"Aldera will have to choose in real ti whether to proceed publicly or retreat."
"Yes." The pen continued moving. "All of which serves current objectives."
Ken bowed, turned to leave.
"Ken," she said.
He stopped.
"Demorti ntioned you maintained position outside my chambers for the full three days," she said, not looking up from the docunt. "Including rotation breaks."
A pause. "Yes, Your Highness."
"That was operationally inefficient. You required sleep to maintain functional capacity. Your function is more valuable than your proximity."
A longer pause.
"Understood, Your Highness," Ken said. The words were correct. The tone carried sothing underneath them she didn’t have complete vocabulary for—not hurt, not acceptance, sothing compressed between the two that she registered without being able to precisely locate.
He left.
"You could have just said thank you," the System said quietly from the desk corner.
"What he did was counterproductive to his operational effectiveness," Elara said.
"What he did was because he was terrified you were dying and he had no way to help and he chose proximity over everything else."
"I wasn’t dying."
"He didn’t know that."
Elara’s pen moved. The draft took shape—clean lines, clear structure, every anticipated objection nad and answered before it could be raised. She worked in silence for several minutes, the System watching from its perch without further comntary.
"The forum opens in two hours," she said eventually.
"I know," the System said.
"I have preparation to complete."
"I know."
"Then stop making personal observations."
The System was quiet for a mont. Then, carefully: "Mahir looked like sothing heavy had been lifted off him. Sothing he’d been carrying a very long ti."
The pen paused. One beat. Two.
"Yes," Elara said quietly. "I noticed that too."
The System looked at her. At the careful, controlled line of her shoulders. At the pen resuming its movent across the paper.
It didn’t say anything else.
Outside the office door, Mahir stood at his post, bright-eyed and steady, a man who had handed sothing over completely and found himself lighter for it.
Inside, Elara prepared to walk into a room of three hundred people and make an ambush into a coronation of narrative.
The empire turned.
Her pen moved.
And sowhere in the quiet data-processing architecture of her particular mind, a data point sat unresolved—not filed, not dismissed, not integrated into any existing frawork.
Just present.
*He looked like the sun ca out.*
She didn’t know what to do with that.
So she kept writing.
The only thing she knew how to do with things she didn’t understand.
Work.
Always work.
Until understanding eventually caught up.
**Location:** The Grand Consultation Hall, Two Hours Later
***
Elara had tid her entrance precisely.
Not early—early suggested anxiety, the need to establish position before others arrived. Not late—late suggested either disrespect or the theatrical calculation nobles used when they wanted to remind rooms that their ti was worth waiting for.
Exactly on ti. To the second.
The Grand Consultation Hall held three hundred people at full capacity. It currently held approximately two hundred and sixty—every council mber who’d received the two-hour notice and judged the situation important enough to drop everything for, plus ministers, ambassadors, senior administrators, and a scattering of noble house representatives who’d been in the capital for other business and received the open invitation.
Duke Harren was already there. She’d expected that. He stood near the front with Lady Revine and Countess Aldera, the three of them in a tight cluster of controlled fury, expression sets ranging from Harren’s flushed indignation to Revine’s cold calculation to Aldera’s careful neutral that concealed whatever she’d actually co to do.
They’d expected a private room and three chairs.
They’d gotten a chamber the size of a cathedral and two hundred and sixty witnesses.
Revine’s eyes found Elara the mont she entered and went through three rapid micro-expressions: understanding what had happened, calculating what it ant, deciding whether to proceed or retreat. All in the span of two seconds.
Elara filed the data point. Revine was fast. Dangerous. Worth watching more carefully than Harren, who led with emotion, or Aldera, whose agenda was still unclear.
She walked to the central platform without acknowledging any of them, Beast Knights forming a precise formation behind her—all six in full ceremonial dress, armor polished, collar bonds glowing their standard faint azure. Ken at her left. Mahir at her right.
The room quieted as she ascended the steps.
She stood at the regent’s podium and looked out at the assembled faces. Two hundred and sixty people watching her with a spectrum of expressions ranging from curious to wary to hostile to carefully blank.
"This open consultation convenes at my request," she said, voice carrying cleanly to the back walls. "There are questions circulating about my governance, my personal conduct, and my fitness for the regency role. I prefer to address them directly, in open forum, with full docuntation available, rather than through rumor channels or private audiences that serve only partial interests." She paused. "Before questions are opened, I’ll make a formal statent."
She nodded to Demorti, who was stationed at a side table with the disclosure package. He began distributing bound docuntation packets to the tiered seating—one per house representative, one per ministry seat.
"Six weeks ago, an assassination attempt was made on my life using a classified magical toxin," Elara said. "That toxin remains partially active in my system. Its primary effect is the destabilization of magical pressure control—causing periodic episodes of uncontrolled power overflow that, if not managed, would result in catastrophic magical discharge. In simple terms: without intervention, the poison would eventually cause my magic to detonate. The resulting explosion would kill and cause significant casualties in the surrounding area."
Complete silence in the chamber.
She continued without inflection. "Master Cullens, my physician, identified the chanism. The toxin was specifically engineered to exploit the connection between physical arousal and magical discharge—a docunted phenonon in advanced magical theory. The poison creates artificial arousal states that, if completed properly, discharge excess magical pressure safely. If suppressed, the pressure builds to critical levels."
She let that sit for three full seconds.
"In practical terms: the poison requires a specific kind of physical response to manage. Attempting to suppress episodes through conventional magical dampening causes escalating pressure until critical overflow occurs. The alternative is providing the physical discharge pathway the toxin requires."
Another pause.
"I made a decision. Rather than die, or risk killing everyone around during an uncontrolled episode, I arranged a docunted, consensual protocol with mbers of my Beast Knight corps. The docuntation you’re currently receiving contains the full dical assessnt from Master Cullens, the voluntary consent contracts signed by the involved knights with full understanding of the arrangent, witness confirmations, and the dated tiline proving all of this was established and agreed to before any episode occurred."
Harren had gone the color of old brick. Revine was reading her copy of the docuntation with the focused attention of soone looking for a gap to exploit. Several other nobles were leafing through pages with expressions ranging from shock to sothing more complicated.
"I did not hide this arrangent," Elara said. "I also did not publicize it, because it is a dical matter with legal docuntation, and dical matters are not public business. However, since speculation has been circulating in ways that threaten administrative stability, I’ve chosen to address it directly."
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