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Royal District – Late Morning

The day after their quiet retreat from duty, the palace halls buzzed with activity once more. Ministers filed through corridors. Couriers delivered reports in sealed leather tubes. Guards stood in polished formation under the colonnades.

But Bruno and Alie had already left the palace before most of the court had stirred.

Clad not in regalia but in simpler attire—dark coats for the king and a modest cream dress for the queen—they rode in an unmarked carriage toward the poorer districts of Elysee. The royal crest was absent from the vehicle. Only a small lantern and a driver's coat marked it as belonging to the crown.

They weren't visiting as monarchs today. Not in the eyes of the people. They ca as Bruno and Alie.

"Do you think they'll recognize us?" Alie asked softly, her gloved hand resting in his.

Bruno looked out the carriage window as they crossed the stone bridge over the eastern canal. "They might. But that's not the point of today."

The carriage ca to a halt in front of Saint Guillard's Shelter—a tall, weathered building tucked between narrow brick tenents. Once a textile mill, it now served as a charitable haven for widows, children, and the war-displaced.

Outside, a dozen volunteers stood waiting—so nuns, others in plain clothes, and one familiar figure: Sister Therese, a sharp-eyed woman in her fifties with a warmth that outshone her modest robes.

"Your Majesties," she greeted with a bow—but her tone held no stiffness. Only affection.

Bruno stepped down first and helped Alie alight. "Sister Therese. We're not here to be bowed to today."

"You'll forgive for my habits, Your Majesty," she said, smiling as she reached out to take Alie's hand. "But I'll follow your lead. Co, we've much to do."

Saint Guillard's Shelter – Midday

Inside the shelter, laughter and noise filled the long converted hall. Rows of children sat on benches with soup bowls in front of them, while the older ones helped distribute bread or wash dishes at the back. The scent of root stew, fresh rolls, and beeswax candles wafted through the space.

Alie rolled up her sleeves and took her place behind the food line with practiced grace. A young girl handed her ladles. Bruno, anwhile, crouched beside a group of children on the floor, helping one boy with a broken toy carriage. The axle was loose. He pulled out a small penknife and tightened the joint.

"You fixed it!" the boy bead.

Bruno smiled. "You did most of the work."

"You're really the king?" another child asked.

Bruno looked up, then winked. "Only on weekdays."

The children giggled.

Near the rear of the shelter, Sister Therese led Alie through a cloth divider to a smaller room. Inside were crates of clothes, dicinal herbs, and bedding supplies sent by the palace charity bureau. Alie checked each with care—verifying inventory, repackaging smaller kits for distribution. It was quiet work, but she moved with purpose, sleeves stained with flour and her shawl slightly off-center from the heat.

"These will go to the northern wards tonight," Sister Therese said. "I've arranged for a handcart and a few of the older boys to help."

"I'd like to go with them," Alie replied.

Therese hesitated. "Your Majesty, the northern wards are… difficult."

"All the more reason."

Northern Wards – Afternoon

By mid-afternoon, the sun dipped behind the taller chimneys and buildings of Elysee's industrial quarter. The northern wards were grayer, denser, and burdened by decades of neglect. Smoke hung thick from the foundries. Narrow alleys teed with children in patched clothes, and the streets bore the scars of both poverty and the recent epidemic.

Alie rode in a covered wagon, seated beside Sister Therese and two teenage boys steering the handcart. Bruno followed on foot with several guards in plain coats, keeping watch discreetly from a distance.

They stopped at a cluster of old stone apartnts.

"Wait here," Alie told the guards. "We'll knock door to door."

She and Therese climbed narrow staircases and passed bundled cloth bags—each filled with food, soap, and bandages—to grateful residents. So didn't recognize her. Others did, and tears welled in their eyes.

"Bless you, Your Majesty."

"My daughter had fever," one woman whispered, clutching Alie's hands. "We had no more coins for the apothecary. She's well now… thanks to the supplies your people sent."

Alie squeezed her hand. "We only gave what should've always been yours. We're going to do better."

St. Camille's Courtyard – Late Afternoon

They stopped for a brief rest at the courtyard of St. Camille, where a small garden was maintained by the local children. Bruno arrived, wiping sweat from his brow.

"You've been climbing stairs all afternoon," he said, offering Alie a cloth.

"So have you," she replied. "You're covered in soot."

