The next morning arrived with a quiet, golden stillness that seed to breathe new life into the palace grounds. The harsh, biting winds of the northern ridge had softened into a gentle breeze, carrying the fresh scent of damp earth and morning dew.
Down in the royal gardens, the sprawling pathways were frad by thick hedges of winter-blooming white roses and ancient stone archways covered in ivy. It was the one place in the capital that the cloying, heavy floral perfus of Azure’s private bed chambers couldn’t reach.
Odesse walked slowly along the gravel path, her hands clasped loosely in front of her simple, pale gray gown. Her long silver hair was tied back with a modest silk ribbon, allowing the morning sun to catch the soft lines of her face. Beside her, Cara kept pace, holding a small basket of clipped lavender, her fingers occasionally reaching out to brush against the leaves.
"You look rested," Cara noted softly, her eyes studying her friend’s calm profile. "After everything that happened that night, and the way the palace was practically shaking with tension... I half-expected to find you pacing your room at dawn."
Odesse offered a small, reassuring smile, keeping her gaze fixed on the path ahead. "A good night’s sleep does wonders, Cara. The journey from the south took a heavy toll on my body, but being back here, under the open sky... it anchors ."
"The whole household is talking," Cara whispered, leaning in slightly as they passed beneath a stone archway. "The guards at the lower courtyard said Azure didn’t open her doors once this morning. A kitchen maid went up to bring her breakfast tray, and she said she heard sothing smash against the wood. Everyone is on edge, but it’s a good kind of edge. The servants are moving around with their chins up. They know the tide is turning."
Odesse listened quietly, nodding as she absorbed the news. She chose not to ntion a single word about the exhausting, silent clash of wills that had taken place in the spiritual plane the night before. There was no need to burden Cara with the dark, heavy realities of Azure’s witchcraft or the protective silver shield she had woven under the moonlight to keep Valex’s mind safe. So battles were ant to be fought in the shadows, away from the innocent people she had returned to protect.
"Let them talk," Odesse said smoothly, her voice even and relaxed. "The truth has a natural way of clearing out the weeds. We don’t need to force it. For now, we simply carry ourselves with dignity."
Cara smiled, her chest swelling with a profound sense of relief. "You’ve changed, Odesse. I an, you’re still the sa person who used to help carry the heavy water buckets when the head housekeeper wasn’t looking, but there’s sothing... solid about you now. Like nothing can shake you."
"When you are stripped of everything you know and forced to survive on nothing but your own na, you either break or you find out exactly what you are made of," Odesse replied, her fingers gently tracing the edge of a white rose petal. "The Hispo Pack showed that a queen isn’t defined by the walls of her palace, but by the strength she carries inside her."
Before Cara could reply, the crunch of heavy boots on the gravel pathway echoed from the western side of the garden.
Both won paused, turning their heads toward the sound. Erging from the shadow of a large stone gazebo was Valex. He wasn’t wearing his formal royal capes or his heavy ceremonial armor; instead, he wore a simple, dark tuniced shirt and leather riding trousers. His massive fra seed to absorb the morning light, his posture straight and disciplined, but his face carried the unmistakable signs of a man who hadn’t slept a single wink. His jaw was tightly set, and his green eyes looked clouded, shifting restlessly as he caught sight of them.
Cara imdiately stiffened, her hands tightening around the handle of her basket. She looked at Odesse, an unvocalized question hanging in her eyes.
Valex closed the distance between them with slow, asured strides. He stopped a few feet away, his gaze locking instantly onto Odesse before flicking briefly to Cara. The sheer weight of his presence was enough to silence the ambient chirping of the birds in the hedges.
"Leave us, Cara," Valex requested, his deep voice carrying a rough, raspy edge that spoke of his internal exhaustion. It wasn’t a harsh command, but the quiet authority of a king who needed space.
Cara looked at Odesse one final ti, receiving a gentle, assuring nod from her friend. Bowing her head slightly toward the King, Cara stepped off the main path and hurried back toward the servant quarters, her footsteps fading quickly into the distance until the garden was entirely silent.
Valex stood perfectly still, his eyes scanning Odesse’s face. He looked down at her silver hair, then down at her hands, his gaze lingering for a fraction of a second on the heavy silver ring on her left hand before rising back to et her eyes. The confusion in his expression was palpable, a silent war raging behind his green irises.
"You look tired, my king," Odesse said softly, breaking the heavy silence between them. Her voice was devoid of the sharp, mocking edge she had used against Azure the previous day. Here, in the quiet of the morning, she spoke to him with the genuine warmth of a partner.
Valex took a slow, deep breath, his broad shoulders rising and falling heavily. "My mind has not given peace since the masquerade," he admitted, his tone direct and empty of the usual royal pride. He gestured toward the continuing path that led deeper into the secluded sections of the garden. "Walk with ."
Odesse nodded smoothly, stepping up to line herself beside his massive fra. They began to walk down the gravel path in unison, their movents naturally falling into a familiar, rhythmic stride that their bodies rembered even if his conscious mind could not.
For several long monts, neither of them spoke. The only sound was the synchronized crunching of their boots against the small stones. Valex kept his hands clasped behind his back, his head tilted slightly downward as if he were trying to find the right words, trying to piecing together a broken puzzle that refused to fit.
