[Grand Arena of Sunfire—Inside the Imperial Tent]
The imperial tent stood slightly elevated from the sanded arena floor, draped in heavy crimson silk embroidered with black serpents coiling toward a central golden sun. Outside, the roar of the crowd swelled and crashed like desert tides.
Inside—there was shade, incense, and breath.
Lyresaph darted across the thick woven rugs like a silver streak. Asha followed, tumbling over her own paws before pouncing upon nothing in particular.
"WRR!"
They rolled, wrestled, and bounced against the tent cushions with unrestrained delight—clearly far more interested in freedom than in duels.
Levin watched them with a soft smile beneath his veil.
"They are happier here than in court," he murmured lightly.
Zerat exhaled a quiet breath of amusent, "Let them roam; the sand does not frighten them."
He flicked his fingers lazily toward the tent entrance.
"Go," he commanded gently.
Both creatures paused, blinked once—and then bolted out of the tent flap like released arrows.
The heavy silence returned. Zerat turned and lowered himself onto the cushioned divan, bronze skin catching the filtered light. He patted the space beside him.
"Sit, consort."
Levin complied without protest, robes settling gracefully as he seated himself, before he could ask anything further, Zerat shifted, and without ceremony, without warning, he lowered his head into Levin’s lap.
Levin blinked.
"Zer—?"
Zerat’s silver-dark hair spilled across Levin’s thighs. One strong arm draped lazily across his own torso as if the arena outside ant nothing. His fingers rose, brushing lightly along the inside of Levin’s veil—touching his cheek through the thin silk.
"Did you prepare a handkerchief for , consort?" he asked quietly, golden eyes lifting upward.
The question struck like a blade dipped in embarrassnt.
Levin stiffened, his gaze slid away, "I... did."
A pause.
"But it would be better," he added faintly, "if you did not inquire further."
Zerat slowly lifted his head, sitting upright now.
"Why?" he asked, tone calm but attentive.
Levin’s fingers tightened lightly in his lap, "It does not look... dignified."
Zerat studied him, the faint hesitation, the barely concealed dread. He reached for Levin’s hand—warm, deliberate—and brought it gently to his lips. He pressed a slow kiss to Levin’s knuckles.
"Whatever you crafted with your own hands," he said quietly, voice deep as temple drums, "is already worthy."
Levin did not imdiately believe him.
Still—he drew a careful breath and slipped his hand inside his sleeve; from within, he retrieved the folded square of pale silk.
The lotus.
Crooked, uneven, and almost tragically abstract. He placed it upon Zerat’s open palm.
"...Then," Levin said softly, though he did not quite et his eyes, "I would ask that you understand my intention... and return victorious."
Zerat did not speak at first; he looked down.
Studied it.
The stitching wandered in places. The petals were uneven. One side drooped slightly lower than the other.
Silence stretched.
Levin’s heart tightened as he thought,’I knew it; I should not have offered sothing so flawed.’
His fingers curled faintly into his own sleeves, but before regret could settle fully, Zerat rose to his knees before him.
Not hurried.
Not theatrical.
Deliberate.
He took Levin’s hands in both of his own—large, warm, and grounding.
Then—slowly—he lifted Levin’s wrist and pressed it against his closed eyes. As though shielding himself in prayer.
As though receiving a blessing from a god.
"I shall bring victory to you," Zerat murmured, voice lowered, reverent. "Not because I require proof... but because you have given sothing far more precious."
His thumb brushed lightly against the crooked lotus.
"This was stitched with effort." His head bowed slightly. "With intention."
He pressed a kiss to Levin’s left wrist, then to the right, saying softly, "On this sand, I fight not for pride, not for applause."
His golden eyes lifted, fierce and unwavering, "I fight for the one who waited for ."
The noise of the arena surged like a storm breaking against stone—steel clashing, the crowd roaring as one duel ended and another na was shouted into the sun. The tent poles trembled faintly with the vibration of thousands of voices.
Zerat folded the crooked lotus kerchief with surprising care; for a mont, Levin thought he would tuck it into his armor.
