Elara’s POV
“Red scrolls for imperial affairs. Blue for military councils. Green for personal ti.”
Claire laid each one across the oak table with the precision of a jeweler setting stones. Her reading glasses caught the lamplight as she tapped the red scroll twice.
“Never mix them. His Majesty’s schedule is color-coded for a reason. One misplaced docunt in the wrong category, and you’ll have a general receiving love poetry instead of troop movents.”
I bit back a nervous laugh. “Has that actually happened?”
“Once.” Claire’s eyes twinkled behind her lenses. “The general was not amused. His wife, however, was delighted.”
I pulled my notebook closer and scribbled faster. Since my shift began, I’d been drowning in information. Filing protocols. Seal hierarchies. Which ink to use for which correspondence — apparently there were seven types, and using the wrong one was considered a minor act of treason.
Claire was patient. Endlessly, impossibly patient. She walked through every system with the calm authority of soone who had managed the chaos of this palace for four decades. Her voice never rushed. Her hands were steady as she demonstrated how to cross-reference the territorial ledgers with the council’s rotating schedule.
“The Emperor’s movents dictate everything,” she said, adjusting her glasses. “He plans ahead — always. By the ti you receive an order, he’s already anticipated three possible outcos and prepared for all of them.”
“That sounds exhausting.”
“For him or for us?”
“Both.”
Claire smiled — that quiet, knowing smile I was beginning to recognize. “You’re not wrong, dear.”
We spent the next stretch of ti reviewing the correspondence I’d organized yesterday. Claire corrected two minor filing errors with the gentleness of a mother fixing a child’s crooked collar. No judgnt. Just adjustnt.
“You have good instincts,” she said, sliding a stack of blue scrolls into their proper case. “Better than good, actually. That border tax discrepancy you flagged — I’ve been watching those numbers for months and missed it.”
Heat crept up my neck. “I just noticed the pattern didn’t match.”
“Exactly. You noticed.” She gave a long, steady look over the rims of her glasses. “That’s rarer than you think in this palace.”
I opened my mouth to respond when the transmission stone on Claire’s desk flared to life.
Not the soft amber of Claire’s signature. This was deep gold. Almost molten. The stone vibrated against the wood with a low hum that I felt in my sternum.
Claire was already halfway across the room, headed toward the corridor to summon a courier for the evening dispatch.
The stone pulsed again. Insistent.
I stared at it. Then at the empty doorway.
Last ti I’d answered this stone, I’d nearly choked on my own tongue. The Emperor’s voice had ripped through like a winter gale, and I’d spent the rest of the evening convinced I’d be fired before my second day began.
A third pulse. The gold light intensified.
I reached for it.
“This is the Imperial Archive,” I said, steadier than yesterday. Marginally. “Claire is currently unavailable. This is Elara Frostfang, the new —”
“I know who you are, Miss Frostfang.”
His voice poured through the stone like dark honey over a blade. Smooth. Dangerous. Faintly amused, the way a predator is amused by sothing small and interesting crossing its path.
My hand tightened around the stone.
“I trust Claire has been educating you on the intricacies of my schedule,” he continued. The words were perfectly asured. Each one placed with deliberate weight.
“Yes, Majesty Nightfire. We’ve been reviewing the color-coded —”
“Good. Then you’ll understand the urgency of what I’m about to say.” A pause. Just long enough to make my pulse stutter. “I’m returning tomorrow.”
I blinked. “Tomorrow? Claire ntioned the weekend —”
“Plans change, Miss Frostfang. Particularly when the border lords decide to be reasonable for once in their miserable lives.” There was a razor edge beneath the casual words. “I’ll arrive by evening. And I want a dinner prepared for tomorrow night. Fifteen mbers of the Privy Council. Their spouses. Full formal service.”
The quill slipped from my fingers and clattered against the table.
Fifteen mbers. Their spouses. By tomorrow night.
