[House Veyrhold—Western Hall—Late Afternoon]
The summons spread like wildfire through dry stone: no raised voice, no repeated command, and yet every Zahryssar within the estate felt it.
They gathered in the western hall—one by one, then in clusters, and finally, in silence.
No one spoke loudly; no one dared because the air itself had changed. Zerat sat at the head of the hall. One leg crossed over the other, posture relaxed—almost careless.
Almost.
A thin stream of smoke curled from the pipe between his fingers, rising in slow spirals that seed far too calm for the weight pressing against the room.
Before him stood Sharukh, Raevahn, Iru, Captain Varesh, and Naburash. All still, all aware, and all waiting.
"...Where," Zerat asked at last, his voice low and even, "is Physician Naram."
No one answered, not imdiately, because before the silence could stretch, footsteps approached. Physician Naram entered, bowing deeply, his breath slightly uneven.
"Malik... forgive my delay," he said, his voice careful and controlled. "I was attending to Malika... preparing his dicines."
The pipe paused midway to Zamaret’s lips and then lowered.
"...Are they prepared?"
"Yes, Malik."
A single nod, nothing more, but the weight in the room shifted. Subtly and dangerously.
Naburash’s gaze flickered.
Just once.
His hand tightened faintly at his side.
’So... the malika did not yet lose the kids,’ he thought, sothing sharp passing behind his eyes. ’Then the situation has not resolved itself.’
His gaze moved sideways toward Captain Varesh. Zerat leaned back slightly, the motion unhurried, his presence expanding rather than relaxing.
The pipe was set aside deliberately as his attention sharpened.
"...Varesh."
The na alone was enough.
Captain Varesh straightened instinctively.
"Yes, Malik."
Zerat’s gaze settled on him fully now, heavy and unforgiving.
"...Do you rember," he asked, voice quieter still, "the oath you took when you were given command?"
Varesh did not hesitate.
"I do."
A pause.
Then, steady—
"I swore to serve you with all that I am... and to speak truth before you, without concealnt."
Zerat watched him long enough to make the words feel... insufficient.
"...Good, then begin."
The hall stilled further.
"...Tell ," Zerat continued, his tone no longer patient, "what occurred...after my consort left Zahryssar and remained under this roof."
Varesh went still, not outwardly, but sothing in him tightened. Raevahn’s gaze shifted. Sharukh’s posture sharpened. Even the silence seed to lean in.
Waiting.
Zerat’s eyes flicked briefly—toward Physician Naram.
He saw it, the tension, the hesitation, and the fear poorly concealed beneath discipline.
And that—That was enough.
"I asked," Zerat said, his voice dropping into sothing colder, edged with steel, "a question Varesh."
Varesh swallowed barely, but was seen, his jaw tightened, and then—
"...Malik..." The word strained. "...the Malika—"
He stopped, just for a fraction of a second, and in that mont, the entire hall understood. This was not a report.
This was a confession.
"...Speak...before I lose what little patience remains...and separate your head from your shoulders."
The words were quiet, almost gentle. Which made them far worse. Varesh lowered his gaze and spoke.
"...The Malika nearly lost the child."
Silence, complete and absolute silence. The air did not move; even the faint curl of smoke from Zerat’s pipe stilled—then slipped from his fingers, falling soundlessly against the stone.
He did not reach for it; he did not move. For a single, suspended mont—Zerat simply... stared.
Not at Varesh, not at anyone, but through them. As if the words had not yet settled, as if his mind refused to accept what had just been placed before him.
—
Then—
"...Explain."
One word, but it carried enough weight to break bone. His gaze sharpened—slowly, dangerously.
"I will hear," he continued, voice lowering into sothing far more controlled, far more lethal, "every detail."
A pause.
"...from the first mistake... to the last breath he took before collapsing."
—
Varesh faltered. Just for a mont, then Physician Naram stepped forward, bowing deeply.
"Allow , Malik."
Zerat did not respond; he did not need to, and so they spoke.
Naram, Varesh, Iru, and Raevahn.
Each adding pieces, each filling the silence with truth. The poisoned tablets were switched with intent by the unseen hand behind it.
The letter, the collapse, the strain, and the assassins who dared approach while the consort stood alone.
Every detail laid bare.
Nothing softened, nothing hidden, and Zerat listened. By the ti they finished, the hall had changed.
The air thickened, not gradually, not subtly, but completely. A suffocating pressure spread outward—heavy, coiling, alive.
Dark.
The scent of the black lotus deepened—no longer distant, no longer restrained. It pressed against the lungs.
Against skin, against bone. Several in the hall faltered.
One breath caught.
Another staggered half a step back. Even Raevahn’s jaw tightened.
Zerat remained seated, but sothing about him was no longer contained.
"...All of this happened," he murmured, pausing, his fingers curled slowly against the armrest. "...while I was absent."
The wood beneath his grip creaked faintly.
"...while he carried my blood."
Another pause, long enough to suffocate. Sharukh stepped forward carefully and asured.
