Elara studied her servant’s face, trying to understand the emotional calculus. "You valued being seen more than you valued safety."
"Yes."
"That seems illogical."
"Probably. But emotions aren’t logical, Your Highness." Lisa t her eyes. "Which you already know, I think. Because you don’t really have them, do you?"
The observation was direct enough to be almost confrontational. Elara considered deflecting, then decided against it. Lisa had been honest. "Not in the way others do. No."
"I thought so. Everyone’s noticed, actually, though no one says it directly. Dimitri and Mira whisper about it sotis. The beast knights watch you differently than they watch others. Even the rchant crew has comnted that you’re ’an odd one.’"
"That’s probably accurate."
"It doesn’t make you cruel, though." Lisa pushed off from the barrel slightly, testing her balance on the rocking deck. "It makes you... clear. Honest. When you say thank you, it’s because the action genuinely warranted thanks, not because you’re performing politeness. When you give orders, they’re straightforward because that’s efficient, not wrapped in fake sweetness that everyone knows is manipulation. I can work with honest."
"You sound like the fox knight."
"He said sothing similar?"
"Essentially. Last night. He found my ’clarity’ tactically advantageous."
"Well, he’s right." Lisa managed a more genuine smile now. "The palace is full of royals who smile and praise and make you feel valued—all fake, all manipulation, all designed to extract maximum service for minimum cost. They perform emotions they don’t feel to control people. You just... don’t perform at all. No pretending. No gas. Just honest interaction. It was strange at first. But real."
"And now you’re seasick on a barge heading to an uncertain future where my honesty might get you killed."
"Yes. And it’s still better than being invisible in the palace." Lisa t her eyes directly. "Your Highness, can I say sothing that might be inappropriate?"
"You’re already being fairly inappropriate by palace standards. Continue."
"You don’t feel things the way other people do. Everyone’s figuring that out. But that doesn’t make you a bad person to follow. It actually makes you easier to trust in so ways. Because you don’t lie about your feelings—you don’t have feelings to lie about. Everything you say is just... true. Or at least your version of truth."
Elara considered that. "So my emotional limitations create a different kind of trust."
"Exactly. We’re all figuring out how to work with you. How to function around soone who doesn’t play emotional gas because you can’t, not because you won’t." Lisa pushed off the barrel entirely now, standing on her own despite the deck’s movent. "I’m glad I ca. Even with the seasickness. Even knowing my mother cried for three days before I left. Because wherever this goes, at least I’m not invisible."
"Your mother cried?"
"For three days. I told you—I’m leaving family behind."
"You didn’t ntion the crying."
"Would it have changed your decision to bring ?"
"No. But I would have understood the weight of your choice better."
Lisa tilted her head. "See? That’s what I an. Soone else would say ’I’m so sorry’ or ’how touching’ or so emotional response. You just... process the information and acknowledge its significance. It’s oddly comforting."
As Lisa walked away to help with morning preparations, Elara stayed at the rail, watching the river flow past.
Two people in less than twelve hours telling her they appreciated her emotional absence. That her inability to feel made her more trustworthy, not less.
She couldn’t feel relief at that revelation. Couldn’t feel validation or warmth or connection or any of the emotions that would normally accompany such an observation.
But she could recognize useful information when presented with it.
Her limitations weren’t just tactical disadvantages. They created a different kind of trust—one based on predictability and honesty rather than emotional manipulation. People could rely on her words because she had no emotional agenda behind them. Her actions were practical because no feelings clouded her judgnt.
Port Crestfall appeared on the horizon about an hour later—a sprawling port city with docks and warehouses and buildings climbing up hillsides.
Tomorrow would bring new complications. New threats. New gas to play with new players who didn’t yet know her patterns.
But she’d enter them with thirty-one people who’d chosen to follow her. Not all of them understood her emotional absence. Not all of them were comfortable with it. But so—like Lisa and the fox knight—had decided it was a feature rather than a flaw.
That was data worth having.
Even if she couldn’t feel grateful for it.
The Silver rchant docked at Port Crestfall just after midday.
Elara stood at the rail watching the city co into focus. It was larger than she’d expected—a sprawling port that stretched along the coastline and climbed up terraced hillsides. Warehouses dominated the waterfront, massive structures designed for cargo storage. Behind them, rchant houses and trading offices rose in tiers. Further up the hills, residential districts with colored roofs created a patchwork against grey stone.
The docks themselves were chaos. Dozens of ships and barges tied up at various piers, cargo being loaded and unloaded by hundreds of workers. rchants shouted prices. Sailors called out mooring instructions. The sll hit her before they’d even tied off—salt water, fish, spices, unwashed bodies, and sothing else she couldn’t identify. Comrce, probably. The scent of money changing hands.
"Welco to Port Crestfall," Kael said, appearing beside her. "Not the palace."
"No. It’s not."
"Is that a problem?"
"It’s an observation." Elara watched a crane lift a massive crate from a neighboring ship. "How long until we can disembark?"
"An hour. Maybe less. We need to clear cargo inspection and pay docking fees. Your household can start gathering belongings."
Behind her, the beast knights were already organizing. Captain Lyra barked orders in her usual efficient manner. The hawk knight was actually smiling—the first ti Elara had seen genuine pleasure on his face. Even the fox knight looked more relaxed than he had in days.
Solid ground. After six days on water, solid ground probably felt like a miracle.
Lisa erged from below deck, pale but determined. The mont the barge stopped moving, she visibly steadied.
"Oh gods," she breathed. "It’s not rocking."
"The dock is stationary, yes."
"I could kiss this dock. I could marry this dock." Lisa looked at the city with sothing approaching wonder. "I’ve never been outside the capital."
"None of us have." Dimitri joined them, carrying docuntation. "Well, except the rchant crew. But this is new territory for the rest of us."
Elara turned to him. "What’s first?"
"Customs inspection, then we clear the cargo. Kael says the Verin family has arranged accommodation for us—a rchant house they own in the upper district. It’s empty right now, being held for visiting guild mbers. They’re letting us use it for our stay."
"How generous."
"Strategic, more likely. Keeping us close. Making sure their investnt doesn’t get killed by competitors." Dimitri shuffled his papers. "We should organize the move carefully. Thirty-two people, all our trunks, twenty-five beast knights who’ve never navigated a city without palace walls—it’ll be complicated."
"Make a list. Assign groups. Move in waves if necessary."
"Yes, Your Highness"
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