The corridor was empty when Aiden left Leonidus behind.
His footsteps echoed too loudly in the hush, each one a reminder that the palace slept uneasily tonight. Torchlight flickered across ancient tapestries—dragons coiled around emperors long dead, their eyes seeming to follow him as he passed.
For the first ti in weeks, the adrenaline ebbed.
What remained was sothing quieter. Heavier.
Regret.
Not for the duke. Not for the demon burned to ash. Not even for the empire trembling in the aftermath.
For Leonidus.
Aiden paused at a narrow window overlooking the inner courtyard. Frost silvered the stone. Below, a single lantern burned beside the stables, tended by a boy too young to understand what had changed tonight.
Leonidus had been... simple. Predictable. A man who believed alliances were built on mutual benefit and kept promises because breaking them was inefficient. He had offered Aiden position, protection, a daughter’s hand—thinking those things could bind a force he never truly saw.
Aiden had liked him for that simplicity. Liked that Leonidus tried, in his clumsy way, to keep peace. To make his wife content. To give his children structure. To navigate the court without drowning in its venom.
The world never rewarded such n.
It punished them.
Aiden’s reflection stared back from the dark glass—sharp features, eyes too old for the face they inhabited. He thought of Sabrina’s quiet relief. Of Luna’s shaken silence. Of Catherine holding Flora as if the girl were the last pure thing in a fracturing world.
Won who had been starved of attention, of passion, of soone who saw them.
And n like Leonidus—decent, flawed, limited—paid the price for it.
A bitter smile touched Aiden’s mouth.
The world hates those who make others happy... especially won.
He turned from the window and continued walking. Regret was a luxury. The board was already moving.
Dawn had not yet broken when the letter arrived.
It ca not by rider, not by courier, but by the hand of a crimson-robed Cardinal-Archivist whose face was pale with awe. The man moved through the Dragon Palace as though the floors might burn his feet, clutching a slender ivory case sealed with gold and imperial crimson wax.
The seal alone silenced every servant who saw it.
A double-headed dragon entwined with the radiant sun of the Church—marks that had not appeared together in living mory.
The letter was addressed not to Aiden.
Not to the Hidden Knight.
Not to the Blade of the Light.
It was addressed to Lucifer, Prophet and Supre pope of the Eternal Light.
The Cardinal knelt in the antechamber, case extended in trembling hands.
Aiden accepted it without a word.
The mont the door closed behind the departing churchman, he broke the seal.
The parchnt within was heavy, scented faintly with winter roses—the Empress’s personal mark. The handwriting was Elizabeth’s own: elegant, precise, unhurried even under pressure.
..To His Holiness Lucifer, Voice of the Light, Shepherd of the Faithful,’
The empire stands at a precipice. The faithful look to heaven for guidance. I would speak with the one who speaks for heaven.
Co to the Crystal Throne at the hour of your choosing. No escort. No ceremony. Only truth between crown and faith...
Elizabeth Regina
No request. No plea.
A summons wrapped in courtesy.
Aiden read it twice. Then a third ti.
The timing was too perfect. He had returned to the capital less than a day ago. Word of rlin’s fall would still be spreading. Yet the Empress already knew enough to reach directly for the Prophet.
Soone inside the Church had spoken quickly.
Or Elizabeth had eyes deeper than even he suspected.
Either way, the board had shifted again.
He burned the letter in a brazier, watching the imperial crimson wax lt into blood-like droplets.
Then he began to prepare.
The transformation took less than an hour.
In a secluded chamber lit only by candlelight, Aiden shed the last traces of the mortal knight.
Hair once pale white was dyed to a deep, unrelenting black—severed at the shoulders and bound simply. Colored lenses were placed, revealing eyes to their deep blue: calm, fathomless, ancient.
Robes of the Prophet were brought from a locked chest—white silk threaded with subtle gold, falling in clean lines that suggested restraint rather than opulence. No crown. No scepter. Only a narrow circlet of plain electrum resting lightly on his brow.
When he stepped into the mirror, Lucifer looked back.
Not the hidden blade.
Not the devourer of demons.
The Voice the world now listened to.
He left the Dragon Palace before sunrise, alone, cloaked in plain gray over the sacred robes. The streets were still dark, but word traveled ahead of him like wind before a storm.
By the ti he reached the High Cathedral, the bells were already tolling a soft, solemn welco.
Priests lined the cloisters in silence.
Incense rose in pale columns.
Every head bowed as he passed.
The air itself seed heavier, charged with the weight of expectation.
