Night fell slowly upon Arven, like a dark veil being pulled over an open wound. Outside Damon’s mansion, the lights of the noble city shone in soft gold among the mist-weathered cobblestone streets, beautiful enough to conceal the political rot growing beneath the surface. Carriages still circulated along the main avenues. Nobles still toasted in heated halls. Musicians still played for refined audiences who feigned oblivious to the sll of blood spreading among the grand houses.
But inside the mansion, no one held any illusions anymore.
The main library had completely transford into an improvised operational center. Arven’s maps now covered almost the entire central table. Small colored markers indicated noble alliances, patrol routes, influential properties, and potential pockets of ard resistance. Piles of open letters accumulated in a corner, while candles burned slowly, forming thick tears of wax on their tal holders.
The atmosphere was no longer rely tense.
Now it was war.
Damon remained hunched over one of the larger maps as he listened to Elizabeth summarize the results of the initial political maneuvers. She sat elegantly at the end of the table, as always perfectly composed, though her eyes betrayed the accumulated fatigue of the last few hours.
"House Verden responded to the invitation," she said, slowly swirling a wine glass between her fingers. "Discreetly. Which ans fear."
"Good," Damon replied without lifting his eyes from the map. "Frightened people make predictable choices."
"Sotis they make idiotic choices," comnted Cherry, sprawled in a nearby armchair while twirling a dagger between her fingers. "Which can also be fun."
Ingrivid imdiately gave her a cold look.
"You treat potential civil wars with too much enthusiasm."
"I treat everything with enthusiasm."
"That’s exactly the problem."
Morgana completely ignored the side conversation. She remained standing before another smaller table, reviewing the floor plan of Arven Manor for the tenth ti that night. Her concentration was so intense it seed physical. Her finger slowly slid along the drawn corridors, ntally marking every blind spot, every narrow passage, every possible route to the Duke’s chambers.
She wasn’t thinking politically.
She was thinking like soone about to invade enemy territory.
Damon observed this for a few seconds before finally speaking.
"You still intend to enter today."
It wasn’t a question.
Morgana didn’t raise her head.
"Yes."
Elizabeth let out a small, tired sigh.
"You say that like soone announcing a nightti stroll."
"Because to it is." Morgana finally raised her eyes. "I grew up in that manor. I know every corridor better than any guard."
"And the Duchess probably knows that," Elizabeth replied. "Which ans the most obvious routes might be compromised."
"Then I’ll use the less obvious ones."
"You speak like an assassin."
Morgana tilted her head slightly.
"Perhaps I am."
The ensuing silence was uncomfortable.
Because no one there could completely deny the possibility.
Damon rested his hands on the table and took a deep breath before intervening again.
"Our goal isn’t just to survive the night." His gaze swept over everyone in the room. "It’s to take Arven."
The words imdiately altered the weight of the atmosphere.
It made everything real.
Cherry let the dagger rest between her fingers. Elizabeth slowly uncrossed her legs. Even Ingrivid interrupted the movent of serving tea.
Damon continued.
"The Duchess controls the Duke. Controls part of the guards. Controls noble families through debt, fear, and favors." He pointed to the city map. "But she doesn’t control everything."
Elizabeth nodded slowly.
"The people still respect the Arven na."
"Much more than they respect her," Morgana added.
"Exactly." Damon picked up one of the markers and positioned it over the center of the city. "So we didn’t just take down a woman. We took down her narrative."
Elizabeth smiled discreetly.
"Now you’re speaking my language."
He pointed to the different marked areas.
"From tonight on, we’ll divide our actions into three fronts."
Morgana approached the table imdiately.
"First?"
"Internal reconnaissance of the mansion. You go in, confirm the Duke’s condition, find out who remains loyal to the old House Arven, and identify the weak points in security."
She nodded without hesitation.
"Easy."
"Nothing in this situation is easy."
"Comparatively easy."
Elizabeth raised an eyebrow, clearly unconvinced.
Damon ignored the interruption and continued.
"Second front: politics." He looked directly at Elizabeth. "You start eroding the Duchess’s support before she realizes the magnitude of the problem."
Elizabeth slowly swirled her glass before replying.
"I’ve already started."
"Of course you have."
"Two minor lords have already sent indirect replies. They’re nervous."
"Because they sense a shift in power?"
"Because they sll blood."
Cherry smiled.
"Aristocrats really are sophisticated vultures."
"Vultures survive for a long ti," Elizabeth replied calmly.
Damon placed a finger on another point on the map.
"Third front."
Now everyone looked at him.
His expression hardened slightly.
"Control of the city."
Morgana frowned.
"It’s too early for that."
"No." Damon moved another marker. "If the Duchess realizes she’s losing political influence, she might react quickly. Close the gates. Mobilize guards. Fabricate accusations." His gaze grew colder. "Or start a preemptive massacre."
