[ ⌠] â youâre not from around here , are you? i figured because you totally just missed { serin kaplan } walking by. donât tell me you donât know who { she } is ? they kind of look like { cemre baysel} and i could be wrong but i think that they might be { 26 } years old right now. theyâve been living in palmview for the last { 4 months }. and i donât know if anyone has ever told them this before but they kind of remind me of { blair waldorf } from { gossip girl }. if you stick around the town long enough you might catch them in action working at { palmview fashion house } as a { designer }. you see this town isnât really that big of a place, some folks like to call them the { opulent } of palmview! they took a liking to the name too after a while, go figure. oh crap, they must have heard me yapping. theyâre coming this way. i got to warn you though, rumor has it they can pretty { sharp-tongued } at times. i wouldnât take it too seriously though, from the times iâve spoken to them they seemed pretty { driven } to me. we see each other all the time since they live in that { 2a } apartment beside me over in { mango bay lofts }. i better leave you to it. it was nice meeting you!
â§ÍâşË*シŕźâž BASIC INFO â§ÍâşË*シŕźâž
full name: serin illara kaplan
nickname(s): rin
age: twenty six
birthday: december 30th
zodiac sign: capricorn sun, scorpio moon, leo rising
gender: cis-female
pronouns: she/her
sexuality: biromantic/bisexual
hometown: manhattan, ny
current location: palmview, fl
apartment: seaglass gardens, #2b
label: 'the opulent'
occupation: designer @ palmview fashion house
â§ÍâşË*シŕźâž PASSIONS - A Visionary in a Sea of Trades â§ÍâşË*シŕźâž
interests / hobbies: classic films (especially anything starring audrey hepburn or vikki dougan) collecting art & vintage fashion books (she'll spend hours flipping through them, seeking inspiration for her next piece), high-end fitness regimes (boxing, pilates, yoga, etc.)
style: her personal style is a carefully crafted combination of sophistication and drama. she adores sharp lines, rich fabrics, opulent details. having a flair for the dramatic, serin often pairs her outfits with bold statement pieces. for her, fashion is an extension of her inner world, a reflection of her strength and unyielding ambition.
in the brutal & fast-paced world of fashion, serin thrives to be a trailblazer, and ultimately one day a legendary name. in each piece she makes, she aims to fuse timeless elegance with cutting edge innovation; her designs exude opulence, from intricate hand-embroidered details to show-stopping silhouettes that capture attention from first glance. the meticulousness with which she crafts every gown, every suit, every accessory is a testament to her obsession with perfection.
when she's not working, she's feeding her mind. whether itâs indulging in avant garde exhibition in a gallry, diving into literature on the latest fashion trends, or collaborating with renowned artists, she immerses herself in experiences that feed her soul and fuel her creativity. sheâs also a connoisseur of all things luxuryâvintage jewelry, rare handbags, and one-of-a-kind couture pieces that become treasures in her personal collection.
â§ÍâşË*シŕźâž PERSONALITY - A Razor-Sharp Edge, Wrapped in Velvet â§ÍâşË*シŕźâž
serin is a complex blend of contradictions, each layer revealing a deeper intensity. on the surface, sheâs confident, poised, and effortlessly charming â traits that make her both admired and, at times, feared. with a sharp tongue thatâs as effective as any scalpel, serin is quick-witted and often uses her words to carve out space for herself in a world that demands attention. she knows exactly what she wants, and exactly how to get it, rarely letting anything stand in her way. if anything does stand in her way, she removes itâmethodically, without a momentâs hesitation. people say she reminds them of blair waldorf from gossip girl â the same regal elegance, the same cunning ambition, and the same sharp-edge wit that is always in full force, even when sheâs at her most graceful.
driven barely scratches the surface when it comes to describing her work ethic. serin is obsessed with perfection â not just in her craft, but in every part of her life. whether it's the cut of a fabric or the trajectory of her career, she aims to be nothing less than the absolute best. she rarely relaxes, always seeking the next challenge, the next opportunity to elevate herself, and the next step in her ever-expanding empire. her ambition is so fierce that it often leaves little room for anything else â except, perhaps, her inner circle, who she fiercely protects with unwavering loyalty. but even her closest confidants know that serin isnât one to wear her heart on her sleeve.
sheâs not without her softer side. beneath her icy exterior lies a mind constantly working, constantly creating. she finds peace in solitude, often retreating to her private studio, where she can drown out the world with music â everything from classical symphonies to underground electronica â using it as a soundtrack for her creative process. design is more than a profession for Serin; itâs her language, her therapy, her means of self-expression. and, at the end of the day, itâs what keeps her grounded amidst the chaos of her high-powered life.
