Chapter 214: How to Start a Miracle
It struck then, the way history could hinge on such small things: an apology, a treaty on a napkin, a smile from a baker, or a scone for courage. None of this was how I’d imagined royal life, back when I was just a lost girl thrown into the body of a princess with a fate as heavy as the crown itself.
I didn’t imagine, for instance, that the most pressing matter on my royal schedule would be how to get jam out of state regalia. Nor had I anticipated that my council of advisers would include a professional mischief-maker, two forr bodyguards-turned-conspirators, one semi-reford shadow sorceress (and crush), an exasperated librarian, a pair of revolution-hungry siblings, and, depending on the day, a union of enchanted lawn ornants.
This, I told myself, was probably not the scenario in the royal training manual. But then, manuals rarely survived contact with my family.
The palace felt changed, sohow, as we crossed the threshold. It was as if hope ssy, noisy, ungovernable had seeped in with us, wedging itself between the marble tiles and ancient portraits, poking holes in centuries of tradition. Courtiers peered at us from behind pillars, their faces wary and expectant. The scent of chaos clung to us like perfu.
At the grand staircase, my parents waited. Verania, poised but clearly tired, nodded at in a way that was both regal and, sohow, encouraging. Sylvithra offered a small, steadying smile, but I could see worry nesting at the corners of her eyes.
“Elyzara,” Verania said quietly, “a council eting is about to begin. There have been…developnts.”
Developnts, I had learned, was royal code for trouble.
A chorus of footsteps echoed behind Mara, Velka, Elira, Riven, the twins (the latter still sticky and brandishing jam-stained napkin treaties). We fell into a lopsided procession behind my parents, and I saw, with both dread and relief, that the throne room was full to bursting.
Nobles, ambassadors, professors, staff, and standing near the front students in uniforms still flecked with library dust and the odd magical scorch mark. There were journalists with enchanted notepads, and at least one court painter sketching the scene for posterity, looking as if he rather hoped soone would set off fireworks or at least a dramatic duel.
I took my seat at the council table, Velka beside , Mara lounging with practiced insolence, Elira smoothing invisible wrinkles from her uniform, and Riven eyeing the refreshnts with the nervous focus of a man who has just survived sentient footwear.
My parents took the high seats, and the Headmistress looking sohow both dignified and recently singed called the eting to order.
The first topic: the North.
“The latest reports,” announced one of the ministers, “suggest the rebellion’s leadership is…creative. Magical sabotage, clever propaganda, alliances with certain ah ‘progressive’ student groups. There have been more incidents at the Academy, and so border towns have begun flying the Phoenix banner.”
Murmurs swept the room. The Phoenix once a symbol of hope, now a warning.
A student stood one I recognized as the leader of last week’s “peaceful” protest that had ended in a food fight and a new appreciation for projectile pastries. “With respect,” she said, “if the crown keeps ignoring the reasons for unrest poverty, injustice, the old laws there won’t be a kingdom left to argue over. We want a seat at the table.”
A dangerous hush. I saw Verania’s knuckles whiten on the armrest. Beside , Velka was all dark poise, her gaze daring anyone to object.
I swallowed, finding my voice. “Then sit.” I gestured to the empty chairs. “Speak your mind. This isn’t a kingdom of shadows and secrets anymore.”
The effect was imdiate and electric. Several students sat, exchanging looks of disbelief and hope. Even the most stone-faced councilors seed caught off guard.
The next hour was a cacophony of argunts, laughter, and more than a few raised voices. There were passionate speeches, careful lists of grievances, proposals wild and pragmatic. Mara suggested mandatory ‘conflict resolution’ through pillow-fighting tournants. Elira, dry as ever, proposed magical lie-detection for court proceedings. Riven began drafting a “Code of Magical Conduct” on the back of a pastry box, while Aeris and Arion insisted the twins’ “Scone Initiative for Universal Happiness” be given due consideration.
