[POV Liselotte]
The thunderous boom of the heavy oak doors closing behind us marked the end of one era and the beginning of a suffocating uncertainty. The sound was sharp, final, like a judge’s gavel delivering a sentence with no possible appeal. The echo bounced against the high marble vaults of the private audience chamber, lingering in air thick with dust and tension before dissolving into a silence heavier than lead.
At first, the room seed overflowing. Elite guards in armor gleaming beneath the light of stained-glass windows, counselors with sallow faces clutching scrolls as if they were shields, and bureaucrats watching us with a mixture of disdain and suspicion. But the atmosphere shifted the mont the man seated behind the imnse polished wooden table rose to his feet.
He was King William Whirikal. His presence filled the space in a way no crown ever could. His back was rigid, a column of steel forged through decades of rule and war, and his large, weathered hands pressed into the wood with such force that his knuckles blanched.
"Leave," he ordered.
His voice was not a shout, but a low, steady thunder. An absolute command.
The counselors exchanged sidelong glances, communicating in that silent language of politics. A few opened their mouths to protest, perhaps to invoke security protocols, but William's gaze silenced them before the first sound could escape. One by one, the guards sheathed their weapons and withdrew with rhythmic steps. When the last of them crossed the threshold and the door sealed once more, William raised a hand.
With a fluid gesture, he activated a magical seal embedded in the side wall. I felt a subtle vibration in my teeth, a faint hum that signaled the soundproofing had taken effect. We were cut off from the world.
Now, it was just the four of us.
William Whirikal, the sovereign. Leah, to his right, so still she might have been carved from salt. Chloé, at my side, her presence an alert shadow, her hand resting naturally near the hilt of her weapon, ready to react to any threat—even one wearing a crown. And … I was trying to remind my lungs how to process oxygen while my heart slamd against my ribs like a caged animal.
The King exhaled. It was not a sigh, but the sound of a man allowing himself to release a burden he had carried for far too long. His posture, once defensive and regal, softened by a fraction. His eyes—until then deep wells of political calculation and monarchic coldness—finally focused on Leah.
I saw the change. It was like watching a crack form in a granite mountain. His pupils trembled, and his breathing, always controlled, faltered for one eternal instant.
"Is it… really you?" he asked.
The question hung in the air, stripped of titles. He did not call her "Crown Princess." He did not invoke the Whirikal lineage. It was the voice of a man searching for a ghost he believed lost to the fog of the past.
Leah did not answer imdiately. I could see her profile—pale, her hands clenched into fists so tight her nails must have been biting into her palms. She looked as though she were fighting an internal battle between the urge to run to him and the instinct to flee as far as possible from the palace that had forgotten her.
I wanted to step forward. I wanted to wrap an arm around her shoulders and tell her I was there, that she did not have to face this alone. But I stopped myself. This was not my mont. My role was to be the anchor, not the ship.
At last, Leah lifted her chin, eting the King’s gaze with a dignity that required no silks or jewels.
"Yes," she said, and her voice, though quiet, sliced through the silence like a blade. "It’s ."
That simple statent shattered william's facade. The King took a step forward—an instinctive movent—then stopped abruptly, as if afraid that getting too close would cause the vision to crumble into ash.
"I thought… for years…" he began, but his voice broke. William Whirikal, the man who ruled with an iron hand, found himself without words.
Leah drew in a deep breath, the sound of soone preparing to plunge into icy waters.
"When they captured on the northern road… I thought I would never see you again either," she said.
The King’s face hardened, reclaiming a shadow of his authority.
"Captured? The reports said the caravan was massacred. No survivors, Leah. We searched for months. We found only burned remains and—"
"The demons," Leah interrupted, and the na of the enemy race seed to chill the room by several degrees. "They weren’t just trying to kill. They wanted information. At first, they tried to persuade . They treated with a twisted courtesy. They spoke of power, of humanity’s weakness, of a so-called vengeance against a world that, according to them, did not deserve . They told the crown of Whirikal was a burden that would eventually suffocate ."
William clenched his teeth so hard the muscles in his jaw twitched.
"Did they hurt you?" The question was heavy with contained hatred for his daughter’s captors.
Leah was silent for a mont—a pause that tore at my soul.
"Yes… and no," she finally answered. "It wasn’t always physical, Father. At first, it was constant terror. Then it was isolation. They locked in a cell where sunlight was a blurred mory. When they realized I would not yield, that I would not beco their political puppet against you, they simply stopped speaking to . Years passed. Years where silence was my only companion. They kept alive like a forgotten trophy on a shelf. No news. No ti. No future."
"Years." The word fell into the room like a gravestone slab.
I watched William squeeze his eyes shut, as if trying to block out images of his daughter suffering in the dark while he ruled from a golden throne. A bitter knot ford in my own throat. I had been there when we pulled her out of that hole. I rembered her empty gaze, her weakened body.
"I thought you were dead," the King murmured, almost to himself.
"So did I," Leah replied with brutal honesty. "Many tis, I wished I were."
Silence returned, but this ti it was not awkward; it was shared mourning for lost ti that would never return. Leah was the one who chose to continue, softening her tone slightly when her eyes t mine.
"One day… the camp where they held was attacked," she went on. "It wasn’t a royal army. It wasn’t your knights, William. It was Lotte and Chloé."
I stiffened at hearing my na. The King turned his head toward , his eyes scanning as if trying to decipher what kind of force I possessed to achieve what his armies could not.
