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Page 6 of Tempests & Tea Leaves (The Charmed Leaf Legacy #1)

Chapter Six

Jasvian’s blood thundered in his ears as he watched Lady Iris Starspun’s retreating form, her midnight blue gown swirling around her as she carved a path through the astonished crowd. Her parents exchanged a brief, panicked glance before hurrying after her.

How dare she? The sheer audacity of speaking to him that way, questioning traditions that had sustained their society for generations and throwing his private words back in his face. Words that, while perhaps not kind, had been true . The preservation of magical bloodlines was vital to their society’s future. Someone had to speak sense, even if others found it uncomfortable to hear.

And what of the things she’d said about his own magic? Granted, it lacked the aesthetic appeal of more flamboyant powers, but it was essential . Lady Iris clearly failed to comprehend the responsibility he bore. He could have pointed out that his abilities saved lives—dozens of them, each time he sensed a building tempest and prevented a disastrous mine collapse. He could have explained that the Rowanwoods did not hoard lumyrite-derived wealth, as she had so carelessly suggested, but rather fostered prosperity throughout the realm, their operations sustaining countless families across the United Fae Isles with dignified employment and fair compensation.

And then there was her ridiculous claim that he disapproved of all art and his magic contributed nothing of beauty to the world. Did lumyrite not power self-playing musical instruments? Did it not enhance illusion tapestries that transformed rooms with changing scenes of far-off lands? Without it, half the elegant enchantments that adorned this very ballroom would cease to function. Though his own hands might not craft these wonders directly, his magic ensured that lumyrite could be extracted safely and abundantly, making possible the very enchantments that transformed the mundane into the magnificent.

The last of the golden dust settled around him, glittering on the polished floor. He suddenly became acutely aware of the crowd’s attention, their curious glances and whispered speculations. His grandmother still stood beside him, and when she caught his eye, the slight arch of her brow spoke volumes.

“Well!” she announced with practiced nonchalance, addressing the gathered onlookers. “These ancient chandeliers really ought to be replaced. All this magical energy from our young debutants—it’s a wonder the entire ceiling hasn’t come down!” She gestured elegantly toward the dance floor. “Do continue with the festivities.”

Her well-timed intervention worked its usual magic. The crowd’s attention shifted as the orchestra struck up a lively tune, and couples began to form for the next dance.

“Quite the outburst,” she remarked quietly, turning back to him once the immediate spectators had dispersed. “I haven’t seen you lose control of your magic since you were a boy.”

Jasvian stiffened, horror creeping through him as her meaning became clear. “The chandelier? That was most certainly not my doing. I do not lose control.” The very suggestion was absurd. His entire life was built upon rigid self-discipline. The mines depended on his ability to maintain perfect control of his magic at all times. A single lapse in concentration could mean disaster. “Far more likely it was Lady Iris,” he continued stiffly. “She’s clearly still unused to her powers.”

Lady Rivenna’s gaze held his for a long moment. “Perhaps it was a combination of both your magic and hers. Such things have been known to happen when?—”

“It was not,” he interrupted, more forcefully than he’d intended.

His grandmother smiled and patted his arm with maddening condescension. “Of course not, dear,” she replied, her tone suggesting precisely the opposite.

She drifted away to speak with Lady Thornhart, leaving Jasvian to confront an alarming possibility. Had he truly lost control? Even for just a moment? The idea unsettled him deeply. He prided himself on his discipline, on the careful containment of his emotions and magic alike.

This entire evening had gone from tedious to disastrous. He hadn’t wanted to attend in the first place, finding these gatherings exhausting with their endless social expectations and crushing press of bodies. The constant noise and movement set his nerves on edge, and he’d noticed himself being unusually sharp-tongued in his conversation with Hadrian. Perhaps that had led him to express his opinions about Lady Iris’s magic more bluntly than propriety dictated. But once she had challenged him so directly, with those flashing eyes and razor-sharp responses, something in him refused to yield ground. Each barbed comment she’d delivered had only driven him to respond in kind until their exchange had spiraled beyond his control.

One they’d reached that point, he couldn’t possibly have acknowledged that he secretly shared her opinions of the Opening Ball. He’d always found the entire ritual faintly absurd—young fae parading their abilities while society assessed their worth based on spectacle rather than substance. But he was not about to admit that to Lady Iris Starspun.

As the weight of attention shifted elsewhere, Jasvian found himself increasingly desperate to escape. Unlike his grandmother, who had always been skilled at managing social situations, he found every ball and social gathering where he was expected to make polite conversation to be more like navigating a maze blindfolded. Give him a quiet room or the open mountainside near the mine shafts any day.

“Lord Rowanwood!”

He turned reluctantly to find Lady Emberlee Whispermist approaching, trailed by two other young women whose names momentarily escaped him. They surrounded him in a flutter of silks and perfume, their expressions eager. “That was quite the exciting moment with the chandelier,” Lady Emberlee said, her voice pitched just high enough to grate on his already frayed nerves. “So dramatic!”

“Indeed,” he replied neutrally, searching for any graceful exit from this conversation.

“You handled it so masterfully,” another young lady—Myrissa Featherlock, he now recalled—simpered. “Transforming all that falling glass into harmless dust! Such quick thinking.”

“It was nothing,” he said, wishing fervently that he could merge with the marble floor beneath his feet and sink into the very foundations of Solstice Hall.

“You never dance at these events, Lord Rowanwood,” Lady Emberlee observed with a practiced pout. “Could we not persuade you to join just one set this evening?”

“Oh, yes!” the third young lady exclaimed, her fan fluttering with excitement. “Surely you could spare one dance?”

Jasvian maintained his polite mask with considerable effort. “I’m afraid I must decline.”

The young women exchanged glances, undeterred by his refusal. “I heard the most interesting rumor,” Lady Myrissa ventured after a moment. “They say you might be considering taking a wife this season.”

“I will not be choosing a wife!” he blurted out stiffly. A shocked silence fell over the immediate vicinity, and he realized he’d spoken louder than he intended. Mortification washed over him. “I … that is …” He cleared his throat and attempted to recover his composure. “Forgive me, ladies. If you’ll excuse me, I have … urgent business to attend to.”

He turned on his heel and strode away from the clustered young ladies, their disappointed sighs following in his wake as he headed in the opposite direction from where Lady Iris had disappeared.

He needed air. And silence. And most of all, he needed to stop thinking about impertinent half-fae ladies who dared to suggest that his magic—magic that kept hundreds of families safe, that maintained the very foundation of their society—was nothing more than ‘sensing rocks.’