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Bound by the Mark of Lies (BL)-Chapter 375 - 369: The last Claymore heir
Chapter 375: Chapter 369: The last Claymore heir
The bedroom was too quiet to be a battlefield, but that’s what it was.
Maximilian Claymore sat on the edge of the mattress, one leg drawn up, fingers curled around a letter written on royal paper. The machines beside the bed hummed faintly, tubes gently rising and falling in time with a body that no longer cared to wake. The air was warm, the curtains drawn back just slightly to let in the golden hour.
The man in the bed hadn’t moved in months.
George Claymore. Lord of the House. Architect of a thousand careful cruelties. Father to Elliot. Uncle to Max.
He looked smaller now. Burned from the inside out, ether channels scorched clean, spine twisted just enough that Max had once thought, briefly, almost cruelly, that it suited him.
Max’s eyes dropped again to the letter in his lap. He had read it once already. Then again. And again.
Daniel Rhine’s handwriting never wavered.
Elliot Claymore is dead.
Max pressed a thumb to the fold of the parchment. A clean message. A tidy summary. A signature that weighed more than a sword. He had read it aloud when it arrived. The nurse had offered to stay.
He had asked her to leave.
Now, the machines continued their futile rhythm, soft, clicking whispers that pretended at hope.
And George? George would never read this letter. But he’d earned it.
"Your son beat you to the grave," Max said finally, voice low and even. "You said once he’d be the end of our line. Maybe you were right."
He glanced at the monitors. Still steady. Still clinging. But no ether moved. No pulse of life beneath the skin. Just the illusion of breath, the final arrogance of science.
Max rose slowly, the way a man might get up from a pew after the last prayer had already been said.
"You know... He took his wife with him. Petty even in death, he knew that Daniel is fond of his niece and now princess Anya is dead too.
Max stood at the foot of the bed, the letter still in his hand, though his grip had loosened. The edges curled slightly, damp from the sweat of his palm or maybe from the room itself, sickrooms always ran warm, as if heat could fake healing.
He stared down at the body that once commanded entire councils with a single raised brow, now sunken, paper-thin, swallowed by sterile linens and the quiet tyranny of machines. George Claymore, who had once mapped futures with ink and blood, couldn’t even twitch a finger to stop the present from unfolding.
"You always thought Elliot would ruin us," Max continued, his voice sharp now, stripped of gentleness. "But you never imagined he’d do it on purpose."
The thought should’ve chilled him. It didn’t. It landed like prophecy.
"He made it loud," Max added, mouth curling in a humorless smile. "Public. Poisoned the girl, slit his own wrists. "
He let that sit. The machines beeped. Somewhere in the corridor, a cart rolled past. Life, still moving.
Max took one slow breath and folded the letter neatly, tucking it into the pocket of his coat.
"You raised him to think love was a currency and pain a receipt. I wonder if you’re proud."
His voice was quiet now, low and dry like the end of a sermon.
"It is now your turn to leave as well."
He stepped closer, resting a hand on the bed’s rail as if claiming the last word in a house built on silences.
"You outlived your usefulness the moment you named me heir. The empire you bartered pieces of our souls for? It’s already shifting. Damian doesn’t need you. And I—" Max’s lips twitched, almost a smile. "I only came to see if you’d twitch when you heard the cost."
The monitors didn’t so much as blip.
"I’ll tell the nurse you stopped responding," he said, brushing imaginary dust from his sleeve. "I think you’ve kept him waiting long enough."
He moved to the panel beside the bed. It took a fingerprint and a confirmation code, his. As the last Claymore standing. The interface blinked once in silent understanding, then dimmed.
One by one, the machines quieted.
The final line came to an end abruptly. No frantic beeping. No rush of staff. Just a soft exhale from the ventilator as it powered down, like even it had been tired of pretending.
Max stood there for a moment, not out of grief, but out of obligation, an old reflex, like watching a stage curtain fall on a performance that ran too long.
"I’ll tell them it was peaceful," he said at last. "You liked peace, didn’t you? When it meant obedience. When it meant no one raised their voice."
He glanced down, eyes unreadable. The body looked even smaller now. Shriveled. Ordinary. No more ether-slick shadows clinging to the bones. No legacy in those hands, no schemes stitched into the skin. Just a man, burned hollow, finally without power.
Max turned away.
He walked to the door, pausing just long enough to set the room’s comm system to private, a final courtesy for a man who never granted one. Then he stepped into the corridor, pulling the door closed behind him with a soft click.
Down the hall, Adam was waiting, leaning against the wall, a coffee in one hand, his other tucked into the front pocket of a long coat Max had bought him out of spite once and then come to like far too much.
He looked devastatingly composed.
Hair like woven sunlight fell over one shoulder in a loose twist, half-tamed but never confined. The collar of his coat was turned up, framing his face in shadows and bone, and the gold at his throat caught the light as he turned his head.
Max paused in the doorway.
Adam’s gaze met his, unflinching. Patient in that way that always unsettled people who didn’t know him. But Max did. Max knew that under the calm was something ancient and feral, bound in elegance and silks and long, watchful silences.
Adam didn’t ask anything when he saw him.
"It’s done," Max said.
Adam nodded once. "Good."
They didn’t look back.
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