Selienne’s eyes narrowed—sharply, precisely.
The temperature in the room didn’t fall, but it felt like it did. Her once smooth poise held a new texture now—tension curled into the corners of her stillness, like the press of a blade resting just shy of skin.
She didn’t raise her voice.
She didn’t lash out.
But the absence of warmth was unmistakable.
Her gaze—no longer the inviting weight of royalty—beca the cold, unyielding stare of soone who had just been denied. And didn’t appreciate it.
"You’re serious?" she asked flatly, with a disbelief that wasn’t feigned.
Lucavion gave her his most maddening, most maddeningly him smile.
"Terribly," he said, folding one arm across his chest, the other gesturing lazily outward. "Unless, of course, I’m dreaming all of this, in which case I’d rather wake up before taxes are involved."
He winked.
The kind of wink that could unravel tempers and charm thieves in equal asure.
Selienne stood.
No rustle of skirts. No fanfare. Just a single, fluid rise—like the unsheathing of a sword with no intention of returning to its scabbard.
Her crimson eyes sharpened.
The smile was gone.
The diplomacy was gone.
Only Selienne Lysandra remained—the imperial daughter. Not amused. Not pleased.
"Then," she said, tone clipped, "you wasted a very big chance."
She stepped toward the threshold, but not before leaving her final words behind—low, sharp, and deliberate.
"You’re walking on a thin line, Lucavion."
No title now.
Just the na.
"You may dance along its edge for now. But no matter how talented they are... everyone slips. Eventually."
Lucavion didn’t blink.
Didn’t even shift.
He let the silence settle just long enough.
Then—voice relaxed, even cheerful—
"True," he said lightly. "But when you know the fall is inevitable... it’s far more entertaining to see how long you can balance on the edge."
He offered a shallow bow—more performance than protocol.
"And sotis, Your Highness..." his smile returned, devil-may-care, gleaming like duskfire in his eyes, "it’s not about avoiding the fall."
He straightened, gaze gleaming beneath that calm exterior.
"It’s about choosing how you land."
Selienne said nothing more.
She didn’t argue.
She didn’t threaten.
She just looked at him—one last ti.
And that look held volus.
Not fury. Not scorn.
But sothing colder than either.
Disappointnt, maybe.
Or calculation reshaping itself.
Then, without another word, she turned.
Each step she took echoed across the polished stone like a trono counting down—imperial, poised, exact.
The door didn’t slam.
It didn’t need to.
It closed behind her with the quiet, deliberate precision of a judgnt rendered.
A curtain falling.
And in the stillness left behind—
Lucavion stood alone.
No tension.
No regret.
Just that sa grin, softening at the corners now, slipping toward reflection.
’So that’s how she reacts to "no," huh?’
He exhaled slowly, dragging a hand through his hair.
’Sharp woman. And dangerous... But still a blade honed for a throne. Not a battlefield.’
Behind him, a low flicker of fla licked up from the hearth—the residue of the magic still clinging faintly to the walls.
[She will rember this.]
Vitaliara’s voice, low and distant, like breath from the hollow between silence and wind.
Lucavion glanced toward the closed door.
"I hope so," he murmured. "It ans I didn’t waste her ti."
He turned back to the room.
Back to his fire.
And, as always,
back to his path.
*****
The corridor was colder than it should have been.
Selienne’s steps echoed through the marbled hall like punctuations—asured, deliberate, sharp. Her heels did not falter. Her expression did not crack. But to those attuned to her rhythm, there was sothing off—a stiffness in the swing of her arms, a restraint too taut to be normal.
And her attendant noticed.
"Your Highness," the young man greeted, bowing deeply with one hand pressed to his chest. He was a thin, wispy thing, always impeccably composed, always two steps ahead of court etiquette. But now, his brows twitched as he rose. "Is everything alright?"
Selienne didn’t answer.
Not imdiately.
He stepped closer, concern drawing his voice into a quieter register.
"...Did he anger you?" he asked carefully. "I’ve heard Lucavion can be... insolent."
That word hung in the air like smoke.
Selienne’s gaze remained ahead.
But inside her, the thought stirred.
’Was he insolent?’
Yes. Without question.
’The way he sat—relaxed, like the weight of her crown didn’t matter. The way he spoke, each word too free, too tailored to his own tempo rather than the rules of discourse. And that gaze—direct. Untempered. As though her bloodline, her power, her future throne... were just details.’
That was insolence.
She should have been furious.
She should have felt the sting of humiliation, the ire of refusal.
But—
’He didn’t mock .’
’He didn’t belittle the offer. He didn’t scoff, or smirk with the arrogance most of his ilk would wear like perfu. He refused , yes. But not with cruelty. Not with disdain. With clarity. With intent.’
’And sohow... with respect.’
A contradiction.
But Lucavion was contradiction made flesh.
He had said no.
But not because he was trying to win. Or outplay.
He simply didn’t want to be owned.
Selienne’s breath drew quieter, more asured.
She did not look at her attendant.
"It is fine."
The words were calm. More than calm—composed with the kind of quiet that silenced all further questions.
The attendant hesitated, lips parting once more. But she turned then—just slightly. Enough to let the weight of her gaze settle on him without raising her voice.
"He rejected the offer."
A simple statent.
But the way she said it... it landed like steel on silk.
The attendant’s mouth closed.
"Understood," he said with a bow, retreating half a step, wise enough not to press.
Selienne continued walking.
But her thoughts didn’t.
She continued down the corridor, each step echoing in rhythm with thoughts she had no intention of voicing aloud.
’I watched him.’
’From the mont the entrance exams began, I watched.’
Not out of idleness. Not because of curiosity.
But because of certainty.
Lucavion had stood out before he even stepped onto the field. Not with na. Not with lineage.
But with force.
His mana control. His understanding of terrain. His psychological read of every opponent—even his restraint. It wasn’t just raw talent. It was practiced chaos. Refined unpredictability.
There had been no hesitation in her assessnt.
’As a weapon, he would be devastating.’
Not just for her faction, but against anyone foolish enough to stand in their path.
That’s why she had made the decision.
To co herself.
To extend the offer personally.
Because unlike Lucien—her ever-theatrical half-brother, who wouldn’t stoop to speak to a commoner unless it served a headline—Selienne believed in tactical investnt.
And Lucavion?
He was potential unclaid.
’It was a move I knew Lucien would not make. Not personally. He’d send soone. A proxy. A letter gilded in royal pretense. But not himself.’
And that gave her the opening.
To see the boy for herself.
To weigh the sharpness of his eyes against the shape of his na. To draw her own conclusions.
And she had.
’He’s everything the reports said.’
’And more.’
Which was why—
’Why in the Empress’s na did he say no?’
She really couldn’t understand his reasoning at all.
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