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Soren didn’t raise his voice. Didn’t rush. Didn’t fall into the trap of letting emotion drive his words.

Instead, he stood there with the kind of absolute calm that suggested he’d been waiting for exactly this confrontation, had anticipated every argunt, and was about to dismantle them with the precision of a master strategist who’d already won the war before the first battle began.

He turned the ring slowly between his fingers, letting the ice-blue stone catch the light, letting the silence stretch just long enough that every person in the hall was holding their breath waiting for his response.

When he spoke, his voice carried through the chamber with crystalline clarity.

"You speak of fear as though it is weakness, Mother."

The word ’Mother’ landed differently this ti. Still respectful. Still acknowledging their relationship. But with an edge underneath that suggested he was about to teach her sothing she’d sohow forgotten.

"As though being feared is evidence of tyranny rather than strength. As though commanding respect through power rather than inherited privilege is sohow... lesser."

He set the ring down carefully, his movents deliberate, asured.

"I chose Lady Eris because she is feared. Because when she walks into a room, people notice. Not because of her title. Not because of who her father was. But because of what she herself has beco. Because she commands authority through her own strength, her own will, her own undeniable presence."

His gaze swept across the assembled nobles, landing on faces both friendly and hostile.

"Nevareth needs an Empress who can rule. Not simply wear a crown and smile prettily at banquets. Not soone who will defer every decision to advisors and councils and the endless machinery of bureaucracy. But soone who can stand in a throne room and make kings nervous. Soone who can walk onto a battlefield and make generals reconsider their strategies."

He paused, letting that sink in.

"Soone," his voice dropped slightly, beca more intimate despite still carrying to every corner, "who will be my equal. Not my ornant."

The implication was clear. Devastating. He’d just suggested that the carefully selected Lady Bianca, raised and trained and prepared for exactly this role, would have been nothing more than a decorative addition to the throne. Pretty. Proper. Powerless.

Duke Konstantin leaned forward slightly, his interest sharpening. This was not the argunt he’d expected. This was sothing more dangerous. More compelling.

Soren continued, his tone shifting to address the political concerns.

"You speak of Solmire’s nobility celebrating her departure as though it condemns her. But consider what that celebration actually reveals." His lips curved into sothing that wasn’t quite a smile. "They were relieved. Grateful. Overjoyed that she was finally leaving. Why?"

He let the question hang for a breath.

"Because she was too strong for them to control. Because she refused to be manipulated by their gas, their factions, their endless scheming for power. Because she ruled absolutely, and they hated her for it precisely because they could not bend her to their will."

His voice took on a harder edge.

"Their relief is not evidence against her character. It is proof of her strength. They celebrated the sa way weak n always celebrate when sothing that threatens their comfortable diocrity finally leaves them alone."

General Aldrik’s scarred face shifted into sothing that might have been approval. He understood that logic. Had seen it play out in military campaigns where competent commanders were undermined by politicians who preferred comfortable incompetence to threatening excellence.

"And if old tensions resurface?" Soren’s voice rang with certainty. "If trade agreents strain? If border conflicts that we thought settled begin to simr again? Then let them. We will face them as we always have. With strength. With certainty. With the absolute knowledge that Nevareth does not bow to threats or cower from conflict."

He turned slightly, his attention shifting to where High Priestess Serah sat watching with those ancient, knowing eyes.

"High Priestess Serah."

The old woman straightened slightly, her attention focusing with the kind of sharp awareness that ca from decades of theological study and political navigation.

"Does divine law forbid this union?"

The question was direct. Unambiguous. And it placed the burden of religious authority squarely on her shoulders rather than allowing Vetra’s interpretation to stand unchallenged.

Serah stood slowly, her movents deliberate despite her age. When she spoke, her voice carried the weight of soone who’d spent a lifeti interpreting the will of gods for mortal understanding.

"The gods blessed both fire and ice," she said clearly. "They gave these gifts to humanity, shaped our bloodlines, granted us power over elents that should have been beyond mortal reach."

She paused, her gaze sweeping across the assembled nobility before returning to Soren.

"They did not forbid fire and ice from eting. They did not decree eternal separation. They simply..." she chose her words carefully, "discouraged their war. Warned against the destruction that could co from opposition rather than cooperation."

Her lips curved into a small smile.

"But war and marriage, Your Majesty, are not the sa thing."

The murmurs that rippled through the hall carried a different quality now. Uncertainty. Reconsideration. The religious objection had just been publicly dismantled by the highest spiritual authority in the empire.

Soren inclined his head in acknowledgnt.

"Then we offer the gods peace instead of war. Unity instead of division. We show them that fire and ice need not destroy each other when they et."

He turned back to address the hall, his voice taking on a different quality. Not arguntative. Almost philosophical.

"Fire and ice together do not annihilate each other. They create balance. They produce steam. Water. The very essence of life itself. What grows in pure fire? What thrives in absolute ice? Nothing. But where the two et, where they interact and modify each other, that is where transformation happens."

His hand gestured elegantly, encompassing the palace around them.

"Perhaps it is ti Nevareth stopped fearing power and started embracing it. Stopped treating strength as sothing to be contained rather than sothing to be celebrated."

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