"The other night," Valex began, his voice low and cautious, "when you stood at the palace doors... you spoke with an absolute certainty that defied everything I have been told for the past month." He paused, his stride slowing down slightly as they reached a shaded bend in the path beneath a canopy of old oak trees. "Azure told that you died due to us mating. She told us mating killed you the way it killed my other wives. But the people in this palace... Kael, Miss Faye, the servants... they look at you as if a miracle has walked through the gates."
Odesse kept her eyes on the path ahead, her expression serene. "People do not weep with joy for an imposter, Valex. And they certainly do not risk the anger of a sitting alpha to defend a stranger."
Valex stopped walking entirely, turning his body to face her. The shadows of the oak leaves danced across his features, cutting lines through the intense focus in his eyes. "I am a man who relies on facts, on things I can see and verify. But right now, my own senses are betraying . When you touched my face yesterday in the solar... when you looked at ... sothing shifted inside my chest. It wasn’t an argunt or a political point. It was a physical reaction I could not control."
He took a half-step closer, his large hands resting at his sides. He didn’t reach out to touch her, respecting the boundary between them, but the intensity of his gaze was unwavering.
"I need to understand what we were," Valex said, his voice dropping into a raw, vulnerable register that he rarely showed to anyone. "I am not asking you about treaties or laws. I want to know about us. If we were truly married... if you were the one who stood by before the high altar... how did we live? What were the small things that defined our days in this palace before the fog took everything from ?"
Odesse looked up at him, her heart aching at the sheer exhaustion written across his face. She could see the strain the ntal shield was under, holding back the dark poison of Azure’s spell, keeping his core safe while he searched for his own truth. She didn’t offer him grand, dramatic speeches or historical dates. She knew that to reach a mind trapped in a fog, she had to speak to the simple, human realities they had shared.
"We were a partnership, My King," Odesse whispered, her voice carrying a soft, grounding weight. "You were always a king who carried the burdens of the entire territory on your shoulders, but when you walked through the doors of our private quarters, you left the crown at the threshold. We used to sit by the hearth on cold winter nights, much like the ones that are coming now. You would complain about the endless trade disputes from the southern ridges, and I would tell you that you were being too stubborn with the younger alphas."
A faint, involuntary twitch played at the corner of Valex’s mouth, his brow furrowing as if the image she was describing was trying to spark a light behind his eyes.
"You never liked the cloying, sweet perfus that the foreign dignitaries brought as gifts," Odesse continued, a small, genuine smile gracing her lips. "You always said the natural scent of the pine trees and the rain-washed earth of our forests was the only thing that could clear your head after a long day in the courtroom. We didn’t spend our ti in public displays or loud celebrations. Our life was found in the quiet monts between the duties of the throne."
Valex listened in absolute silence, his breathing turning slow and deliberate. He stared at her mouth, then at the silver ribbon in her hair, his mind racing as her words acted like small, sharp drops of water hitting a solid stone wall, slowly wearing away the rigid barriers of his brainwashing.
"And the ring?" Valex asked quietly, his eyes dropping to her hand once more. "The vow ring you wear."
"You forged it with Master Theron," Odesse said simply, keeping the details of his secret visit to the craftsman out of her mouth, allowing him to connect the pieces on his own terms. "You told that a true alpha doesn’t seal a promise with words alone, but with the ancestral silver of his bloodline. You placed it on my finger because you chose , Valex. Not because a spell demanded it, and not because it was politically convenient. You chose because our souls recognized each other long before the court ever called us King and Queen."
Valex closed his eyes tightly, his large hands clenching into fists at his sides. Within the darkness of his closed eyelids, the silver shield Odesse had created last night glowed brightly, protecting his consciousness as a sudden, vivid mory flared to life. He didn’t see a blurred crowd this ti; he saw a quiet room, the amber light of a dying fire, and the distinct, soft laughter of a silver-haired woman leaning her head against his shoulder. The feeling of safety, of absolute and profound peace that accompanied the mory, sent a violent wave of warmth straight through his soul.
He opened his eyes slowly, the green hue within his irises visibly swirling, fighting against a sudden surge of natural amber that threatened to break through the surface. He looked down at her, his posture slightly less rigid than it had been when they first t in the garden.
"I don’t rember the words we spoke," Valex muttered, his voice thick with an underlying frustration. "I don’t rember the day of the ceremony, or the faces of the people who watched us. But the peace you are talking about... I can feel the echo of it right here." He placed his right hand firmly over his chest, right above his heart. "And it is the only thing in this entire palace that doesn’t feel like a lie."
Odesse stepped a fraction closer, her expression filled with a quiet, maternal tenderness that offered him comfort without demanding an imdiate surrender. "You don’t have to force the pieces to fit all at once, my king. The mind can be clouded, and nas can be hidden behind thick walls of deceit, but the soul does not forget what it loves. I am here now. I am not running, and I am not hiding. Take the ti you need to find your way back to the light."
Valex gazed down at her for a long, unblinking mont. The heavy, defensive hostility that had defined his deanor since the masquerade ball seed to lt away, replaced by a profound, exhausted respect. He didn’t pull her into an embrace, and he didn’t make any grand promises, but the silent understanding that settled between them in the shade of the oak trees was more powerful than any formal oath.
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