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Chapter 39: Chapter 40: His arrival

Chapter: The Arrival

Elara’s POV

I stood in the grand entrance hall and tried not to think about how badly my stomach was hurting.

Around , the court had assembled in their finest clothes. The council mbers stood in their proper positions, Lord Malakor closest to my left, his expression perfectly neutral in that way that ant he was paying very close attention to everything. The lesser nobles were arranged behind them in careful order of rank, all of them dressed in the colors of their houses, all of them watching

to see how I would handle this.

I had dressed with deliberate care this morning. The full regalia of Dravara, heavy crimson robes with gold embroidery that caught the light from the high windows, the formal collar that pressed against my throat, and my crown, settled firmly on my head despite how impossibly heavy it felt. Every single detail of my appearance had been calculated to project exactly three things: strength, authority, and stability.

Inside, I felt none of those things.

Inside, I felt sick and tired and frightened in ways I could not fully na.

The morning had been brutal. I had woken in the dark hours before dawn with nausea hitting

so hard I barely made it to the wash basin in ti. It took half an hour of careful breathing, sitting on the cold floor of my chambers, before I could stand without feeling like the world was tilting sideways. When Lena finally ca to help

dress, I spent an extended amount of ti behind the privacy slide, and though she said nothing about it, I could feel her careful silence like a weight.

"Are you sure you’re well, Your Majesty?" she had asked quietly when I finally erged.

"I am fine," I had told her, my usual response. "Just nervous about the visit."

She had looked at

for a long mont, and I could not read her expression. Then she had simply nodded and helped

into the heavy robes. Her hands were gentle as she adjusted the fabric, making sure every fold fell exactly right. She had been doing this for

since, first as a young maid assigned to help the princess, then as my personal attendant, and now as the only person in the palace I truly trusted. She knew

better than anyone. And I knew she did not believe

when I said I was fine.

But she also knew better than to push.

I told myself it was stress. The pressure of King Thorin’s arrival. The marriage negotiations I had never actually agreed to but which seed to be happening anyway. The constant, grinding weight of making decisions that carried consequences I could not fully predict or control. The mory of Kaelen. I was glad he was back. But whatever was wrong with .

It had to be stress. It could not be anything else. I could not afford for it to be anything else.

Now I stood in the entrance hall, my hands folded in front of

in a posture learnt over the years. Composed. Regal. My face showed nothing of what I was feeling inside. That was the most important lesson she had ever taught : a queen does not let anyone see her fear.

Behind my right shoulder, exactly where he was supposed to be, stood Kaelen.

I could feel him there without looking. His presence had beco sothing I recognized on an almost physical level. The particular quality of stillness he carried. The sense of watchfulness. The way the air felt different when he was close. It should have been comforting. It was comforting.

But it was also a complication.

I was acutely, painfully aware of how the council perceived this arrangent. When Kaelen had taken his position this morning, dressed in his guard uniform with his sword at his hip and his face carefully blank, Malakor’s expression had been perfectly neutral. But I had caught the calculation in his eyes. The assessnt. The note being made.

This was a test. All of it. Kaelen’s reinstatent. My authority. My judgnt. Everything was being evaluated, asured, weighed against so invisible standard I was expected to et but which no one had clearly explained to .

I felt Kaelen shift slightly behind , just a small adjustnt of his stance, and I wanted very badly to turn around and look at him. To see his face. To get so reassurance that I was doing this right. To rember the way he had looked at

in my chambers, his eyes soft and warm, telling

he would always choose .

I kept my eyes forward instead.

The entrance hall was full of people. Nobles from every corner of Dravara, dressed in their finest silks and velvets, their jewels catching the light from the high windows. Servants lined the walls, standing at attention, ready to serve. Guards in full dress uniform ford a path from the doors to where I stood, their armor polished until it glead.

Everyone was watching . Waiting to see what I would do. Waiting to see how I would handle this mont.

My stomach turned again, a slow rolling wave of nausea that I forced down with sheer will. I could not be sick here. Not now. Not in front of all these people.

I thought about Kaelen.

The trumpets sounded. Clear and bright, echoing off the high stone walls of the entrance hall.

The mont had arrived.

The great doors swung open.

Light flooded in from outside, bright morning sun that made

blink. For a mont, I could see nothing but the silhouette of the doorway, a great arch of carved stone framing the world beyond.

Then the figure stepped through, and the light shifted, and I saw him.

King Thorin of Valerium was not what I had expected.

I had prepared myself for soone older. Soone like Malakor, perhaps, with cold eyes and calculating smiles. Soone who would look at

and see only a piece on a board, a resource to be acquired, a ans to an end.

But the man walking toward

was young. Younger than I had imagined, perhaps late twenties at most. He was tall and broad-shouldered, with dark hair cut short and a beard trimd close to his jaw. His clothes were fine but not ostentatious, dark blue fabric with silver embroidery, a simple gold chain at his throat instead of a crown. He wore a sword at his hip, not as decoration but as a working weapon, the hilt worn in a way that showed it had been used.

And his eyes. When he looked at , his eyes were not cold or calculating. They were... interested. Curious. Assessing, yes, but in a way that felt different from how Malakor assessed things. This was not the assessnt of a rchant calculating value. This was the assessnt of a person trying to understand another person.

Behind him ca his retinue. A handful of advisors in similarly fine but practical clothing. A small guard contingent, their armor different from ours, their weapons unfamiliar. No great procession. No show of overwhelming wealth or power.

That told

sothing important about Thorin. He did not need to show off. He was confident enough in who he was that he did not need to prove anything through spectacle.

He stopped at the proper distance and bowed. Not low, not a grovel, but a respectful inclination of his head that acknowledged my rank without diminishing his own.

"Your Majesty Queen Elara of Dravara," he said. His voice was deep, steady, with an accent I could not quite place. "I am honored by your welco."

I returned the greeting with the formal words I had rehearsed, my voice steady despite the churning in my stomach. "King Thorin of Valerium. Dravara welcos you as an honored guest. We hope your journey was pleasant."

"It was long," he said, and there was a hint of humor in his voice, "but the destination made it worthwhile."

I was not sure if that was flattery or simply politeness. I chose to treat it as the latter.

"We have prepared rooms for you and your people," I said. "You will wish to rest and refresh yourselves after your travels. This evening, there will be a formal dinner in your honor. Tomorrow, we can begin the discussions you have traveled so far to have."

"That is most gracious." His eyes held mine for a mont longer than strictly necessary. "I look forward to our conversations, Your Majesty."

Then he turned and followed the servant who had appeared to guide him and his people to their quarters.

I stood there for a long mont, my hands still folded, my face still composed, as the crowd around

began to murmur and shift. The formal greeting was over. Now the watching would begin.

I felt Kaelen behind , still and silent, and I wanted to turn to him. To ask him what he thought. To get his read on this man who had just walked into my life and my kingdom.

But I could not. Not here. Not with everyone watching.

So I kept my eyes forward and my face calm, and I waited for the proper mont when I could retreat to my chambers and let the mask slip.

My stomach turned again, and I swallowed hard.

This was only the beginning. Three days of negotiations. Three days of dinners and conversations and careful political dance.

Three days of trying to figure out what King Thorin really wanted, and what I was willing to give.

Behind , Kaelen did not move. But I felt his presence like a steady fla, warm and constant, and that helped more than I could say.

The great doors closed. The crowd began to disperse. And I allowed myself, just for a mont, to breathe

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