One physician leaned forward. "Because normal people feel guilt when they harm others, even in justified self-defense. The emotional response is what proves you’re not a monster."
"That’s circular logic," Elara said. "You’re defining ’not a monster’ as ’experiences specific emotions’ and then using absence of those emotions as proof of monstrosity. But behavioral outcos matter more than internal states. A person who feels terrible guilt while committing atrocities is still committing atrocities. A person who feels nothing while doing the right thing is still doing the right thing."
The First Consort stood abruptly. "This is absurd. The Princess is admitting she’s incapable of normal human emotion and you’re entertaining her sophistry. She’s clearly unfit—"
"First Consort," the head physician said sharply. "You filed the petition. You don’t get to determine the outco. Sit down."
The First Consort sat, fury barely contained.
The Council conferred again, this ti for longer.
Elara waited, patient. Duke Romian watched tensely. The First Consort simred.
Finally, the head physician spoke.
"Princess Elara Blackwood. The Imperial dical Council has completed our preliminary evaluation. Our findings are as follows:"
He read from a docunt:
"First: The Princess demonstrates atypical emotional processing consistent with alexithymia—difficulty identifying and describing emotions. However, this is not classified as ntal deficiency requiring disqualification.
"Second: Her behavioral patterns, while unconventional, do not demonstrate the harmful characteristics typically associated with dangerous psychological conditions. She honors commitnts, treats people fairly, and makes decisions based on rational assessnt rather than impulse.
"Third: Historical precedent supports the viability of logic-driven leadership. Several successful emperors have demonstrated similar practical approaches to governance.
"Fourth: Her recent accomplishnts in Port Crestfall—building profitable operations, eliminating corruption, treating subordinates fairly—demonstrate functional capability despite emotional atypicality.
"Therefore, our conclusion is: Princess Elara Blackwood is fit for imperial succession. Her emotional processing differences do not constitute disqualifying ntal deficiency."
The First Consort shot to her feet. "This is outrageous! You’re allowing soone who admits she cannot feel basic human emotions to compete for the throne—"
"Our evaluation is complete, First Consort. You may file appeal with the Emperor if you disagree, but our dical assessnt stands." The head physician looked at Elara. "Princess, you’re dismissed. This evaluation is concluded."
Elara bowed. "Thank you, honored physicians."
She walked out of the chamber with Duke Romian beside her.
Once they were outside in the corridor, Duke Romian exhaled. "That was closer than I’d like."
"But successful. The evaluation confird my fitness, which ans the First Consort’s attack failed."
"She’ll appeal to the Emperor."
"Let her. He’ll support the Council’s decision—supporting without appearing to show favoritism." Elara continued walking. "This actually worked in our favor. The formal evaluation established that my emotional differences are docunted, assessed, and approved. Future attacks on that basis will be dismissed as redundant."
"You’re remarkably calm for soone who was just evaluated for ntal fitness."
"Panic would have been counterproductive. Calm was more efficient."
Duke Romian smiled. "Your mother would have been proud. She always saivalued practical thinking over emotional drama."
They walked back toward Duke Romian’s estate in silence. When they arrived, Elara went directly to her study and pulled out the wooden box Sera had given her at the wedding.
The note about Lady Chen. Lin i’s murderer.
Duke Romian appeared in the doorway. "You’re thinking about Sera’s information."
"Yes. The First Consort just tried to eliminate from succession through dical disqualification. She failed, but she’ll try sothing else. anwhile, I have evidence that her sister murdered Lin i forty-three years ago." Elara unfolded the note. "The question is timing. When do I use this information for maximum impact?"
"What does your strategic assessnt say?"
"Using it now, imdiately after the failed evaluation, looks like petty retaliation. The optics are bad—’Fourth Princess lashes out after being challenged.’ But waiting too long ans the First Consort continues attacking while I hold leverage I’m not deploying."
"There’s another consideration," Duke Romian said quietly. "The Emperor. This is about the woman he loved. He deserves to know we have this information."
Elara looked at him. "You’re suggesting I consult him before acting?"
"Yes. This isn’t just your fight. It’s his justice too. And politically, having the Emperor’s approval before you expose a forty-three-year-old murder conspiracy is much safer than doing it independently."
"Valid point." Elara stood. "I’ll request private audience with him. Tonight, if possible."
"I’ll send word through military channels. Should be faster than normal palace bureaucracy."
Two hours later, Elara received a response.
Co tonight. Midnight. Private study. Alone.
---
At midnight, Elara walked the familiar path to the Emperor’s private study.
The sa guard stood outside. He nodded and opened the door without question.
Inside, the Emperor sat by the fireplace, exactly as before. He wore simple black robes, no ceremonial decorations. The fire cast shadows across his face.
"Fourth Daughter," he said. "I heard about the dical Council evaluation. Congratulations on your successful defense."
"Thank you, Your Majesty." Elara sat in the sa chair as her previous visit. "Though I suspect you already knew the outco before it happened."
"I may have ensured that two of the uncommitted Council mbers understood that finding you unfit without clear dical cause would displease ." He smiled slightly. "But you still had to perform well during the evaluation. I couldn’t do that part for you."
"I appreciate the subtle support."
"Don’t thank yet. The First Consort is livid. She’s already filing appeals and gathering support from other consorts to challenge the Council’s decision." The Emperor poured two glasses of wine. "She sees you as a genuine threat now. The attacks will intensify."
"Anticipated." Elara accepted the wine glass. "Which brings to why I requested this eting."
She pulled out the wooden box and showed him Sera’s note.
The Emperor read it. His expression didn’t change much, but his hand tightened on the paper.
"Lady Chen," he said quietly. "First Consort’s sister. She’s been here all along. Living comfortably in the eastern palace wing while the woman she murdered is forty-three years dead."
"According to Sera’s intelligence, yes. And there’s evidence in Lady Chen’s private safe—a letter detailing paynt from the noble families."
The Emperor set down the note carefully. "Third Princess Sera gave you this information at your wedding. Why?"
"Unknown. She said we should talk privately, that we have more in common than I realize. I haven’t followed up yet."
"Sera is dangerous. More dangerous than Eleana in so ways, because she operates through information and manipulation rather than direct confrontation." The Emperor stared into the fire. "But her intelligence is usually accurate. If she says Lady Chen has evidence, it’s probably there."
"Do you want to pursue this? Investigate, gather the evidence, expose the conspiracy?"
The Emperor was quiet for a long mont. "What I want and what’s strategically wise are two different things."
"Explain."
"What I want is to drag Lady Chen into a public trial, force her to confess to Lin i’s murder, execute her and everyone involved, and burn the First Consort’s political power to ash." His voice was cold, hard. "But that’s emotional response, not strategic thinking."
"And strategically?"
"Strategically, exposing a forty-three-year-old murder conspiracy right now serves multiple purposes. It damages the First Consort’s faction significantly. It demonstrates to the other consorts that ancient sins can still be punished. It establishes you as soone willing and able to pursue justice against powerful enemies." He looked at Elara.
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