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"Both are possible."

She studied him for a mont longer than etiquette strictly required.

Most people would have called him composed. So would have said that Arik was just elegant. Others, especially those inclined to fear imperial blood for sensible reasons, might have called him dangerous. All true. None sufficient for her.

There were nights in Pais, very late, when she had found herself thinking of him for no reason she liked. Not sentintally. Not with the softness academy girls sotis wasted on princes from a distance. More like intellectual irritation. An unfinished equation. A pattern glimpsed at the edge of sight and lost whenever she turned to look directly.

He noticed too much.

Not in the bright, easy way of clever n pleased with themselves.

In the quieter tone of soone who had long ago learned that seeing first was frequently the difference between survival and regret.

"You do that often," he said.

Natalie blinked once. "Do what?"

"Look at people as if you’re trying to work out how they were built."

That, embarrassingly, was accurate.

"I studied engineering."

"You studied ether weaponry."

"Which is engineering."

"With better funding."

"With more consequences."

His mouth shifted at one corner. "That too."

She should have let it end there. The doors below the corridor would open soon. The herald sequence was already being carried through the etherwork. The staff behind them were pretending not to listen with the polished hypocrisy of palace professionals everywhere. It was not the mont to prod a prince for answers he had not offered.

Natalie heard herself ask anyway, "Has anyone ever told you that you’re strange?"

Arik’s expression did not change quickly enough.

Then he said, "Constantly, in different wording."

"That sounds practiced."

"It is."

Natalie held his gaze and decided to be civilized this night and prowl harder for answers later. "Do we go?" She asked with a smile that promised trouble.

Arik looked at her for one beat longer, as if asuring the smile and the trouble folded neatly inside it.

Then, with the calm resignation of a man who had apparently known for years that Natalie Frasner would eventually beco a social hazard in formalwear, he inclined his head.

"We go," he said.

The attendants stepped back at once.

The receiving doors opened fully, and the sound of the gala rose to et them. Ether light ran warm through the carved lines of the hall beyond, caught in chandeliers, reflected in polished stone, and softened by the warded glass that opened toward the terraces.

The palace was awake tonight in every sense, its mana grid humming under marble and molding alike, its security wards stretched fine and alert under elegance, its ether-fed climate charms keeping the air perfectly balanced despite the crush of silk, tal, perfu, and ambition.

Natalie straightened once, because ritual was still important, even if one was willing to mock it internally.

Arik offered his arm.

When she placed her hand there, she said under her breath, "If anyone cries, I’m blaming you."

"That seems unfair."

"That has never stopped high society."

"No," he said. "Or Rafael."

That almost got her.

She bit the smile back too late to fully save herself, and Arik noticed, but had the decency not to look triumphant about it as they began the descent.

Below them, heads turned in that slow, inevitable ripple that always moved through a room before sound did.

The herald’s voice carried cleanly across the ballroom. Her na, her house, the formal acknowledgnt of her coming of age, the titles of her parents, and the gentle but clear invocation of imperial godparentage - all of it moved through the air, reaching everyone present.

And Natalie, who had spent the last three years in Pais learning how ether moved through reinforced channels, how wards failed under strain, and how a weapon’s elegance was often only a disguise for mathematics and heat, descended into the center of a room full of nobles as if she had been built for both things at once.

She could feel the eyes.

So looked at the gown. So at the jewels. So at the way Arik walked beside her. Others, the more useful ones, looked at her face and realized too late that beauty was the least interesting thing about the evening.

At the base of the stairs, the formal receiving line waited.

Rafael was radiant and already emotionally compromised.

Gregoris looked like calm personified, which in Gregoris ant approximately three seconds from violence if soone behaved badly.

Aylin had been placed half a step behind Rafael, which had done absolutely nothing to reduce the alert brightness in her expression. She looked like a tiny, elegant tribunal.

Damian stood with Gabriel beside the central floral arrangent, and together they were exactly what they always were in rooms like this - beautiful enough to draw every eye and dangerous enough to make most people regret doing so for too long.

Natalie could have laughed if the room had not been so full.

Instead, as soon as she and Arik reached the polished floor, she leaned just enough to murmur, "There are too many people."

"Objectively true."

"You say that like this is survivable."

"It is. You’ve endured military drills in freezing rain."

"I preferred the rain. It had less perfu."

A small sound escaped him, not quite laughter, but close enough that she glanced up and found, to her satisfaction, that he was smiling faintly.

Good.

If she had to endure spectacle, he could endure amusent.

The formal greetings began. Older nobles bowed. Ladies inclined their heads. Several council mbers delivered polished congratulations that sounded both genuine and politically useful. One military official from Pais gave her a look of open approval that felt refreshingly real. Natalie answered them all as she had been taught.

And through it all, Arik remained at the proper distance, near enough to be natural and far enough not to make the room invent things too quickly.

It lasted twelve minutes.

Natalie knew because she was counting.

At minute five, she endured Lady Nibia telling her she had ’flowered beautifully,’ which sounded too much like a gardening report for comfort.

At minute eight, one of the younger lords from a northern house tried to praise her ti in Pais in a tone that suggested he thought a military academy made a girl more decorative by adding discipline, and she very nearly asked whether he often spoke before locating his brain.

At minute eleven, Rafael’s smile beca just a little too refined, which ant he was near the edge.

At minute twelve, Arik caught her eye from across the line and, with the smallest possible tilt of his head toward the side gallery, communicated what she had already been thinking.

Run.

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