The suffocating scent of antiseptic that perated the corridors of the Iron Hearth City Hospital slowly began to recede, replaced by the crisp, invigorating fragrance of lavender and jasmine carried by the mountain breeze. Rianor Sudrath pushed the silver-frad wheelchair with a movent so fluid and deliberate it was as if he feared the slightest vibration on the polished marble floor might cause irreparable harm to the woman seated within.
Elara leaned her back against the plush cushions of the VIP-standard wheelchair. Her fingers, thin and pale, gripped the edges of the heavy wool blanket that draped over her motionless legs. Her eyes, still rimd with red from hours of agonizing tears, began to glimr with a faint, newfound light as they passed through the grand glass doors leading to the hospital’s private botanical gardens.
"Rianor, you truly didn’t have to do this. I know how busy you are with the mobilization," Elara whispered. her voice was still raspy, cracked by grief, but it no longer held the abyssal darkness of an hour ago.
Rianor paused for a brief second, leaning forward so that his face was positioned directly beside Elara’s ear. "It is rely the usual chaos of administration, Elara. The world will not crumble simply because I stepped away for an hour. But seeing you confined in that cold, sterile room alone... that is sothing I cannot allow."
Elara let out a small, breathless laugh—a sound Rianor had feared he might never hear again. "You were always prone to exaggeration."
"It is an observation of fact, not a hyperbole," Rianor countered, his hands returning to the handles as he guided the chair into the heart of the VIP Garden.
The garden was not empty. As a premium facility reserved for the nobility and high-ranking officers of the Sudrath military, it played host to several other patients seeking the healing properties of the fresh air. An elderly nobleman from the Southern territories sat nearby reading a newspaper, while a few knights in various stages of rehabilitation practiced their gait under the watchful eyes of dics. However, as Rianor passed, the very atmosphere of the garden seed to gravitate toward them.
Rianor Sudrath—the cold, calculating architect of the Northreach industrial revolution—was personally pushing his fiancée’s wheelchair. The sight triggered a wave of hushed whispers among the staff and patients, but Rianor ignored them entirely. He maintained a cold, distant gaze that seed to build an invisible, impenetrable wall around the two of them.
They ca to a halt near a grand fountain carved from white quartz. Rianor released his grip on the chair and stepped to the side, reaching down to pluck a small, delicate flower. It was white with a soft gradient of blue at its heart—a Snow Seruni, a rare flora native to Northreach that blood only in soil that was freezing yet rich in minerals.
Rianor knelt on the grass in front of Elara’s wheelchair, disregarding the fact that his expensive, tailor-made military trousers were being stained by the damp earth. He looked up at Elara with a gaze so profound it was as if he were mapping every contour of her face into his permanent mory.
"Rianor? Why are you staring at like that?" Elara flushed, her pale cheeks warming as she tried to hide behind her hands.
Rianor didn’t answer imdiately. With a hand that was surprisingly steady despite his inner turmoil, he carefully tucked the Snow Seruni into the locks of Elara’s crimson hair. The stark contrast between the fiery red of her tresses and the icy blue-white of the flower made her look like a winter goddess—ethereal, fragile, yet breathtakingly beautiful.
"Beautiful," Rianor stated simply.
Elara touched the flower with her fingertips, her lips curling into another soft smile. "You’ve beco quite the charr, haven’t you? Since when did the stiff, work-obsessed Chief of Research learn how to woo a woman?"
"Since the mont I realized that seeing you laugh is infinitely more satisfying than any technological breakthrough I’ve ever achieved," Rianor said, taking Elara’s cold hand in his. "Elara, listen to . I was serious about what I said in the room."
Elara’s expression dimd slightly, the reality of her condition looming like a shadow, but she kept her eyes on him. "About the wedding?"
"Yes. Once the situation in Iron Hearth has stabilized... once the transition of this dragon alliance is running smoothly, I want us to make it official. I will not have any more delays." Rianor spoke with a gentleness that was foreign to his subordinates. There was no talk of revenge or tactical logistics; in this mont, there was only the two of them.
"But Rianor... I might never walk again. I am not the formidable Elara the Mage you once knew. Are you truly not ashad to have a wife who must be pushed around like a broken doll?"
Rianor stood up and turned her wheelchair so that she faced the setting sun, which was currently painting the horizon in vivid shades of orange, gold, and deep violet. "Look at that sun, Elara. It is sinking now, but it will return tomorrow with the sa brilliance. You are the sa. You may have lost your mana, but you have not lost yourself. You are my Elara. I promised you, and I will keep that promise: I will be your legs. If this world is too difficult for you to traverse, I will build the flattest, smoothest road for you to travel upon."
Elara stared at Rianor’s back, tears of genuine joy finally replacing the tears of sorrow. She felt so small in the face of this man’s unwavering devotion, yet at the sa ti, she felt more precious than all the treasures in Draconia. "Thank you... Thank you for loving this seriously."
On the second floor of the hospital, behind the large glass windows of the VIP Wing, two won were observing the scene in the garden.
Dr. Elena, still in her white dical coat, crossed her arms over her chest. Her eyes showed a mixture of professional relief and personal exhaustion. Beside her, Sila, the senior nurse, held an empty dical tray.
"Master Rianor is truly a different man when he is before Lady Elara," Sila whispered with a sincere smile.
Elena let out a long, heavy breath, her gaze fixed on her younger brother below. "Rianor is an obsessive man, Sila. For him, Elara is not just a fiancée; she is the very axis of his sanity. If she breaks, he breaks with her."