â§ÍâşË*シŕźâž FAMILY LIFE TURMOIL - Privilege at a Price â§ÍâşË*シŕźâž
despite her towering success, serinâs family life remains one of the most difficult and emotionally complex aspects of her existence. raised in a world of wealth and privilege, serin grew up with everything most people could dream of â lavish vacations, designer everything, and access to the most elite circles. but despite the material abundance, her relationship with her parents has always been strained and transactional. their love for her is often measured by how well she performs in their eyes â something she learned to accept early on.
serinâs father, a self-made mogul, has always seen her as a tool to maintain his position in the elite echelon of society. he has always pushed her to be the best, but never offered the warmth of a true connection. her mother, a renowned socialite known for her charitable events and impeccable style, is more interested in maintaining the familyâs flawless public image than in understanding her daughterâs complex desires. the love they offer is always in the form of materialism.
her older brother, more of a carefree playboy type with no interest in the business world, often becomes the subject of tension between serin and their parents. while heâs seen as the âgolden childâ in the family, due to his charm and lack of ambition, serin feels an intense rivalry with him â though she would never admit it aloud. she resents how easily he navigates the world they live in, carefree and adored, while she must constantly prove herself. despite the animosity, thereâs a lingering affection between the two, though itâs rarely expressed.
this absence of emotional support and connect has made serin fiercely independent and driven her to succeed on her own terms. however, the lack of a true family connection weighs heavily on her. she longs for the kind of genuine bond she sees in others âsomething authentic and untainted by wealth and status. but she quickly suppresses those feelings, using them as fuel to achieve more, to rise even higher in a world where emotions are often seen as a weakness.
the question didnât shock her. nothing ever really did. not in public, not when she was wearing a wine-colored slip dress that matched the merlot and a look that dared him to flinch first. âthat,â she said, her voice low and smooth, âisnât dangerous.â a pause, the kind that let gravity catch up. âitâs just⌠premature.â she turned slightly, leaning one hip against the ledge now, looking him over with the same kind of interest one might give an unsolved riddle or a limited-edition bottle â equal parts curious and cautious. not dismissive. never that. âiâm seeing a lot of things,â she said, fingertips ghosting the rim of her glass again. âdisappointment in men who talk like theyâre deeper than they are. the faintest edge of sincerity behind your eyes. the way you say my name like itâs going to crack something open in your chest if youâre not careful.â then, she tilted her head. âbut if youâre asking whether someoneâs claimed me â planted a flag, drawn a border, sent their regrets in a red envelope?â she smiled. it didnât reach her eyes, but it didnât need to. âno. iâm not seeing anyone.â her gaze didnât drop from his. she studied him a beat longer, searching. not for weakness. for weight. for substance. for the thing beneath all the things he didnât say. âso tell me, clark,â she said softly, leaning forward just a fraction, enough to shift the air between them. âis this curiosity... or possession, dressed up in better manners?â her voice lowered, velvet over steel. âthereâs a difference. and i donât entertain men who donât know which side of it theyâre standing on.â
A faint, though pleased, smile touched Henryâs lips. He wasnât entirely sure that she wasnât teasing him somehow, but he didnât entirely mind. Heâd outright mockery from peers in his school days, and so he had a fairly high bar now. âOh, good,â he said, his own tone a little dry and ever so slightly amused. He took a sip of his own wine, humming softly. âHis wife also became infertile after he gave her a sexually transmitted infection,â he said. âOne can only imagine the impact his reign would have had on the Austrian empire, not to mention Europe. As if they werenât poised for enough trouble at the time.â He hummed in agreement and gave a small nod. âYou know, we still arenât sure what Anne Boleyn looks like because Henry VIII destroyed all portraits of her. The portrait commonly assumed to be her is based on earlier images and painted during the reign of her daughter.â He couldnât help but laugh, softly but a laugh nonetheless, at the idea of being menacing. It wasnât so usual that Henry was relaxed enough to laugh in front of strangers, often holding others at armâs length -- especially after the recent failure in his personal life. But, despite being six feet tall and broad-shouldered, it was still funny to him to imagine anyone finding him menacing. He was certain most people did not notice him at all. âI like to think interesting,â he said. âI imagine you might be the first person to ever find me dangerous.â He smiled a little. âI donât have any other plans, so I suppose Iâll stay.â