He looked down at his sleeves and chuckled. "A boy asked to help him repair a chimney pipe. I forgot how hot they get."

Nearby, the children showed Alie a patch of green onions and carrots poking through the soil.

"We water them every other morning," said a girl no older than eight. "Sotis we sing to them too."

"Then they'll grow strong," Alie replied, kneeling to press her fingers gently to the warm earth.

Bruno watched from the bench, his heart quietly full. These were the quiet victories that never made the reports or council etings. These were the people they ruled for.

As the children continued their impromptu tour of the garden, Alie took a mont to look around. The courtyard, though surrounded by crumbling brick walls and rusted railings, was alive with color and spirit. Flowers peeked out from ceramic pots and makeshift planters made from salvaged wooden crates. Soone had even painted a faded mural of a sun above the well, its smiling face crooked but cheerful.

Bruno approached one of the benches where a mother sat with her infant wrapped tightly in layers of cloth. He offered a nod and crouched beside her.

"May I?" he asked, gesturing to the bundle.

The mother hesitated, then smiled shyly and lifted the edge of the cloth.

Inside was a baby girl, barely a few weeks old, her small face serene in sleep. Bruno gently touched her hand, marveling at how sothing so small could still carry so much hope.

"She was born during the outbreak," the mother said. "There were days we weren't sure either of us would make it. But… soone left dicine at our door. I never found out who. Just a basket and a note. 'You are not forgotten.'"

Bruno looked over at Alie, who was now laughing as she taught a few children how to braid wildflowers into a crown.

"You were never forgotten," he said quietly. "I promise you that."

The mother's eyes misted. "You ca here. I never thought… I never thought a king and queen would walk our streets."

"We shouldn't have waited this long," he replied.

She reached out and placed her hand over his. "You're here now. That's what matters."

Return to the Shelter – Early Evening

By the ti the last basket was handed out and the final bandage kit delivered, the sun had begun its slow descent behind the skyline. The tall silhouettes of chimneys cast long shadows over the narrow roads. Smoke thinned. Lamps were lit along alleyways. Evening bells rang faintly from distant churches.

Back at Saint Guillard's, the mood was calr. The younger children napped on folded blankets. A few of the older ones scrubbed pots and swept the floor while humming a nursery rhy. The day's frenzy had settled into a quiet rhythm.

Bruno leaned against a support beam with a mug of barley tea, speaking quietly with a volunteer about repairs to the shelter roof. Alie helped Sister Therese inventory the remaining supplies.

"They'll hold us for another two weeks," the nun said. "Then we'll need to restock. Winter's coming early this year, I think."

Alie nodded. "I'll speak with the royal quartermaster. We'll allocate more blankets and dried goods. And I want a permanent physician assigned here."

Therese's brow lifted. "A royal physician?"

"Not one of the palace doctors, no," Alie said. "But soone qualified, soone who won't treat this post like punishnt."

Therese smiled faintly. "You've changed since your coronation."

Alie blinked. "I hope for the better."

"Oh, most certainly," the nun replied. "You were always kind. But now… you're rooted. You understand what it ans to hold the weight and the people at the sa ti."

Alie didn't reply imdiately. Instead, she looked across the room to Bruno, who was laughing with a few boys as they argued about the best way to patch a toy drum.

"Yes," she whispered. "I think I do."

Carriage Ride Ho – Nightfall

The return to the palace was silent, but not from exhaustion. The city outside their windows felt different now—no longer sothing distant or abstract. Every corner, every narrow lane, every peeling wall held nas and faces.

Alie leaned her head against Bruno's shoulder as the carriage rolled through the royal gates.

"We should do this more often," she said.

"We will," he promised. "Every month, if not more."

She gave a small hum of approval. "We always speak of reforms and decrees. Of plans and projections. But there's sothing about simply being there. Present. Felt."

Bruno nodded. "Empires are built by laws. But kingdoms survive on the trust of those who live in them."

The carriage ca to a gentle halt at the palace steps. Footn approached, but Bruno waved them off. He helped Alie down himself.

Before stepping inside, they paused at the grand entrance—lit by lanterns, surrounded by silence.

"It's strange," Alie murmured, "but today... I felt more like a queen than I ever have at a coronation."

Bruno offered her his arm.

"Then let's keep ruling like that."

And together, they walked into the palace—not to rest, but to prepare for what ca next.

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