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First Chosen by the Dragon (Evelyn) novel Chapter 44

[Cassandra’s POV]

The servant crossed the great hall at half past eight, carrying emptied wine goblets toward the service corridor. Dark hair. Head down. The stride of someone trained to be invisible—except her right leg catches weight differently than her left, a fractional hitch that pulls the hip inward before correcting.

I noticed it automatically, had filed before the conscious mind decides whether the information matters.

I replay the moment three times before sleep, lying in the guest chambers with the western sea wind rattling the shutters.

The walk. The weight shift. The particular angle of the jaw beneath dark-dyed hair—a jawline I’ve studied since childhood, the way you study a lock you intend to pick.

It looked like Evelyn. Moved like Evelyn. That slight favouring of the right leg, the old injury from the sparring yard when we were twelve and I proved a point she refused to learn—a signature written in bone.

You can dye hair. You can change your posture, your name. You cannot change the way a healed fracture distributes weight across a joint. But then the story fractures, and the pieces refuse to fit.

“Tell me about this tournament again,” I say to Maren the next morning, standing at the window while my advisor sorts through briefing documents. “The one where an outsider defeated their senior warrior.”

Maren is efficient, discreet, and possesses the extraordinary gift of being forgettable—the kind of woman who disappears in a crowd while memorizing everything the crowd says.

“The marking tournament, my lady.” Maren doesn’t look up from her papers. “Held roughly four months ago. A houseless woman challenged for position through ancient rites—single combat, witnessed by the full house garrison.”

She turns the page and continues. “She defeated the senior warrior, a woman named Venna, in what multiple sources describe as an extraordinary display. Speed beyond normal training. Reflexes that several witnesses compared to bonded-level performance.”

“Bonded-level,” I repeat, letting the words sit in my mouth like something sour. “And Lord Draven awarded his personal mark to this woman. A houseless nobody who appeared from nowhere and fights like a dragon rider.”

“That’s the account, my lady. Draven’s mark is not given lightly—it signifies personal loyalty, a direct oath between warrior and lord. In this house’s history, fewer than a dozen have carried it.” She replies, her voice monotonous.

I turn from the window. “The servant at dinner—dark hair, right leg injury, working the main hall during the reception. And the tournament winner—bonded-level speed, personal mark from the lord, no known lineage. You’re suggesting these could be the same person?”

“I’m not suggesting anything, my lady. I’m presenting the information as gathered.” She still doesn’t look up.

“Good. Because they can’t be the same person.” I cross to the desk and sit, folding my hands. “I know my sister, Maren. Every load-bearing wall, every structural weakness, every point where pressure produces collapse.”

My voice carries the knowledge that I know in my bones. “Evelyn is soft. She cried when Father raised his voice. She flinched when I walked into a room. The idea that she could defeat an elite warrior in single combat is absurd.”

Maren sets down her papers and meets my eyes with careful neutrality. “Then the resemblance at dinner is coincidence?”

“Or it’s not coincidence, and Evelyn is here—but she’s exactly what she appears to be. A servant. Scrubbing floors, carrying trays, surviving on scraps of someone else’s mercy.” I lean back. “That version makes sense. That is the Evelyn I know—running, hiding, attaching herself to whoever offers protection.”

“And if you’re wrong?” The question hangs between us. I let it hang for precisely the length of time that communicates, I’ve considered it and dismissed it.

“Yes. I heard about the tournament. A remarkable outcome, by all accounts.” I watch the junior warriors execute a formation shift, giving Venna the courtesy of not looking at her while the wound breathes. “I understand you lost your position to an outsider. That must be difficult—truly difficult—for someone of your caliber.”

Venna’s jaw tightens. She doesn’t respond immediately, and the silence tells me everything I need.

A woman at peace with her circumstances would deflect or dismiss. Venna does neither. She stands there absorbing the words the way parched earth absorbs rain—desperately, involuntarily, hating the need even as it pulls the water down.

“Positions are earned,” she says finally, each word measured. “That is house law.”

“Of course.” I incline my head with perfect grace. “House law is what separates civilization from chaos. I only meant that skill like yours doesn’t diminish because a single contest went badly. These things have a way of correcting themselves, in my experience. Talent and loyalty always surface eventually.”

I offer a small, warm smile—the kind I’ve practiced until it reaches my eyes—and step away from the railing. “It was a pleasure, Venna. I hope we’ll have another opportunity to speak again.”

I leave without looking back. The seed is planted, and seeds don’t need supervision—they need darkness and pressure and time, and Venna has all three in abundance.

She won’t come to me today or tomorrow. But when the resentment reaches the point where silence becomes unbearable, she’ll remember the foreign diplomat who saw what her own lord apparently couldn’t—a warrior who deserved better. And then she’ll talk.

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