"They ca in like a storm of fire and steel," Leah said, and a small, almost imperceptible smile curved her lips. "I didn’t understand what was happening. I only rember the sound of swords, the chaos outside my cell… and then seeing them. They didn’t rescue because I was the Princess of Whirikal. They didn’t even know my na. They did it because they found there, abandoned, and decided that no life deserved to end in that place."
My hands trembled, and I clasped them behind my back to hide it. We hadn’t done it for glory. We’d done it because it was right.
"After that… we returned to Whirikal," Leah continued. "But we couldn’t enter through the front gates. We were adventurers. We worked at the guild, took missions, tried to survive on the margins of the society I once led."
William frowned, a shadow of pain crossing his face.
"Why didn’t you co to imdiately? I’m your father. The entire kingdom is my ho. Why hide?"
The question was not an accusation, but the lant of a wounded man. Leah lowered her gaze for a second before answering with renewed firmness.
"Because I didn’t know if I could trust this place," she confessed. "Kaelen, the guildmaster… he recognized . And he was the one who advised caution. He warned the kingdom was tense, that noble factions were ready to tear apart anyone who disrupted the balance. He said returning like that, without proof and after so much ti, could be seen as an enemy ploy."
"Kaelen?" the King repeated, filing the na away. "That old fox has always been overly cautious."
"He was right," Leah said. "I wanted to return. Not for the throne, William. I don’t care about the crown. I wanted to return for my family. For my mother, Miah. For my siblings. For the place my heart belonged. But when the truth finally ca out… when I stood before you… you rejected ."
The King took a step back, as if struck.
"I… the circumstances were complicated, Leah. The council was applying pressure—"
"They looked at like I was a threat!" Leah cried, and for the first ti tears welled in her eyes, though she refused to let them fall. "They treated like an impostor—or worse, a demon spy. I am your blood! Do you have any idea what it feels like to be rescued from hell only to find your own ho has shut its doors in your face?"
My chest ached at the sight of her. Beside , Chloé let out a low growl—a silent warning that her patience with royalty was wearing thin.
William Whirikal did not respond. His shoulders, once so broad and powerful, sagged. For a long minute, the only sound was Leah’s ragged breathing.
Then sothing happened that I never expected to see. The King of Whirikal, sovereign of vast lands and invincible armies, bowed. It was not a ceremonial bow. It was the gesture of a man acknowledging his bitterest defeat.
"Forgive ," he whispered.
Leah froze.
"I failed as King by not protecting our borders," he continued, lifting his gaze, his eyes clouded with tears. "But I failed far more as a father by letting fear rule my heart. I was afraid, Leah. Afraid you would be used as a weapon against us. Afraid the kingdom would fracture into civil war if I accepted you without proof. Afraid of losing you again to an internal conspiracy. None of that excuses turning my back on you when you needed us most."
He stepped closer, this ti without hesitation.
"I accept you. Before the gods and before n. You are my daughter. You are Leah Whirikal."
A sob escaped Leah’s throat, a sound carrying years of buried pain. For a mont, she looked like she might embrace him—but the King raised a hand, stopping the impulse. His face slipped back into that mask of necessary responsibility, though his eyes remained painfully human.
"However…" he said heavily. "You still cannot return to the castle. Not officially."
Anger surged up my throat. After all this, he was pushing her away again?
"What?" Leah exclaid, stepping back.
"Listen to ," William said quickly. "There are too many people at court who distrust you. Nobles who gained power in your absence and advisors afraid of losing influence. The kingdom is a raft in the middle of a storm; if I present you now without preparation, they will destroy us all. I need to clear the path. I need to make your return unquestionable."
Leah pressed her lips together, processing his words.
"How long?" she asked, her voice icy.
"A week," the King replied firmly. "Just one week. Stay in the city, under my indirect protection but out of the court’s sight. After seven days, the palace gates will open for you. You will return to your mother, to your siblings. William will be your father again, not just your King."
Leah closed her eyes, and this ti the tears flowed freely down her cheeks. She nodded slowly. It was a fair compromise, even if it was bitter.
"Thank you," she murmured.
William then turned his attention to . His gaze was heavy, filled with a gratitude that seed difficult for him to voice.
"And you, Liselotte… thank you for saving what I failed to protect."
I stiffened under his scrutiny. Etiquette dictated a bow, but my pride and my loyalty to Leah kept upright.
"You don’t need to thank , Your Majesty," I replied, my voice steadier than I felt. "I didn’t do it for the crown, or the kingdom, or so future reward. I did it for Leah. Because she is my family."
The King nodded slowly, a spark of respect shining in his eyes. He seed to understand that, for us, titles ant nothing compared to the bond forged in mud and blood.
"Take care of her for one more week," he said at last. "Then we’ll speak of rewards—though I know you don’t seek them. Whirikal owes you a debt that gold can hardly repay."
"It isn’t necessary," I added simply.
William deactivated the magical seal on the wall. The hum faded, and the sounds of the castle—the echo of distant footsteps, the wind rattling the windows—returned to the room.
When we left the chamber, the air felt different. The guards’ looks in the corridors were still curious, but I no longer cared. We walked together: Leah in the center, Chloé on one side, and on the other.
We had entered that room as pariahs and left with the promise of a ho. But as we crossed the palace threshold back into the city streets, I knew one thing with absolute certainty: no matter what crowns fell or what thrones rose, we had already chosen where we belonged. And that place was not within stone walls and castles, but in the space we defended together, sword in hand.
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