The mory of the bodies found in the mansion hung silently over everyone.
Elizabeth was the first to break the silence.
"You think she’s already started."
"I think," Damon replied slowly, "that paranoid people rarely start halfway."
Ingrivid placed another tray on the table.
"So we need to secure supplies, communication, and safe routes before the city panics."
Cherry pointed at her imdiately.
"See? That’s why I like her. She talks like soone preparing a professional coup."
"Because soone needs to be competent in this house."
"Offensive."
"I need to."
Morgana turned her eyes to Damon.
"And you?"
He seed genuinely confused.
"What about ?"
"What exactly is your role in all this?"
Cherry answered before he could.
"To improvise dangerously."
Elizabeth took a sip of wine.
"To survive through sheer audacity."
Ingrivid sighed.
"To sohow irritate absolutely everyone involved."
Damon seed offended.
"You have an extrely unfair view of ."
"We have experience," Elizabeth replied.
Despite the overwhelming tension hanging over the room, a brief wave of humor swept through the atmosphere. Small. Fleeting. But enough to relieve so of the pressure before everyone completely sank under the weight of what they were about to do.
Because everyone there understood the truth.
This was no longer a dostic dispute.
It was the beginning of a power grab.
Morgana slowly approached the nearest window. Outside, Arven shone in the night like a silent jewel. Too beautiful for a place so full of monsters.
Her reflection appeared in the dark glass.
"If we fail," she said softly, "she’ll kill my father."
No one answered imdiately.
Because there wasn’t enough comfort in that sentence.
Elizabeth was the one who finally spoke.
"Then we didn’t fail."
Morgana glanced at her sideways.
There was still friction between the two. There was still pride, distrust, and irreconcilable thods.
But now there was also sothing more dangerous.
A common goal.
Damon watched them both for a few seconds before picking up another blank sheet of paper and starting to write quickly.
"We need nas," he said. "Loyal guards. Reliable servants. Safe ssengers. If Arven enters into open conflict, information will be more important than swords."
Cherry raised her hand.
"Can I threaten people?"
"Not without authorization."
"And with authorization?"
Damon thought for two seconds.
"Moderately."
"Excellent."
Ingrivid closed his eyes briefly, like soone slowly losing the will to live.
Elizabeth leaned across the table.
"There’s another important detail." Her finger touched one of the central areas of the city. "If we manage to bring the rchants to our side, the Duchess loses the ability to support part of the private guard."
Morgana frowned.
"rchants don’t choose sides."
"They choose profit," Elizabeth replied. "Which is usually even more useful."
Damon nodded slowly.
"Then we apply economic pressure as well."
Cherry seed delighted.
"This is getting incredibly wicked."
Elizabeth smiled for the first ti that night, a truly sincere smile.
"Welco to politics."
The library was once again imrsed in that strange rhythm between military strategy and aristocratic conspiracy. The sound of quills scratching paper mingled with the low crackling of candles and the occasional clinking of porcelain as Ingrivid replaced an empty cup. Outside, night advanced over Arven in absolute silence, but inside Damon’s mansion, the feeling was that ti was beginning to accelerate dangerously.
Everything was moving too fast.
Damon observed the nas scattered across the table as he tried to ntally organize the pieces of that absurd chessboard. Unstable noble houses. Guards bought off. Terrified servants. A duchess likely driven mad by her own power. And, at the center of it all, a man imprisoned within his own mind while the na Arven slowly rotted around him.
This had ceased to be rely a political dispute.
Now it seed like an infection.
Elizabeth finished writing a few more observations before raising her eyes again.
"We need to control the narrative before the Duchess does it first."
Cherry raised an eyebrow.
"You speak of ’narrative’ like a priest speaking of religion."
"Because power rarely belongs to the strongest," Elizabeth replied calmly. "It belongs to whoever controls the perception of the strongest."
Morgana seed impatient imdiately.
"And while you manipulate perceptions, she continues to control my father."
Elizabeth didn’t react to the aggressive tone.
"And while you only think about saving him, she continues to control Arven."
The gaze between the two hardened again.
Damon was already beginning to perceive an exhaustingly predictable pattern in their dynamic. Morgana spoke like soone trying to put out a fire with her bare hands. Elizabeth spoke like soone calculating where to rebuild the city after the flas.
They were both right.
And that made everything worse.
He slowly rubbed his temples before speaking.
"We need to turn the Duchess into a public threat before the first open confrontation."
Morgana crossed her arms.
"She already is."
"To us." Damon pointed to the city map. "Not to the lords sitting in heated halls pretending Arven is still functioning normally."
Elizabeth nodded discreetly.
"If we can make them believe she’s lost control of the situation, they’ll start abandoning her on their own."
Cherry chewed on another biscuit while observing everything with an almost offensive interest.
"It’s fascinating how the nobility reacts exactly like rats when the ship sinks."
