The east wing dining hall had never been used for anything grand.
It was smaller than the great hall—long table of dark wood, high-backed chairs upholstered in faded silver velvet, arched windows that looked out over the lower gardens. Candles burned in simple iron holders. No braziers. No floating platforms. No altars.
The table had been set for thirty—won along both sides, husbands standing behind them as silent attendants. Platters of spiced fruit, roasted quail, dark wine in crystal goblets. Roses floated in shallow bowls between every place.
No one sat until Isolde entered.
She wore the sa obsidian gown, but her hair was braided loosely with silver thread. The sigil on her hip glowed softly beneath the silk—visible, unhidden. She carried no chain in her hand. The thin silver necklace at her throat was the only ornant.
She took the head of the table—not the place of honor, simply the place closest to the garden doors.
"You may sit," she said.
The won sat. Husbands moved to serve—pouring wine, offering bread—without being ordered. Their hands shook only a little.
For several minutes no one spoke beyond murmurs of "thank you" and "more wine, please."
Then Cat laughed—sudden, surprised, bright.
Everyone looked at her.
She covered her mouth, eyes wide. "I’m sorry. I just... I haven’t laughed at a table in years without soone telling it was unbecoming."
Lira grinned. "Then laugh louder."
Cat did. The sound rolled down the table like a pebble starting an avalanche.
Elara joined in. Then Lulu. Then Bri.
The husbands froze—serving spoons hovering—staring at their wives as though seeing strangers who wore familiar faces.
Isolde lifted her goblet.
"To nas," she said simply.
Glasses rose. Wine touched lips.
"To nas," the table echoed.
Conversation began in fragnts.
Lira told a childhood story about stealing apples from the orchard behind her father’s estate. Elara admitted she still hated the sll of her father’s tobacco. Cat spoke—quietly—about the brother who had once called her Cat, and how he had died in a border skirmish before she was married off.
No one interrupted. No one corrected. No one shad.
Husbands listened.
Lord Blackthorn—kneeling now beside Cat’s chair—kept his eyes on his wife’s face. When she laughed again he smiled—small, broken, real.
Lord Voss poured for Elara with careful hands. When she thanked him he whispered, "Elara," as though testing the sound. She looked at him—really looked—and nodded once.
Across the table, Bri reached over and touched Luna’s wrist.
"Lulu," she said. "Tell sothing I don’t know."
Luna hesitated. Then: "I still sleep with the little wooden horse you carved for when I was six."
Bri’s eyes filled. She blinked hard. "I thought you’d thrown it away."
"I never could."
Silence fell again—not heavy, but full.
Isolde had barely spoken.
She ate slowly, watched everything, missed nothing.
When the last course was cleared—honeyed figs, soft cheese, dark chocolate—she rose.
The room quieted instantly.
"Tomorrow Aiden returns," she said. "He will walk the gardens. He will sit at tables. He will look into faces that rember their nas."
She let the words settle.
"He may smile. He may rage. He may do nothing at all. But whatever he does, he will do it to won who know who they were before the chains."
She looked around the table—eting every pair of eyes.
"Tonight you sleep in your own beds. Alone or together, as you choose. No one will co for you. No one will summon you. The Spire is quiet."
She paused.
"But tomorrow... tomorrow we greet him. Not as witnesses. Not as vessels. As won who have tasted freedom—even if only for one night."
She lifted her goblet one last ti.
"To tomorrow," she said.
"To tomorrow," the table answered—stronger this ti.
Isolde drank. Set the goblet down.
Then she walked to the garden doors and stepped out into the night.
Behind her, conversations resud—louder, freer, laced with laughter and tentative hope.
Husbands remained standing for a mont longer.
Then—slowly—one by one—they began to sit at the ends of the table, on stools brought by servants, no longer kneeling.
No one told them they could.
They simply did.
Outside, Isolde stood beneath the black roses.
She lifted her hand. The silver necklace at her throat shimred.