“Your Majesty,” I said, scrambling to retrieve the quill while simultaneously flipping my notebook to a blank page, “that’s — with respect, that’s a significant number of guests on extrely short notice. The wine pairings alone would require —”
“Wine pairings, dietary restrictions, seating arrangents, Duke Harrison’s severe seafood allergy, and Lady Chen’s strict plant-based diet.” His voice didn’t waver. Didn’t slow. “I expect perfection, Miss Frostfang. Not excuses.”
My quill scratched frantically across the page. Harrison. Chen. Dietary. Seating. Wine.
“Your Majesty.” The words left my mouth before I could swallow them. “My first day is barely over. This is — this is not a reasonable request.”
Silence.
The kind of silence that has teeth.
“Miss Frostfang.” His tone dropped to sothing low and lethal. The faint amusent was gone. “An Alpha does not make unreasonable requests. An Alpha gives commands. And those commands are followed.”
My jaw clenched. Sothing hot and reckless flared in my chest.
“With respect, Your Majesty, commanding a banquet into existence overnight doesn’t change the number of hours before dawn.”
Another silence. Longer. I could feel the weight of it pressing against my ribs.
“Your predecessor’s ink bottles are still full, Miss Frostfang.” His voice was silk wrapped around steel. “She never managed to use them. I wonder — will you?”
The stone went dark.
I stared at it, my heart slamming against my ribs so hard I could hear it. My hands were trembling. The notebook page was a ss of frantic shorthand and ink blots.
He’d cut the connection.
He’d just — thrown an impossible task at my feet and walked away.
“That arrogant, insufferable —”
“I take it Kaelan called?”
I spun around. Claire stood in the doorway, a stack of courier receipts in her hands, one eyebrow lifted with perfect calm.
“He wants a dinner,” I blurted. “Tomorrow night. Fifteen Privy Council mbers. Spouses. Wine pairings. Dietary restrictions. Seating charts that apparently require a degree in political warfare. And he called it a command, not a request, as if food and logistics bend to royal authority.”
I was breathing hard. My face was flushed. I could feel it.
Claire set down the receipts. Removed her glasses. Cleaned them on her sleeve with deliberate slowness.
Then she laughed.
Not a polite, restrained court laugh. A real one. Warm and surprised and utterly genuine, crinkling the corners of her eyes.
“Oh, my dear,” she said, sliding her glasses back on. “Do you know — the last three archivists had resigned by this point.”
I stared at her. “What?”
“The first one cried. The second one wrote a formal letter of protest and left it on the desk. The third simply never ca back.” Claire’s smile held sothing deeper now. Sothing almost tender. “He does this. Every ti.”
“Does what? Tortures people for sport?”
“Tests them.” She moved to the table and began straightening my scattered notes with practiced hands. “Kaelan pushes people to the breaking point because he needs to see what they’re made of. He’s been hurt before — badly. The people closest to him have betrayed him in ways that...” She paused, choosing her words carefully. “He doesn’t trust easily. So he tests. He provokes. He watches to see who crumbles, who sches, and who fights back.”
The heat in my chest shifted. Not gone, but complicated now.
“I yelled at the Emperor,” I said flatly.
“You pushed back against an unreasonable demand with honesty and fire.” Claire t my eyes. “That, Elara, is exactly what he needs. Even if he doesn’t know it yet.”
I sank into my chair. “He’s going to dismiss .”
“He won’t.” Claire pulled a thick leather ledger from the shelf behind her and opened it to a tabbed section. “Because we are going to deliver that dinner. And it is going to be flawless.”
She spread the ledger across the table. Inside — nas, dietary notes, alliance charts, wine preferences. Years of ticulous records in Claire’s elegant hand.
“Duke Harrison — severe shellfish allergy. Even trace amounts. Lady Chen follows a strict plant-based diet for religious reasons.”
I pulled the ledger closer, scanning the dense annotations. My panic was still there, curled tight in my stomach. But sothing else was rising through it.
Focus. Purpose. The fierce, stubborn refusal to be the fourth person who walked away from this desk.
“Duke Harrison,” I said, flipping pages. “We’ll need a thoroughly scrubbed kitchen for the seafood allergy.”
Claire smiled, tapping the open ledger. “Let’s begin.”
I picked up my quill, dipping it fresh into the inkwell, and turned to a blank page.
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