If the Duel of Cinders had been blood and spectacle, then the Midnight Ball was its phoenix rebirth, the violence transmuted into velvet, jewels, and firelight. Solmire did not do subtlety; it preferred to dazzle until the eye watered and the heart forgot to question what, exactly, it was celebrating.
The carriages ca first, a river of gilded beasts winding up the marble causeway toward the Hall of Eternal Fla. Each vehicle, emblazoned with family crests and dripping gold filigree, passed through the ceremonial archway, a gateway of living fire.
The flas curved and coiled around every carriage, testing, so they said, the "purity of intention" of those who entered. (One must imagine, then, that Solmire’s nobility burned far more brightly than they ever intended.)
Nas were proclaid like hymns.
"House Drakas!"
"House Kaknov!"
"House Ashvane!"
Each declaration rose over the crowd, gilded and heavy with the weight of history, or the illusion of it. The red carpet beneath their feet shimred, lined with floating orbs of soft golden fla, each hovering obediently at shoulder height to bathe every arrival in flattering warmth.
Servants in scarlet livery moved through the throng like well-trained flas themselves, offering fire-wine in crystal goblets. The drink glowed faintly, hot to the touch, and left behind a taste of smoke and honey... courage in liquid form, or at least the pretense of it.
And then, the doors.
The Grand Ballroom of Cinders was now less a room and more a living cathedral of light. Its do arched high enough to house the stars themselves, every inch carved with stories of fla, wars, gods, lovers turned to ash.
At its center burned the Eternal Pyre, fifteen feet of living fire that never smoked, never dimd. Around it, seven braziers marked the noble houses of Solmire, each fire distinct, for Solmire was a kingdom written in color and heat.
Above, fire-glass chandeliers hung in clusters, refracting their light into soft rainbows that danced over the crowd like playful spirits.
Fla-vines curled up the pillars, whispering and shifting as if they could hear the music beginning to stir. The orchestra was already warming up, the low hum of strings blending with the soft tallic sigh of flutes designed to sing when heated.
At the edges of the room, long tables glead with volcanic stone platters, their contents perpetually steaming, a feast ant not for hunger, but for envy.
The nobles ca in waves.
Peacocks of politics, draped in screaming colors.
Gowns of fire-silk that shimred with every movent.
Necklaces of ember-diamonds, earrings that sparked faintly when they swayed.
Their conversations were a battlefield of whispers and veiled laughter. One could hear it if one listened closely enough:
"Have you seen her sleeves? Practically scandalous."
"Scandal is fashion, dear."
"I heard the emperor is attending tonight."
"As always he does, only this ti I hear he seems to be in search for a bride to bring back to Nevareth."
"Oh dear! These are re speculations."
"Indeed! We should not get our hopes too high."
"Besides... There’s no way the Nevarethians would accept a descendant of Pyronox as their empress."
"Certainly! We are still recovering from old wounds."
"But regardless... Just one night with the god of ice himself... Oh I can see it already... how rciless he’d be!"
"Decorum!"
Groups ford and dissolved with the grace of shifting flas. The young ladies clustered near the lower balcony, all lace and perfud ambition, each trying to position herself strategically before the Emperor arrived.
Rumor had painted him as cold. Tragic. Untouchable. Which, of course, only made him more desirable.
And so, beneath the chandeliers, a hundred hearts rehearsed how to fall.
A sudden hush.
The trumpets’ call.
"His Majesty, King Consort Caelen Caldrith! Lady Ophelia Calista! And His Highness, Prince Rael Igniva!"
The doors opened, and perfection entered.
Caelen led, every inch the golden general. His uniform, black and gold, caught the light like weaponry, his posture sharpened to the edge of command. His hand rested lightly on the small of Ophelia’s back, not possessive but practiced, the kind of gesture that said: this is ours, this night, this kingdom, this illusion.
Ophelia was his foil and complent both. Pearl-white and gold, radiant but cool, she glided more than walked, her gown flowing around her like smoke caught in moonlight. The diamond at her throat winked like a star that had lost its way.
Between them, little Rael walked proudly, his ember-red vest gleaming as though lit from within. His tiny boots tapped against the floor, each sound echoing with a confidence he could only have inherited from royalty..m or perhaps from being loved, if only by one half of it.
