turned around.
“Did I say something amusing?” His voice retained its lightness, but a dangerous edge had crept into it.
“Amusing,” Amanda corrected. Her crimson eyes gleamed through the slits of her mask. “To watch a shadow try to measure the depth of a lake by tossing pebbles into it. You are well versed in the games of men, Lord Caelan. In their ambitions, their fears, their greed.” She paused, letting the words sink in. “But I am not human. Your hints, your temptations… they glide across the surface without ever reaching the bottom. It reminds me of a puppy playing with its own reflection in a mirror.”
His posture changed. The affected nonchalance vanished. Now he stood straight, his entire attention locked on her like a predator that had scented worthy prey. The corners of his mouth twitched into a smile beneath the mask.
“Oh?” The single word rang out like a challenge.
“You offer me a ‘canvas’,” she continued, her voice dropping lower, and therefore growing heavier, more substantial. “Assuming that I am interested in painting. But what if I am the paint itself? The kind that doesn’t lie on the canvas, but changes the canvas? Your Empire… it too is merely a painting, drawn in blood and ambition. What could I add to it? A new shade of red?”
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He looked at her, and in the gaze hidden behind the mask burned a fierce, insatiable curiosity. She wasn’t merely parrying his thrusts. She was speaking his language — the language of metaphors, insinuations, and intellectual dominance.
“Perhaps you won’t add a new shade,” he countered, taking a step closer. “Perhaps you will wash away the old paint and begin again. From the very beginning. And I…” his voice dropped to a seductive whisper, “…could be the one who hands you the brushes.”
He was dangerously close. Too close. Amanda could feel the tension radiating from him — a heady mixture of razor-sharp intellect and lethal danger. And the strangest thing… it thrilled her. Not as a woman, but as that same guy who had always admired such characters in books. It was intellectual chemistry — intoxicating and perilous.
*“I’m in a woman’s body. But I was a man. Then why does my heart race near Randel? This… warmth, this confusion… it’s a weakness. A danger. But this…”* — she glanced at Caelan — *“…this I understand. This is a game. Pure. Clear. A game of minds without all those foolish emotions.”*
The realization struck her like lightning. Randel evoked something warm, tender, and terrifying in its incomprehensibility. But Caelan… he was comprehensible. Like a complex but solvable puzzle. And in her instinctive flight from the tangle of her own feelings, she reached for what seemed clear and controllable.
“Brushes?” She gave his empty hands a look of faint disdain. “I am accustomed to creating with the power of thought alone, Lord Caelan. But…” She paused theatrically, savoring the moment. “…your offer… intrigues me. The way a new, intricate puzzle intrigues.”
He smiled — and this time it was no longer the practiced smile of a courtier. It was a real, predatory smile: the smile of a man who had finally found a worthy opponent.
“Then perhaps, Lady Custodian, you will allow me to escort you? The ball appears to be drawing to a close. And I am certain we shall have further opportunities… to discuss art.”
He extended his hand. Not in a formal gesture, but as a challenge. Watching to see whether she would take it. Whether she would make that step.
Amanda looked at the offered hand. This was a fracture. A step away from Randel — from his simple, sincere devotion — and into a world of intricate schemes and dangerous games. And in her fear of those confusing feelings, in her admiration for a character from the pages of a book, in her desperate need to prove to herself that she still controlled the situation… she slowly, almost weightlessly, laid her golden-gloved hand in his.
His fingers closed around hers — gently, yet with unmistakable strength.
“Excellent,” he whispered.
And they walked away — two enigmatic masked figures — leaving the empty terrace and the admiring, unseeing gazes of the guests behind them. Amanda walked beside him, her heartbeat steady and clear. Not from confusion, but from exhilaration. She was playing with fire, but right now that felt far safer than the warm, bewildering light that emanated from Randel. She was fleeing one mystery straight into the embrace of another — more dangerous, yet seemingly so familiar from the pages of her favorite books.