âgood,â she said, her voice smooth as the merlot. âi hate drinking with people who have somewhere better to be.â the corners of her mouth twitched â not a smile exactly, but something quieter. something earned. his laugh didnât go unnoticed. serin clocked it with the same sharp grace she used to read a hemline or a headline â unexpected, but not unwelcome. âinteresting and self-deprecating,â she mused, tilting her head slightly. ârare combination. most men who know this much about the downfall of royal bloodlines are either prepping for their dissertation or building a podcast cult.â she gestured lazily with her glass. âyou donât strike me as the broadcast type.â a breeze rolled through the vineyard just then, soft and sweet with the scent of ripening fruit and whatever perfume serin had layered to cut through it. the wineryâs golden hour lighting kissed her cheekbones like it was under contract. âbut youâre wrong, you know.â her gaze found his again, this time steadier â something more direct tucked behind the velvet. âyou are dangerous. you just havenât figured out how to make it work for you yet.â she leaned forward slightly, enough to close the space between intrigue and implication. âyou speak like someone whoâs been dismissed one too many times. and those people?â she smiled â slow, sharp, certain. âthey usually end up rewriting the story entirely.â serinâs attention dropped briefly to the bottle between them. âshall we?â she asked, already reaching to refill his glass with practiced ease. âyouâve earned the next pour. and iâm curious to see what other catastrophes history forgot to clean up.â
starter:Â your choice ( @silkfms )
location: callisto's secondhand
Although Daphne loved the look of new books on a shelf, all neat and spines intact, nothing really compared to the feeling of holding a well-loved paperback, turning dog-eared pages and reading pencilled notes left behind. She'd been visiting libraries since the moment she could read, but with some novels, the worst feeling is having to give them back. Some of her favourite reads had felt like they were enjoyed on borrowed time, so when the opportunity arises to browse for second-hand books she can keep, Daphne will always jump.
It's how she finds herself back in Callisto's Secondhand for the second time this week, knowing they'd just restocked from a handful of donations thanks to a tip from a friend. Twenty minutes in, she's finally lost to the struggle of balancing her ever-growing pile in one hand as she pulls more from the shelves to read the blurbs with her other. "I'm so sorry, I'm not usually this clumsy." She blurts, dropping to the ground to gather everything up. "Don't worry, I am buying all these."
she didnât crouch to help. of course not. she stood just beside the mess of tumbling books like it hadnât almost scattered across her designer shoes â eyes cool, expression unreadable, a worn copy of the secret history resting in her hand like sheâd been born holding it. âyouâre apologizing for taste?â serin asked, one brow arching as she finally lowered her gaze to daphne. there wasnât judgment in her tone â just the quiet amusement of someone who rarely wasted time on what she didnât care about. âor the attempted murder of my ankles?â she stepped lightly around the pile, crouching at last with practiced elegance and plucking a copy of beloved from the stack before offering it back, fingers grazing briefly, deliberately. âyou know,â she added, voice softening just a breath, âpeople say they want new beginnings, but they always come crawling back to the stories that already know them.â her gaze flicked upward â assessing, but not unkind. ânot clumsy. just a little overcommitted. it happens to the best of us.â then she stood again, tucking her book under her arm. âyouâve got an eye, though,â serin noted, glancing down at the remaining titles with the kind of precision that usually came from dissecting couture. âif youâre not careful, you might just leave with half the store.â a pause. â...callisto's usually gives a discount for compulsive collectors. especially if you look like you read every one.â
she let the silence stretch, just long enough to become a question in its own right. then â a quiet laugh again, edged this time, like a blade hidden in velvet. âwin,â she echoed, tasting the word like it came with a warning label. âyou say that like this ends with a scoreboard. like anyone walks away from a game with me clean.â her fingers traced the rim of her glass, slow, thoughtful â a motion more habit than hesitation. âand youâre right,â she added, eyes lifting to meet his with a sudden, laser focus. âi didnât tell you my name.â another pause. deliberate. dangerous. âbecause i wanted to see how long youâd chase the thread before realizing the thread was watching you.â she didnât smile, not fully, but there was a flicker of something in the curve of her mouth â approval, maybe. amusement. something sharp that glittered in the dark. âbut since you asked so nicelyâŚâ she leaned in, the space between them shrinking until it buzzed like static. âlenora. but everyone calls me lenny.â a beat. âexcept the ones who regret it.â then she sat back, slow and easy, as if his declaration hadnât stirred something in her she wasnât quite ready to name. âso, michael,â she said, tone softer now, silk hiding steel. âif you play to win⌠hope youâve figured out what youâre willing to lose.â because the way she looked at him now â calm, collected, with that hint of ruin stitched behind her lashes â made it clear: she wasnât bluffing.
