Seeing Elara standing there—alive, unscathed, and surrounded by every single mber of her administrative council—the nobles could only manage one shared expression.
Paleness.
Not the polite kind that ca with courtly restraint, but the kind that drained the very warmth from their skin, leaving behind nothing but disbelief and a creeping, suffocating dread.
Because in their minds... she was already gone.
When the news of her disappearance had spread across the empire, it had not been spoken aloud—but it had been accepted. So believed she had died sowhere beyond the empire’s reach, her body lost to ti and distance. Others believed she had simply chosen not to return, that she had abandoned the throne willingly, uninterested in power, uninterested in the suffocating weight of the crown.
Many had even felt relieved.
Because a missing heir was easier to replace than a living one.
But now—
Now she stood before them.
Not weakened.
Not broken.
And certainly not forgotten.
If anything, she looked... reborn.
There was sothing in her presence that had not existed before. Sothing cold, sothing distant, sothing that did not bend or hesitate. The softness that once lingered around her had been stripped away completely, leaving behind sothing far more dangerous—sothing precise, controlled, and utterly rciless.
Elara’s gaze moved across the hall slowly, deliberately, as if she were taking her ti to recognize each face... and silently decide their worth.
Or their lack of it.
Her lips parted.
"What?"
The single word was quiet—yet it echoed, sharp and unforgiving, slicing through the thick silence like a blade pressed against skin.
"I am still alive," she continued, her voice calm, almost conversational, "and yet... all of you seem to be in quite a hurry."
No one dared to breathe too loudly.
"To place so unknown figure upon the throne," she went on, her tone lowering, gaining a faint edge, "while the legitimate bloodline of the previous emperor stands right in front of you."
A pause followed—long enough for discomfort to settle deep into their bones.
Then, with a slight tilt of her head and a faint, chilling curve of her lips—
"May I ask... with what right?"
Silence answered her.
It wasn’t the respectful kind.
It was the kind that ca from fear—thick, heavy, pressing against the chest until breathing itself felt like a risk.
Her gaze sharpened.
"Or is it," she continued, her voice dropping just enough to make every ear strain to catch it, "that my brother was far too lenient with you?"
Her eyes darkened slightly.
"So much so... that you have forgotten who I am?"
No one moved.
No one spoke.
"And now," she added, her voice turning almost mocking, "you don’t even greet ?"
That was the breaking point.
The mory of her—of what she had done, of what she was capable of—ca rushing back all at once, shattering whatever fragile confidence they had built in her absence.
They bowed.
Quickly. Clumsily. Desperately.
"We greet Your Majesty—!"
"Your Highness—!"
Their voices overlapped, uncertain, afraid of even choosing the wrong title.
Elara did not acknowledge them.
Not even with a glance.
She had already turned away.
Each step she took toward the coffin echoed through the hall, slow and asured, as if ti itself had begun to follow her pace.
The air grew heavier with every step.
Denser.
Harder to breathe.
When she finally reached the coffin, she stopped.
For a long mont, she said nothing.
She simply looked.
The emperor lay there as though he were rely resting, his expression eerily peaceful. But the illusion did not hold under scrutiny. The faint bluish tint on his lips, the subtle discoloration creeping beneath his nails—it spoke of sothing far less gentle.
Poison.
Elara’s eyes lingered there, unmoving, as if committing every detail to mory.
Then, quietly—
"Rest in peace."
For that brief mont, her voice softened. Not enough to show weakness... but enough to suggest sothing deeper, sothing unspoken.
And then it was gone.
She turned.
Sharp. Sudden.
"Your emperor is still here," she said, her voice once again carrying that cold, unyielding authority. "His body has barely lost its warmth... and yet you have already begun circling his throne like vultures."
Her gaze swept across them, heavier this ti.
Judging.
Condemning.
"Tell ," she continued, taking a slow step forward, "should I interpret this as treason against the royal family..."
Another step.
"...or are you going to offer an explanation convincing enough to save yourselves?"
A noble, pale and visibly shaking, forced himself forward.
"Your Highness, please—forgive us. You were not present, and as the pillars of the empire, we believed it was our responsibility to—"
"Pillars?"
The word cut him off instantly.
Elara’s voice dropped—not louder, but infinitely more dangerous.
"Runaway?" she added, her tone laced with sothing colder than anger. "Subjects?"
Her gaze swept across them again, slower this ti, as if dissecting each and every one of them.
"Are you speaking about yourselves..." she said softly, "or about ?"
The noble’s throat went dry.
No answer ca.
"First of all," she continued, taking another step closer, "who decided that I ran away?"
Another voice—hesitant, trembling—rose from the crowd.
"Your Highness... it is simply that no one knew where you had gone."
For a second, there was silence.
Then—
A soft scoff escaped her.
Cold. Dismissive.
"So because you did not know," she said, her eyes narrowing slightly, "that makes it truth?"
Her voice sharpened with each word.
"My brother knew."
"The palace knew."
"My people knew."
Each sentence landed heavier than the last, like stones sinking into still water.
"And yet," she continued, her gaze piercing through them, "those who know the least... speak the loudest."
No one dared respond.
Then—
Derti stepped forward.
Calm. Unshaken. Grounded in a way none of the others were.
"Your Highness did not flee," he said, his voice steady and clear. "You departed with us—with your full administrative body—for research and inspection across the empire."
He paused, letting his words settle.
"The late emperor was aware."
"The emperor before him was aware."
"Permission was granted long before your departure."
A faint smile touched Elara’s lips.
Small.
Controlled.
But real enough to be noticed.
"Thank you," she said.
Then she turned back to the nobles—and whatever softness had appeared vanished completely, as though it had never existed.
"Both emperors knew," she said, her tone final, leaving no room for argunt.
"And yet... you believed I required your permission?"
A pause.
A long one.
Heavy enough to make several of them lower their heads without realizing it.
"Have you all forgotten," she continued slowly, "that I remain the rightful heir... by imperial decree?"
Her eyes hardened, her presence pressing down on them like an invisible force.
"Or shall I consider this..."
She let the silence stretch, forcing them to feel every inch of it—
"...an act of open treason?"
At her words, a ripple of unease passed through the hall.
Many of the nobles visibly stiffened, fear tightening their expressions, their earlier panic returning like a tide they could not hold back.
But not all of them.
There were still a few—older, sharper, far more seasoned.
n who had survived multiple reigns.
n who had watched emperors rise... and fall.
n who did not scare easily.
One of them stepped forward slowly, his movents asured, his expression controlled despite the tension thickening the air.
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