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"But I have lived in fire all my life, Your Grace. I know its nature intimately. I understand how it moves, how it breathes, how it responds to the world around it. And I know this truth that many forget: fire only destroys what refuses to adapt. What tries to smother it. What treats it as enemy instead of force of nature."

She turned slightly, her gaze finding Soren where he stood watching her with an expression that suggested he was witnessing sothing magnificent.

"I did not co here to burn your empire. I did not travel across frozen lands and through hostile territory because I seek destruction. I ca because your son, your Emperor, asked to stand beside him."

Her emphasis on that word was deliberate, unmistakable.

"Not behind him, following in his shadow. Not beneath him, serving his will. Beside him. As his equal. As his partner. As soone who can share the weight of a crown rather than simply wearing one for decoration."

She looked back at Vetra, and her expression softened into sothing that might have been genuine sympathy.

"And if there is one thing I learned from ruling, from surviving, from becoming what I am, it is this: true power is not threatened by other power. It recognizes it. Respects it. And when necessary..."

A pause. Brief but weighted with aning.

"Makes room for it."

The silence that followed was absolute. Complete. The kind of quiet that ca when an entire room collectively forgot how to breathe.

Eris’s voice, when it ca again, was softer but sohow carried even more clearly.

"So I will ask you directly, Regent Empress: Do you have room? Or must we make it?"

The question hung in the air like a sword balanced on its point, capable of falling in any direction.

Then, even softer, almost gentle:

"I hope we can make room together. I would much prefer that."

For a long mont, nothing moved. Nothing breathed. The entire Winter Hall had beco a tableau of frozen figures waiting to see how this mont would resolve.

And then, from three tables over, ca the sound of slow, deliberate applause.

Duke Konstantin Vael, rchant prince and governor of the Silver Shores, had begun to clap. Not enthusiastically. Not mockingly. Just... appreciatively. The way one might applaud a masterful performance or an exceptionally clever negotiation.

General Aldrik, after a mont’s hesitation, nodded slowly. His scarred face showed grudging respect, the expression of a soldier who recognized courage when he saw it, who understood that standing up to power took a different kind of strength than wielding it.

High Priestess Serah’s small smile had grown wider, her ancient eyes twinkling with sothing that might have been delight. She’d just witnessed theology and politics and personal courage woven together into an argunt that even the gods themselves might have found compelling.

Lady Isolde Ravencrest looked at Vetra, waiting for so signal, so indication of how to respond. But Vetra’s expression had gone carefully blank, the face of soone recalculating strategy mid-battle.

Marquess Theron looked like he might actually faint. His face had gone pale, his hands trembling slightly where they rested against the table. The financial ledgers of his embezzlent suddenly seed far less important than the question of which faction he’d bet his life on.

Near the middle tables, Aldric leaned toward Ryse and whispered just loud enough to be overheard by those nearby: "She just challenged the Regent Empress to either submit or declare war. In the politest possible way I’ve ever witnessed."

Ryse’s response was imdiate: "I’m in love with her."

"Get in line."

Soren stood perfectly still throughout this exchange, but his eyes burned with sothing that transcended simple pride or desire. It was possession. Recognition. The look of a man who’d found exactly what he’d been searching for and would burn down anyone who tried to take it from him.

He lifted the ring again, his movents deliberate, final.

"Then let it be finished."

He reached for Eris’s hand, and she gave it willingly, her fingers warm against his palm. The ancient ring slid onto her finger with the kind of perfect fit that suggested destiny or careful planning or perhaps both.

His voice rang through the hall with absolute authority.

"Lady Eris Igniva, I claim you as my bride. As Nevareth’s future Empress. As the woman who will stand beside as we forge this empire’s next Chapter."

He paused, then added with deliberate precision:

"Our union will be blessed ten days hence, on the first night of the winter moon, in the Grand Cathedral, by High Priestess Serah herself."

He turned to look at the ancient woman directly.

"If she will consent to perform the ceremony."

Serah stood slowly, her movents carrying the weight of age and authority and divine connection. When she spoke, her voice seed to resonate with sothing beyond re sound.

"I will bless what the gods do not forbid. And I see no divine objection here."

Her gaze swept across the assembled nobility, then returned to Eris and Soren.

"Only mortal fear. Which is understandable, certainly. But ultimately insufficient reason to prevent what should be."

She nodded toward Eris, the gesture carrying both acknowledgnt and acceptance.

"I will perform the ceremony."

Soren raised his goblet high, the ice-wine inside catching the light like captured moonlight.

"Then it is done. Rise and acknowledge your future Empress."

The command hung in the air like a spell waiting to take hold.

Rise and acknowledge your future Empress.

For a single, breathless mont, no one moved. The Winter Hall remained frozen in that peculiar stillness that ca when history was being written and no one wanted to be the first to choose which side of it they’d be rembered on.

And then Duke Konstantin Vael stood.

The rchant prince rose from his seat with the kind of unhurried deliberation that suggested he’d already calculated the odds, assessed the risks, and determined exactly where his interests lay.

His considerable bulk straightened with surprising grace, and his weathered face showed no particular emotion beyond mild approval, as though he were acknowledging a successful trade negotiation rather than witnessing the potential fracturing of an empire’s power structure.

But he stood. Clearly. Visibly. Making his choice known to every watching eye.

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