[Lavinia’s POV—War Room—Later]
The doors hadn’t even finished closing behind the ren ssenger before silence crashed down over the war room.
Not fear.
No hesitation.
A silence carved from calculation.
Clonal Zerith was the first to break it—arms folded, eyes narrowed like he was dissecting the air. "That kid..." his jaw clenched, "he’s too poisonous for his age."
"Poisonous is why he survived the throne." Arwin’s voice was smooth, almost conversational—which only made the words more brutal. "Let’s not forget it. The boy murdered every sibling competing for the crown, even the youngest one."
Sera shuddered. Even Rey—who laughed in the face of bloodshed—lost his grin.
Arwin’s eyes shifted to . "We treat him as a child, we lose. We treat him as a king; we win."
I t his stare, fingers tapping the arm of my chair—slow and rciless. "You’re right. That twelve-year-old brat isn’t a prodigy... He’s poison. And poison spreads if you leave it alone."
Haldor spoke next—voice low, iron-steady. "Then we cut him out of the kingdom as soon as possible."
"Exactly," I said, leaning back in the chair as if the war had already been decided.
For a mont, no one spoke. The tension pulsed—adrenaline and bloodlust disguised as strategy.
Then I smirked. "Starting today, we rest for one day."
Heads snapped toward —surprised.
"Rest? Now? I thought we were leaving tomorrow, your highness." Osric said.
"Oh yes," I purred. "Give the smaller rulers and nobles exactly one day. They’re already terrified after losing Red Wall. Let them think. Let them panic. Let them stare at their walls wondering if I’m coming next."
Understanding flickered in Zerith’s eyes, followed by a wolfish grin. Arwin chuckled. "You’re waiting for them to abandon their territories before you even arrive."
I shrugged casually. "Why conquer when fear can hand us the keys?"
I stood—and the room straightened like a blade being drawn. "You all have fought relentlessly. Take the day. Recover. Sharpen your weapons. Sharpen your minds."
They all nodded.
Rey stretched his arms with a wicked grin. "I can’t. When that brat kneels, I call dibs on laughing first."
***
[Lavinia’s POV—Red Wall Castle—Night—Training Grounds]
CLASH!CLANG!
Steel t steel again and again—sparks flashing in the cold night air. Haldor drove back with a heavy strike, forcing my boots across the dirt.
"You look tired, Your Highness," he said, breath steady while mine ca faster. "You should rest."
I lifted my sword again, refusing to loosen my stance. "Why? Are you done fighting? Or"—I tilted my head—"are you getting bored of dueling with ?"
His eyes locked onto mine—unshaken, unblinking.
"Bored?" he repeated, voice low. "Crossing blades with you is the greatest honor I have."He took a step closer, steel glinting between us. "But you’re exhausted. You might get hurt."
The way he said the next part wasn’t formal—it was personal. "And I can’t watch you get hurt, Your Highness."
That made pause.
Haldor didn’t flinch. Didn’t soften. Didn’t look away.
He said it like a fact—not a weakness. And yet... sothing in the air shifted. Heat threaded between us—not from the exercise.
I blinked once.
Then a wicked idea curled through my thoughts. I took one slow step back, sword lowering—for a heartbeat he relaxed, thinking I’d agreed.
Then I smirked. The kind of smirk that always gets n into trouble.
I raised my sword again and pointed it at him. "Raise your sword, Haldor. We’re continuing."
His jaw flexed—half frustration, half admiration.
"Your Highness," he warned, "don’t test ."
"I am testing exactly the man I chose for my right side," I shot back, voice sharp as steel. "If I wanted soone who stops when I’m tired, I would have picked a softer captain."
His eyes glimred—not with anger. With hunger for the fight. For the challenge. For .
A faint and slow, dangerous smile pulled at the corner of his mouth as he lifted his sword once more.
"As you wish," he murmured. "But if you get hurt... I’m carrying you off this field, and you will not stop ."
The threat—the promise—slid straight down my spine. I stepped forward until our blades crossed again, faces inches apart.
"Then I suppose," I whispered, pushing against his sword, "you’d better fight hard enough that I don’t."
His breath hitched—only for a second—before steel exploded between us again.
CLASH!!
