When we returned to the palace, the sun hung high and warm, the ride’s tension softened into sothing gentler.
Yuri had been smiling—genuinely smiling—for the first ti in days, and that alone made the outing worthwhile.
But the mont we dismounted, she straightened, eyes clear with resolve.
"Julius. Serena." She bowed lightly. "I... need to work off the strange habits that woman left in my muscles. I’ll head to the legionary grounds."
Serena nodded approvingly. "Better to relearn your own rhythm before bad technique sets in."
Yuri gave a small smile—brave, but still fragile. "I’ll be back by evening. Don’t... talk about behind my back."
She tried to make it a joke.
She failed.
But the attempt alone showed she was healing.
I brushed her hair gently. "Go. Burn it all out."
She flushed faintly and hurried off toward the training barracks, her steps light and determined.
Which left Serena and alone in the courtyard.
Her mare snorted impatiently behind her, but Serena didn’t move to return the reins.
She simply stared at with that look she’d been wearing all morning—one part confusion, one part suspicion, and one part sothing almost... uneasy.
I inhaled slowly.
"Walk with ," I said.
She did.
Without a word.
Without hesitation.
But with a tightening in her posture that told she already knew this talk was overdue.
~
We entered one of the private inner gardens of the palace—quiet, shaded, enclosed by marble pillars and trellised vines.
A place used for private counsel... or private truths.
Serena remained silent until the door shut behind us.
Only then did she turn, arms crossed, eyes sharp as a hawk.
"Julius," she began. "No more dancing around this. Tell what in the gods’ na is happening to this city."
Straight to the point.
As expected.
I leaned against the stone railing, folding my arms loosely. "You’ve been... noticing things."
"Noticing?" she scoffed. "Julius, the sewer system beneath the city was basic if you could even call it that before you went to Francia. I personally was responsible for the city, and know no such egineering undertaking took place. Now it’s pristine, expanded, reinforced—overnight."
She stepped closer.
"Buildings appear that were not there the day before. Roads widen while the buildings simply shift out of the way as if they were alive. Storehouses multiply. Mills expand. People rember working on projects they physically couldn’t have completed."
Her hands tightened into fists.
"And yet I rember how it was before."
That was the key.
The statent that confird my suspicion from the mont she pointed out the drains this morning.
"You rember the old state," I said quietly, "even when everyone else believes the new one is how it has always been."
Her throat bobbed.
She nodded.
Slowly.
Uneasily.
I pushed off the railing and stepped closer.
"Serena."
A pause.
Then, more seriously:
"There is sothing I need to test."
She inhaled sharply—but didn’t retreat.
"If it is dangerous, I—"
"It’s not dangerous," I said. "But it may... answer your questions."
I lifted my hand.
Focused.
And summoned the interface.
A blue window shimred into existence in the air above my palm—showing data about the empire itself, myself, and of course a map showing the current empire as it exists right now.
It cast a soft illumination across the marble floor.
Serena froze.
Her eyes widened.
Her breath caught.
"...Oh gods..."
She reached out—slowly, trembling—to touch the shimring surface.
Her fingers passed through it.
"Intangible," she whispered, awe-struck. "And yet... it’s there."
I exhaled.
"It seems," I said softly, "the imperial bloodline carries certain... privileges."
She tore her gaze from the window, staring at with an expression that lay sowhere between awe and disbelief.
"Is this—so blessing of the gods?"
I shook my head. "I don’t know. But it has helped govern. It lets adjust infrastructure, guide growth, strengthen the empire... things no mortal ruler could do alone. Perhaps this... was the reason the old empire was capable of ruling the entire world for as long as it did before falling into ruin."
"And everyone else..." She swallowed. "...they simply accept the changes?"
"They see them as natural. As if they always were."
She looked shaken.
And angry.
And afraid.
For .
"Julius... do you realize what this ans? If anyone else learned of this—anyone at all—you would be seen as a god to worship, or a monster to destroy."
I stepped closer.
"Which is why no one else will learn."
Silence settled.
A long, heavy mont.
"I trust you Serena, more than i think i’ve ever trusted anyone, i shared this secret with you because i know you will keep it for , but also because with Yuri returned to us... she is also soon to recognize whenever i make changes like last night and i’ll need your help in securing not just her trust in keep this secret but also getting it so Joan would not expose if ever she was given the chance to take over once more."
Then Serena let out a slow breath, her shoulders relaxing—not fully, but enough.
Her voice softened.
"So I can see this because..." She looked up, cheeks faintly flushed. "Because of the... engagent?"
"Yes."
I did not sugarcoat it.
"You are my fiancée, Serena. The system must interpret that as a rging of assets—of family—enough that its veil does not blind you. Making it so you can be by my side without any lies between us."
Her eyes widened slightly at the bluntness.
Before her face turned down cheeks blushing furiously.
A soft sound—half laugh, half disbelief—escaped her.
Then, quietly:
"Thank you... Julius."
Not as a subject.
Not as a regent.
But as a woman speaking to the man she had chosen.
Her hand rose to the glowing window again, studying it in reverent fascination.
"This power..." she murmured. "It’s beautiful. Terrifying. And you’ve been using it alone all this ti."
"Not alone anymore," I said.
She t my eyes.
And this ti, there was no suspicion.
Only resolve.
"When the ti cos," she said softly, "you will also let assist you in your choices, helping to make our empire grander than you’ve already done, until it becos the greatest jewel this world has ever seen!"
A queen’s words.
An empress’s promise.
And for the first ti... the System humd in a way that felt less like a machine and more like approval.
I dismissed the interface.
The world dimd back to normal.
Serena exhaled shakily, as if releasing the weight of everything she had just seen.
"Tonight," she said, regaining her composure, "you will explain how long you’ve had this. And what it ans for Romanus."
"And for us," I added.
She blushed—and didn’t deny it.
"...Yes. That as well."
Outside, the clang of training swords echoed faintly—Yuri throwing herself into rebuilding who she once was.
Inside, Serena stood before —no longer veiled from the truth.
A new equilibrium had ford.
One with far greater implications than she yet realized.
Because if Serena could see the System...
Then she was part of it now.
And the empire would never be the sa.
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