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Chapter 37: Last of Her Na

The sun rose, but Elara did not reach for the pen.

She moved through the morning like soone with too much energy and nowhere safe to put it.

She heated water until the steam clouded the small kitchen, then distributed the rations without a word.

Alistair watched her from across the common area, leaning against the weapon rack. He recognized what she was doing.

’She’s been at it since dawn. That’s not cleaning, that’s just avoiding.’

He had seen the sa thing in soldiers the night before sothing irreversible – the need to keep the hands busy so the mind doesn’t have to sit still.

By the ti she swept the entryway for the second ti that week, the broom was scraping against the stone with unnecessary force.

The sound carried through the base, sharp and rhythmic.

Due seed to notice it as well. He settled deeper into his chair, his attention on the threads between his fingers.

The threads moved more slowly than they used to, thinner in places where they had once been bright.

His capacity had not recovered since the battlefield, and Alistair doubted it ever would completely.

He did not look up from his work. Due had a talent for knowing when to leave people alone with their own weight.

Midday arrived before the broom was finally leaned against the wall.

Elara walked to the table without sitting.

She stood over the docunt she had drafted the night before, her shadow falling across the cramped script.

Alistair made a pretense of working on the leather grip of his Rune Sword. His fingers caught on the hide as his gaze drifted toward her.

He saw her chest go still, and her breath held.

Elara picked up the pen. It was a simple thing, wooden and stained. She held it over the signature line, the tip hovering just above the parchnt.

The silence in the room stretched until Alistair abandoned the pretense of his sword and simply watched.

The docunt was a formal strike against the Echelon’s petition process.

Written in her own hand, it declared her presence in Sun Harvest to be voluntary and free of coercion. It was a formal renunciation of Therasia citizenship.

More than that, it was a renunciation of the Vance na.

In Therasia, the Vance na carried the weight of centuries.

It dictated the flow of grain and gold across the Oasis, and the family’s nobility is the kind that doesn’t bend for anyone.

By signing this, Elara was stepping away from all of it.

She was severing the legal connection to the man who had authored the petition.

Alistair thought of Caldren sitting in his Therasian office, surrounded by lawyers who knew exactly how to turn a daughter’s absence into a legal kidnapping.

With one stroke of ink, she was dismantling the only weapon he had left.

The pen moved. Her hand was steady, betraying none of the hesitation that had co before it.

She signed her na. For the final ti, she wrote the letters that connected her to the Echelon’s records as a Vance.

She set the pen down.

Due exhaled quietly as the atmosphere in the room shifted.

It was not that the weight had vanished, but it had resolved into sothing singular.

The tension of existing in two worlds at once, as her father’s daughter and as her own person, had finally solidified into a single path.

Elara sealed the letter with plain wax.

It lacked the heraldry of the Therasian seals she had known since childhood. She pressed it firmly, and then moved it to the center of the table.

"You knew this was coming," she said, turning toward Due. Her voice was flat. "The obligation you ntioned when I first arrived. The price of staying."

Due t her eyes. "I knew its direction. But, I did not know the form it would take."

She nodded slowly, her gaze lingering on his hands. "Did it hurt to watch?"

Due considered this. He gave the question the full weight of his attention, his Characteristic flickering briefly behind his eyes.

"Yes," he said. "However, you didn’t need

to stop the bleeding. You needed

not to get in the way of the cut."

Seeing this exchange, Alistair was speechless. Not by what Elara had done, but by how quietly it had happened.

He had expected sothing louder. A hesitation, maybe. But instead, she had just done it.

Sothing passed across Elara’s expression that Alistair couldn’t quite read. It wasn’t gratitude. It was quieter than that.

"Thank you," she said.

Due nodded once.

His hands resud their settling gestures, the threads beginning to move again in their slow orbit.

Following that, Alistair stood, checked the wax to make sure it had set properly, and placed the letter in a courier pouch, then he set it by the door.

So monts didn’t need comntary. They needed the people who witnessed them to stay out of the way.

***

Elara walked outside. She stood at the edge of the base for a long ti, her back to the building, looking out over the Oasis of Grain.

Inside, Due waited until her silhouette was small against the horizon before walking to where Alistair sat.

"There is sothing else," Due said. "Sothing neither of us ntioned to her."

Alistair looked at him, his brow furrowed. "What? She was thorough. She cited the Echelon family codes by heart."

Due shook his head:

"Renouncing the na has a secondary consequence under Echelon law," Due explained. "It severs her formal connection to every mber of the Vance line. Not just Caldren, but every Vance."

"She knows that," Alistair countered. "She said it herself."

"She knows the legal text," Due said. "However, I do not think she has considered every na that falls within that definition. The Vance tree has roots that have traveled far from Therasia."

Due spoke a na then. He said it with the gravity he reserved for things that shifted foundations.

"Emrys Vance."

Alistair’s eyes widened. He felt a cold spike in his chest, taken off guard by the weight of hearing it said out loud.

The na was practically a ghost in continental politics, a figure ntioned only in whispers by those who moved through the upper levels of the Echelon.

Alistair was genuinely alard.

Realistically, neither Alistair nor Due knew much about Emrys.

However, they had deduced that Cyrus, the man involved in saving Alistair from Therasia, was one of Emrys’ n.

"She just severed herself from him, too," Alistair whispered.

"Legally, yes," Due said. "Whether that matters practically depends on Emrys Vance’s current movents. No one seems to know what he intends for the Echelon, or why he is funding shadows like Cyrus."

He paused, his hands going still once more.

"However, the obligation that ford when she signed that letter no longer points toward Caldren. It points toward the Vance line generally. The laws of the Oasis do not like an unresolved debt."

Alistair looked toward the doorway. Elara was still standing at the edge of the territory, her silhouette straight.

She looked powerful from here, but to Alistair she suddenly looked very small.

"What does that even an?" he asked.

"It ans," Due said quietly, "that by cutting herself free from a tyrant she knew, she may have inadvertently signaled a ghost she doesn’t. One far more dangerous than her father could ever hope to be."

Alistair followed his gaze. Caldren would read the letter and lose his claim, but if Due was right, the na Elara had just discarded would return through a door she didn’t even know existed.

"How much does she know about Emrys?" Alistair asked.

The silence that followed was longer than any pause Due had taken all day. It was an answer in itself.

"Less than she should," Due said. "And far less than he knows about her."

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