"Malik... you must steady yourself—"
Zerat laughed, low, sharp, and wrong.
"Steady?"
The word twisted in his mouth; he leaned forward slightly, eyes lifting—dark and burning. "How does one remain steady... when rot festers beneath his own throne?"
No one answered; no one dared. His hand clenched.
"...My consort was hunted." A breath. "...poisoned...broken—"
His voice caught, not loudly but enough. Enough to reveal sothing far more dangerous than rage.
Hurt.
"And you would have ... calm."
The last word fell flat and dead. Silence crushed the hall. Zerat leaned back slowly, dragging a hand through his hair—an uncharacteristic gesture, fleeting, but real.
"It seems," he murmured, voice lowering again, colder now, refined, "that the serpents within Silthara Palace have grown... bold."
A pause.
Then—
"...or foolish enough to believe I would not notice." His gaze darkened. "...They will learn otherwise."
Physician Naram stepped forward again, more cautiously this ti.
"Malik... Malika is stable for now. The children are unhard." A pause. "But his condition is delicate. The strain he endured was... significant."
Zerat did not interrupt.
"...Your presence," Naram continued, bowing deeper, "will aid him. Your pheromones... they will steady him. Emotionally. Physically."
Zerat exhaled slowly; the pressure in the room did not vanish, but it folded inward and was contained.
For now.
"Prepare for departure," he said at last, his voice having changed again, cold and final. "We return to Zahryssar as soon as possible."
No one questioned it; no one delayed because they understood—this was no retreat, this was not escape.
This was the beginning of retribution, and sowhere, far beyond those walls, those who had dared to reach for what belonged to him had already sealed their fate.
***
[House Veyrhold—Dining Hall—Night—Continued]
The dining hall glowed beneath a hundred lights.
Gold flickered along polished stone, reflecting against silverware and crystal, while the long table stood dressed in excess—rich ats, fragrant grains, spiced wine, and delicacies prepared to impress.
Servants moved in silence, precise and Invisible.
Zerat sat at the head of the table, composed and unreadable. At the opposite end sat Duke Aren, equally poised, though his gaze held a quieter calculation.
Between them—Levin. Seated opposite Zerat, his posture calm, though the faint pallor beneath his skin had not gone unnoticed.
Iru stood nearby, discreet but vigilant—his eyes scanning each dish before it was allowed near Levin. Nothing escaped him, nothing would.
Aelira sat slightly to the side, perfectly composed, perfectly placed, and watching. Her gaze drifted—again and again—toward Zerat.
But Zerat did not look at her, not once. His attention remained where it had been since he entered the hall.
On Levin.
"...I trust the preparations et your expectations, Malik." Duke Aren’s voice cut gently through the quiet, asured and courteous.
Zerat’s gaze shifted at last. He inclined his head just slightly.
"The presentation alone speaks well of your house," he said, his tone smooth, controlled. "And I have never known House Veyrhold to offer anything... less than excellence."
A faint smile touched his lips.
"...What you host, Duke... is always worthy."
Aren held the complint with grace, though sothing sharper flickered beneath his composure.
"You honor us," he replied.
A brief silence followed as the first course was served, then—
"I am told," Aren continued, lifting his glass, "that your departure is... imminent."
Zerat did not reach for his drink, his gaze returned—quietly—to Levin before he answered.
"Yes." A single word, then—"...Zahryssar does not rest well in the absence of its Malika."
A pause, subtle and deliberate.
"And I find," he added, quieter still, "that neither do I."
Levin’s fingers stilled briefly against the table, Just for a mont and then resud.
Duke Aren observed it.
Of course he did.
He inclined his head slightly as he said, "A kingdom is rarely patient. Especially when it waits upon sothing... irreplaceable."
A pause, then—
"However." The word lingered. "The Emperor has expressed interest in hosting a gathering in your honor. A ball."
Aelira’s gaze sharpened—just slightly.
"...Should you permit it," Aren continued, "I would ask that you remain a few days longer."
The hall quieted and waiting. Zerat leaned back slightly, his expression unchanged. He considerd for a while and then—
"I do not object." The words ca easily. "We will remain, but not long."
Aren nodded, satisfied.
"Then it shall be arranged."
The conversation dissolved into quieter exchanges as the al continued. Silver touched porcelain. Wine was poured.
Voices remained low and asured, and still—Zerat’s gaze returned, again and again, to Levin.
Across the table—Aelira watched that gaze.
Watched the way it lingered, the way it never faltered and the way it never strayed. Her fingers tightened ever so slightly around her glass.
A faint smile touched her lips.
’The ball...’ Her thoughts unfolded slowly, carefully. ’...how convenient.’
Her gaze lowered briefly—then lifted again, this ti with purpose.
’If he will not look at now...’ A pause and her smile deepened, subtly and sharply. ’...then I will give him a reason to.’
Across the table—Zerat did not look at her, not once and that would prove to be her greatest mistake.
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