Chapter Fifty-Feast of Crowns
Elara’s POV
Two days is enough time for a palace to learn your heartbeat.
By the second sunrise, ward cloths were swapped twice, the pressure plates under Aeron’s rug clicked if a moth so much as sneezed, and the silver-thread line stitched along our balcony glowed like a quiet warning after dark. My fever broke, but the hum under my skin didn’t leave. It idled there-steady, low-like a new engine waiting on my say-so.
Apparently, I have a wolf after all.
I still didn’t like the mirror. I still crossed rooms with my palm finding Aeron’s curls, as if touch could build walls. Cassia called it “maternal force-fielding,” which she swore was real science. Julian backed her up with a straight face and a spreadsheet he titled, Projected Barrier Efficacy: Hugs vs. Horror.
We kept moving. That’s how you survive here.
Maris orchestrated the palace like a conductor with knives. She added a watcher rotation at our door, rerouted staff through the Green Route, and doubled checks on vents near the nursery. She didn’t waste words, and I didn’t need them. The woman could fold an army into hotel service and no one would
notice until the beds saluted.
Caius worked in patient loops-docks, east corridor, back to our wing, again. The black mist at the harbor hadn’t returned, but the gouges in hulls were real. Crews filed claims, Julian cooled headlines and warmed loyalties, holding the feeds at “concerned” instead of “hunting season.”
Thorne stayed calm. That’s his gift and his sin. His quiet has gravity. When it dropped into a room, other people’s panic lost interest.
On the morning of the third day, he set his phone on the table and told me there would be a feast.
“A presentation,” he said. “Formal. Tonight.”
“For us,” I said.
“For you,” he corrected, softer. “And for our son.”
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My pulse went off-beat-half dread, half fight. “We’re making it official.”
“We already are,” he said. “This lets the city breathe like it.”
I looked at Aeron, who was engineering a cereal dam with toast pilings. “And if the cold lady decides to attend?”
“Then she gets turned away at the door,” Thorne said, like he was ordering fresh napkins. I wanted to believe it was that simple. I chose to, because sometimes strategy is also faith.
Julian pinged me a schedule that had columns for everything from hair to who would physically remove Cassia from the pyrotechnics.
“No one,” Cassia replied in the thread, attaching a video of tasteful indoor sparklers. “You cowards.”
“Subtle,” Julian messaged back. “Like a siege with glitter.”
“Buy me dinner; buy the firewall,” she wrote.
“My love language is redundancy,” he sent, and pretended the sparkler crown she reacted with didn’t make him save the thread.
By noon the palace had a pulse I could feel in the floorboards. Strings tuning. Boot heels counting. Flowers marching into vases with military precision. The kitchen smelled like butter and ambition. Outside, the city tightened its jacket and looked up.
I stood still long enough to be dressed. The stylists arrived with the reverence of people approaching a skittish lion. They chose black-soft, clean lines, a shoulder that nodded to power without apologizing for my bones. The collar framed the mate mark like it was a jewel and not a bruise that warmed when I thought about Thorne’s mouth there.
“Hair down, please,” I said. “I want to look like a person, not a marble bust.”
Cassia tutted, “You’re unkind to marble. It’s doing its best.” She tweaked a curl into behaving. “There. Terrifying and approachable,”
Aeron waddled in, solemn in miniature black, He had crumbs in his hair and Mister Dwagon tucked into his sash like a knight who had seen things. He stopped dead when he saw me.
“You a kween,” he whispered, awe dropping his voice two octaves.
My throat pulled tight. “You a pwince,” I whispered back,
He considered that and nodded once, like a small man accepting a large job. “No yewwy,” he
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Chapter Fifty – Feast of Crowns
decreed. “Shawe.”
“Article One and Two,” Julian said cheerfully from the door, tablet already lit. “I have press language that makes cookie redistribution sound like enlightened fiscal policy.”
“Because it is,” Cassia said, deadpan.
“Please don’t say ‘policy’ to a toddler,” Caius murmured, taking our cloaks. “He’ll unionize nap time.”
Aeron brightened. “Union naps!”
Caius sighed. “I did this to myself.”
We went.
The Hall of Crowns looks like it was designed by someone who loves spectacle but hates mess. Black stone ribs, glass skylight, banners snapping like weather. Tonight the room had teeth softened with light-candles tucked into niches, a hundred places where you could mistake power for warmth if you wanted to.
Outside the palace, the terraces filled. Screens along the lower plaza carried the feed; drones drifted at regulation height like well-mannered wasps. I could hear the sea, and somewhere beneath it, the city’s breath. The corners of the hall smelled like eucalyptus and clean linen. The center smelled like attention.
They were already waiting.
Halden I ignored. Valeria I didn’t bother to hate. Daven watched me approach with the measured interest of a man who had counted floors before and will count them again. Others looked. I let them.
I took the step to Thorne’s right. Not behind. Not anymore.
A murmur rolled-curiosity, calculation, a few strands of relief that sounded almost like gratitude. The worst corners bristled, but they didn’t move. Enough of the city had seen a little boy point a toy dragon at a hawk-eyed councilor and command an apology. That does something to people.
“Citizens of Northern Crescent,” Thorne said, voice leveled to carry without strain. The microphones caught it and made it only what he chose. “Meet your queen.”
Gasps. Silence. Bowing, like a tide that knows which way gravity goes.
My heart kicked once, hard. I didn’t blink.
“And your prince,” he added, and stepped aside so Aeron could stand on the small platform Maris
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had conjured from nowhere. Our son lifted his chin. People smiled like sunrise.
“No yewwy,” Aeron told the city.
They laughed the way you do when something lands exactly where it should.
