The "dawn" in that kingdom didn’t co with light.
There was no slow golden light filtering through windows, no shadows stretching under the sun’s touch. The sky remained the sa—dark, constant, unchanging—as if ti there were asured by sothing other than the natural cycle of the outside world.
Yet... they knew.
There was a subtle change in the air, almost imperceptible to anyone not accustod to perceiving the environnt beyond the obvious. The castle seed... more active. Distant, muffled by the thick walls, a greater flow of movent began to form. Footsteps. Low voices. Routine.
Ti.
Inside the room, the silence was different.
Heavy, but not tense.
The sheets were disheveled, clearly marking that the night had been... anything but peaceful. Exelia remained lying down, partially supported by Kael, her body still relaxed, but her eyes open, already conscious long before any external interruption.
She didn’t move when she heard the first signs outside.
She just took a deep breath.
Slowly.
Controlled.
As if she were returning, little by little, to that version of herself the world knew.
Kael was also already awake.
His eyes were open, fixed on the dark ceiling, as if he had been there for so ti, just... thinking. Or maybe not even that. Maybe just existing in that interval between rest and what was to co.
He didn’t seem tired.
Nor rushed.
Just... ready.
The sound of footsteps approaching the door was no surprise to either of them.
Three light knocks.
Respectful.
Precise.
Exelia slightly raised her face, resting her chin on Kael’s chest, her eyes sliding towards the door for a mont before returning to him, a small, lazy smile appearing on her lips.
"Back to reality," she murmured, her voice still slightly hoarse, but regaining its usual control.
Kael let out a small, almost automatic "hm."
"Unfortunately."
She chuckled softly through her nose, but didn’t have ti to reply.
The door opened.
The maid entered with soft steps, low posture, her gaze respectfully directed at the floor for the first few seconds—until she approached close enough to speak.
"Your Majesty."
Her voice was calm, practiced, perfectly controlled.
She bowed slightly.
"A bath has been prepared."
A brief, asured pause.
"And breakfast is being served. After that, the Vampire King will receive you in audience."
No hesitation.
No curiosity.
She didn’t look around more than necessary, showed no reaction to the state of the room or the proximity between the two. Professional down to the last detail.
Exelia observed this in silence for a mont, her smile slowly fading, not from discomfort... but from adaptation. The mask returned, layer by layer.
"Understood," she replied even before Kael, her voice now completely aligned with the tone she used outside—soft, polite, controlled.
The maid inclined her head once more.
"I am at your service."
And then she stepped back.
Without haste.
Without noise.
The door closed again, leaving the room once more isolated from the rest of the castle.
Silence returned.
But now... different.
Lighter.
More conscious.
Exelia let out a small sigh, resting her forehead briefly on Kael’s chest before finally moving, sliding to the side with a lazy, yet still elegant movent, as if even that were calculated.
"Bath, coffee... and then politics," she comnted, looking at the ceiling for a mont.
A pause. Then she turned her face toward him.
"Want to bet how much trouble this is going to cause?"
Kael turned his head slightly to look at her, his gaze calm, almost bored.
"No need to bet."
A short pause.
"Enough already."
Exelia let out a low chuckle, running a hand over her face before slowly sitting up in bed, her movents now more controlled, closer to the version the rest of the world would see.
"Great," she murmured, getting up imdiately afterward.
And then, with a small, wry smile:
"Let’s take a shower before we have to decide who survives today."
Exelia stood for a mont after getting up, her eyes scanning the room as if reorienting herself—not in space, but in the role she needed to resu playing. The lightness that had enveloped her monts before hadn’t completely disappeared, but it was carefully gathered, folded, and stored away where only Kael seed to have access.
She ran her fingers through her hair, adjusting it with simple but precise movents, while letting out a controlled sigh.
"This almost seems unfair," she comnted lightly, though her tone was far removed from her previous intensity. "We barely have ti to enjoy ourselves and we already have to deal with an entire kingdom again."
Kael, still lying down, followed her movent with his gaze, in no hurry to get up. There was sothing almost deliberate in the way he remained there—not laziness, but a kind of quiet mastery over ti.
"You speak as if it’s a surprise," he replied, his voice low and steady.
Exelia raised an eyebrow slightly, looking at him over her shoulder.
