Lucas remained where he was, the noise of the camp fading into sothing distant and muted as his thoughts turned inward, each possibility unfolding slowly and painfully in his mind. Betrayal did not happen in a vacuum, he knew that much, because it required access, trust, proximity, and ti, and whoever had done this had possessed all three long before the army ever marched. He replayed every conversation from Valerion, every council eting, every quiet exchange that had seed harmless at the ti, searching for the mont where intent might have slipped through unnoticed.
"If the usurpers were ready," he thought quietly, "then the information was never delayed. It was delivered cleanly, confidently, and without hesitation."
That ant the traitor was not acting out of fear or coercion alone, but conviction, or at the very least a belief that Valerion was already lost. The realization weighed heavily on his chest, because such resolve did not belong to a minor informant or a disposable pawn. It belonged to soone who believed their choice was justified.
He was pulled from his thoughts by familiar footsteps approaching from behind, and he did not need to turn to know who it was.
Henrietta stopped beside him, her gaze fixed ahead on the rows of tents and banners fluttering gently in the night air, yet her voice carried a rare uncertainty when she spoke. "You are thinking too loudly," she said softly.
Lucas let out a slow breath and nodded. "I am trying to understand how this happened," he replied. "Not who yet, but how. The thod matters as much as the na."
Henrietta turned to face him then, her expression troubled in a way he rarely saw, because doubt was not sothing she often allowed to take root. "I do not understand it either," she said. "We took precautions. Routes were altered. Even the king himself misled the council. Yet Rus was ready."
"That is what frightens ," Lucas answered quietly. "It ans the deception failed before it even began."
She studied him carefully, her eyes searching his face as if grounding herself in his presence. "Lucas," she said, her voice firming despite the confusion, "I need you to know this. I trust you more than anyone alive or dead. If the world itself accused you, I would still stand in front of you."
He looked at her then, truly looked at her, and for a mont the weight pressing down on him eased just enough to breathe. "And that," he said softly, "is why I trust you as well. The bond we share is not just power or obligation. It is truth. If you had betrayed Valerion, I would already know, because sothing inside would have shattered."
Henrietta clenched her fist at her side. "Then the sa is true for ," she replied. "If you had turned, I would feel it like a blade through my chest. Which ans whoever did this stands outside that bond entirely."
Lucas nodded slowly. "Exactly. And that narrows the circle in a terrifying way."
Silence stretched between them for a mont, heavy but not uncomfortable, the kind shared by people who understood that speaking too much could dilute the gravity of what they were facing.
Henrietta finally spoke again, quieter this ti. "The king does not trust anyone now."
"I know," Lucas said, his gaze dropping briefly to the ground. "And that may be the most dangerous consequence of all. An army can survive betrayal. A king who doubts everyone cannot."
She inhaled sharply, then steadied herself. "What do you intend to do."
Lucas lifted his head, resolve settling into place even as uncertainty lingered beneath it. "I will not confront the traitor yet," he said. "Panic would only force them deeper into the shadows. For now, I observe, I listen, and I prepare for the worst outco."
Henrietta nodded once. "Then I will do the sa," she said. "Whatever path this takes, you will not walk it alone."
Lucas let the silence stretch for a mont longer, giving the thought ti to settle properly before he gave it a voice, because once spoken it could no longer be taken back. His eyes remained fixed on the distant glow of the campfires, but his jaw tightened slightly as the conclusion finally crossed his lips.
"Then there is only one na left," he said quietly. "If you and I are innocent, and we both know it in our bones, then the circle closes on the empress."
Henrietta did not react imdiately. She inhaled slowly, her chest rising and falling as she weighed the words, as soone who had lived long enough to understand how power corrupted even the most resolute hearts. "I ca to the sa conclusion," she admitted at last. "I simply did not want to be the first to say it."
Lucas turned to her then, his expression grim but steady. "It makes sense," he continued. "She lost everything in Lechia. Her authority, her fearso presence. If the usurpers promised to restore her power, truly restore it, not scraps or illusions, then that would be an offer few could refuse."
Henrietta’s fingers curled slowly at her side. "Especially soone like her," she said. "She has always defined herself by strength. To live powerless is a punishnt worse than death for soone who once ruled through fear and reverence."
Lucas felt a dull ache settle in his chest, not because he was surprised, but because part of him had hoped there was still another explanation, so hidden variable he had overlooked. "She had access," he said. "To the king. To the council. To the routes. To our timing. She would have known about the deception regarding Lechia before anyone else."
"And she would have known how to pass the information without raising suspicion," Henrietta added. "No one would question a ssage carried under her seal."
Lucas exhaled slowly. "Which explains why they were prepared long before we ever changed course."
Henrietta lowered her gaze briefly, her voice softer when she spoke again. "If this is true, then the king’s reaction makes sense too. He thought of her first, even if he refuses to say it aloud."
"And yet," Lucas said, his thoughts darkening, "he cannot act on it. Not without proof. Accusing the empress without absolute certainty would fracture Valerion beyond repair."
Henrietta looked back at him sharply. "And if he acts too late, the war will decide the truth for him."
Lucas nodded. "Either way, he is trapped."
For a mont, neither of them spoke. The weight of what they were implying pressed heavily on the air between them. Lucas could not help but think back to the tis the empress had looked at him with veiled curiosity, the way her gaze lingered just a mont too long, as if asuring him not as a person but as a variable in a larger design.
"She has always been watching," he thought. "Not guarding Valerion, but calculating its worth."
Henrietta broke the silence again, her voice edged with restrained anger. "If she truly did this," she said, "then she has condemned thousands to die just so she can reclaim what she lost."
Lucas’s eyes hardened. "That is why we cannot move rashly," he replied. "If she senses suspicion, she will accelerate whatever plans she has left."
Henrietta studied him carefully. "You already have sothing in mind."
"I do," Lucas admitted. "For now, we pretend nothing has changed."
He paused, then added, his voice low and resolute, "This war is no longer just about territory or thrones. It is about uncovering the truth before it destroys what little trust Valerion has left."
Henrietta t his gaze, unwavering. "We stand together," she said. "Until the very end."
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