Lucifer had returned.
In the Prophet’s private solar—a chamber of white stone and high arched windows—two won waited.
Saintess Calipso stood near the hearth, arms folded, sea-green eyes sharp with restrained impatience. Her silver hair was bound in a severe braid, the mark of her oceanic order glinting at her throat.
Saintess Bela leaned against a pillar opposite, fla-red hair loose over scarlet robes, golden eyes watchful and cool. The ruby of her desert order caught the firelight like a warning.
The mont Lucifer entered, tension crackled between them like static before lightning.
He closed the door softly.
"Calipso. Bela."
Both inclined their heads—precise, respectful, but not quite synchronized.
"You summoned us together," Calipso said, voice smooth as deep water. "Unusual."
Bela’s tone carried the dry heat of dunes. "One might almost think you wished us to share the sa air."
Lucifer removed his cloak, folding it over a chair. "The empire requires unity. So do its saints."
The two won exchanged a glance—brief, loaded.
Calipso spoke first. "There is no disunity in faith."
Bela continued seamlessly. "Only in priority."
They spoke the next words at the sa mont:
"I was chosen first."
Silence fell, thick and sudden.
Calipso’s cheeks colored faintly. Bela’s lips pressed into a thin line.
Lucifer regarded them for a long mont, expression unreadable. Then the corner of his mouth lifted—just enough.
"There is no first or second in faith," he said quietly. "Only those who serve. And those who do not. And you know what you need to serve...only ."
The gentle rebuke landed perfectly.
Calipso lowered her eyes. Bela exhaled through her nose, tension easing fractionally.
But the rivalry remained, humming beneath the surface like a plucked string.
Lucifer crossed to the window, looking out over the awakening city. "You have both done well in my absence. The Church stands stronger because of you. But strength without harmony fractures under strain."
He turned back to them.
"I know you missed more than ceremony."
Calipso’s voice was softer now. "The faithful need their shepherd."
Bela added, almost reluctantly, "And the shepherd’s voice steadies the storm."
Lucifer nodded. "You will have my ti. My care. My reassurance. But later. First cos duty."
The promise was simple. It was enough.
Their shoulders relaxed in unison.
Then Calipso’s expression grew serious.
"There is more," she said. "The empire teeters."
Bela continued, "Rumors of the Emperor’s passing grow louder each day. No official word. No mourning. Only silence from the Crystal Throne."
Calipso: "Nobles hoard grain. Armies drill without orders. Alliances made in blood are questioned in whispers."
Bela: "The Empress holds the center alone. She is strong—but even mountains crack under endless siege."
Calipso t his eyes directly. "I fear she may act rashly. Or break entirely."
Lucifer listened without interruption.
When they finished, he smiled.
Not the cruel smile of the hidden blade.
Not the predatory curve of the devourer.
A calm, certain expression that seed to steady the very air.
"Then I will give her a solution she cannot refuse."
The words were soft.
Their implication was chilling.
Calipso tilted her head. "A solution?"
"Legitimacy," Lucifer said. "Divine confirmation. A narrative stronger than armies. Faith that crowns her authority anew."
Bela’s golden eyes narrowed. "You would anoint her?"
"I would give the empire what it needs most," he replied. "A story it can believe in. One that places the Empress at the center of heaven’s design."
Calipso exhaled slowly. "That is... dangerous generosity."
"Dangerous tis require dangerous gifts."
He moved to an ornate desk, drawing out a fresh sheet of parchnt. Ink and quill appeared as if summoned.
"I will go to her. Not as knight or counselor. As Prophet. As the Voice the world now listens to."
Bela watched him with sothing close to awe. "She will not be eting an ally."
"No," Lucifer agreed. "She will be eting a new axis of power."
The stakes settled over the room like snowfall—silent, inevitable, transformative.
Hours later, the cathedral’s great rose window cast jeweled light across the nave.
Lucifer stood before it, robes catching ruby and sapphire glow.
Behind him, Calipso and Bela waited in silence—rivals, guardians, anchors.
Below, the capital stirred fully to life. Carriages clattered over cobblestones. Bells tolled the hour. Sowhere in the imperial palace, the Empress prepared for a eting that would redefine everything.
Lucifer’s reflection hovered in the colored glass—black hair, blue eyes, circlet gleaming.
He thought:
An empire ruled by fear will collapse.
One ruled by faith... can be rewritten.
The Prophet turned from the window.
It was ti.
The Crystal Throne awaited.
And with it, the future he intended to shape.
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