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Chapter 92: Chapter 93: sothing is off

Elara’s POV

The days after Lena ca back were not the sa.

I told myself that was normal. She had been locked in a waiting room for days, questioned, suspected, treated like a criminal. Of course she was different. Anyone would be different. The strain of it, the fear, the uncertainty, it would take ti to fade. She needed space. She needed patience. She needed

not to watch her like she was a puzzle I was trying to solve.

So I did not watch her. I told myself I was not watching her.

But I noticed things.

It was not dramatic. That was the thing that made it difficult to na. She was present. Attentive. She did every part of her job with the sa quiet competence she had always had. The bed was made. The clothes were laid out. The tea was hot and ready when I ca back from my morning etings. Everything was as it should be.

But sothing underneath it had shifted.

She was less available than she used to be. Not absent, exactly. She was still there when I needed her. But she was gone for stretches that she explained with small, ordinary reasons. I had to check on sothing in the kitchens. I needed to speak with the laundry mistress. I was looking for a book in the library.

Each reason made sense on its own. The kitchens were always busy. The laundry mistress was always behind schedule. The library was always a ss.

But together, they added up to sothing I could not quite see the shape of. A pattern of absence. A rhythm of disappearance that had not been there before.

She was less instinctive. Less easy. Less the person who finished my thoughts before they were fully ford. There was a quality of containnt to her now, a careful managent of herself that had not been there before. She thought before she spoke. She moved like she was asuring her actions, like soone had told her to take up less space.

I noticed. I told myself it was the aftermath of the waiting room, the strain of the investigation, the reasonable residue of a difficult week. I gave her space. I did not press.

I filed the feeling away.

It was not just Lena.

Three tis in the span of a week, I walked into a council session to find that decisions I had been privately considering had already been moved on.

The first ti, it was Petrov. He raised a asure about the water channels, the sa asure I had been planning to propose myself. I had not discussed it with anyone. I had not written it down. I had not shared it beyond the walls of my own chambers. But there it was, on the agenda, coming out of his mouth like it had been his idea all along.

I told myself it was coincidence. The water channels were a pressing issue. Anyone could have thought of it. Anyone could have brought it forward.

The second ti, it was a budget reallocation. I had ntioned it in passing to no one official. A comnt here, a thought there, nothing that should have left my private chambers. But it appeared on the council agenda as though it had been there for days.

Coincidence, I told myself. It had to be coincidence.

The third ti, it was about the grain distribution. A plan I had been turning over in my mind, not yet ready to share, not yet ready to propose. And there it was, on the table, being discussed by n who should not have known I was even thinking about it.

Small things. Things that could be coincidence. Things that would be coincidence if they happened once or twice.

They kept happening.

I sat at the head of the council table and watched.

Petrov was speaking. Sothing about the northern territories, about the need for stronger oversight, about the failures of the current administration. His voice was smooth, reasonable, the voice of a man who had been doing this for decades.

I listened. I nodded. I said nothing.

But I was watching. Not just him. All of them. The way they looked at each other. The way they moved. The way they spoke.

Lord Harwick was quiet today, more quiet than usual. He sat at the end of the table, his hands folded, his eyes on the papers in front of him. He did not look up when Petrov spoke. He did not nod or shake his head. He just sat there, still and contained, like a man waiting for sothing.

Lord rcer was not here. He had been arrested, along with Ashford, their faces on every wall, their nas on every tongue. The council was smaller now, the seats empty, the n who should have been sitting in them gone.

But the work went on. The etings went on. The decisions were made.

I watched and said nothing and started to understand that sothing was wrong in a way I could not yet prove and did not yet want to na.

That evening, I sat in my chambers and thought about the week.

Lena ca in with tea. She set the tray on the table, poured the cup, placed it on the desk beside . Everything was as it should be.

"Thank you," I said.

She nodded. She turned to leave.

"Lena."

She stopped. Turned back. "Yes?"

I looked at her for a mont. At her face, her hands, the way she was standing. There was nothing wrong with any of it. She looked like Lena. She sounded like Lena. She moved like Lena.

But sothing was off. Sothing I could not na.

"Is everything alright?" I asked.

She smiled. It was the right smile. The one she always gave

when I asked that question. "Of course. Why wouldn’t it be?"

"I don’t know." I shook my head. "Never mind. It’s nothing."

She nodded and left. The door closed softly behind her.

I sat in my chair and stared at the tea. It was the right temperature. The right color. The right amount of honey. Everything was as it should be.

But I could not shake the feeling that sothing was wrong.

The next morning, I walked into the council chamber and found Petrov already seated. He was talking to Lord Harwick, their voices low, their heads close together.

They stopped when I entered. Their faces shifted into the careful neutrality of n who had been caught doing sothing they should not have been doing.

"Your Majesty," Petrov said. "Good morning."

"Good morning." I took my seat at the head of the table. "I hope I’m not interrupting."

"Not at all." He smiled. It was the right smile. The one he always gave

when he was about to say sothing he thought I did not want to hear. "We were just discussing the water channels. The repairs are behind schedule. I was suggesting to Lord Harwick that we authorize additional funding."

I had not authorized additional funding. I had not discussed additional funding. I had not even been told the repairs were behind schedule.

"I see," I said. "And when did you receive this information?"

Petrov’s smile did not waver. "Yesterday afternoon. From the district overseer. I assud you had been inford as well."

I had not been inford.

"I’ll look into it," I said. "In the anti, I’d like to see the reports before we authorize any additional funding."

"Of course, Your Majesty." Petrov nodded. "I’ll have them sent to your chambers."

The eting continued. Other matters were discussed. Decisions were made. I signed papers and nodded and said the right words.

But I was watching. I was always watching now.

After the eting, I walked back to my chambers. Lena was there, straightening the books on the shelf.

"Lena," I said.

She turned. "Yes?"

"The water channels. Do you know anything about the repairs being behind schedule?"

She shook her head. "No. I haven’t heard anything."

"Who would know?"

She thought for a mont. "The district overseer. Or soone in his office. Maybe Lord Corvus. He’s been tracking the infrastructure projects."

I nodded. "Thank you."

She went back to straightening the books. I sat at my desk and stared at the papers in front of .

Sothing was wrong. I could feel it. The shape of it, the weight of it, the way it pressed against the edges of everything I did.

I did not know what it was. I did not know who was behind it. I did not know how far it went.

But I was going to find out.

That night, I could not sleep.

I lay in bed and stared at the ceiling and thought about the week. The decisions that had been made without . The information that had not reached . The way Petrov had looked at

in the council chamber, like he was waiting for sothing, like he already knew what I was going to say before I said it.

And Lena. The way she moved now, careful and contained. The way she was gone for stretches that she explained with small, ordinary reasons. The way she smiled when I asked if she was alright, the right smile, the one that ant nothing.

Sothing was wrong.

I did not know what it was. I did not know who was behind it. I did not know how far it went.

But I was going to find out.

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