A faint crack appeared along its length—barely visible.
She closed her fingers around it.
"Tomorrow," she whispered to the dark garden, "we see how much silence one man can bear."
The roses above her trembled once, as though nodding.
The al stretched longer than anyone expected.
Won lingered over the last of the wine. Husbands refilled goblets when asked, cleared plates when finished. No one rushed.
Cat and Lord Blackthorn talked in low voices. She told him about the brother who had called her Cat. He listened—really listened—without interrupting. When she finished he reached across the table and covered her hand with his.
"I rember him," he said quietly. "He used to tease when I ca to court you."
Cat smiled—small, real. "He said you were too serious."
Lord Blackthorn exhaled. "I was."
They sat in silence after that. Hands still touching.
Elara and Lord Voss sat across from them. Elara ate slowly. Lord Voss watched her. When she set her fork down he spoke.
"Elara," he said again—testing.
She looked at him.
"I never asked what you wanted," he said. "I assud the marriage was enough."
"It wasn’t," she answered. Flat. No anger. Just fact.
He nodded. "I know that now."
She studied his face. "Do you?"
"I’m starting to."
Elara reached over. Touched his wrist—briefly. "Start faster."
He swallowed. Nodded.
Bri and Lulu stayed close. They talked about small things—the wooden horse, the garden behind their old estate, the way the roses slled in sumr. Lord Silverre sat at the end of the table. He listened. When Lulu laughed he smiled—tentative, uncertain. Bri noticed.
"Lulu," she said. "Your father is listening."
Lulu looked at him.
He t her eyes—first ti in months.
"Thank you for serving," Lulu said.
Lord Silverre blinked. "You’re welco."
Bri’s hand tightened on her goblet.
The younger won—Florrie, Lulu, and the others—had pushed their chairs together. They talked about the gardens, about nas, about what they might do tomorrow when Aiden returned. Their husbands sat nearby—quiet, watchful. One of them—Florrie’s husband—spoke up.
"I rember when you were little," he said to Florrie. "You used to run through the halls calling yourself Florrie. Your mother hated it."
Florrie looked at him. "She doesn’t anymore."
He nodded slowly. "I’m glad."
The table quieted again.
Isolde had not returned from the garden.
The won began to rise—slowly, reluctantly. Husbands stood with them. So offered arms. So simply walked beside.
Cat and Lord Blackthorn left first. They walked toward the private wing. His hand hovered near her elbow. She took it.
Elara and Lord Voss followed. She walked ahead. He followed. At the corridor she stopped. Turned.
"Co with ," she said.
He nodded.
They disappeared down the hall.
Bri and Lulu walked together. Lord Silverre trailed a step behind. At the stairs Bri paused.
"Father," Lulu said.
He looked at her.
"You can walk beside us," she said.
He moved up. They climbed the stairs—three abreast.
The hall emptied.
The candles burned lower.
Outside, Isolde still stood under the roses.
She had not moved.
The silver crack in her necklace had lengthened—thin, hairline, running from clasp to pendant.
She touched it.
Then she turned back toward the east wing.
The dining hall was empty now. Chairs pushed in. Plates cleared. Roses still floating in bowls.
She walked to the head of the table. Sat in the chair she had used earlier.
She waited.
Aiden appeared at the garden doors twenty minutes later.
He wore black trousers and nothing else. Barefoot. Hair loose. The silver fracture on his wrist caught the candlelight.
He stopped in the doorway.
Looked at her.
"You gave them dinner," he said.
"I gave them a night without summons."
He crossed the room. Stopped beside her chair.
"They used the nas."
"They did."
He reached out. Touched the sigil on her hip through the silk.
"They will want more tomorrow."
"They will."
He looked down at her.
"And you?"
Isolde t his eyes.
"I want to see how far silence stretches before it breaks."
Aiden smiled—small, private.
He pulled out the chair beside her. Sat.
They stayed like that—side by side at the empty table.
No words.
Just the low crackle of dying candles.
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