perhaps she could've been more obvious with the no-nonsense way she'd beelined to the counter... or more snappy with her cadence when she'd posed the question. she is desperate ! the girl on the other side of the desk certainly takes her time registering the request - and the sense of urgency seems to fly over her head ! was 'quick turnaround' not quite clear enough ? and does everybody in palmview move at a snail's pace ? she flicks her wrist before the girl finishes speaking. " quick as in i have an event in 3 hours and these trousers need altering. if you have a business card or phone number of someone i can reach out to, that would be ah-mazing. "
her brow arched. not high â precise. just enough lift to say oh, sweetheart. a slow inhale followed, the kind someone might take before delivering a eulogy or a mercy kill. âthree hours?â she echoed, voice warm like velvet draped over glass. âdarling, thatâs not a turnaround, thatâs a resurrection.â she stepped closer, sharp heels ticking like a countdown now. her gaze dropped to the trousers in question â once, then again, slower â before flicking back up with mild, elegant disdain. âand from what i can see, you didnât exactly bring lazarus.â a faint, amused smile curled the edge of her mouth. âi am the business card. you found me.â she didnât break eye contact. didnât blink. didnât budge. âand if you want someone whoâs going to butcher the hem with a glue gun and prayer, by all means â go yelp-diving.â a beat. âbut if you want to walk into your event and look like the main character instead of the lighting crew?â she held her hand out, expectant. âgive me the trousers. iâll see what palmviewâs miracle worker can do.â a pause, then, almost cruel in its timing. âbut if iâm doing this, you're telling me why you waited until the eleventh hour. and it better be scandalous.â
her laugh came low â not loud, not performative, just the kind that curled at the edges like smoke from a lit match. âmm,â she hummed, letting it linger. âconfident and quotable. no wonder your exes have so much to say.â she didnât blink at the microscope feeling. lenny lived under scrutiny â courtrooms, headlines, whisper networks with expensive drinks and even more expensive secrets. being watched didnât rattle her. it thrilled her. and more than that, it let her see who flinched first. âworth forming an opinion about,â she repeated, like she was trying it on. âyou do talk like someone whoâs been the subject of a few long-ass voice memos.â she tilted her glass toward him in a kind of informal cheers. ârespect.â his smirk didnât go unnoticed, but it didnât win anything either â not yet. lenny matched it with one of her own. slow, knowing, unapologetically earned. âyouâre right,â she said, leaning her chin into her palm. âi donât usually do second chances. i do consequences. and clever exits. and very good lawyers.â the thrum of bass from the dj booth shifted, vibrating through the walls like the pulse of the room itself. linkinbio was alive, electric â the kind of place built for curated chaos, where danger smelled like cologne and opportunity came in champagne flutes. she studied him a beat longer, lashes casting soft shadows as she tipped her head. âbut sometimes,â she added, âsometimes a bad idea is just interesting enough to make it worth the headache.â then, her gaze sharpened â just slightly. not enough to be cruel. just enough to make it clear she wasnât handing over the wheel. âso if this is your best hand, michael,â she murmured, her voice low and deliberate, âyou might want to stop circling the glass and actually play it. before i get distracted by someone elseâs bluff.â she leaned back again, easy, cool, completely in control â but there was heat beneath the surface now. not quite a challenge. not yet. âbecause this?â she gestured lazily between them. âit doesnât stay open long.â
a slow smile curved across her lipsâtight, knowing. âhm,â she said, almost too softly to be heard over the hum of low conversation and clinking glasses in the distance. the golden palm had a way of cloaking conflict in civility. a beautiful kind of stage for a beautiful kind of undoing. she didnât step back when he moved closer. of course not. serin never ceded space; she redefined it. "don't i?" she asked, eyes narrowing â not out of fear, but intrigue. her fingers tapped once against the glass sheâd only half-finished, then fell still. âyou think i came out here for sweetness and soft landings?â a breath, then a whisper of a laugh. âdarling, thatâs not what this place serves.â the vineyard stretched out behind her like something out of a painting â wild, golden, and deceptively peaceful. but her attention stayed on him, unblinking. âyou say you donât know anything but being burned,â she repeated, like she was testing the weight of it. âand yet here you are, offering that ash as if itâs something iâd want to hold.