[Silthara Palace — Malika’s Private Chamber — Continuation]
Grief did not announce itself; it did not cry; it settled heavy and unseen. And in that chamber. It sat beside the living. Levin remained still upon the silken bed, his breath shallow and his body quiet but no longer untouched.
Sothing had been taken, silently and irreversibly, and beside him, Zerat did not move his hand. It still held Levin’s, not loosening, not trembling, just...holding.
As if that alone kept him anchored. The chamber stood empty now: no priest, no physician, and no attendants, because when the order had been given, they had left.
And none dared return, not yet.
"...One," the word slipped from Zerat’s lips, barely ford. "Only one remains."
Silence swallowed it; he looked down at Levin. "...And one...was taken."
Not lost, not gone, but taken. His gaze darkened slowly and dangerously, because grief did not break him. It sharpened him; with a faint shift, Levin stirred, just slightly, his fingers moving weak and searching.
Zerat’s grip tightened imdiately, and his voice lowered, quieter and more careful now, "...Consort, you return again."
Levin’s lashes fluttered, struggling heavily, and then they opened, not fully Just enough.
"...Zer..." The na barely ford. Fragile and lost sowhere between breath and pain.
Zerat leaned closer—"... I am here."
Levin’s gaze tried to focus, but sothing lingered behind it, a weight. An absence he could not yet na.
"...It feels..." His voice trembled. "...odd."
The word struck, and Zerat stilled, just for a mont. Then his hand moved, resting against Levin’s hair. "...You are alive...and so is the heir."
He did not say more, not yet, because so truths could not be spoken while the wound was still open. Levin’s eyes closed again, not slipping away, just resting.
But his hand tightened faintly. As if holding on to sothing he could not see and mumbled, "Then why do I feel as if...I lost sothing valuable?"
Zerat stilled only for a breath, then leaned down, pressing a quiet kiss against Levin’s forehead.
"Rest, consort," he murmured low, the words softened but not entirely steady. "...I will remain here."
Levin did not close his eyes; he watched him closely. Searching, not his words but what lay behind them.
And there, He felt it: the silence and the thing unsaid.
"...You are hiding sothing." His voice ca faint but certain.
Zerat’s expression did not break, but sothing within his gaze shifted, and then Levin added softly, "...Please...lie beside ."
Zerat held his gaze, then very faintly he smiled. "...As my consort commands."
He moved without further word, removing the distance, settling beside him careful and asured, as if even the space between them required gentleness. His arm ca around Levin, drawing him close, not tightly, not possessively, but with quiet certainty.
Levin exhaled, the tension in him easing, as he rested against Zerat’s chest, listening to the steady rhythm beneath.
"...You are warm."
He murmured almost absentmindedly. Zerat’s hand moved slowly through his hair, a touch more carefully than before.
"...Then stay." A soft kiss brushed against Levin’s crown, lingering—"...and rest."
***
[Elsewhere — The Dark Cells Beneath the Palace]
Stone replaced silk, cold replaced warmth, and deep beneath the palace two figures remained.
Lyresaph and Asha were confined. The cage was narrow and unforgiving. The air was thin and unkind.
Lyresaph did not roar, did not struggle. He remained still, head lowered. As if replaying the mont again and again and again.
Asha pressed closer, not afraid of the dark but of sothing else.
The silence, because instinct told them they had not been wrong, but they had still failed.
***
[Back to the Chamber]
Zerat rose slowly and reluctantly. His hand lingered then released only when it had to. He turned, walking toward the door, each step asured and controlled because what ca next would not be.
The doors opened, and the mont he stepped out, the Malik returned, cold, absolute, and deadly.
"...Summon the council." The command fell like iron. "And...seal every gate; no one leaves Zahryssar."
His gaze darkened further and silence tightened, "...And bring ...Nabuarsh."
The na lingered, heavy and final, because sowhere in the shadows of this palace a serpent had struck, and now the king would strike back.
***
[Silthara Palace — Council Chamber — The Summoning]
The chamber did not murmur. It held silence tight and asured because every serpent present knew sothing had already broken within the palace, and when the Malik called council under such silence, it was never for discussion.
It was for judgnt.
At the far end upon the elevated throne Zerat sat, still and unmoving. His presence no longer burned; it pressed, cold and absolute.
Below, rows of nobles and council mbers stood, heads bowed, spines rigid, and breathing only when permitted.
Then the doors opened, and Nabuarsh entered. Every step was placed with the precision of one who had long mastered the art of standing beside power without being crushed by it. He reached the center and bowed, deep enough to respect but not enough to submit.
