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ASHES UNDER THE CROWN

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The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Synopsis
At St. Darius Academy, power is everything—and Amara Kade has none. Invisible, quiet, and burdened by a past no one knows, Amara survives school by staying out of sight… until one mistake puts her directly in the path of Lucien Voss, the untouchable king of the campus. Cold, calculating, and dangerously charming, Lucien doesn’t just humiliate people—he dismantles them. And for reasons Amara can’t understand, he chooses her as his new obsession.
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Chapter 1 - The Line No One Crosses

There was one unspoken rule at St. Darius Academy: You don't stand against Lucien Voss. 

And Amara Kade knew that. Everyone did, even the smallest insect. Which was why she kept her head down as she walked through the courtyard that morning. Her steps were quiet, measured and deliberate. 

The early sun reflected off the glass windows and the polished stone, casting everything in a clean, untouchable glow.

Students laughed in clusters, their voices smooth with confidence and entitlement. Their blazers crisp along with spotless shoes. They just live life effortless and Amara moved along the edges of it all, unnoticed. Exactly how she wanted it.

She adjusted the strap of her bag, her eyes lowered just enough to avoid attention but not enough to seem suspicious. It was a balance she had mastered. Blend in, disappear and survive.

"Move." The voice was sharp and dismissive.

Amara stepped aside instantly as a group of girls brushed past her. One of them glanced at her, lips curved in a smirk. "Some people really shouldn't be here."

An uproar of soft laughs filled the hall in an instant. But she didn't utter a word. She never did, instead, she kept walking. Because reacting would only make it worse and silence was the perfect armor of protection.

Just then, a sudden loud crash cut through it all, turning heads to its direction. Conversations stopped mid-sentence. The air spontaneously fell silent. Amara looked up before stopping in her tracks.

There, she noticed a tray lay overturned near the café tables. With a plastic cup rolled across the ground, leaking iced coffee in a slow, spreading stain. The boy who had dropped it stood frozen.

He looked young and nervous. Completely out of place in a school like that. And right in front of him, was the reason no one moved. Lucien Voss.

He was perfectly still, staring down at the coffee soaking into his shoe. Silence spread outward like a ripple. No one laughed or whispered because it wasn't funny, it was rather dangerous.

"I—I'm sorry," the boy stammered quickly, his voice shaking. "I didn't see you…I swear, it was an accident" Lucien didn't respond or even look at him.

And somehow, that made it worse. The boy swallowed hard. "I'll clean it. I will, I just—please—" He kept pleading but the silence pressed in, suffocating.

Amara felt it, the imbalance. The boy had apologized immediately and repeatedly but it all went in vain. It had been an accident and everyone could see that yet no one stepped forward.

Yes, no one did because it was him. Lucien Voss, that one guy everyone feared. He didn't need to raise his voice or threaten. His silence alone was enough to break people.

The boy's hands trembled as he dropped to his knees, pulling tissues from his pocket as he tried to wiping the stain from his shoe.

"I'm really sorry," he whispered again and he finally moved. His gaze slowly travelled down at the boy.

"Stop." He ordered. The word was quiet but absolute, freezing the boy in an instant. Amara's chest tightened.

"You're making it worse," Lucien added, his tone calm and detached. "Stand up." 

The boy hesitated, then quickly obeyed, rising to his feet. For a second, hope flickered across his face. Like maybe, that was it or it's finally was over. But no, it wasn't. Lucien took a step forward which made him step back instinctively.

"You think saying sorry fixes things?" Lucien asked softly.

"I…no…I just…"

"Then what was the point of it?"

The boy faltered. "I didn't mean…"

"That's obvious." The words landed sharp. Amara's fingers tightened around her bag. This wasn't necessary or fair. The boy had already apologized. He was already humiliated so why keep going?

"Look at you," Lucien continued, his gaze cold. "You don't even belong here." A murmur stirred through the crowd and the boy's face paled.

"I…I do," he said weakly. "I earned my place." Lucien let out a soft breath, not quite a laugh.

"Did you?" The boy didn't answer because there was no winning there. Amara who watched on all along, felt something twist inside her. Uncomfortable, sharp and wrong.

Just walk away, that wasn't her problem. She knew that and everyone there did too, which was why no one moved or spoke. Because the moment you involved yourself, you've become a part of it.

Amara shifted her weight, one step back, then another. Leave now, her instincts told her but the, the boy's voice cracked. "Please… I said I'm sorry…"

Just like that, something inside her snapped. Not loudly or dramatically but enough to cause a scene. "Stop." The word left her before she could think, stop herself or remember the rule.

The courtyard spontaneously went silent again. But this time, it was different because now, it was centered on her. Amara felt it instantly, the shift in attention. It was too much but too late to back off so, she stepped forward anyway.

Her heart pounded against her ribs, loud enough that, she was sure everyone could hear it.

"He apologized." Her voice wasn't loud but carried weight. "And that was enough."

The boy stared at her, horrified. "What are you doing?" he whispered but Amara didn't answer. She was already looking at Lucien and he was also looking at her.

The weight of it was immediate, heavy and dangerous. "He said it was an accident," she added, forcing the words out despite the way her throat tightened. "There's no reason to keep—"

"You're talking to me." The interruption was soft, controlled and deadly. 

Amara swallowed with a yes. Another mistake, which she knew the moment the word left her mouth. Lucien slightly tilted his head, studying her like she was something unfamiliar.

