The Beaumont mansion loomed against the Drakorian skyline, its Gothic spires piercing the smog-filled air. Inside, the opulent halls echoed with the rapid click of heels on marble as Cassandra Beaumont descended the grand staircase, her face a mask of barely contained fury.Moments earlier, Maria, the elderly nanny who had cared for Cassandra since childhood, had knocked on her door with a familiar, dreaded phrase: "He's here again."

"Who?" Cassandra had asked, though she already knew the answer.

"Uncle Harry," Maria had replied, her wrinkled face creased with worry.

Now, Cassandra stormed through the mansion, her emerald eyes flashing with rage. She'd done her best to maintain composure in the weeks since uncovering her uncle's betrayal, juggling personal crises and the weight of the Beaumont legacy. But this intrusion was the final straw.

As she reached the bottom of the stairs, she caught sight of Uncle Harry in the foyer. He stood near a priceless Luminian vase, his once-impeccable suit now rumpled and stained. The sight only fueled Cassandra's anger.

"Uncle," she spat, the word dripping with venom. "What part of 'stay in the boys' quarters' did you fail to comprehend?"

Harry turned, his face lighting up with a desperate smile. "Cassandra, my dear niece! I-I just wanted to talk. To explain-"

"Explain?" Cassandra laughed, a harsh, brittle sound that echoed through the foyer. "Explain how you tried to have me killed? How you schemed to steal my birthright?"

She advanced on him, her silk robe billowing behind her like the wings of an avenging angel. "Or perhaps you'd like to explain that little charade with the fake noble from Lumina? Did you think I wouldn't figure it out?"

Harry's face paled. "That was... that was a misunderstanding. I only wanted what was best for you, for the family-"

"Best for me?" Cassandra's voice rose, her carefully cultivated poise cracking. "You hired a commoner to pose as nobility! You tried to manipulate me into a sham marriage, all so you could control the Beaumont fortune!"

She was inches from him now, close enough to see the beads of sweat forming on his brow. "And when that failed, when you realized I had eyes for Zafron instead of your puppet, you decided to have me eliminated. Your own flesh and blood."

Harry held up his hands in a placating gesture. "Please, Cassandra, if you'd just listen-"

"No, Uncle," she cut him off. "You've done enough talking. For years, you whispered in my late Father's ear, slowly taking control of our family's interests. But that ends now."

She snapped her fingers, and two burly guards appeared at the edges of the foyer. "I've transferred everything back under my control. The shipping contracts in Lumina, the mines in the southern mountains, even that little side business you thought I didn't know about in the Astoria. It's all mine now."

Harry's face contorted in a mix of fear and rage. "You can't do this! I built those connections! I nurtured those deals!"

"And you did it all with Beaumont money, Beaumont influence, Beaumont name!!" Cassandra retorted. "Money and influence that were never rightfully yours."

She began to circle him, like a predator toying with its prey. "Did you really think I wouldn't find out? That I was just some vapid socialite you could manipulate and discard?" Sёarᴄh the NovelFire.net* website on Google to access chapters of novels early and in the highest quality.

Harry's demeanor shifted, desperation taking hold. "Cassandra, please. I can make this right. I have contacts, resources you don't know about. I can double our profits in a year, I swear it!"

Cassandra paused, fixing him with a withering stare. "Profits? You think this is about money? This is about trust, Uncle. This is about family. Two concepts you clearly know nothing about."

She turned to the guards. "Escort my uncle back to his new 'accommodations' in the boys' quarters. And this time, make sure he stays there."

As the guards moved forward, Harry fell to his knees, grasping at the hem of Cassandra's robe. "No, please! I'll do anything! I'll sign over everything, I'll leave Drakoria, just please don't send me back there!"

Cassandra looked down at him, her face a mask of disgust. "You're pathetic, Uncle. To think I once looked up to you."

She jerked her robe from his grasp. "You should be grateful. Do you know what the Enforcers do to those who plot against noble houses? I could have handed you over to them, let them extract every detail of your schemes in their interrogation chambers."

Harry blanched at the mention of the Enforcers, Drakoria's feared secret police. "You... you wouldn't. We're family!"

"Family?" Cassandra's laugh was cold and bitter. "You forfeited that claim when you plotted my demise. The only reason you're not rotting in a cell or swinging from the gallows is because I still have some use for you."

She leaned down, her voice dropping to a menacing whisper. "Foreign investors and rival houses are watching us, Uncle. They're like vultures, waiting for any sign of weakness. So you'll stay here, in the boys' quarters, and you'll play the role of the doting uncle whenever we're in public. You'll smile, you'll laugh, and you'll pretend that everything is perfectly fine in the House of Beaumont."

Standing straight again, she addressed the guards. "If he gives you any trouble, feel free to remind him of the alternatives. I hear the Astoria is lovely this time of year. Perhaps he'd prefer accommodations there?"

As the guards dragged Harry away, his pleas echoing through the halls, Cassandra allowed herself a moment of weakness. She leaned against a nearby pillar, closing her eyes and taking a deep breath.

Maria approached cautiously. "Miss Cassandra? Are you alright?"

Cassandra opened her eyes, the steel returning to her gaze. "I'm fine, Maria. Just tired of dealing with snakes in our midst."

The old nanny nodded sympathetically. "You did what you had to do, child. Your father would be proud."

At the mention of her father, Cassandra's expression softened slightly. "Would he, Maria? Sometimes I wonder if I'm becoming the very thing I despise."

Maria reached out, patting Cassandra's hand gently. "You're nothing like him, Miss. You're strong, yes, but you're fair. You could have done much worse to your uncle, but you showed mercy."

Cassandra straightened, smoothing out her robe. "Mercy born of necessity, perhaps. But you're right, what's done is done."

She glanced towards the grand doors of the mansion. "Now, we have a bigger game to play. Uncle Harry was just a pawn. There are other forces moving against us, both here in Drakoria and beyond."

Her eyes narrowed, a dangerous glint appearing in them. "Let them come. They'll find that Cassandra Beaumont is not so easily toppled."

As she strode away, head held high, Maria watched her go with a mixture of pride and concern. The little girl she had raised was gone, replaced by a formidable woman ready to take on the cutthroat world of Drakorian politics.

In the distance, the ever-present smog of Drakoria swirled, obscuring the horizon. But within the Beaumont mansion, the air had cleared, if only for a moment. The first battle had been won, but Cassandra knew the war was far from over.