Chapter 17 - Sunrise at the Grand Estate

The dim glow of the candlelight flickered across the opulent chamber, casting long shadows that danced upon the walls adorned with intricate tapestries. The duke, the father, a figure shrouded in the solemnity of his vigil, sat by the cradle where his son lay in a restless slumber. Each breath was a whisper of life that hung tenuously in the air—a delicate thread he was afraid to fray with his touch.

"Adrian," he whispered, the name a tender invocation. It was a name drenched in legacy, a bridge spanning back to a mother's love and further still to the grandmother whose memory lingered like a comforting scent on an old shawl. His voice was a gentle murmur, carrying stories and dreams as it broke the heavy silence.

However, with it also came the realization that certain possibilities would never come to fruition. He would never have the chance to form a relationship with his mother or meet his grandparents. They were taken away from him far too soon.

Bitterness rose in the duke's heart as he remembered all that he had lost. First, his uncle took his parents from him, and now his beloved woman was gone as soon as his son arrived. He couldn't help but hate himself for thinking this way, but the pain was too raw to ignore.

The child's chest rose and fell, each breath punctuated by the softest of sighs. Adrian was thin and slept a lot most probably due to the lack of nutrients. The father's gaze was unwavering and sorrowful, drinking in the sight of his son—his heart filling and breaking in the same fragile moment. Time seemed suspended, the room isolated from the world outside, a sanctuary of sorrowful beauty framed by the elegant drapery and rich mahogany furniture that whispered of bygone grandeur.

A tremor ran through him—a battle within, between the fear of causing harm and the innate yearning to comfort his flesh and blood. Memories of his beloved wife cascaded through his mind, her laughter now a haunting melody that underscored his solitude.Her empathy and presence, the very things that had held him together, were now causing him to feel desperate.

She had been the embodiment of grace, her spirit now enshrined in the name she had chosen for their son. Every time he called his name, he would be painfully reminded of her and the family he now lacked.

Slowly, ever so slowly, his hand reached out—a hesitant journey over mere inches that felt like traversing vast, uncertain landscapes. His fingers, roughened by the trials of life, hovered momentarily before they came to rest upon the child's fevered brow. The contact was like a sacred rite, a father's blessing bestowed upon his ailing offspring. 

"Adrian," he said again, each syllable laden with hope and despair. The name was her wish, a whisper from the lips of the woman who had slipped from this world too soon, leaving behind a legacy in the eyes of the child she would never hold. With the courage born of love and loss, he allowed himself to feel the warmth of his son's skin beneath his touch, a poignant connection that transcended the boundaries of life and death. 

In that quiet nursery, surrounded by the trappings of a genteel age, a father named his son, intertwining their destinies with a word that held the weight of the past and the promise of the future. Adrian, a name that would carry forth the echoes of a loving mother and grandmother, a beacon of hope amidst the shadows of grief.

In the opulent chamber where silken drapes billowed like sails against the soft gusts from the open window, the Duke of Wartenburg stood, his posture rigid with concealed turmoil. The room was bathed in the golden hue of afternoon light, casting a luminous aura over the delicate furnishings that spoke of a bygone era of grace and grandeur.

The duke rose from his seat and made his way to the master suite, leaving his son in the care of the servants. He stopped before a painting of his late wife, one of many adorning his room. He had ordered for all her belongings to be brought here, as if surrounding himself with her things could bring her back to life. Her bronze skin and honey-colored eyes gazed back at him, seemingly alive and just out of reach. His own stern expression softened briefly before returning to its usual coldness. As the Duke of Wartenburg, he couldn't afford any signs of weakness. His responsibilities were to his son and his household, which he carried out with a reserved demeanor and a heart as unfeeling as the hard cold floor beneath him.

His mind churned with thoughts of responsibility, of all that must be done to ensure Adrian's safety and well-being in this harsh and unforgiving world. A sigh escaped his lips a quiet, desperate sound that echoed in the silence. They had just won a war, a significant one for his son for their kind, the People of Naria.

The nursemaid, her cheeks flushed from the haste of her duties, hovered over the cradle where little Adrian lay. Yet, despite her care and ceaseless watchfulness, the boy's discomfort was palpable; his face, though angelic, was thin and he looked sickly.

"Shh, little master," she soothed, her voice a lilting balm amidst the backdrop of his piteous cries. "You'll get used to it eventually." She attempted to give him the milk concoction prescribed by the doctor who checked on both him and the duke every day.

But Adrian's wails worsened with each attempt to nourish him with the goat milk, a testament to his mother's absence and the fragility of his constitution. The servants rushed in and out of the nursery, their movements a silent ballet choreographed by concern, exchanging full bottles for the scarcely touched ones, their faces etched with worry.

"Dr. Harrington must arrive soon," Ulrich the butler murmured to himself, his voice barely a whisper amid the understated opulence of the chamber. His eyes, normally full of authority and command, now betrayed a desperation he could not voice aloud. 

With each passing hour, the urgency clawed tighter at everyone's soul. But there was no sight of the duke. The thought of an existence devoid of the little master's presence—a future as barren as the silence that now filled the spaces where the former duchess's happiness once danced—was a torment too grievous to bear.

"Please," he implored in silent prayer, his plea directed to the unseen forces that governed life and death, "they need to come quickly."

Outside, the manicured grounds of the estate lay serene, untouched by the tempest brewing within everyone's heart. The world continued its inexorable march, oblivious to the struggle for life that unfolded within the ornate walls of Wartenburg's hall.