The crowd gasped, audibly.
"They look like the true royal family."
"Have you ever seen a child adore soone like that?"
"Lady Ophelia’s grace puts even the Queen’s to sha."
Oh, Solmire’s nobles did love to devour their monarchs, with their eyes, with their envy, with their gilded tongues.
Caelen moved through the crowd as if born to rule it, nodding, smiling, greeting each lord and lady with the polished charm of a man who’d learned diplomacy from battlefields.
Ophelia played her role to perfection: the serene beauty, soft voice, kind smile... never too wide, never too long. Every inch the ideal consort, though she was not yet one.
They made it look easy... all that poise, all that quiet choreography of affection.
Dearest reader...
There are entrances, and then there are arrivals... those rare, shattering monts when a room forgets to breathe, when silk freezes mid-swish and every conversation falters into stunned silence.
That was what happened the instant the herald’s voice rang through the ballroom like the crack of a winter wind:
"His Imperial Majesty, Emperor Soren Nivarre of Nevareth... and the Northern Delegation!"
Ah, and there he was.
The Ice Emperor himself, cutting through the heat of Solmire like a blade through molten glass.
Behind him, the Imperial Envoy followed in perfect formation... Lord Venrick, grave and silver-browed; Captain Ryse, stern as frost-carved stone; and four Winter Knights gleaming in ceremonial armor of ice-blue steel, their cloaks edged in snow-white fur. They moved like ghosts through fla, their presence a quiet insult to Solmire’s infernal splendor.
But none of it mattered, because Soren had entered.
He did not command attention; he absorbed it.
He wore a long, tailored coat the color of storm-washed sky, its hem and collar lined with white fur soft enough to sha clouds. Silver embroidery coiled across the fabric in intricate frost-patterns, catching the light so delicately that he seed to shimr with each step.
Upon his brow rested a slender circlet of silver and sapphires, modest for a monarch, yet it crowned him with such austere precision that one could almost believe the jewels were shards of frozen stars.
Devastating. That was the word that rippled through the crowd like a secret too delicious to keep.
And oh, how Solmire’s won responded.
Fans snapped open like wings. A collective sigh fluttered across the ballroom. Several young ladies, poor souls undone by the sight... "accidentally" shifted closer to his path, pretending interest in the floral arrangents. Mothers, suddenly strategic, gave their daughters urgent little shoves forward, whispering prayers to whatever gods ruled beauty and fortune. Even wives... secure, jeweled, well-fed wives... allowed themselves a second look, just long enough to recall that the ice might, under certain conditions, lt.
The Emperor, for his part, played his role flawlessly.
That easy smile, the one that could thaw or freeze with equal elegance, made its practiced appearance. He inclined his head here, brushed gloved fingers over a hand there, murmured pleasantries that ant nothing and yet made every recipient feel montarily immortal.
To the casual observer, he was the perfect diplomat: all grace, charm, and self-possession.
But ah, dear reader, if one were to look closer, closer than any of those blushing debutantes ever dared, one might have noticed the truth flickering beneath that composed exterior.
His eyes kept moving.
Scanning. Searching.
Every ti the great doors opened and a new cluster of nobles entered, his gaze flicked that way, sharp and unguarded for the briefest of monts before the mask returned. Every toast, every greeting, every laugh he offered seed to carry an invisible hitch, a heartbeat spent elsewhere.
One could almost feel it, like standing too near a storm cloud humming with trapped lightning.
Because in his mind, the ballroom was not a ballroom at all. It was a garden at midnight, heavy with jasmine and mory. A bench of cool marble. A voice like smoke and defiance saying, "Your talent for appearing uninvited is remarkable."
He was here, yes, surrounded by fla and admiration. Yet part of him remained in that garden, replaying every word, every glance, every impossible spark.
And as Solmire’s most exquisite won giggled and plotted, and the orchestra’s first notes spiraled into the air like embers caught in wind, Soren Nivarre smiled his beautiful, empty smile...
...while the heat in his chest coiled and climbed, burning hotter with every breath, every heartbeat, every unspoken na.
He was supposed to be the Ice Emperor.
But tonight, he was a man waiting for fire.
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