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No one breathed.

The grand doors stood open. The woman who had said hello took one unhurried step into the hall, then another. Her presence changed the space without a single flare of aura. It was in the way she stood, the way her eyes moved, the way the room began to behave as if it had always been ant to hold her.

Tiamat moved first.

The Radiant Dragon didn’t rise or roar. She simply turned, and the hall turned with her. Her voice carried warm and steady.

"Guest rights are honored in my hall," she said. "State your na and purpose."

The woman bowed—not deep, not shallow, exactly correct.

"Lyra Vionn," she said. "Crown Cantor of the Cantari. Envoy of the Seven who stand against the Demon Lords. I co with greeting. I co with assurance. I co with purpose."

Marcus stepped forward as host. Lyralei matched him half a pace to the right. Ian held position at his father’s back, jaw set, hands loose. Guards tensed, then eased when Tiamat did not move to stop Lyra’s next step.

Lyra bowed a second ti, this one to Tiamat alone.

"Dragon Empress," she said softly. "Your na reached us long ago. It is an honor to stand in your presence at last."

It had been centuries since anyone used that title. A murmur moved through the hall. Tiamat’s lips curved, barely.

"Your courtesy is accepted," Tiamat said. "Speak, Lyra Vionn."

Lyra straightened and let her gaze pass over the room. Her eyes paused on Luna in her human form, and sothing like fondness touched her expression. She bowed her head a fraction, respectful without presuming closeness. Then her gaze t Arthur’s for the first ti.

"Arthur Nightingale," she said, simple as saying day has co. "You truly are special on this earth too."

Arthur didn’t answer. He didn’t have to. The hall heard it as fact, not flattery.

Lyra let the silence sit for a heartbeat, then began.

"I stand here for seven peoples bound in common cause," she said. "You may call us the Septem Concord. We do not rule each other. We hold to shared laws and fight the sa enemy. Each of our peoples has a leader who stands at the rank you call Divine. Together we have held back Demon Lords where they rise."

She did not raise her voice to make it carry. She didn’t need to. Everyone in the hall was listening.

"The Concord has watched your world from far away," she went on. "We do not step lightly into young skies. We wait for signs. We wait for will. We wait for proof that a world can carry itself forward without breaking under our help."

Her eyes swept across the Iron Line officers, the ward choir, the families in their best clothes.

"In you, we see that proof," she said. "Twice your world has raised a Hero. You have held against cults that would hollow out your cities. Your Southern Line stood when a Calamity pressed down. Your disciplines are modern, your customs old, your hearts unwilling to kneel to despair. And among you walks sothing we have not seen for a very long ti."

Her gaze returned to Arthur. She did not na the Grey. She didn’t have to. The crown above his brow was dim now, but every person who had watched the ridge understood.

"So we co with an offer," Lyra said. "Join us. Not as subjects. As partners."

She lifted one hand and lowered it, a small gesture that asked for calm, not attention.

"If you accept, the Concord will open stable gates above your seas and place them where you choose. We will build wards that blunt miasma before it nests. We will train with your soldiers and healers without demanding your doctrine. We will share craft that helps your engines endure demon weather and keeps your cities from choking when the sky turns wrong."

Her eyes moved to the ministers at the left rail, then to Marcus and Lyralei.

"In return, we will ask you to sign the Edicts we all keep," she said. "No bargains with demons. No weapons that rot the laws your children live under. No binding of mythical beasts against their will. When demon incidents rise past a threshold, you will fight with us under a joint command agreed in advance. When your cult leaders fall into your hands, you will bring evidence to a tribunal we can trust together, whether it sits here or with us."

She paused there. A minister from the coastal bloc inhaled sharply, asuring costs. Lyra did not press.

"This is not a net," she said. "We tune, we do not rule. You will keep your crowns and your councils. Your lines will be your lines. We will hold them with you."

She turned back to Tiamat again, and this ti she did not speak to the hall at all.

"Elder," Lyra said, and that single word held more respect than any title, "if Earth accepts, we will ask your witness for what cos next. The Concord’s entry tests are simple by design. Three asures only: restraint, courage, wisdom. No spectacle. No blood gas."

Tiamat’s eyes ward with sothing like approval.

"Your tests sound clean," she said. "I will hear the full terms later. For now, say what you expect of this hall."

Lyra inclined her head.

"I expect nothing without consent," she said. "Tonight is for your dead and your living. I bring no demand. I bring ti."

She looked up toward the high windows and the starlit black beyond.

"The window for freely placing large wards is not long," she said. "Sothing in your outer sky has started to test the lanes. Not a Lord. Not yet. But if we wait months, not weeks, we will bleed more than we need to."

She let that land and did not flog it with more words.

Lyralei stepped forward a half-step, voice smooth.

