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The pause that followed was heavy.

Ragnar then turned to Mira.

"You claim to be a courier," he said, his tone sharpening. "Bound by oath to deliver sealed ssages untouched. Yet you admit, before the crown, to breaking that seal out of curiosity."

Mira stiffened. "I thought—"

"You thought," Ragnar interrupted, his voice cutting cleanly through hers, "that violating one of the most sacred rules of your profession would earn you praise?"

Her fingers tightened around the strap of her satchel, the leather creaking softly beneath her grip.

"Produce your credentials," Ragnar said evenly. "Your guild mark. Your writ of service."

Mira hesitated, her gaze flicking briefly toward the gathered courtiers, then to the dais.

"Do it," King Zeriel ordered sharply, his voice cutting through the room like a blade.

She flinched and reached into her satchel, fumbling far longer than necessary before finally withdrawing a small, worn token. It was dull and unremarkable in her palm, its edges smoothed by years of handling.

Ragnar glanced at it only briefly before lifting his eyes again.

"That mark," he said calmly, "belongs to the western courier houses. Not the border villages you claim to serve."

A hush fell over the throne room, as though the air had been sucked out.

Ragnar did not pause. If anything, he seed to draw strength from the silence. "You also claim to recognize my handwriting. Tell —how many letters have you handled that were penned by ?"

Mira’s lips parted. Her throat worked. No sound ca.

"None," Ragnar answered for her. "I do not use civilian couriers. I never have." He gestured toward the parchnt still clutched in the herald’s hands. "As for the letter itself, its language alone condemns it as false. I do not call my father a tyrant. I do not write in grand proclamations. And I do not send detailed military vulnerabilities through unsecured channels like so reckless fool begging to be caught."

He turned then, chains softly clinking, and t the king’s gaze head-on. "Four weeks ago, when this letter was supposedly written, I was at court. I addressed the court. I dined at your table. And shortly before that, I was confined to my manor with my wife, as we both healed from the grievous wounds we sustained when our carriage was ambushed by ard thugs."

His eyes never left the throne. "You know this, Your Majesty. So tell —when, precisely, would I have found the ti to pen such a conveniently damning letter? A letter so clearly forged that it insults the intelligence of everyone present." He inclined his head slightly. "If you doubt my words, I urge you to compare its writing to any of the recent missives I sent you."

King Zeriel’s expression remained unchanged, as unreadable as it had been when the trial began.

"And finally," Ragnar continued, nodding toward the parchnt, "that seal." His pupils narrowed, just briefly, as sothing darker stirred beneath his composure. "The wax is fresh. It has not aged, cracked, or dulled as it should have after weeks of travel."

A ripple of unease moved through the court.

The shackles around Ragnar’s wrists seed to grow tighter the longer he stood there on display, presented to the room like carrion for starving vultures. "These witnesses offer hearsay, broken oaths, and a forged letter," he said. "No corroboration. No proof. Only a narrative carefully crafted to damn ."

Ragnar bowed, the motion controlled despite the iron biting into his skin. "I have fought for the crown. I have bled for it. I have risked my life, and the lives of soldiers loyal to fighting Your Majesty’s wars." He straightened slowly. "If these false testimonials branding a traitor are to be believed, then there is one final thing they have overlooked. The rebel factions would never work with . Why would they, when I was the one who led troops through their borders, laid siege to their stronghold, killed their king, and carried off their princess? I am the last man they would ever trust with an alliance."

"I stand accused today not because I betrayed the crown, but because soone fears what I represent." His gaze flicking just once toward the queen.

From the way she had wielded the conflict in Westeria against him, it was clear she at least suspected he harbored an interest there. None of this felt coincidental.

"The witnesses brought here today are either idiots or terrible actors," Ragnar went on. "I sincerely hope whoever paid them demands a full refund and invests in more competent liars next ti. Until then, the courtiers will have to find so other mind-numbing spectacle to occupy themselves with."

The faint humor in his voice was wildly out of place, and it struck the room like a slap.

Laheir scowled from his place near the dais. "You dare to make a mockery of the royal court?" he seethed.

Ragnar did not rise to the bait. He rely gave Laheir a bored, unimpressed look. "This court made a mockery of itself the mont it began lending credence to every baseless rumor that drifted through its halls."

"I see that your ti in prison did nothing to cure you of your insolence," the queen said coldly. She regarded him as one might a stain that refused to be scrubbed away.

"Forgive , Your Majesty," Ragnar replied, inclining his head with a practiced, false sincerity. "It was never my intention to offend." Then, after a heartbeat, he added, "I have served the crown for twenty years. In that ti, I have been called many things but I have never once been called a traitor to the king."

Still, King Zeriel said nothing.

The silence gnawed at Ragnar. He could not decide whether it was a good thing or a warning.

"Since you insist upon your innocence before all gathered here," Nheera said smoothly. "I see no reason you would object to a full audit of your private docunts and ledgers." Her smile was predatory. "You are a man of the law, after all. Or is that distinction reserved only for monts when you believe yourself untouchable?"

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