The only one who remained silent was Velka. She watched, and listened, and when I caught her eye, I understood this was my mont. I couldn’t hide behind anyone else’s words.
When the room finally quieted, all eyes fell on . The weight was enormous but not empty. It was full of hope, and terror, and the possibility of sothing better.
I stood, my voice steadier than I felt. “We are not here to keep the peace. We are here to build it. That ans new laws fairer laws. A new council, with voices from every part of the kingdom. And yes open negotiations with the North. No more secrets. No more punishnt without justice. If we want the Phoenix to rise for all of us, it has to be a symbol of rebirth not war.”
There was silence, then applause tentative at first, then swelling, as even so of the older nobles joined in. My parents exchanged a look that was both proud and resigned the look of people who know their daughter has outgrown the world they built for her.
Afterward, the crowd dispersed, still buzzing. Mara high-fived a revolutionary, Riven lost a button to an enthusiastic supporter, and Aeris sohow convinced a diplomat to sponsor her “Chocolate for All” campaign.
I found a quiet alcove behind the throne room, Velka following. She was silent for a long mont, then leaned against the window. “You know,” she said softly, “when I t you, I thought you were just another spoiled royal. I was wrong.”
I turned, letting the late afternoon light spill between us. “I thought you were just another mysterious troublemaker. I was right, but it’s more complicated.”
She laughed, the sound low and warm. “You keep surprising .”
I hesitated, then reached for her hand. “Will you stay?” The question was small, but the answer felt like a hinge in the door of my future.
Velka squeezed my fingers, her smile soft and serious at once. “There’s nowhere else I’d rather be.”
We stood there, two conspirators against an uncertain future, the voices of family and found family echoing down the hall.
History, I realized, was not made of grand speeches or golden crowns. It was made of the courage to listen, to forgive, to try again. To reach for soone’s hand and trust that, together, you might start a miracle.
Or at least survive the next council eting.
Velka’s hand in mine steadied the tremor I hadn’t realized was running through . Together we stood in the alcove, sunlight turning the dust motes to spun gold. In the distance, I could still hear the chaos of my court Mara recruiting would-be revolutionaries for a “Bureaucracy Busters” club, Aeris and Arion earnestly explaining the intricacies of jam diplomacy to a bewildered ambassador, Riven losing a spirited debate with a sentient teapot.
For the first ti since my transmigration, I didn’t feel like a fraud or a child play-acting at power. The sense of being out of place had always clung to a different world, a borrowed body, a mission that began as duty and grew into dread. Now, though, I felt the uncertain beginnings of belonging—not to the throne, but to the people beside .
I let out a shaky breath. “If soone writes this down, it’ll sound absurd. ‘And thus the kingdom was reford, thanks to pastries, pillow fights, and the persuasive power of two small, jam-covered twins.'”
Velka squeezed my hand, her lips curving into a smile that was all mischief and sincerity. “If you’re lucky, the historians will get the pastry filling right.”
A sudden peal of laughter rang out as Mara was chased from the hall by a swarm of magically animated paperwork retribution, apparently, for so ill-considered legislative suggestion. The sight sent Velka into a fit of silent giggles, and I couldn’t help but join her. It was the sound of fear loosening its grip, of hope daring to return.
“Tomorrow will be harder,” Velka said quietly, once our laughter had faded. “The council won’t forget. The North won’t be appeased by speeches and jam alone. You know that, right?”
“I do,” I said. “But today…today we made it possible to imagine sothing else. Maybe that’s enough to start.”
The noise of the court drifted back shouts, debate, the twins’ persistent call for a “snack recess.” I squeezed Velka’s hand, anchoring myself to the present.
“Let’s go,” I said. “If history is made of small things, we might as well make a few more before dinner.”
As we rejoined the whirlwind of friends and family, Mara waved a jam-stained treaty triumphantly, the twins staged a mock duel with croissants, and Riven shouted, “Victory for snack diplomacy!” I laughed, hope threading through my nerves.
Reviews
All reviews (0)