"The historical literature—and I want to emphasize this is extrely rare, only docunted in two other cases in the past four centuries—describes the managent thod as... intimate physical contact."
"Define intimate."
The word landed in the room like a stone in still water.
Ken’s posture, already rigid, beca sohow more rigid. His ears pressed flat against his skull. Marcus turned her head slightly toward the wall.
Derti appeared to be having a small internal crisis.
Cullens finally looked directly at her.
"Sex, Your Highness."
The word sat in the silence.
Elara looked at him.
He looked back, expression a combination of professional detachnt and personal mortification.
"To be precise," he continued, apparently having decided that the only way through was forward, "the magical resonance transfer requires sustained skin-to-skin contact combined with significant magical output from the partner. The intimacy component isn’t—it’s not rely symbolic. The physiological state involved produces a specific pattern of magical emission that happens to be uniquely compatible with stabilizing the dysregulation caused by this particular compound."
He wiped his forehead one more ti.
"In layman’s terms: your body needs to synchronize its magical field with an externally stable one. And the most effective—indeed, the only docunted effective—thod of achieving the required depth of synchronization is..."
"Sex," Elara repeated.
"Yes, Your Highness."
Silence.
Elara turned back to the vanity. Began removing her earrings with thodical precision. The tiny clasps required focus, which gave her hands sothing to do while her mind processed this information.
Behind her, no one moved or spoke.
The earrings went into the jewelry box. Elara opened the wardrobe, removed a plain sleeping robe, set it on the bed with careful placent.
"Every three to four days," she said finally.
"Yes, Your Highness."
"Indefinitely. Or until an antidote is developed."
"Until an antidote is developed, yes. Which I cannot promise a tiline for. The compound is..." He hesitated. "Sophisticated. Whoever made it was thorough."
"And the partner’s requirents. They need to be what—specifically magically capable? Beast-clan? Human? Any restrictions?"
Cullens blinked, apparently having expected more of a reaction. He recalibrated.
"Significant magical output is necessary. The compatibility with royal bloodline frequency is important—beast-clan individuals tend to have higher baseline magical resonance compatible with royal frequencies due to their inherent magical nature. Human partners are not impossible but would be significantly less effective." He paused. "A beast knight, for example, would be... well-suited. Physiologically speaking."
Nobody looked at Ken.
The effort of not looking at Ken was almost visible.
"And if I decline," Elara said. "If I simply experience each cycle and let my body manage it naturally."
"Your Highness, I have to advise strongly against—"
"I asked what happens. Not your recomndation."
Cullens exhaled. "Each cycle will deplete your body’s defenses further. Based on the progression rate and your current physical condition, I would estimate..." He hesitated. "Four to six months before the cycles beco unsurvivable. With each activation, the overflow duration extends. The magical damage accumulates. Eventually your body simply won’t be able to regenerate between cycles."
Elara set down the second earring.
So. The options were:
Option A: Regular sexual activity with a magically compatible partner to manage poison cycles. Indefinitely. Until antidote developnt.
Option B: Die in four to six months from accumulated magical damage.
She turned to face the room.
Cullens looked like he was bracing for an explosion. Derti was staring at the ceiling with deep philosophical intensity. Marcus had beco very interested in the door fra.
Ken stood perfectly still, face completely neutral, eyes forward.
"Who else knows about this?" Elara asked.
"Currently in this room only, Your Highness," Derti said, voice slightly strained. "We... thought it best to inform you privately before any wider discussion."
"Good. Keep it that way." She looked at Cullens. "I want your full docuntation on the compound. Everything you’ve found. Historical cases, chanism analysis, all of it. On my desk by morning."
"Yes, Your Highness."
"I want you to continue researching antidote developnt. This becos your primary project. Whatever resources you need, request them through Derti."
"Yes, Your Highness."
"And I want a secondary opinion. Find the most qualified magical biochemist in the empire who isn’t connected to any of my sisters’ factions. Quietly."
"...Yes, Your Highness."
Elara nodded. "That’s all for tonight. Leave ."
Everyone began moving toward the door with visible relief.
"Cullens."
He stopped.
"You delivered that information professionally despite obvious personal discomfort. That’s noted." She paused. "Thank you for finding a managent solution rather than just telling there was no solution."
Cullens bowed deeply, sothing shifting in his expression. "Of course, Your Highness."
He left.
Derti followed, closing the door with excessive care—the way people closed doors when they were desperately trying not to make any noise or draw any attention whatsoever.
That left Ken and Marcus.
Standard overnight guard configuration.
Elara turned back to the wardrobe and finished changing into her sleeping robe, movents thodical.
"Ken."
"Yes, Your Highness."
"Your ears are flat."
Pause. "My apologies, Your Highness."
"Don’t apologize. I’m making an observation." She sat down on the edge of the bed, running through the evening’s information with chanical precision. "The physician’s recomndation is what it is. I’ll handle it the sa way I handle everything—with analysis and appropriate planning."
"Yes, Your Highness."
"Currently, my priority is rest and recovery. The poison managent question will be addressed after I’ve reviewed Cullens’s docuntation and obtained a secondary opinion." She looked at him directly. "I’m telling you this because you’re my primary security, and whatever solution I implent will affect your operational paraters."
Ken’s ears didn’t rise from their flattened position. "I understand, Your Highness."
"Do you have any questions."
"...No, Your Highness."
"Any observations relevant to my safety or operational capacity."
A very long pause.
"No, Your Highness."
Elara studied him for a mont. Noted the rigid posture. The carefully controlled expression. The tail that was completely, deliberately still.
She’d seen Ken face assassination attempts with less visible effort at composure.
"Go eat sothing," she said. "You haven’t had a full al since before the crisis started. That’s inefficient."
"Your Highness—"
"That’s an order. Marcus can cover for twenty minutes while you eat. Then rotate."
Ken bowed stiffly and left.
Elara lay back on the bed, staring at the ceiling.
Four to six months without managent. Or regular intimate contact with a magically compatible partner indefinitely.
She ran the variables with the sa clinical detachnt she’d apply to any operational problem.
The goddess’s voice echoed sowhere in the back of her mind: ’Try not to die imdiately after all this effort.’
’I’m trying,’ Elara thought back at the empty ceiling. ’But your universe keeps making that surprisingly difficult.’
From the corridor, she could hear the faint sound of Ken explaining the rotation schedule to Marcus in a voice that was just slightly too controlled to be natural.
Elara closed her eyes.
’I’ll consider it,’ she’d told the goddess.
Well.
She was considering it.
Whether she liked the conclusion she was reaching was a separate question entirely.
She filed it under ’problems requiring further analysis’ and let exhaustion pull her toward sleep.
The poison ticked quietly in her system.
Patient.
Waiting for its next cycle.
’Three to four days,’ Cullens had said.
Elara had approximately seventy-two hours to figure out a solution.
She’d worked with tighter deadlines.
’Probably.’
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