â she took a step forward then â not aggressive, not even assertive, but deliberate. like every inch closed between them was part of some silent negotiation. âbut iâm not afraid of fire, i just need to know itâs worth the singe.â her voice dipped lower, hushed but precise, each syllable sharp and clean. âbecause thereâs a difference between being dangerous and being reckless. and if youâre just swinging your wounds around to see who they stick to?â her head tilted. âiâd rather finish my wine alone.â her fingers brushed the edge of the ledge again, grounding her in that effortless, elegant way she always managed. but her gaze stayed locked on his. âso no,â she added, finally answering his original claim. âi donât want to be burned. but iâll take heat. passion. conviction. something with teeth. because i can handle scars.â the wind caught a lock of hair and she pushed it back, unconcerned. âwhat i wonât do is play therapist to another man who confuses chaos for charm.â and then â so softly it almost wasnât there â âtry again. this time, with intention.â
âself-defense from the void, obviously,â she replied without missing a beat, swirling her wine with the absentminded grace of someone who'd mastered the art of distraction years ago. âor loneliness. or mediocrity. or the horror of bad lighting. take your pick.â she took another sip of her wine, eyes flicking toward julian with the kind of knowing glint that suggested sheâd already clocked everything he wasnât saying â but sheâd let him catch up. serin knew how to wait for the truth. it always showed up eventually, usually dressed as a half-apology and a hangover. âso.â she settled deeper into the couch, crossing her legs with ease despite the tightening clay mask on her skin. âyou double-booked. with mystery girl and someone else. and you actually said the words just a friend out loud?â her brow lifted in elegant disbelief. âyou really do like to make things difficult, donât you?â serin didnât sound angry. she never did. what she sounded like was worse â curious, like a lawyer who already knew where your story was going and was just giving you enough rope to hang yourself with. âlook,â she continued, setting her wineglass down with a soft thud, âi donât care how innocent it was. perception is everything. if she walked in, or found out, or felt like she was an afterthought? game over. you could be holding hands with a nun and itâd still sting.â she watched him a beat longer, long enough to read between the lines â his sighs, the mask of guilt under the actual mask, the way he still hadnât quite decided if he was explaining or confessing. âand now sheâs gone,â serin added softly, folding one arm under her chin as she leaned into the couchâs back. âbut not gone gone. just⌠away. which means sheâs undecided. which means youâve got a window, however tiny.â then, with the kind of clarity that made her both terrifying and useful: âif you want to fix it, do something worth remembering. not dramatic. not public. real. something that proves you understand what the hell it was you broke. not because youâre sorry. because you mean it.â a pause. the air seemed to still, candlelight flickering like it too was waiting. âand if you donât?â she shrugged, a single elegant movement. âthen let her go. properly. donât hover in limbo hoping she does the emotional labor for you.â serin reached up, gingerly touching the stiff edges of her mask. âalso, donât touch my pillows unless you want green streaks on white linen and me adding that to your karmic bill.â her eyes cut sideways to him again, the ghost of a smirk pulling at her lips. âbut hey. if you want me to stage your redemption arc, i do accept payment in vintage chanel and emotional vulnerability. your move, jules.â
" hi, helloo," she sings, approaching the register. " could you possibly point me in the direction of the best tailor around here ? preferrably one that can work with a quick turnaround time. " â @silkfms
without looking up from the garment she was inspecting, serin raised a single manicured finger â âmm,â â then slowly glanced up, dark eyes flicking toward the voice like it had interrupted something more important than it ever could be. she looked nevaeh over. not unkindly, but with the kind of scrutiny that could strip wallpaper. it was automatic. instinctual. head tilt. once-over. shoes, stitching, how her hair framed her face, whether her nails matched the effort of the rest. âdepends,â she said, finally setting the silk blouse aside with a practiced grace. âare we talking quick as in twenty-four hours, or quick as in you needed it yesterday and brought me a tragedy to fix?â she stepped out from behind the counter in a cloud of expensive perfume â bergamot, white amber, and something sharp beneath. pointed toe heels clicked against the floor like punctuation.
