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David's ditative state broke at the sound of shifting blankets. He opened his eyes to find Elara sitting up, her back against the headboard. Moonlight traced silver lines along her profile, highlighting the subtle tension in her jaw. Whether she had truly been asleep or rely feigning rest was impossible to determine, but the alertness in her eyes suggested she'd been awake for so ti.

"You should sleep," she said, her voice quiet but clear in the night-hushed room. "The chair can't be comfortable."

David stretched, working out the stiffness that had settled into his muscles during his vigil. "I've slept in worse places."

"So have I," Elara replied with a hint of dry humor. "That doesn't make it a recomndation."

A comfortable silence stretched between them, broken only by distant sounds from the streets below, a dog barking, the occasional shout of revelry from late-night tavern patrons, the asured footsteps of city watchn making their rounds. Inside their small room, ti seed to move differently, creating a pocket of stillness amid Valemir's constant motion.

"How is she?" Elara finally asked, her tone carefully neutral.

"Stable," David answered. "The attendants you arranged have been invaluable. She managed to keep down so broth, a small victory, but progress nonetheless."

Elara nodded, fingers absently tracing patterns on the blanket, the unconscious habit of a fla sorceress accustod to manipulating fire with precise gestures. "She deserves better care than we can provide in these conditions."

The simple statent carried layers of aning, acknowledgnt of the elf's suffering, recognition of their limited resources, acceptance of responsibility for soone who had no formal claim on their protection. So typical of Elara to assu such burdens without question, to extend her sphere of care beyond what duty demanded.

"The manor will have better facilities," David assured her. "My grandmother's dical equipnt remains fully functional despite years of disuse."

Elara's eyes fixed on him, searching for sothing beyond his words. "You continue to surprise , David. Just when I think I've taken your asure, you reveal another facet I hadn't anticipated."

"Is that good or bad?" he asked, genuinely curious.

"Inconvenient," she replied with unexpected candor. "It makes you difficult to categorize, and I prefer knowing exactly who stands beside in battle."

David smiled slightly. "And here I thought unpredictability was a tactical advantage."

"In enemies, yes. In allies..." She let the thought trail off, her gaze shifting to the window where stars glittered through gaps in the passing clouds. "In those I rely upon, I prefer consistency."

The admission carried weight, Elara rarely spoke of reliance on others. As Archon, she had cultivated an image of self-sufficiency that bordered on isolation, a necessary stance for a woman holding power in the often-brutal politics of the empire. That she acknowledged dependence on him, even obliquely, represented significant trust.

"Mariana will be wondering what's happening," she said after another stretch of silence, her voice betraying the concern she tried to mask. "The communication blackout was necessary, but she must be worried by now."

David moved from the chair to sit on the edge of the bed, maintaining a respectful distance while closing the gap between them. "You miss her."

It wasn't a question, but Elara answered anyway. "She's all the family I have left." Her fingers stilled on the blanket, curling into a tight fist before deliberately relaxing. "After our parents died, Uncle Nicalo raised us, but Mariana and I... we raised each other in ways he couldn't understand."

She rarely spoke of her childhood or family connections. This glimpse into her past felt like a gift offered with careful deliberation, a vulnerable mont shared by choice rather than circumstance.

"She was always the diplomatic one," Elara continued, a ghost of a smile touching her lips. "Where I would challenge directly, she found ways to navigate around obstacles. Uncle Nicalo called her 'the water to my fire', flowing where I would burn."

"She sounds remarkable," David said, picturing the younger sister who now bore the weight of Lysora County's governance in her sibling's absence.

"She is," Elara agreed. "But she's not prepared for this. Acting Archon during peaceti would be challenge enough, but with the Duke potentially moving against our borders..." Her voice tightened. "She's capable, intelligent, and has Salomonis's counsel, but...."

"She doesn't have Salomonis anymore," David finished for her, the harsh reality hanging between them.

Elara's composure cracked slightly, raw concern flooding her features before she mastered herself once more. "No. She doesn't. She's alone, facing what may beco an imperial incursion, with ministers who respect her na but not her authority."

The vulnerability in her admission struck David more powerfully than any display of magical prowess could have. Elara, the Fla Archon whose tactical brilliance had turned the tide of three border conflicts, was afraid, not for herself, but for her sister.

"Mariana isn't alone," David said with quiet conviction. "The mont the Duke makes any move toward Lysora, they'll find my shadows waiting. so of them have been positioned at the county borders since we left. At the first sign of imperial troops, they'll establish a defensive periter and alert us imdiately."

Elara stared at him, genuine surprise washing across her face. "You positioned your people without telling ?"

"A contingency plan," David explained, eting her gaze steadily. "I didn't ntion it because I hoped it wouldn't be necessary. But I wasn't willing to leave your sister unprotected while we pursued answers in the capital."

Sothing shifted in Elara's expression, the wariness that habitually guarded her features softening into sothing more complex. "You anticipated this scenario from the beginning," she realized. "Even before Salomonis was taken."

"I considered it a possibility," David admitted. "The Duke's interest in Lysora's resources isn't new, just opportunistic. Your absence created vulnerability he was bound to exploit, one way or another."

Elara's gaze remained fixed on him, her crimson eyes catching the moonlight with unsettling intensity. "What else haven't you told , David?"

The direct question demanded an equally direct answer. "Many things," he acknowledged. "So for your protection, so for security, so because the right mont hasn't presented itself."

He expected anger at this admission, Elara rarely tolerated information being withheld from her, regardless of justification. Instead, she surprised him with a slow nod of acceptance.

"I understand the necessity of compartntalization," she said, the words asured and deliberate. "But in twelve hours..." she glanced toward the window where night still held sway, "...in less than twelve hours now, we're committing to a course of action that affects my minister, my county, and my sister. I need to know that I'm not missing critical information when I make that decision."

David considered his response carefully. Trust was a fragile thing between them, hard-won through shared dangers and mutual respect. What he chose to reveal now could strengthen that bond or irreparably damage it.

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