Instead, Zerat paused.
Levin reached forward first.
"No."
Zerat looked up.
Levin took the kerchief gently from his hand and tied it around Zerat’s wrist himself. The silk sat against bronze skin—crooked lotus and all—fluttering faintly with his pulse.
"If it rests over your heart," Levin said quietly, fingers lingering just a breath longer than necessary, "you will not see it."
His eyes softened beneath the veil.
"But if it rests on your wrist... you will rember it every ti you lift your blade."
Zerat went still, and Levin tightened the knot carefully.
"I shall pray to Lord Urzan," he added, voice calm but resolute, "that his sun does not blind you and his fla strengthens your strike."
Zerat’s expression shifted—not pride, not teasing.
Sothing deeper.
"You bless as though I march to war," he murmured.
Levin t his gaze steadily, "Every arena is a war, Zer. Only the banners differ."
Outside, the drums changed rhythm—deep, summoning beats that rolled like thunder over the sand.
The tent flap stirred. Captain Varesh entered, armor gleaming, posture straight as a drawn spear. He did not look directly at either of them.
"Malik. Malika." His voice was controlled but firm. "It is ti we start the tournant."
Zerat rose in one smooth motion. The air seed to tighten around him as he straightened to full height, sunlight slicing through the tent seam and catching along his scars.
He turned to Captain Varesh.
"Double the Red Knights around the Malika’s dais," Zerat said evenly, but there was iron beneath the calm. "No unknown noble approaches him without clearance."
A beat.
"And no one lingers."
Varesh bowed deeper, "As you command, Malik."
Zerat’s gaze flicked once to Levin. An unspoken understanding passed between them. Then he stepped toward the tent entrance.
The roar outside swelled the mont his silhouette beca visible through the silk. His na began to rise—first in pockets, then in waves.
"MALIK!"
"MALIK!"
"THE GOLDEN ROSE IS HIS!"
Before he crossed fully into the light, he glanced back once more, not as emperor, but as husband. Levin gave the faintest nod, and Zerat stepped into the sun.
The sound that followed was not applause.
It was reverence.
Inside the tent, the echo lingered.
Captain Varesh turned toward Levin and bowed his head respectfully.
"Malika."
Levin rose without haste. The veil fell perfectly into place as he adjusted it once—no trembling, no hesitation.
"Let us proceed, Captain," he said calmly.
Varesh stepped aside to allow him passage first.
Outside, the arena of Sunfire revealed itself in full—tiers upon tiers of serpents rising like a living wall of bronze and crimson. Banners snapped in the wind. Sand shimred under the rciless sun.
Levin ascended the carved imperial steps toward the shaded dais prepared for him. Red Knights repositioned imdiately, spears grounded in protective formation, and his voice thundered through the arena.
"Let the Sunsteel Tournant begin!"
Drums struck.
Steel lifted, and as Levin took his seat as Mother of Zahryssar, the empire held its breath—unaware that beneath celebration and devotion, sothing darker had already entered the sand.
Drums thundered.
Deep.
Layered.
Reverberating through bone and sand alike.
Steel rose across the arena as competitors saluted the imperial dais. The crowd answered with a roar that trembled the very air.
The herald lifted a scroll.
"First duel of the Sunsteel Arena!" he proclaid. "Lord Vaelrith of House Senkhar—Blade of the Eastern Tributaries!"
A tall noble stepped forward, hair bound in river-blue thread, armor etched with wave motifs. He saluted cleanly.
"Opposing him—Lord Tamrith of House Qazareth—Spear of the Western Barrens!"
A broader warrior entered from the opposite gate, bronze spear gleaming under the sun, desert sigils marked across his gauntlets.
Steel t sand.
The duel began.
The crowd erupted at the first clash—spear striking blade with a ringing crack that carried up to the imperial seats. Vaelrith pivoted with fluid grace, river-trained footwork weaving across the sand. Tamrith pressed forward, relentless, desert strength driving each thrust with punishing force.
Levin watched—not as a spectator alone, but as a sovereign. His eyes flickered across the arena, asuring discipline, composure, arrogance, and restraint.