"Envoy Lyra," the queen said, "the House of Viserion thanks you for this offer. We will convene a council at dawn with our allies and our elders. Tiamat will preside. You will be our guest while we listen and decide."

Lyra bowed.

"It is enough," she said simply.

Ian glanced at Arthur, then at Tiamat. He wanted to say sothing and chose not to. Marcus did not move from his place, but the tension in his shoulders eased. The ward choir on the zzanine began to breathe normally again. Officials whispered, already building lists. The orchestra did not resu. No one wanted to trample this mont with a song.

Lyra turned slightly and, for the first ti since she had spoken her na, allowed herself a smile that reached her eyes.

"Luna," she said gently, using the na without the weight of prophecy, "I greet you. Kin-made and true."

Luna blinked, surprised, then stood and bowed back with the awkwardness of soone learning what to do with new human limbs and old dignity.

"Welco," she said. "And thank you for speaking plainly."

"We try," Lyra said. "Plain speech fits brave halls."

She returned to Arthur last. There was no challenge in her look. There was curiosity and a flicker of gladness, as if sothing she had been told and sothing she now saw had matched.

"When I say you are special, Arthur Nightingale," she said, "I do not an only strength. I an that you cut the world in a way that leaves more of it standing after you pass. Not many can do that. Fewer choose to."

Arthur didn’t know what to do with praise like that. He gave her the only answer that felt honest.

"I had good teachers," he said, and inclined his head toward Tiamat, toward Luna, toward the Viserions, toward the warders who had sung until their hands shook.

Lyra accepted the answer like a small gift.

"I will ask one thing now," she said. "Not a demand. A question offered in front of those who have a right to hear it."

She lifted her hand and let it fall, careful again, keeping the room’s calm.

"The first of our three asures is restraint," she said. "Two anchors hold a field. I would ask you, Arthur Nightingale, to stand with as the second anchor when we demonstrate what restraint looks like on a living line. Not tonight. Not in this hall. Soon. Tiamat may choose the ground and the hour. Your king and queen may set the rules."

She looked to Tiamat and waited. The dragon’s crimson eyes weighed, then nodded once.

"I will choose a place that deserves to keep standing," Tiamat said. "And I will invite those who must see."

Marcus looked at Lyralei. She gave the smallest nod. He turned back to Lyra.

"You will be housed in the east wing," he said. "Anything you need, ask. I will send my engineers to listen when you are ready to speak with them."

"Thank you," Lyra said. "We will keep our footprint small."

There was a rustle then as the spell of stillness finally broke. People began to speak in low voices. The orchestra leader lifted his hand, looked to Tiamat for permission. Tiamat inclined her head, and the music returned, soft, respectful, as if the hall itself had decided to step lightly.

Lyra stepped back, not to the doorway, but to an open space near the balcony, neither claiming center nor retreating. Three small rings glead on the pin at her collar—the only mark she wore of who she represented.

She did not try to take more of the night.

Reika exhaled very quietly at Arthur’s side. Seraphina watched Lyra the way a craftswoman studies a new tool and imagines what it can build. Rachel’s smile was thoughtful. Rose’s eyes narrowed in interest and trouble. Ian rolled his shoulders like a man who has waited for war and now sees a door that might lead sowhere better. Lyralei was already assembling a list in her head that would take three hours to read. Marcus was thinking about maps. The ward choir was thinking about sleep and warm tea and the feeling of not singing for a while.

Tiamat stood like a mountain under lanterns and watched the envoy who had called her Dragon Empress. Her gaze flicked once to Arthur. It said: the world is widening. Hold steady.

Lyra did one last thing before the night moved on. She lifted her hand, palm open, and spoke a single clean promise, without trick or glow.

"The Concord will not ask for what is yours," she said to Arthur and Luna and, by clear extension, to Tiamat. "We will ask to learn beside you. If we fail to keep that line, you may cast us out, and I will be the first to go."

No one in the hall knew what her people’s oaths felt like when they bound. She did not show it. She did not need to.

"Then be welco as a guest," Tiamat said. "Dawn cos quickly. Eat, and rest."

Lyra bowed one last ti and stepped aside. The hall let out the breath it had been holding. Conversation swelled. Strings rose. Stella tugged Arthur’s sleeve with wide eyes that said she had a thousand questions and would ask them all if allowed five minutes alone with a willing target.

"Tomorrow," Arthur told his daughter. "We’ll listen first."

"Fine," she said, already plotting.

He looked back toward Lyra. She had turned her face to the windows, watching the night as if she could see a road through it. When she sensed his attention, she glanced over, not surprised, and gave a small nod that said: soon.

Arthur nodded back.

The world had just opened a new door. He would walk through it. But not alone, and not rushed.

The music rose. The dragon hall breathed. And far above the mountain, where no one in that room could see, sothing in the outer dark pressed at a lane, found the resistance steady, and paused.

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