her laugh came low and rare â not generous, but precise, like a perfectly placed stiletto heel. ânoisy and bold,â she mused, swirling her glass with just enough flair to suggest that the theatrics werenât entirely unappreciated. âdangerous combination. but i suppose itâs only fair that every estate have at least one charming liability tucked into the family tree.â she let the wine touch her lips, more gesture than indulgence, and then set the glass down on a nearby ledge with the practiced ease of someone used to being observed. âlying about the wine,â she repeated, savoring the shape of it. ânow thatâs either an act of sabotage or performance art. though i imagine with you, the lineâs blurred on purpose.â her gaze flicked to him then, sharp as cut glass. âperhaps you didn't think you'd see me again,â she said flatly, not asking, just stating. âso you lied. how efficient. but here you are, still talking. still sipping. still lingering like someone whoâs beginning to regret being so careless with his stage cues.â and when he trailed off â so what i want... â she let the silence stretch. not to fill it, but to press against it, just enough to make him feel the weight of her attention. âcareful,â she murmured, stepping closer, her voice dropping low enough to graze between words like silk over skin. âthe next thing you say might actually matter.â a breath passed. she tilted her head, lashes sweeping down, but when she looked up again, there was a dare in her stare. âbecause i know what i want,â she said, tone like the clink of crystal. âclarity. intent. a little fire, maybe, if it doesnât burn the wrong way.â her fingers grazed the stem of her glass again, slow and deliberate. âbut if all youâve got is chaos in a borrowed vineyard, youâre going to have to convince me itâs worth uncorking.â her smile was sharp now â not cruel, but curated. âso,â she said, like a challenge, âtry again.â
"So I get a potential excuse from future moving jobs and what sounds like an incredibly interesting story out of all this, I'd say all the trouble this dresser gave us was worth it then." Having survived what could've been a frustrating failure, Isaiah was right back navigating the conversation with the lighthearted and optimistic nature he usually carried about, albeit with a little less energy thanks to all the effort it took to move that damn dresser. "And hopefully less of them in the future, or at the very least something lighter next time." He chimed in with another small joke as the bottles clinked together before falling into a thoughtful silence as he gave what she said the time to roll around in his mind. If asked, he wouldn't say there was anything particular grand about how he specifically approached life or that anyone should follow his example exactly. As long as people made an effort to do their best or even had the desire to do a little better most days, he thought that was enough. "I think, or maybe it is a matter of simply hoping, that there's a decent number of people who share a similar line of thinking. Not exact, but they do the best they can in their own ways. It's easy for it to get overshadowed, though." Again, perhaps it was naive to believe, but he felt like the goodness in the world outweighed the bad â the negative just often had a way of standing out more. Or maybe he just hadn't been burned bad enough yet to lose the unyielding faith he had in other people to eventually do the right thing. "Good to know I didn't just aid a supervillain who favors a controversial pizza topping." It was either another joke or admitting that he wouldn't have said anything if she had gone with pineapple on pizza thanks to a compulsive need to please that had been with him for so long that he didn't even know what to blame it on. "Thank you, though, for the pizza and the beer." There was probably no need to thank her since those things were already a thank you for the help, but still.
