The Gaze of Harcourt
The study’s dark oak panels carried the lingering scent of pipe tobacco and old leather-bound volumes—a perfume of authority that seemed to cling to the very air. Magistrate and landowner Mr. Harcourt stood as immovable as the carved woodwork, his gloved hand raised in finality, cane tapping once against the carpet like the gavel of a judge. Beside him, the young man Daniel shifted uneasily, his threadbare jacket hanging loose from narrow shoulders, collar undone, eyes darting between the floor and the raised hand. “You will settle your debt under my roof,” Harcourt declared, his voice rolling like distant thunder, though laced with a quieter curiosity that went beyond mere duty. Daniel swallowed, lips parting, heart fluttering—was it relief or dread? He had braced for prison or the lash, not servitude under a man whose judgment seemed to extend far past the letter of the law. Harcourt’s gaze lingered too long on the hollow of Daniel’s throat, the sharp line of his jaw, the tension in ...