"Because I’m tired, Elara. I’ve ruled this empire for forty-three years. I’ve maintained stability, prevented civil war, kept the noble families from tearing everything apart. But I’ve done it without purpose, without hope, just... existing. When I die, I want to know that whoever takes this throne might actually care about sothing beyond their own power."
He looked at her directly. "You care about efficiency. About systems that work. About people being treated fairly—even if your motivation is practical rather than emotional. That’s close enough to purpose for . So yes, I’ll help you. Quietly. Strategically. And if you win, maybe this empire will finally beco sothing worth ruling."
Elara sat with the docunt in her hands, mind racing.
The Emperor—her father—had loved two won and lost both. Had fought for a throne he didn’t want. Had spent four decades ruling an empire he hated, surrounded by people he couldn’t trust. And now he was offering to help her win the succession battle, not because he loved her, but because she represented the possibility of change.
It was the most honest political alliance she’d ever been offered.
"I accept," she said. "With one condition."
"Which is?"
"Honesty. Like with Duke Romian, I want honest communication. If you’re going to help , I need to know your actual motivations and limitations. No more hidden tests. No more secret assassination contracts. Just direct strategic cooperation."
The Emperor smiled—genuinely smiled. "Your mother would have said exactly the sa thing. She hated political gas. Wanted everything direct and clear." He raised his wine glass. "Agreed. Honest communication. No more hidden tests. You’ve proven yourself sufficiently."
They drank.
"One more thing," Elara said. "The consorts. The ones whose families killed Lin i and possibly sabotaged my mother’s research. What do you want to do about them?"
"Nothing. Yet." The Emperor’s voice went cold. "They’re old now. Their power is maintained through their daughters—your sisters. If you win the succession battle and beco Empress, you’ll have authority to restructure the entire court system. Then you can deal with them however you see fit."
"And if I choose to eliminate them entirely?"
"Then I’ll watch with satisfaction while you accomplish what I never could." His eyes glead. "Just be thorough. Half-asures against powerful families only create more enemies."
"Understood."
They sat in silence for a mont. The fire crackled. Outside, the palace complex was dark and quiet.
Finally, Elara spoke. "Thank you. For telling the truth. For the information. For... acknowledging that my mother mattered to you."
"She did. More than anyone except Lin i." The Emperor’s voice softened. "I failed both of them. Couldn’t protect either one. But maybe I can help protect you. Help you build enough power that no one can poison you, sabotage you, or eliminate you the way they eliminated the won I loved."
"I’ll survive," Elara said firmly. "I’ve survived this long. I’ll continue surviving. And if I win this succession battle, I’ll make sure the system that killed them is dismantled piece by piece."
"Good." The Emperor stood, indicating the eting was ending. "Go. Marry Duke Romian. Build your alliances. Strengthen your position. And when you’re ready to make your next major move, send word. I’ll provide what support I can without triggering the other factions."
Elara stood as well. Bowed formally. "Thank you, Your Majesty."
"Elara."
She paused.
"Your mother nad you. Did you know that?"
"No."
"She chose ’Elara’ because it ant ’bright star’ in an old language she studied. She said you would be a light in the darkness of this palace. A reminder that brilliance could exist even in terrible circumstances." His voice was quiet. "She was right. You are brilliant. Don’t let this place destroy that."
Elara felt sothing strange in her chest—not quite emotion, but acknowledgnt of significance. "I won’t."
"Good. Now go. We’ve been alone too long. People will speculate."
Elara left the study, the dossier hidden inside her jacket. The guard outside didn’t react as she passed.
She walked back through the empty palace corridors, mind processing everything she’d learned.
The Emperor had loved her mother. Had tried to protect her. Had failed. And now he was offering to help Elara succeed where he’d failed—not out of paternal love, but out of strategic calculation and the hope that she might change the system that had destroyed everyone he cared about.
It was practical. Logical. Efficient.
And sohow, it was the closest thing to genuine connection Elara had felt since arriving in this world.
When she reached her palace, the fox knight was waiting anxiously.
"Your Highness! You’ve been gone nearly two hours—I was about to send word to Duke Romian—"
"I’m fine. The eting was... productive." Elara handed him the dossier. "File this sowhere secure. It’s comprehensive intelligence on palace power structures. We’ll review it tomorrow."
"What happened? What did the Emperor want?"
Elara paused. "He told the truth. About my mother. About himself. About why the succession battle exists." She looked at the fox knight directly. "And he offered to help win it."
The fox knight’s ears shot up. "The Emperor is helping you?"
"Quietly. Strategically. Not openly—that would trigger opposition. But yes. He’s providing information and resources."
"Why would he do that?"
"Because I remind him of soone he lost. And because I might actually use the throne for sothing beyond personal power." Elara walked toward her study. "Now co. We have work to do. Tomorrow I marry Duke Romian. The day after, we start dismantling the power structures that have controlled this palace for forty years."
"Your Highness... you’re going to try to change the entire system?"
"Eventually. First I need to survive it. But yes. That’s the goal." She pulled out paper and started making notes. "The Emperor spent forty years maintaining a broken system because he lost hope. I don’t have hope either—I don’t experience it. But I have objectives. And one of those objectives is building sothing that functions better than what currently exists."
The fox knight stood silent for a mont. Then he bowed deeply. "We’ll help you, Your Highness. All of us. The beast knights. Your staff. Everyone who’s benefited from your different approach. We’ll help you survive and change things."
"Good. I’ll need that support." Elara looked up from her notes. "Because tomorrow, when I marry Duke Romian, I’m not just gaining an ally. I’m declaring war on every power structure that’s existed in this palace for decades. And they will fight back."
"Are you ready for that?"
Elara thought about the Emperor’s story. About Lin i, poisoned three days before her coronation. About her mother, dead from sabotaged research. About forty years of scheming consorts and murdered rivals.
"No," she said honestly. "I’m not ready. But I’ll prepare as much as possible and execute anyway. That’s what survival requires."
She returned to her planning.
.
.
Outside, dawn was breaking over the imperial capital.
Today, she would marry Duke Romian.
Today, she would formalize alliances that would reshape the succession battle.
Today, the Fourth Princess—the one everyone had dismissed as weak and irrelevant—would step fully into the war for the throne.
And sowhere in his private study, the Emperor sat alone, staring into dying embers, rembering two won he’d loved and lost, and hoping that maybe—just maybe—his strange, emotionless daughter could accomplish what he never could.
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