âfirst of all,â she said, voice lilting with amusement as she tipped her head back against the couch cushion, âif i ever do go full supervillain, itâs gonna be for something way more sinister than pizza.â a beat. âlike unironically quoting the wolf of wall street or starting a lifestyle brand.â her nose crinkled at the thought â a mock grimace â but she was watching him now, more closely than before. not in a way that begged for anything, but like she was taking inventory. like he was a map, and she was trying to figure out how many roads in him actually led somewhere. she took another slow pull from the bottle, letting the silence stretch. not awkward â never with isaiah. just comfortable. grounding. and maybe that was the part that messed with her the most. âyou know what your problem is?â she asked, glancing sideways, her voice dry but threaded with warmth. âyouâre too decent. not performative. not âi go to therapy and talk about my healing journeyâ decent. just... good. itâs weird.â her eyes narrowed, playful. âyou make it hard to keep my walls up, and thatâs honestly a little rude.â lenny didnât thank people easily. not because she wasnât grateful â she just didnât like the vulnerability that came with it. it felt like admitting someone mattered. like inviting them to stay. but still, she nudged her foot against his gently â a silent i see you, in lieu of anything more sentimental. âdonât mention it,â she said after a beat, lifting her beer in mock salute. âyou lugged a solid wood coffin of a dresser through two doorways and a hallway that clearly hates me. youâve earned pizza and then some.â her phone buzzed with the delivery update, and she glanced at it without urgency, setting it back down on the coffee table. âfifteen minutes. maybe less if the universeâs feeling kind.â then, as casually as someone asking about the weather, she added, âyou ever help someone move and just⌠not leave?â it couldâve been a joke. couldâve been her usual misdirection. but the way her voice softened on the not leave part? it hung there, just long enough to mean more than it said. she didnât look at him when she said it â didnât have to.
âugh,â she groaned, tilting her head back against the couch with the kind of dramatic flair that only someone wearing a perfectly applied clay mask could pull off. âwinter wonderland strikes again â the event that launched a thousand bad decisions under twinkle lights.â she let the words hang, but there was no bite behind them. just that well-polished veneer of mischief and insight that made her dangerous at parties and indispensable in crises. her hand floated toward her wine glass â stemless, of course â and she took a sip like it was an exhale. âi have thought about interiors, actually. but fashion already bleeds me dry. if i started designing rooms too, iâd never stop curating things that donât actually fix the existential void.â she gestured vaguely to the space around them â her apartment lit like a high-end perfume ad, full of textures and tonal contrasts that said taste without screaming it. âthis isnât design, itâs self-defense.â then, her gaze slid back to him, sharp as ever. ânow,â she said, voice silk-wrapped steel, âwhat exactly did you do to mess things up with mystery girl? because let me tell you, dear jules, iâve seen a lot of damage control â half of it in couture and the other half involving crying in coat closets â and if youâre saying you caused the wreckage, it mustâve been spectacular.â she leaned in just slightly, folding one leg up beneath her, elbow resting on the back of the couch, mask drying in elegant patches. âwas it emotional unavailability? poor timing? a tragic misuse of festive plaid?â her smile twitched. âdonât hold out on me now. you brought me the drama, i expect details.â and despite the smirk, there was something else in her tone â something grounded. because for all the gloss and precision, serin kaplan knew how to spot the difference between a petty misstep and a real heartbreak. and the way julian said grasping at straws? that sounded closer to the latter. âyou know i donât offer redemption arcs lightly,â she added, voice lowering like a secret, âbut if thereâs something worth saving⌠maybe we plot your comeback.â
her hand didnât move for the glass right away â not because she wasnât going to take it, but because she wasnât done looking at him. her eyes dragged over him again, slower this time, like she was recalibrating. heâd said reset, but the thing about lenny was, she didnât reset. she filed things away. catalogued, archived, weaponized â velvet in the moment, steel when it counted. still, she took the drink. her fingers brushed his, just enough to register, then gone. âmichael,â she repeated, lips wrapping around the name like it was a code she hadnât quite decided whether to crack or toss. âthatâs a little biblical for a man who just admitted to leaving exes with opinions.â she sipped, slow and unbothered, and then set the glass down with a soft clink. âbut hey, far be it from me to judge. iâve been called worse by people who never got close enough to earn it.â the smirk returned, sharper this time. playful, but still precise. âyou sure you want a reset?â she asked, head tilted slightly. âbecause so far, iâm not bored. and thatâs rare in a place full of overpriced cocktails and men who talk like theyâre pitching a linkedin bio.â she shifted again, leaning in just enough that her words didnât have to carry far, her voice dipping low â not a whisper, just a little too intimate for polite conversation. âbesides,â she added, âtrouble looks good on you. you should consider keeping it.â then she leaned back, all faux-casual confidence, fingers circling the rim of her glass, her gaze catching his with that same glint sheâd had from the start â equal parts curiosity and intent. not a challenge, not yet. âso tell me, michael,â she said, tone softening just enough to drag him in, âare you always this charming, or did i catch you on a particularly good night?â because lenny? lenny didnât flirt like a girl with butterflies. she flirted like someone setting the first piece on the board â and she always played to win.
