Chapter 130: Chapter 131: The Eastern Threat
Thorn’s POV
The sun was setting by the ti I crossed the border.
I did not wait. I did not look back. I did not give myself a mont to feel the weight of what had happened in that council chamber. The sword in her hands. The look in her eyes. The way she had stood there, in her crown, with her chin raised, and told
to leave.
I sat in my travelling chambers and was very still for a long ti.
The room was small. Functional. A desk. A chair. A bed that I would not sleep in. Maps on the wall. A fire burning low. My n knew not to approach
when I was this still. They had learned that lesson years ago.
I thought about Elara.
About the sword in her hands. It had been hanging on that wall for generations, they said. A relic. A decoration. And she had taken it down like she had been born holding it. Like it had been waiting for her.
I had seen fear in the eyes of many rulers. I had seen hesitation. I had seen doubt. I had seen them crumble when faced with soone who was willing to take more than they were willing to lose.
I had not seen that in her eyes.
She looked at
the way you look at sothing you have already decided to destroy. Not with anger. Not with hatred. With the absolute cold clarity of a woman who had already made up her mind and was simply waiting for the right mont to act.
I had underestimated her.
I did just made the sa mistake twice. But I wasn’t giving up.
I thought about Kaelen.
The Voice. The forr guard. The man who had walked into her council chamber and taken off his mask in front of everyone. The man who had been inside her palace, inside her chambers, inside her bed.
I sat in the silence and worked through the problem.
I could not weaken her from inside. I had tried that. Malakor had been my inside man. Petrov had been my contact. The letters. The information. The network I had spent months building. All of it was gone now. Malakor was under guard. Petrov was under guard. The corrupt lords were dead. The council was reduced to two n who answered to her.
I needed a new plan.
Not inside. Outside.
External pressure. Border movents. A manufactured incident that required Dravara to respond militarily. A kingdom at war was a kingdom distracted. A kingdom at war could not focus on reforms. Could not focus on healing. Could not focus on building.
And a queen at war needed allies.
She had expelled
today. She had raised a sword to my face and told
to leave. But in six months, when her borders were burning and her people were dying and her treasury was empty, she would be asking
to co back.
She would have no choice.
I smiled. It was not a kind smile.
She thinks she has won, I thought. She thinks the stones and the sword. And choosing a Traitor over a king was the end.
She is wrong.
She has made
look weak. She has made
leave with my tail between my legs. She has chosen a guard over a king. A revolutionary over an ally. A man who has nothing over a man who has everything.
She will learn.
I stood up. I walked to the window. The night was dark. The stars were hidden behind clouds. Sowhere to the west, beyond the treeline, beyond the border, her kingdom was sleeping. Her people were sleeping. Her child was sleeping inside her.
She was sleeping.
I thought about the sword. The way she had held it. The way her hands had not shaken. The way her voice had not cracked.
She had looked like a queen.
But queens could bleed. Queens could fall. Queens could watch their kingdoms burn and discover that their allies were not as loyal as they thought.
I turned from the window.
I called for my general.
He ca quickly. He always ca quickly. He was a large man, broad-shouldered, gray-haired, with scars on his face and hands that had seen too many battles. He bowed.
"Your Majesty."
"I have orders for you."
He waited.
"Move two regints to the eastern border. Quietly. I do not want them seen. I do not want them noticed. I want them there before the month is out."
He frowned. "The eastern border? There is nothing there. No cities. No forts. No strategic value."
"There will be."
He looked at . He did not ask questions. He had learned not to ask questions.
"Yes, Your Majesty."
He turned to leave.
"General."
He stopped.
"There is a war to be fought and won."
He nodded. He left. The door closed behind him.
I sat back down in my chair. The fire was low. The candle was burning down. The room was quiet.
I thought about Elara again. About her face. About her eyes. About the way she had looked at
when she raised that sword.
She had been beautiful. I had not noticed that before. I had seen her as a political asset. A marriage alliance. A way to expand my kingdom without spilling blood. I had not seen her as a woman.
I saw her now.
She was beautiful. And she was dangerous. And she had humiliated
in front of her own council.
I would not forget that.
I would not forgive it.
I would sit here, in my travelling chambers, and I would wait. I would build. I would plan. I would move my pieces into place, one by one, slowly, carefully, the way I always did.
And when I was ready, I would take from her everything she had taken from .
Her pride. Her power. Her kingdom.
Her child.
I picked up my glass and drank. The wine was dark. The fire was low. The night was long.
There was work to do. There was always work to do.
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