"Because wealth doesn’t create courage," Ingrivid replied, gathering so discarded papers from the table. "It only creates more elegant ways to escape."
Morgana glanced at Damon.
"How much ti do you think we have?"
He didn’t answer imdiately.
Because that was precisely the question no one wanted to face.
Finally, he let out a slow sigh.
"Less than we’d like. More than it seems."
"Terrible answer," Cherry murmured.
"Terrible question."
Elizabeth rose from her chair for the first ti in several minutes and began to walk slowly around the table. Her fingers distractedly traced the edges of the docunts as she silently organized her thoughts.
"If the Duchess has already begun eliminating people within the mansion," she said finally, "then it ans sothing has frightened her."
Morgana narrowed her eyes.
"Or soone." The phrase hung in the air for a mont.
Damon imdiately understood where this was going.
Elizabeth did too.
Cherry smiled slowly.
"Oh, that’s interesting."
Morgana approached the table again, now with a different intensity in her gaze.
"She knows sothing has changed since my return."
"Of course she knows," Elizabeth replied. "You ca ho accompanied by dangerous people, started stirring up old family contacts, and disappeared from her sight soon after."
Cherry raised her hand.
"There were also threats, invasions, social chaos, and a worrying amount of hostile flirting."
No one reacted.
"I’ll continue to consider this relevant," she declared.
Damon rested his arms on the table.
"The Duchess probably doesn’t know exactly what we’re planning yet." Her gaze hardened. "But she knows she no longer fully controls the situation."
Ingrivid added more wood to the fireplace before speaking again.
"And paranoid people make mistakes when they feel control slipping."
Elizabeth nodded again.
"Especially when they’re forced to react quickly."
Morgana gave a small, cold smile.
"So we push harder."
Damon looked at her.
"No recklessness."
"No promises."
"You’re extrely irritating."
"And you take too long to accept efficient solutions."
Elizabeth ran her fingers along the side of a chair as she carefully observed Morgana.
"There’s still another problem."
"What?" asked Damon.
"The Duke."
The atmosphere seed to cool slightly.
Even Morgana stood motionless.
Elizabeth continued:
"Even if we manage to expose the Duchess, control the city, and neutralize her allies... we still need to prove that the Duke isn’t acting of his own volition." She crossed her arms. "Otherwise, any decree he signs will still have legal legitimacy."
Morgana clenched her jaw imdiately.
"You think I haven’t thought of that?"
"I think thinking and solving are different things."
The silence returned.
Because that was the true core of the problem.
The Duchess didn’t just control guards or political influence.
She controlled Arven’s very symbol of authority.
Damon slowly examined the maps before him before asking:
"Is there anyone outside the manor capable of recognizing clear signs of mind manipulation in the Duke?"
Morgana hesitated for a mont.
"Perhaps."
Everyone looked at her.
She seed annoyed with herself before continuing.
"There was a forr court advisor. Elias Varn. He worked with my father for years before he left politics."
Elizabeth imdiately recognized the na.
"The historian?"
"He was more than that."
Cherry leaned forward in her armchair.
"That sounds promisingly suspicious."
Morgana ignored the comnt.
"Elias studied ancient magic, ntal bonds, arcane influence on behavior... things that many nobles pretended didn’t exist."
"Because admitting to that kind of magic scares powerful people," Elizabeth said calmly.
"Because admitting to that kind of magic destroys the illusion of control," Morgana corrected.
Damon looked up.
"Where is he now?"
"In hiding," Morgana replied. "Or dead. It’s been years since I last heard of him."
Cherry smiled imdiately.
"Excellent. Now we have a mysterious old man missing. The situation has officially beco interesting."
Ingrivid seed less enthusiastic.
"If he truly understands this kind of manipulation, then the Duchess may have already tried to eliminate him."
"Probably," Elizabeth replied.
Morgana turned directly to Damon.
"If we find Elias and he publicly confirms that my father is being controlled..."
"Then half of the Duchess’s legitimacy implodes imdiately," Elizabeth finished.
Damon began tapping his fingers slowly on the table as he thought.
The pieces were finally starting to fall into place.
Political pressure.
Internal recognition.
Economic control.
And now, possible public proof of the Duke’s ntal corruption.
It was risky.
Unstable.
Too dangerous.
But for the first ti since the beginning of that crisis, it seed possible.
Not easy.
Never easy.
But possible.
He finally looked up.
"Then we find Elias." Morgana nodded imdiately.
Elizabeth did too.
Cherry seed overjoyed.
"I love it when plans start to sound criminally ambitious."
"Because that’s usually when things get worse," Ingrivid murmured.
Damon let out a small, tired sigh.
"Honestly? That stopped being a concern a long ti ago."
Outside, the night wind swept through Arven’s gardens as the city continued to sleep beneath its golden towers and silent streets.
Unbeknownst to them, that very night, dangerous people were silently beginning to decide who would rule their future.
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