âsome do,â she said coolly, âthe smart ones. the others tend to cry, try to sleep with me, or both â never in the right order.â the shrug that followed was effortless, practiced, like sheâd long since stopped being surprised by either reaction. her eyes narrowed just slightly as she watched him take the hit without folding, no apology for the hair, no overcompensation. it earned him a flicker of approval, subtle but real. âand for the record, confidence without direction is just noise,â she added, voice honey-laced but edged. âbut maybe thatâs your appeal. a little chaos in a denim jacket.â serin shifted her weight, letting the heel of one shoe sink into the gravel just enough to make a point without saying it. âi think you like not answering the question because you think it gives you the upper hand.â her glass tilted toward him as if to say go on, then. âspoiler, it doesnât.â then, her gaze softenedânot in kindness, but curiosity. âso youâre here,â she mused, more to herself now. âyouâre not posturing. youâre not chasing. and youâre not trying to impress me... but you havenât left either.â the corner of her mouth twitched. âeither youâre intrigued, or youâre deeply bored and pretending otherwise.â she stepped close enough now that the air between them warmed. âso,â she purred, like a slow pull of velvet. âif weâre skipping pretense, letâs skip the wine too. what do you want?â
âIt might be the only way I have,â Henry admitted, without any sense of self-deprecation. It was just that he valued his own intelligence highly, and the information heâd gleaned from years of voracious reading was oddly precious to him. He couldnât quite put it into words, but it was certainly rewarding when he received a response like this -- when someone actually seemed interested in what he had to say. He brightened further when it seemed that she also knew who the Duke of Clarence had been. âSome people believe it was a purposeful political statement, but Iâm of the belief that it was more sardonic than symbolic.â He smiled faintly as she spoke. âMaybe he felt that it was better than the typical punishment meted out to traitors,â he said. âBeing drowned in wine, he could have ostensibly at least gotten a few mouthfuls first.â He smile faintly as she tried to figure out what he did for a living, or at least why he knew this sort of information off the top of his head. âDefinitely not in sales,â he said. He was not that sort of people person. âA librarian.â He thought for a moment. âIâm not sure if this is scandalous or just awful, but -- Prince Rudolf of Austria was depressed and riddled with a sexually transmitted disease, not to mention politically irrelevant at nearly 30 years old. He was looking for a way out, but it seems that he did not want to go alone. So he invited a couple of friends out to his hunting lodge, and under the cover of this trip, he secretly asked his girlfriend to join him. She snuck in through his window. By the next day, heâd shot her, composed her body holding a rose in her hands with her hair brushed out over her shoulder, and then shot himself. His suicide was hushed up so that he could be buried in sanctified ground, and she was bundled out of the house in the middle of the night and buried in secret. She was only 17.â
her laugh â low, honeyed, and entirely devoid of shock â rolled out slowly, curling around the edges of his story like smoke from a clove cigarette. âmm. now that,â she said, tilting her chin as if weighing the tragedy in her hand like a rare gem, âis properly scandalous.â a glint of something wicked sparked in her eyes, not unkind, but sharp-edged. âyou didnât disappoint.â she took another sip, savoring it with the kind of elegance that didnât ask for admiration but assumed it anyway. âpoor girl. seventeen, and still old enough to be ruined by a man with more ghosts than backbone.â serin wasnât the kind to feel sorry for dead girls, not exactly, but there was something in the quiet finality of the tale that made her tongue linger just a little longer against her glass. âthey buried her like a secret. history always does that to inconvenient women.â her gaze lifted to his again, steady nowâno longer testing, but measuring. âa librarian,â she repeated, almost as if it amused her. âwhich explains the precision. the quiet kind of menace that comes with knowing how every great empire collapsed. and here you are, armed with facts like knives and hiding them in your sleeves like a magician.â serin smiled then, that rare and slow thing she offered like a signed invitation. âi canât decide if youâre dangerous or just interesting, which, for me, is the same thing either way.â a pause. âyouâll stay for the next glass, wonât you? or are you the type to vanish before the wine turns warm?â