"...Malik." He straightened, his gaze lifting with calm and composure. "You summoned ; has sothing occurred for this urgent summon?"
Silence answered him first, then Zerat leaned forward just slightly enough to shift the weight of the entire chamber.
"Sothing has indeed occurred." His voice ca low and unhurried. "...Within my own palace, under my own watch."
The words settled heavy as his gaze swept across the chamber, "...Soone dared...to raise a hand against what belongs to ."
A faint tightening of breath rippled through the council.
"...And that...will not remain unanswered." Silence deepened, and then his gaze returned to Nabuarsh.
"And...You will find them within two nights. I want the one responsible...dead."
No elaboration, no explanation, only certainty. Nabuarsh did not flinch; he inclined his head smoothly and practiced. "...As you command, Malik, I promise whoever that serpent is they will not see the third night."
Zerat said nothing more, because nothing more was needed. The command had already been carved into the air, irreversible.
Nabuarsh bowed once more and then turned, walking away asured and controlled. Just as he had entered, but beneath that composure, sothing stirred.
’Why...?’ His thoughts sharpened. ’Why issue such an order... A command ant for shadow... Why did Malik command before the entire council?’
A faint narrowing of his gaze.
’This could have been spoken in private, unless...’ He did not finish the thought and did not allow it to fully form because doubt was dangerous.
But still—it lingered, and then slowly his lips curved into a subtle and hidden smirk.
’It does not matter; the storm has already struck, and the Malika...’His eyes darkened. ’...has finally paid the price, a price to be the silver serpent’s bride.’
A faint exhale left him satisfied.
’The heirs...must be gone by now; this ti everything was planned perfectly, and I hope Dark Lord Azhrakaal will be impress by my work and let see my husband.’
The smirk deepened wickedly and unseen.
’And when the root falls—the tree follows.’
Behind him the chamber remained silent, because above them all, the Malik watched, and sowhere beneath that stillness, a trap had already begun to close.
***
[Silthara Palace — Malika’s Private Chamber — The Quiet After]
The chamber was calm, the kind of stillness that did not soothe but unsettled. Levin stood before the mirror alone.
Robes loosely draped, unfastened at the front his gaze fixed, not on himself but on what lay beneath. His hand moved slowly resting against his abdon. It was there, the shape, the warmth, the life and yet—A unseen and unspoken hollow.
"...Why..." His fingers pressed slightly as if searching deeper—"...does it feel...less?"
The word lingered uncertain and wrong, before he could form another thought, the doors opened quickly.
"...Malika—!"
Iru entered and stilled because Levin was not resting, not seated but standing and barely steady before the mirror.
Iru rushed forward concern breaking through restraint. "...Malika, you should not be standing, you must rest."
Levin did not turn, did not answer his gaze remained fixed ahead unmoving.
"...Please..." Iru softened reaching for the nearby cup. "...at least take water."
He offered it carefully and Levin took it, not because he wished to but because his hand moved before his mind did.
"...Iru." His voice ca quiet, too quiet. "...How are my children?" What did physcian Naram said"
An Imdiate and sharp silence. Iru froze, his breath caught just for a mont.
"...They are well, Malika." The answer ca too quickly, too smooth and too rehearsed.
Levin’s gaze shifted finally toward him, and in that look there was no confusionm only knowing.
"...Do not lie to ." The words were not raised but they carried weight.
Iru’s fingers tightened around the tray—"...Malika—"
"—Iru." This ti, the tone changed, not soft, not uncertain but an authority. "...I order you to speak the truth."
Silence fell heavy and unavoidable.
Iru’s head lowered, then slowly he sank to his knees. The tray set aside, hands trembling just enough to betray him.
"...I apologise..." His voice broke quietly and his head bowed deeper. "...Malika but please...do not force to speak what will only bring you pain."
Levin stared at him long and unblinking. And then sothing shifted, not anger, not grief but sothing colder.
"...I see. so even now..." His gaze drifted not to Iru but beyond him. "...truth is withheld from , within my own chamber."
Iru flinched. "...Malika—no—"
Levin continued, his voice lowered further almost distant, "...Perhaps...I have misunderstood my place. It seems...that as Malika...I have not earned a place within the hearts of Zahryssar."
The words settled not loud but devastating.
"...That even those who serve ..." His gaze returned sharp now. "...choose silence over truth."
Iru’s head dropped further almost to the ground.
"...That is not—"
But the words failed him because he could not deny it, not fully. Levin looked away his hand returning to his abdon, resting there.
"...Then I will not ask again. I will learn it myself."
Silence followed, tense, fragile and beneath it the truth remained unspoken but no longer hidden.
User Comments
0 comments from readers