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Now reading: Chapter 504: Her Fate from ShadowBound: The Need For Power, a Action novel by JemBrixon21.

After the knights had taken Serah away, she was cast into the depths of the palace dungeons—a place where the sun never reached. Her cell was small, scarcely large enough for her to stretch her legs, the walls slick with condensation and lined with ancient chains that spoke of forgotten prisoners. She was given no food, no water, and no comfort. Only silence.

Three days passed, the only sounds were the distant echoes of footsteps and the faint creaks of the old prison doors as the guards rotated their shifts. Six knights in total kept constant watch over her, working in teams of two. They never spoke to her or even t her eyes.

When the third day passed, a group of knights erged before her cell. The clang of keys followed, and the door groaned open.

"On your feet," one of them commanded.

Serah obeyed without a word. Her movents were slow and deliberate. Chains clinked softly as she was escorted out. Her once-fine attire was wrinkled and dusted with gri; her hair slightly tangled, her skin pale from the absence of sunlight. Yet despite the fatigue that clung to her, her posture was still poised. There was an echo of defiance in her calm.

Led through the grand corridors of the royal palace, Serah’s chained steps resonated against the marble floor. The knights surrounding her moved in tight formation until finally, they reached the towering double doors of the great courtroom. The massive doors swung open, and the murmurs of the gathered court fell into silence.

There she stood, at the center of the grand chamber—beneath the towering pillars of gold and stone, before the high throne where King Tharion himself sat. Around him, mbers of the Solara council observed with unreadable expressions. To the left, among the guests, sat King Valemir of the Crescent Kingdom, accompanied by a handful of his council mbers, including the stoic figure of Caelum Virellan.

Serah’s gaze lifted, scanning the faces before her. There was no fear or no tremor of guilt. Only the cool detachnt of a woman who had already accepted the weight of her fate. Her crimson eyes eventually found her father’s—King Tharion—his stare burning like a quiet storm. It was the sa gaze she had known all her life: commanding and firm. But behind it now lingered sothing else—sothing she could not na. Perhaps disappointnt.

The room was silent enough to hear the faint rustle of robes and the whisper of breathing. Then, finally, Tharion’s voice broke the stillness.

"Serah Magna," he said, his tone deep and controlled, though heavy with unspoken tension. "Princess of the Solara Kingdom. I trust you have so notion as to why you stand here today. But even so—it must be declared before all."

His hand clenched around the armrest of his throne as he continued. "You have been brought forth to stand judgnt for your acts of treason—for violating the sacred trust of the crown by sharing classified intelligence with the Tempest Kingdom. And furthermore..."

He paused, his voice lowering, darkening, and his expression shifting into a mixture of sha and disdain. "For consorting with a dark mage... and engaging in an intimate relationship with him."

A ripple of whispers surged through the chamber. Several council mbers turned their heads, eyes wide, others whispering behind their hands. King Valemir watched quietly, his gaze unreadable, while Caelum’s cold stare never left Serah.

And through it all, Serah did not move. Not a flinch. Not even a blink. Her calm expression remained ghostly, detached—like soone standing outside her own trial.

Tharion let the silence hang for a long mont before exhaling sharply. "Two years ago," he began again, his tone heavier, "after your departure, King Valemir reached out to . He revealed to your secret dealings with Queen Lucy of Tempest—your exchange of information about the demonic incursions. The betrayal was confird, and evidence was presented."

With a gesture of his hand, the air before the court shimred. A large arcane screen ca alive, projecting the image of Serah seated before Queen Lucy Rature herself, both won speaking in hushed tones over a glowing map. The magic replayed their conversation, every word echoing faintly in the chamber.

Gasps filled the air.

Tharion’s voice softened—not with rcy, but with a trace of conflicted truth. "And yet... in your treason, there was a fragnt of righteousness. The information you shared with the Tempest Kingdom aided Amthar and its people against the demon onslaught. You sought to protect humanity."

His jaw tightened. "But no matter the reason... the act itself remains a betrayal to Solara."

He leaned forward slightly, his eyes narrowing on his daughter—the weight of a king and a father both pressing down in that gaze. "Tell , Serah Magna," he said quietly but firmly, "did you believe yourself above the law of your own bloodline?"

Serah’s crimson eyes t her father’s as the heavy silence pressed down upon the courtroom like an invisible weight. Everyone waited for her to crumble—to plead, to defend herself—but her voice ca calm, steady, almost hauntingly quiet.

"No," she said. "I didn’t."

That single phrase echoed across the marble floor, bouncing off the walls of the great hall. No explanation. No justification. Just a bare truth that cut through the silence like a blade.

For a mont, Tharion said nothing. His fingers tightened on the armrest of his throne until the wood cracked faintly beneath his grip. The air in the room seed to grow colder. Then, at last, his voice thundered once again, though a trace of sorrow lingered behind the authority.

"Then you understand, Serah Magna," he began, "that by your own will, you have sealed your fate. The punishnt for your betrayal—the act of leaking classified knowledge to an external kingdom—is imprisonnt for a term of ten years within the Solaran Fortress of Detainnt. During this ti, you shall be stripped of your command as Grand Commander of the Solara Knights and relieved of your birthright as Princess of Solara."

Around the chamber, gasps and low murmurs spread as the court processed the decree.

Still, Serah said nothing. Her expression remained calm and detached.

Tharion’s gaze darkened further. "And that," he continued, his tone colder now, "is but one stain upon your honor. The other... is far worse."