Then—His gaze caught on a figure seated several rows below the imperial dais.
Lady Arinaya Karzath.
She wore deep crimson and black, with House Karzath’s sigil embroidered sharply at her collar. Her posture was immaculate—spine straight, chin lifted—but her eyes were not on the duel.
They were on him.
Sharp.
Assessing.
Not hostile.
But calculating.
When their gazes t, Arinaya rose slightly from her seat and bowed from afar—controlled, dignified, and not exaggerated.
Levin inclined his head in acknowledgnt.
Behind him, a familiar voice spoke low enough to carry only to the dais.
"She is Lady Arinaya Karzath, Malika," Naburash said, veiled and composed. "The rightful heir of House Karzath."
Levin’s eyes returned briefly to Arinaya.
"She carries herself like one accustod to command," he murmured.
"Yes," Naburash replied evenly. "Unlike her brother, she governs through discipline rather than spectacle."
A subtle choice of words.
Levin caught it, "She looks restrained, as though she asures every breath."
Naburash inclined his head slightly, "She has learned that survival in House Karzath demands precision."
Below, the duel intensified—Vaelrith feinted left, ducked under Tamrith’s spear, and struck the shaft hard enough to disarm him. The spear flew from Tamrith’s grasp, landing several paces away.
Blade touched throat.
Silence.
Then—the herald raised his staff. "Victory—Lord Vaelrith of House Senkhar!"
The crowd roared approval. Flower petals scattered again into the arena as the victor lifted his blade skyward. Levin’s attention drifted once more—past the victor, past the cheering nobles—To the outer ring of the arena.
There.
For half a breath.
Red hair beneath shadow.
Black eyes watching—not the duel, not the crowd—but the imperial dais, on him. Levin’s fingers tightened slightly on the armrest.
The man did not cheer, he did not move, he simply watched, and then—He smiled.
Not wide.
Not proud.
Wicked.
Levin’s voice remained steady as he leaned back slightly.
"Captain Varesh," he said without turning his head.
"Yes, Malika."
"Bring a spear."
Varesh stilled with surprise. Behind Levin, Naburash’s veiled head inclined subtly. "Malika...? For what purpose do you require a spear?"
Levin’s gaze did not leave the arena sands.
Below, the next pair of duelists were stepping forward. The crowd roared. Drums rolled like distant thunder. But his eyes were not on the competitors.
They were searching the outer ring.
The shadow.
The red hair.
The wrongness beneath celebration.
"We may require it," Levin replied calmly.
Varesh’s brow furrowed faintly. "Malika, the Red Knights are stationed on all four tiers. No threat may approach the dais."
Levin’s fingers tightened just slightly on the carved armrest.
"No threat approaches loudly," he said, voice quiet as desert dusk. "It walks beneath noise. It smiles beneath banners."
Naburash glanced toward the periter as if sensing the sa undercurrent.
The drums struck again.
BOOM.
BOOM.
Steel lifted, the herald announced the next duelists—two border captains, blades raised in salute. The crowd thundered in approval.
Varesh straightened imdiately. "As you command, Malika."
Within monts, a Red Knight approached and knelt, offering a ceremonial spear—long, balanced, tipped in polished steel. Its shaft bore imperial markings.
Levin accepted it without flourish, without theatrics. He did not lift it high, he did not brandish it. He rested it upright beside his throne, fingers loose but ready around the grip.
Naburash’s voice lowered. "You intend to defend yourself?"
Levin’s gaze sharpened beneath the veil, "I intend, to ensure that no serpent mistakes festivity for weakness."
Below them, blades clashed. Sand scattered. The crowd surged to its feet.
Levin remained seated, still.
Composed.
But the spear stood at his side like a promise. A reminder, the Mother of Zahryssar did not rely bless the arena.
She guarded it.
And sowhere beyond the roar of devotion and steel—Sothing waited.
The drums intensified.
The duelists advanced.
And beneath the burning sun of the Sunfire Arena—The Malika was ready to hunt whatever dared rise from the sand.
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