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Chapter 88: Chapter 89: I saw her

Kaelen’s pov

Kaelen’s POV

The words were flowing the way they always did. Specific. asured. Rooted in the details of the day. The water channels. The grain that disappeared between the palace and the people. The petitions that went nowhere. The lords dragged out of the warehouse this morning, which the crowd already knew about and which landed exactly the way I intended it to.

I was in full flow. The room was with . This was the part I was good at.

And then I saw her.

She was near the middle of the crowd. Hood forward, head slightly down, doing everything right. There was nothing obvious about her, nothing that should have pulled my eye to her specifically among this many people. Plain dress. Plain cloak. No jewelry, no mark of rank, nothing that would make anyone look twice. She looked like everyone else. She looked like no one.

But I knew. I knew the woman I had held in my hands, made love too.

I knew the particular stillness of her. The way she was standing with that quality of contained attention I had learned over months of watching her across council tables and palace corridors. Present. Absorbing everything. Giving nothing away. The way her hands were very still at her sides. The way her head was tilted just slightly, the way she listened when she was hearing sothing she didn’t want to hear but needed to hear anyway.

I kept speaking.

I did not miss a word. Did not stumble, did not pause, did not let a single thing show in the Voice’s steady tallic cadence. Years of discipline held

together while everything underneath it lurched sideways.

She was here. She ca. She was standing in my crowd, in the dark, listening to

dismantle everything she thought she knew about her own kingdom. And she had no idea it was

behind the mask.

I watched her face between sentences.

No one else in the room was looking at her. Why would they? She was just another body in the crowd, just another volunteer in plain clothes,.

But I saw her. I always saw her.

She was not shocked. Not frightened.

She knew. So of it, at least. She had co out here today to find out, and she had found it, and now she was standing in this room having it nad out loud by the Voice. And she had no idea the Voice was the man she had dismissed and made love to her.

I made myself focus. The room. The words. The work.

I rembered, with a precision that was almost physical, how we had parted.

I had walked away because there was nothing else to do. She was the queen and I was the man standing against everything her crown represented, and whatever had existed between us had never been given a na by either of us.

I had told myself it was for the best. That I was too compromised. That I couldn’t do what I had co to do. That walking away was the only way to survive with anything of myself intact.

And now she was here. In my crowd. Listening to

speak against everything she was trying to build. And she didn’t know. She didn’t know it was .

I was supposed to be the Voice right now. The Voice did not have feelings about Elara.

But Kaelen did, and Kaelen was standing on a platform looking directly at her.

The words that ca next were harder than I intended.

Sothing about rulers who perform understanding without possessing it. Sothing about crowns that gesture at justice while the rot continues underneath. Sothing about the difference between a queen who sends grain and a kingdom that is actually fed.

I did not look at her when I said it.

I was aware of her the entire ti.

She did not move. Did not flinch. Did not look away from the platform. Her face was still, her hands still at her sides, her whole body still with that particular stillness she had when she was absorbing sothing she didn’t want to hear. The crowd moved around her, people shifting, murmuring, reacting to my words. She was a stone in a river, unmoving while everything flowed past.

I wondered what she was thinking. What she was feeling. Whether she was angry, or sad, or just tired. Whether she recognized anything in my voice. Whether she was thinking about

at all.

I was the man who was supposed to kill her, and I had fallen in love with her instead, and there was no way back from that.

I pushed the thoughts away. I had a job to do.

The speech went on.

The crowd was with . I could feel them leaning in, hungry for the words, hungry for soone to na what they had been living. They did not know that the woman standing among them was the queen. They did not know that the person they were cheering against was standing right there, listening, watching, taking it all in.

Only I knew.

Only I saw the way her hands tightened at her sides when I talked about the petitions. Only I saw the way her jaw set when I talked about the grain. Only I saw the way her eyes stayed fixed on the platform, on the mask, on the Voice who was telling her people the truth about her kingdom.

She did not look away. She did not leave. She stood there and took it.

I did not know whether to admire her or hate her for it. I did both. I had been doing both for weeks.

The speech ended. The room shifted back into itself, murmuring, movent, the energy of the eting dissolving into ordinary bodies in ordinary space.

I stepped back from the platform.

From where I stood, partially obscured by the edge of the platform, I watched her in the crowd. She was very still in the movent around her. People were pushing toward the doors, talking to each other, processing what they had heard. She stood apart from them, separate, alone.

Her face was turned toward where I had just been, toward the now-empty platform, and the expression on it was the one I had no clean na for. Sothing between recognition and unresolved and who are you.

She was trying to figure out who I was.

I was twenty feet away.

The irony sat in my chest like a stone.

No one else was looking at her. The crowd flowed around her like water around a rock, not noticing, not seeing, not knowing that the queen was standing in their midst. She was invisible to them. Only I saw her. Only I knew.

At one point her eyes moved through the crowd, assessing in that instinctive way of hers, and passed over

without stopping. Without recognition. Without anything.

The crowd was thinning. People were moving toward the doors, back out into the cold night air, back to whatever lives they had left behind for this hour. I stayed where I was, watching, not moving, not thinking about why I was still there.

She was still there. Near the middle of the now-emptying room, her hood still forward, her head still slightly down. She was not leaving with the others. She was standing alone, watching the platform, watching the space where I had been.

I wondered if she was waiting for sothing. For soone. For .

No. She didn’t know it was . She wasn’t waiting for . She was waiting for sothing else. An answer. A sign. A reason to believe that the things she had heard tonight were not the whole truth.

I could have walked down to her. Could have crossed the twenty feet between us, pulled off the mask, let her see who had been speaking. Could have watched her face when she realized that the man she had dismissed, the man she had ordered to stay away, was the sa man who had been standing on this platform, naming the rot in her kingdom.

I didn’t.

I stayed where I was, in the shadows at the edge of the platform, and I watched her watch the empty space where I had been.

I watched her until she finally turned and walked toward the door.

She moved slowly, tiredly, the way soone moves when they have been carrying sothing heavy for too long. Her hood was still forward, her head still down, her hands still at her sides. She did not look back.

I watched her go.

When the door closed behind her, I was alone.

I stood in the empty room with the mask in my hands and the weight of everything I had not said pressing down on my chest.

She had been here. In my crowd. Listening to my words. Trying to figure out who I was.

She had not known.

And I had not told her.

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