藝獎:
Maris brought me the cup that meant something. Gold, heavy enough that my wrist felt it. I touched it and said only what I meant.
“I understand responsibility,” I said. “Better than I understand privilege. I will stand with him for you, and with you for him.”
The sound that came back wasn’t applause; it was a kind of collective exhale, like the room had been holding lungs for years and finally remembered how to let them go.
We took the long walk down the hall. Wolves bowed. Officials dipped. Drones purred, obeying their lines. Outside, the terraces cheered. The screens showed a tight shot of Aeron squeezing my hand. The feed split with a wide shot of the crowd raising bread and cups and hands like they were blessing a harvest.
Of course there were whispers. Always are. At least it isn’t Ashthorne. At least the line is secure. At least there’s a boy with dimples to paste on flags. Hope is pragmatic here and it looks like math.
Cassia took the balcony for a “quick view audit” and set off a fountain of discreet sparklers that turned the terrace air into stars.
“Accidental,” she mouthed, as the crowd gasped and then laughed like they were in on a secret.
“Put her on a list,” Julian said, thumbs flying. “A good one. Possibly also a no-pyro zone.”
“Catch me,” Cassia sang into his comm, pleased.
“Toasts,” Daven announced, rescuing dignity. His was careful and clean, like his suits. “To the crown that bends without breaking,” he said, and I didn’t dislike him.
A captain from the east raised a cup to Aeron and thanked him for the broccoli ban and the hall loved him for it.
Thorne kept his words sharp and short. “Home,” he said, and somehow it counted as a speech.
We were still standing on that warmth when the warning nudged me.
It’s strange, sensing a ward from the inside. The silver-thread along the doors tingled like a mouth tasting sour. It wasn’t loud. It was…polite. A brush. A knocking.
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I went still. Thorne’s palm found the small of my back. Maris’s gaze cut to mine, already guessing. Caius pivoted toward the outer courtyard without moving his feet.
Out past the glass, the night bent. A shape gathered where darkness should be simple. Taller than a man. Not quite a person. Like a beast made of shadow pulled itself up from its own reflection.
It stepped toward the first ring of wards.
The line hissed and flared. The thing lifted a head that didn’t have a face and leaned the way a
person leans close to read a name.
Then it dissolved-no sound, just a drift of black flakes that fell like snow and vanished before they
touched stone.
Guests near the far windows murmured; the string players faltered one beat and recovered. Drones
tilted, caught nothing. The feed stayed on a smiling child handing a cookie to a general.
“Not an attack,” I said under my breath. “A knock.”
Thorne’s jaw worked once. “Then the door stays shut.”
Maris didn’t wait for orders; she moved three pieces of the board with one subtle gesture. Guards peeled off columns with civilian grace, the outer balcony closed without a clank. Caius didn’t break the line of his body, but the air near him got heavier.
The city kept cheering. The hall kept glowing. We held the moment, because that’s also our job.
I smiled for an ambassador while Aeron waved at a camera. Cassia mouthed that one wasn’t me. Julian’s tablet pinged with a dozen security flags and one suspiciously gorgeous photo of the sparklers. He didn’t breathe for two beats and then did.
When the formal part finished, the palace exhaled into food. Platters flowed. Wine appeared. Men who swore they didn’t eat sugar accepted lemon tarts like they were in a trance. Aeron collected olives and loyalists with equal efficiency.
The sky was clear when the black mist came,
It didn’t begin like weather. It began like a rumor. First, the terraces noticed their breath where it shouldn’t belong. Then the harbor bells coughed, one after another, as if their throats had turned to glass. Far bridges wore a thin veil. It moved soft and even, sliding into alleys, curling along steps, touching banners with wet fingers.
The hall’s far doors fogged on the inside with a rind of frost. People went quiet the way they do when old stories wake up and stand in front of you.
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Someone whispered it near the windows.
“Shadow Queen.”
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The whisper traveled like current across wet stone. The terraces picked it up. The streets picked it up. The feeds did what feeds do-they found a word and folded it into a headline.
Julian’s tablet vibrated against his palm. He didn’t bother hiding the way his eyes sharpened. “We’re spiking on the term,” he said, low. “I’m pulling context.”
“What context?” I asked.
“Legends, folk songs, one history podcast that owes the alphabet an apology…and an essay by a historian who spells sovereignty six ways and has a newsletter.” His thumb flicked; a digest compiled itself like magic-because it was, the human kind. “Scrubbing now.”
He sent. It arrived on my phone as the room breathed black frost.
The article up top had a title that refused to apologize.
Queen of the Shadow Court: Archetype, Warning, or Weather Pattern?
It talked about a story older than names-about a woman who ruled not with armies but with absence, who used glass like doors and cold like a pen. The author argued she wasn’t a ghost but a job someone took when the world failed to protect what it loved. They called it a Shadow Crown.
I set the phone down. My mark warmed under silk like it had an opinion.
“Later,” Thorne said softly. “Not in this room.”
He was right. People were watching. Not just cameras. People. I lifted Aeron onto my hip. He went pliant, exhausted royalty. “Home,” he said into my collarbone.
“Home,” the terraces echoed in cups and clinks and small, brave noises,
We crossed the hall as the black mist brushed the outer glass like a hand testing a window.
Inside our rooms, the wards hummed louder. The shrouded mirror looked exactly like what it was- like a door we had closed, Caius stood where a person should. Maris tightened a knot and made a list you’d never see. Cassia poured two drinks, then traded them for water when the healer’s disembodied glare arrived in her memory. Julian stayed on his tablet like you can hold a city together with brightness and thumbs.
When Aeron finally gave his weight to sleep, Thorne and I stepped onto the terrace. The
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