Title: The Velvet Shadow

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8

London in 1888 was a city of two faces: the glittering diamonds of the West End and the suffocating soot of the East. I lived in the latter, a girl of the gutters who spent her days scrubbing the floors of a boarding house and her nights dreaming of a world where the air didn't taste of sulfur.

Then I met Julian.

He was a man of contradictions—a disgraced son of a Duke who had traded his title for a small, dusty bookstore in a forgotten alley. He didn't look at me as a servant or a curiosity; he looked at me as if I were a poem he had been trying to translate his entire life.

In the sanctuary of his bookstore, surrounded by the scent of old leather and vanilla, we created a world of our own. We read Keats and Shelley, debated the merits of the Pre-Raphaelites, and whispered about a future where a girl from the slums could love a man from the manor.

But the world outside the bookstore was not a poem.

My sister, Clara, had been the one to provide the stability our family needed. She had married a wealthy merchant, a man who treated her as a piece of fine furniture. Every letter she sent me was a masterpiece of forced happiness, but between the lines, I could hear the screaming.

Clara's marriage was the price of my education. Every book Julian gave me, every hour I spent in the warmth of the shop, was paid for by Clara's silent endurance in a house of cold marble.

Julian and I planned to flee to France, to a place where our names didn't matter. We had the tickets, the money, and a promise of a small cottage by the sea. But on the eve of our departure, Clara came to me.

She didn't ask me to stay. She didn't beg me to save her. She simply stood in the doorway, her face a mask of perfect, aristocratic composure, and told me that she had finally found a way to be happy.

"Go, Alice," she whispered. "Go and be the woman I couldn't be. Carry my silence with you, and make it a song."

As the train pulled away from the station, I looked back at the smog-choked skyline of London. I realized that my love for Julian was a luxury bought with my sister's life. We were free, but we were carrying a ghost between us, a velvet shadow that would follow us to the ends of the earth.

--- OTMES-V2-CODE: [V-06]-[T6-05]-[M4:9,M9:8,N1:0.6,K1:0.8,I:0.6,R:0.5,TI:31.4]


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