Shadow Unit Scandal: The Commander's Omega-Chapter 182: Claymore manor

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Chapter 182: Chapter 182: Claymore manor

Max tried his best to compose himself until the car rolled through the gates of Claymore Manor.

Composure was something that had been practiced. A mask he’d learned to wear long before the rebellion, before ether trials, imperial bloodlines, and the kind of family history that left unseen bruises. By the time the gravel crunched under the tires and the estate’s wards tasted his signature and let him pass, he had already rebuilt himself into the version of Maximilian Thornwell that George Claymore preferred.

The loyal nephew.

The young man who listened.

He let his shoulders soften into something almost deferential. He allowed his expression to settle into polite calm. He rehearsed, silently, the cadence of ’yes, uncle,’ and ’of course,’ and ’I understand.’

He even let his hands stay loose.

That one was harder, because Max didn’t come here because he wanted to.

He came here because George still held shackles.

Two of them.

The first shackle had always been his mother.

Not as a hostage in the crude, dramatic sense - George was too refined for that. But as a presence Max couldn’t stop worrying about, a life that could be made smaller or uglier through a dozen quiet choices: a ruined reputation, a withheld medical access, a debt called in, or an ’accident’ that would never be proven as anything but misfortune.

The second shackle was worse because it was a secret, and secrets were the only currency that never lost value.

Max was Hadeon Lyon’s bastard.

One of them. Unofficial, inconvenient, and dangerous in ways unrelated to titles but entirely related to blood.

Hadeon Lyon was the type of man who collected people like trophies: charming, brilliant, and bored. Max’s mother had been young enough to think the attention meant something, and innocent enough to mistake charm for devotion.

Then Hadeon had gotten bored.

He’d moved on, and she’d been left to salvage what she could out of the ruin.

She had married quietly, away from the capital and away from imperial eyes. A man with a respectable name and a good heart, who offered safety rather than fireworks. He gave Max a surname that wasn’t Lyon and wasn’t Claymore.

Thornwell.

It was the only reason Max could exist without being dragged under the palace’s microscope.

It was also the reason George Claymore still enjoyed the feeling of holding Max by the throat.

Because George knew.

Max wasn’t sure how he knew; George collected secrets the same way other men collected art: with patience and taste, but he knew. And he smiled about it sometimes, when he wanted Max to remember that loyalty was not optional.

The car stopped beneath the manor’s sweeping portico.

The house was exactly what George wanted it to be: old wealth, heavy stone, tall windows, and ironwork that looked like it had survived three rebellions and expected to survive three more. The wards were embedded in the architecture like scars that had been polished into pride. Everything smelled like history and control.

A servant opened the door before Max could reach for the handle.

Max stepped out into the cold air and smiled as if he belonged here.

As if he weren’t calculating exits by instinct.

As if he didn’t already hate what was waiting inside.

He was ushered through the entry hall with its high ceilings and family portraits that watched like judges. The Claymore line - generations of alphas and betas staring down with painted arrogance. George’s face wasn’t among them yet. George was still alive, and he was the type of man who insisted on selecting his own frame.

Max’s footsteps remained measured. His breathing stayed even.

He let the staff announce him.

He let the doors open.

And there George Claymore sat, exactly as he had always sat - at ease in his own empire, as if the rebellion had been a storm that passed around rather than through him.

George looked up from the tea tray with a smile that was all warmth on the surface and all calculation underneath.

"Maximilian," he said, like the name was a reward. "Come."

Max bowed his head slightly, the polite angle of a nephew raised correctly.

"Uncle," he replied.

George’s eyes lingered on him for a beat too long, as if checking for cracks.

"You came quickly," George observed.

"I always come when you call," Max said smoothly, and if the words tasted like poison, his face didn’t show it.

George’s smile widened, pleased. He gestured to the chair opposite him. "Sit."

Max sat.

He kept his hands relaxed on his knees. He kept his posture open. He kept his expression attentive.

Inside, he kept his mind sharp.

Because George wasn’t calling him here for nostalgia.

George didn’t do nostalgia.

He did leverage.

"I’ve heard," George said casually, lifting his teacup, "that you’ve been very busy."

Max inclined his head. "The Empire requires it."

"The Empire," George echoed, amused. "Or Damian."

"Damian is the Emperor," Max said simply. "They’re the same thing."

George sighed like Max had disappointed him in a small, manageable way. "Such loyalty."

Max smiled faintly. "Such realism."

George’s green eyes narrowed. Then he leaned back, studying Max with that predator’s calm that never looked like violence until it was already done.

"You know," George said, stirring his tea slowly, "I never did like Elliot."

Max kept his face neutral.

Elliot Claymore, George’s son in name, and his disappointment in practice. A boy raised in entitlement and spite, convinced nobility was a personality trait.

"He lacks discipline," George continued. "He lacks tact. He lacks vision."

Max nodded once, as if agreeing was harmless.

George’s gaze sharpened. "You, however..."

Max felt the shift in the room. The beginning of the familiar speech. The part where George pretended affection while tightening the chain.

"You were always different," George said. "Always intelligent."

Max offered the correct response. "I learned from you."

George smiled, satisfied.

Max had kept that mask for years and was intending to keep it just a few more months until his own company would be independent and his mother safe.

"How about your new friend, Adam?" George asked and Max felt only one feeling about it.

Rage.