The approach to the capital was choreographed chaos, a carefully orchestrated display of imperial might disguised as ceremony.
The road widened as they drew closer, transforming from packed snow into smooth cobblestone lined with towering ice sculptures. Each one depicted a different mont from Nevareth’s history: ancient battles, legendary rulers, the mythical founding when Aenithra herself was said to have blessed these lands with her tears.
Crowds had gathered along the route, kept at a respectful distance by the ceremonial guard but close enough to gawk, to whisper, to wonder. Eris as usual could feel their eyes on her, thousands of gazes asuring, judging, questioning. The foreign bride-to-be of their beloved Emperor.
So Nevarians showed curiosity, others suspicion, and more than a few held open hostility, barely masked beneath polite expressions. She t none of their stares, keeping her gaze forward, her spine straight, every inch the monarch she had once been.
Soren rode beside her, close enough that their stirrups occasionally brushed, a silent declaration of unity. His face was composed, imperial, the mask of the Emperor firmly in place, but she could feel the tension radiating from him, subtle as winter frost but just as pervasive.
He was bringing her ho.
And ho, it seed, was not entirely pleased.
The city itself was a marvel, a testant to what magic and determination could achieve when wed together. The outer districts gave way to grander architecture as they penetrated deeper, each ring more elaborate than the last. Buildings rose in sharp, geotric elegance, their walls of pale stone enhanced with ice that caught and refracted light into prismatic beauty.
The Silver Ring bustled with afternoon activity, artisans and rchants pausing in their work to watch the procession pass. The Crystal Quarter glead with wealth barely contained, noble houses presenting their best faces, windows crowded with lords and ladies straining for a glimpse of the woman who had captured their Emperor’s interest.
And then, finally, they entered the Palace District.
Here the very air seed to change, growing sharper, more refined, as though even oxygen knew to behave itself in proximity to such concentrated power. The Ice Palace rose before them, impossibly tall and impossibly beautiful, carved from ice that legend said would never lt, not even should the sun itself fall from the sky.
It should have been cold, intimidating, a monunt to winter’s cruelty.
Instead, it was breathtaking.
Towers spiraled upward like frozen waterfalls suspended in ti. Bridges of crystal spanned between spires, delicate as spider silk but strong as steel. Gardens spread before the main gates, sculptures of ice and arrangents of winter-blooming flowers creating beauty in defiance of the season.
And waiting at those gates, surrounded by the assembled court, stood
Vetra Helaena Nivarre.
The Regent Empress.
Soren’s adoptive mother.
The woman whose throne Eris had been brought here to usurp.
She was beautiful in the way glaciers are beautiful, all sharp edges and terrible majesty, ageless in that way powerful won sotis achieve, as though ti itself had looked at her and decided discretion was the better part of valor. Greying hair fell in an elaborate arrangent down her back, threaded with diamonds that caught the light. Her gown was white and blue, cut in the severe, elegant style of Nevareth’s highest nobility, and her face...
Ah, her face was a masterpiece of controlled disdain.
Not rage. Not fear. Just cold, absolute certainty that the creature approaching her gates was an insult to everything she had built, and she would tolerate it only as long as necessary before disposing of it appropriately.
The procession halted.
Silence fell, heavy and expectant.
Soren dismounted first, his movents fluid despite days of travel, and turned to offer his hand to Eris. She took it, allowing him to help her down from Solara, her mare snorting softly as though sensing the tension coiling through the courtyard.
They stood together, fire and ice, foreign and familiar, the future and the past about to collide.
Vetra descended the palace steps with the asured grace of a woman who had never hurried for anything in her life. The assembled nobles parted before her, a sea of silk and fur and barely concealed curiosity. When she reached the courtyard proper, she stopped, positioned precisely so that Soren and Eris would have to approach her, co to her, acknowledge her authority even in this mont of his return.
"My son," she said, and her voice was winter given sound, beautiful and deadly. "You return to us at last."
Soren inclined his head, the gesture respectful but not subservient. "Mother. May I present Eris Igniva, forrly Queen of Solmire."
He didn’t say betrothed. Didn’t say future empress. Just her na and her forr title, a subtle power play that placed her as an equal rather than a supplicant.
Vetra’s gaze slid to Eris then, pale blue eyes assessing with the precision of a jeweler examining flawed rchandise. The silence stretched, taut as a wire pulled too tight.
"Forrly," Vetra repeated, the word weighted with implication. "How... interesting."
And in that single word, in the slight curl of her lip and the frost in her tone, battle lines were drawn.
The Regent Empress of Nevareth had looked upon the Fire Queen.
And found her wanting.
Eris held herself with the quiet defiance of soone who had burned too long to fear cold stares. Soren remained close at her back, a steady presence, his hand resting possessively at her waist, his breath brushing the curve of her neck as though he wanted everyone to witness exactly who he had chosen, exactly who he protected.
Eris t that arctic gaze without so much the tiniest flinch, her spine straight, her expression serene, every bit the sovereign she had been born to be. She did not curtsy, did not bow, did not offer any gesture of deference.
Instead, she smiled.
Small, polite, utterly devoid of warmth. The cruelty slipping back in like water travelling on gravel.
"How kind of you to welco ," she said, her voice carrying clearly across the courtyard, pitched so that every noble straining to hear would catch every syllable. "I have heard so much about the Regent Empress. It seems the rumors of your... grace... were not exaggerated."
The pause before grace was deliberate, calculated, a razor wrapped in silk.
Around them, the court inhaled as one.
And sowhere in the crowd, soone who knew a declaration of war when they heard one, began to smile.
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