"It’s not a surprise," she said, walking a few steps across the room until she stopped near one of the closed windows. "It’s just... irritating."
She slid her fingertips across the surface of the stone beside the window, feeling the coldness of the material before turning again.
"Especially when we know this isn’t going to be a simple conversation."
Kael finally moved.
He stood up slowly, distractedly running a hand through his hair as he took a few steps around the room. His gaze wasn’t on her at that mont—it was distant, as if he were already several steps ahead of what hadn’t even happened yet.
"It won’t," he confird.
A short pause.
"But it doesn’t have to be long either."
Exelia watched this attentively, crossing her arms slightly.
"Do you intend to resolve this quickly?" she asked, tilting her head slightly.
Kael shrugged.
"It depends on them."
The answer ca simply.
Directly.
But there was sothing behind it—a very clear line being drawn.
Exelia let out a small sigh through her nose, as if she had already expected exactly that.
"Either they cooperate..." she began.
Kael completed, without even looking at her:
"Or they cease to be a problem."
Silence.
Not heavy.
Not uncomfortable.
Just... logical.
Exelia let out a slight, almost automatic smile.
"I like how you simplify things."
Kael glanced briefly at her.
"It works."
She didn’t argue.
Because it really did work.
For a mont, neither of them spoke. The atmosphere seed suspended between what had already happened and what was inevitably to co. But, unlike outside, that silence didn’t feel pressured.
It was... theirs.
Exelia was the first to move again, walking towards a side door that led to the prepared bathing area. She paused there for a second, her hand resting on the doorfra, before looking over her shoulder.
"Are you coming?" she asked, with a slight trace of teasing still present, though softer now.
Kael raised an eyebrow slightly.
"Should I?"
Exelia smiled.
It wasn’t the controlled smile she used with others.
It was lighter.
"Probably."
She didn’t insist.
She just went inside.
Kael watched the door for a mont after she disappeared beyond it, as if considering sothing—or perhaps just savoring the mont before leaving it behind.
Then he followed.
—
Ti passed differently after that.
There was no rush.
But there was no wasting ti either.
When they returned to the master bedroom, they were already completely aligned again with the image the world expected to see. Clothes adjusted, posture composed, expressions controlled. If soone saw them at that mont, they would hardly imagine what had filled the previous hours.
Exelia adjusted the cuff of her own sleeve with a precise movent, checking the final details as she walked to the mirror.
"Better," she murmured, more to herself.
Kael didn’t answer, but he was watching—not the reflection, but her.
There was sothing almost curious about the way he analyzed her in that state. Not because it was different from usual, but because he knew exactly what lay beneath that perfectly constructed layer.
"You change quickly," he comnted.
Exelia t his gaze through the reflection.
"I need to," she replied, simply.
A pause.
Then, more lightly:
"Soone has to keep up appearances."
Kael tilted his head slightly.
"You like this."
It wasn’t a question.
Exelia smiled slightly.
"I’m good at this."
She didn’t confirm.
But she didn’t deny it either.
The sound of footsteps outside the room indicated that the castle was already fully awake. The routine of that place didn’t revolve around light or darkness—it revolved around power, and that never truly slept.
"Breakfast," said Exelia, looking away from the mirror and walking towards it. "Before they decide to co and get us personally."
Kael let out a small "hm," agreeing effortlessly.
"Let’s go."
They didn’t take long.
When they left the room, the hallway was already prepared—not hastily, but intentionally. Servants passed by in the background, silent, efficient, while the castle’s atmosphere carried that sa constant weight of vigilance.
But there was sothing different now.
It was no longer curiosity.
It was expectation.
They were being awaited.
As they walked, Exelia maintained her position slightly behind Kael, as before, resuming the role she had played since they entered that kingdom. But this ti, there was a subtle difference in her posture.
Less restraint.
More... awareness of the control they had.
"They’re nervous," she comnted, in a low tone, just loud enough for him to hear.
Kael didn’t look at her.
"They must be."
Exelia let out a light breath.
"Good."
A pause.
"It ans they’re thinking."
Kael replied with a slight twitch at the corner of his mouth.
"Or trying to."
They continued on.
Each step echoed in a controlled manner down the corridor, bringing them closer not only to a al... but to the next move in that ga that had been underway even before they crossed the border.
And this ti...
There was no need to test anymore.
The next conversation would define everything.
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