"Do you usually involve yourself in things that don't concern you?"

Amara hesitated. She knew she should have stopped right there and back down. Or say sorry and walk away. That's what everyone else would do and that's what she would normally do. But not this time.

"This does concern me," she said quietly. A ripple of shock moved through the crowd.

Lucien's gaze sharpened. "How?"

Amara's fingers curled slightly at her sides. "Because it's wrong."

Utter silence swept through the room like a cold breeze. No whispers or movement were heard. Not even the sound of a pin. Just her words hanged in the air like something fragile and dangerous. Lucien stared at her and then smiled. Not kindly or warmly, but like she had just made a very interesting mistake.

"Wrong," he repeated. The word sounded almost foreign in his voice. "Do you think this place cares about what's right?"

"No," Amara said honestly. "But I do." Another mistake, yet a bigger one.

The boy behind her whispered urgently, "Please… just stop…" But she couldn't. Not now, not when she had already crossed the line.

Lucien stepped closer in a slow, measured and intentional pace. And soon, the space between them disappeared. "Look at me." The command was quiet but absolute.

Amara's breath remained caught. Every instinct screamed at her to refuse. To look away or break eye contact but she didn't. She lifted her gaze and met his eyes fully.

That was the moment everything changed. Something flickered there.

"You're new," he said.

"I'm not."

"Then you've been hiding." Amara didn't respond, because he was right. She had been until now. Lucien glanced briefly at the boy behind her. Then back at her.

"If you care so much," he said calmly, "you can take responsibility."

Amara frowned. "For what?"

"For him." Her stomach dropped.

"What do you mean?"

"You clean it," Lucien said simply. The words landed hard and final. The crowd shifted, anticipation building. Eyes watching and waiting. Amara felt it again—that pressure.

That invisible weight pressing down on her. That was it. The moment she refused—things could get worse. If she agreed, she would lose. Her heart pounded.

"This isn't my fault," she said.

"No," Lucien agreed easily. "But you chose to interfere." Her breath caught. "And actions," he added softly, "have consequences."

There it was, the rule of St. Darius. Not fairness, not justice but power.

Amara looked at the coffee on the ground. Then back at the boy who was still shaking and terrified. She intuitively understood. This wasn't about the mess. It was about control. And now, she was part of it.

Amara stood still and the courtyard waited. Lucien Voss was still watching her, as if she was supposed to fold under the weight of his silence like everyone else did. But she didn't move toward the mess. She didn't kneel or even look at it again.

Instead, she looked straight at him. And said, clearly: "I'm not cleaning that."

The words dropped into the courtyard like a stone into still water. No one reacted immediately. It was too sudden, wrong and unheard of.

Lucien's gaze sharpened slightly. A flicker of something unknown crossed his expression. It was brief and almost invisible. Then he tilted his head. "You're refusing?" he asked softly.

Amara didn't flinch. "Yes." A murmur instantly broke behind her. People shifted uneasily. No one refused Lucien, not in public or ever.

The boy who had spilled the drink looked like he might faint. "I'll clean it," he blurted quickly, stepping forward. "It's fine, I can…"

But Amara quickly cut in, slightly lifting a hand. "Stop." Her voice wasn't loud but it cut through him immediately. The boy froze mid-step. She didn't even look back at him when she spoke again.

"You already apologized," she said firmly. "That should have ended it." Silence tightened. Then she turned her full attention back to Lucien.

"And if your authority depends on humiliating someone who already admitted fault," she added calmly, "then it isn't authority. It's insecurity." 

The courtyard stilled completely. Even the air felt different. Lucien didn't speak immediately; he just looked at her. Like he was trying to understand what kind of mistake she was.

Then, a slow smile formed on his lips. Not warm, but amused, curious and dangerous. "You think I do this for authority?" he asked. Amara didn't hesitate with a yes.

That single word landed harder than anything before it. A few students actually stepped back because no one spoke to him like that. Not even teachers.

Lucien took a step forward. The space between them tightened instantly.

"Do you think you are above the rule?" he said quietly.

"I'm not." He paused, his eyes darkened slightly.

"Then you've come well prepared after hiding for all those years…. I see." He nodded but Amara kept to his gaze without blinking.

"I wasn't hiding," she said. "I just didn't see anything worth reacting to."

A few students gasped under their breath. And one whispered, "She's insane…"

Lucien's expression didn't change outwardly. But something shifted in his eyes. His interest sharpened and his focus deepened. The kind that locks onto a target.

"You shouldn't talk like that here," he said softly.

Amara tilted her head slightly. "Or what?"

That question landed like a challenge thrown directly at his face. Lucien didn't answer immediately. Instead, he studied her for a long moment and then said quietly:

"Or you'll learn why no one else does." A warning, not loud or theatrical but real.

Amara nodded once. "I guess I'll learn then."

Silence shattered, but this time, it wasn't shock but rather, anticipation. Because everyone understood now: that it wasn't a mistake but rather, a collision.

Lucien Voss stared at her for a long moment longer than necessary. Then, very softly, he smiled. It wasn't amusement but interest, pure and focused. Like she had just become something worth watching. Something worth breaking.

"Good," he said and then turned away. But before he left, he added without looking back: "I was getting bored anyway."

And that was it. Because Amara didn't bow, apologize or submit. And in St. Darius Academy, that made her something new. Not a victim or a nobody, but a target.