"But Lady Elara... the condition of her legs..." Sila hesitated. "Is there any dical hope?"
Elena remained silent for a mont, her analytical mind running through the data. "Through conventional dicine or traditional healing magic? No. Her mana circuits were pulverized, and the backlash caused trauma to the central nerves of her spinal cord. But you know how Rianor’s mind works. If this world does not possess the cure, he will invent the technology to provide one. I only hope his love does not beco a burden for her."
"I don’t believe it will, Doctor. Look at how she laughs. That is not the laugh of a woman who feels burdened," Sila remarked softly.
Elena smiled faintly. "Perhaps. For today, at least, they can forget the war."
anwhile, in the outer corridors of Castle Iron Hearth leading toward the city gates, Roland Sudrath was walking slowly alongside Princess Seraphina Draconia. If Rianor and Elara’s atmosphere was one of quiet, poignant romance, the air between Roland and Seraphina was a dance of diplomacy laced with electric sparks.
Seraphina occasionally glanced at Roland, who looked perfectly composed with his hands clasped behind his back. "So, Golden-Tongued Diplomat... do all the n in your family have a tendency to beco as intensely emotional as your second brother?"
Roland chuckled, the sound smooth as silk. "The Sudrath family has many facets, Princess. Riven is our sword, Rianor is our mind, and I... well, I am the voice. And as for being emotional? We simply value what we claim as ours quite highly."
"That sounds remarkably similar to the way dragons think. We do not like sharing what we have claid," Seraphina stopped walking, turning to face Roland with her sharp, crimson eyes. "So, tell then. What have you claid?"
Roland t her gaze without a hint of hesitation. He took a single step closer, near enough that the primal, pure scent of a high-caste dragon radiated from her. "I have claid the future of Northreach. And in that future, I see the two of us standing upon the sa peak."
Seraphina flushed a deep shade of pink, but she let out a sharp huff to mask her embarrassnt. "You truly are as slick as they say."
"I rely do what is necessary," Roland replied casually. "How about we continue our tour? There is a new coffee house in the comrcial district that uses beans from Rumina’s latest trade routes. I believe you will find the aroma quite intoxicating."
Seraphina offered a challenging smile. "Lead the way then, human."
Back at the hospital, the sky had begun to darken into a deep navy blue as Rianor pushed Elara back into her room. The soft, mana-electric lights in the corridor provided a tranquil glow. Upon entering the room, Rianor closed the door and quietly turned the lock.
"Rianor? Why did you lock it?" Elara asked, her voice tinged with confusion.
"So that no nurse interrupts us. I wish to spend just a few more quiet monts with you," Rianor answered as he approached her.
He stopped beside her wheelchair, and with a movent that was incredibly gentle yet filled with imnse strength, Rianor slipped one arm beneath Elara’s knees and the other behind her back. He lifted her from the wheelchair in a steady, confident motion.
Elara instinctively wrapped her arms around Rianor’s neck. She could feel the powerful, rhythmic thrum of his heart, a sharp contrast to her own body, which felt light and frail. Rianor carried her toward the bed, but he didn’t set her down imdiately. He held her for a long mont, staring into her violet eyes, which were now entirely focused on him.
"You are far too light, Elara. You must eat more," Rianor whispered.
"I will try... as long as you are the one accompanying for als," Elara countered with a shy, playful smile.
Rianor lowered her onto the bed with ticulous care, ensuring the pillows behind her back were arranged perfectly for her comfort. However, instead of pulling away, Rianor leaned in, bracing his weight with his hands on either side of Elara’s head.
The atmosphere in the room suddenly beca intensely thick. Elara could feel the warmth of Rianor’s breath against her skin. Her own heart began to race—a sensation she hadn’t felt in what seed like an eternity.
"Elara..." Rianor’s voice was deep, heavy with a restrained longing.
"Yes?"
Without another word, Rianor lowered his head. Elara closed her eyes as she felt his lips press against hers. It was a deep, lingering kiss, filled with longing, silent promises, and a fierce sense of possession. Rianor kissed her with a staggering tenderness, as if she were the most precious and fragile mana-crystal in the world.
Elara returned the kiss with what remained of her strength, her fingers clutching his shoulders. In that kiss, all her fears of the future, the agonizing pain of her lost magic, and the sha of her paralysis seed to evaporate into nothingness. There was only the man before her.
After a mont that felt like an eternity, Rianor pulled back, though their foreheads remained pressed together. Their breaths ca in ragged hitches in the silence of the room.
"I am truly not letting you go, Elara. Do not ever ask to cancel this engagent again," Rianor whispered fiercely.
Elara smiled, her face a bright crimson. "I won’t. I promise."
Rianor straightened his posture, adjusting his slightly ruffled uniform. "Now, rest. I must return. There are several matters I must finalize so that our wedding can take place in the most magnificent hall imaginable."
Elara nodded softly. "Be careful. And don’t forget to sleep."
Rianor walked toward the door, but before he exited, he turned back one last ti. His soft expression was already beginning to harden back into his clinical, military mask, but his eyes remained warm as they locked onto hers. As the door clicked shut, Rianor Sudrath took a long, deep breath. The scent of Snow Seruni still clung to his clothes, but his mind had already shifted back into war-mode.
He had to complete the killing machines he had promised. For Northveil, and for the woman he had just kissed.
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