The courtroom stilled again.

"Your second act of treason," Tharion said slowly, "your sin of consorting with a dark mage... a creature of forbidden myst, one of the very bloodlines our ancestors swore to eradicate." He shook his head, his jaw tightening. "Never did I imagine my daughter—my own flesh and blood—would fall into such depravity."

His voice trembled slightly, but it was not weakness; it was fury restrained by dignity. "I trusted you, Serah," he said, his tone deep and sharp. "I trusted you with command, with the pride of this kingdom, with the legacy of the Magna line. And you shattered that trust for the sake of... affection? Desire?" He spat the last word like poison. "Do you realize what you’ve done? What kind of disgrace you’ve brought to the na of Solara?"

The silence that followed was suffocating. Even King Valemir had turned his head slightly, his piercing blue eyes fixed on Serah with faint disgust.

Tharion raised his hand, and the magical projection shimred to life once more—this ti showing a parchnt of luminous symbols and sigils. "According to the decree of Mystical Integrity," he went on, "all mbers of noble blood and royal command are to undergo myst resonance tests once every three years."

He paused. "Your results, Serah Magna..."

The script glowed brightly as the record ca into view—Serah’s myst signature flaring in brilliant light, but darkened around the edges by traces of shadowed myst energy. It pulsed faintly—dark myst contamination.

Tharion’s voice dropped, now sounding more weary than wrathful. "According to this, your resonance has been tainted by the energy of dark myst. And for one of your status, there is only one possible cause—direct and intimate contact with a dark magic user."

The courtroom rippled with gasps and murmurs. The words intimate contact lingered like venom in the air.

Tharion stood now, his voice booming across the hall, his aura flaring faintly with golden light. "You did not only break law, Serah. You defied every principle of purity, honor, and duty this crown stands for."

But as he prepared to speak the punishnt, he faltered. For a fleeting instant, he looked less like a king—and more like a father, crushed by the weight of what he was about to say. His throat tightened, and his gaze lowered briefly.

Yet, when his eyes shifted toward King Valemir—who sat straight-backed, his blue eyes fixed coldly upon him—the Crescent monarch gave a single, firm nod. Silent, demanding, and unforgiving.

Tharion’s jaw clenched hard. His hands trembled as he forced the words out. "According to the royal decree passed three years ago... for those tainted by dark myst through forbidden intimacy..." He hesitated, his voice low, trembling with contained emotion. "...the punishnt is death."

The chamber erupted in gasps, whispers, and disbelief. The Princess of Solara—sentenced to death. The Phoenix, the symbol of purity and fire, condemned to burn not in glory, but in disgrace.

So council mbers looked away, unable to bear the sight. Others muttered under their breath, questioning if such a punishnt could truly be justified.

Tharion raised his hand again, silencing the murmurs at once. "Quiet."

When all was still once more, he turned his eyes back to Serah. "Do you have anything to say in your defense? Speak now, for this may be your last chance to do so."

Serah stood silent for a mont. Then, slowly, her lips curved into a faint, soft smirk—not one of arrogance, but of bittersweet acceptance. Her eyes glead faintly with sothing unspoken.

"All that you’ve said about is true," she said, her voice steady, lodic even in the face of death. "I did everything you accuse of. And I will not deny it."

Her words made the crowd stir again. But she continued before any could interrupt.

"I knew the consequences of my choices before I made them. And I do not regret them. I lived the life I wanted—the life I chose. I found joy, love, and peace. Sothing the walls of this palace could never give ." She smiled faintly. "If I were to live again, I wouldn’t change a single thing."

Then her tone softened, a faint sadness flickering across her eyes. "My only regret... is that I won’t live to see the joy I built with my own hands continue to grow."

A quiet stillness swept through the room.

She lifted her gaze once more, her chin high. "But before I face what’s to co, I have one request," she said calmly. "Allow to speak with Galen... one last ti."

Tharion’s expression hardened instantly. Behind his composed face, fury and sorrow twisted together. He could feel his chest tighten—her words cutting deeper than she could ever know. He wanted to shout, to demand why she was still defiant, still unrepentant—but the pain stopped him.

Beside him, King Valemir grimaced faintly, his eyes narrowing in disdain. He muttered sothing under his breath, likely an insult or a curse toward the fallen princess.

Tharion drew a long breath, his rage silent but boiling within. "You have no idea," he said quietly, his voice trembling with restrained emotion, "what sha you’ve brought upon your na..."

But before he could decide on her request or officially close the court, a sudden crash thundered through the grand doors.

The enormous doors of the courtroom burst open, slamming against the marble walls as two royal knights were hurled through the entrance—armor shattering, weapons scattering across the floor.

The crowd gasped and rose to their feet as dust and smoke rolled into the chamber. The knights groaned, struggling to move, before going still.

And then, through the haze, a figure stepped forward.

The heavy echo of boots striking marble filled the silence. His aura burned faintly, a fierce and volatile pressure that filled the air. His crimson eyes glowed like twin suns through the settling dust.

It was Galen.

He strode forward in his full Solaran knight attire, his cloak fluttering behind him, his jaw set in fury. Every line of his face scread defiance.

The mont his eyes fell upon Serah—chained, pale, standing alone in the center of judgnt—sothing snapped inside him.

And with a low, sharp growl, his voice cut through the air like thunder.

"If anyone dares to lay a hand on my sister..." his tone was cold, deadly calm, but burning with rage. "...I swear, none of you will live to see another day."

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