We fell into rhythm—strike, parry, step, pivot, breath. Sotis he drove back with brutal precision. Sotis I forced him to retreat with reckless ambition.
He matched perfectly—not holding back anymore.
Exactly what I wanted.
And when the duel was at its fiercest, when his focus burned sharp and unshakable—I activated the wicked plan.
I stumbled back dramatically, jerked my sword from his line of attack, and then let it fall to the ground.
THUD!!!!
"OW—! It hurts!!" I cried out, clutching my wrist.
The change was instant. Haldor’s entire body snapped, like a bowstring breaking.
"Your Highness—" He rushed forward, taking my hand in both of his, eyes wide with panic. "Your Highness, where are you hurt? Talk to ."
His voice cracked.
He searched my hand like he could rip the injury off with his bare fingers.
"Does it hurt here?" He pressed lightly at my wrist.
"Or here?" His thumb brushed my palm. "I should call Rey—he’ll heal you. don’t move—don’t even breathe if it hurts—"
That panic.
Not soldier panic.
Not duty panic.
Haldor panic.
For .
His eyes were wild—terrified of pain, he couldn’t even see. It was almost unfair how sincere he was.
I tried to smother my smile, but a chuckle slipped out.
"Hehe—"
His brows furrowed. And I couldn’t resist. I laughed, bright and shaless. "It’s good to see you have more expressions, Captain. Even though I am not bleeding."
He blinked in confusion, then looked back down at my hand —No wounds.
At all.
My grin widened.
"Surprise," I said, wiggling my fingers. "TA-DA~~!!!"
"I apologize for teasing you, really—but you’re so disciplined, so unreadable, so stoic—I just wanted to break the tense—"
WHOOSH!!!!
The world spun.
Because Haldor suddenly pulled into him. No hesitation. No permission was asked.
He wrapped in his arms—tight, fierce, unshakable—holding against the heat of his chest like he was afraid I’d vanish.
I froze.
His breath hit the side of my neck—uneven, almost angry.
"You can’t—" his voice was low, strained, breaking around the edges, "—pretend to be hurt like that."
My fingers curled unconsciously into his shirt.
"Haldor..."
"I can’t stand it," he murmured into my hair. No pride. No armor. Just truth. "Not even for a second. Not even as a joke."
The grip of his arms wasn’t soft.
It was desperate.
Terrified.
His chest was a wall of heat against my cold skin, and his broad shoulders blocked out the whole world.
And that—that raw fear in him—was far more dangerous than any sword.
His voice shook as it pressed close to my ear.
"You don’t understand how much you matter to , Your Highness." His breath trembled. "So please... promise you’ll never do that again."
I didn’t answer.
I couldn’t.
My hands just dangled helplessly at my sides—because his feelings felt suddenly too close and too real, and I wasn’t prepared for it.
"You worry too much, Sir Haldor..." I murmured, forcing a playful tone I didn’t truly feel.
But he didn’t loosen his hold.
"Because you are my everything, Your Highness."
Not spoken like a knight. Not like a subordinate. Not like duty. Spoken like a man who would burn the world before letting go.
It felt like...Haldor Vaelthorn—not the Captain of Eloria—held in his arms that night.
The training field was silent. Too still. Too close. Too honest.
If I let the mont stretch any further, I didn’t know what would happen—and I wasn’t ready to find out.
So I smirked, light and mischievous, to break the intensity before it swallowed us alive.
"Then," I whispered, pulling back just enough to look up at him, "next ti I’ll prank you with a fake broken leg."
He finally released .
His brows shot up—scandalized, offended, and horrified all at once.
"Absolutely not."
I laughed—genuinely—and for the first ti in days, sothing inside my chest loosened. The heaviness in my heart felt... lighter.
Then I saw the shift.
The warmth vanished from his expression—replaced by realization, discipline, and fear of overstepping.
Haldor imdiately dropped to one knee before , head bowed.
"Your Highness," he said, voice strained with guilt, "I apologize for touching you recklessly. I let emotion overrule discipline. I... will accept any punishnt you decide."
I just stared at him.
This was the sa man who held like his world was breaking—and now he kneeled like he expected shackles.
My hand moved before I even thought about it. I reached out and ruffled his hair, fingers brushing through soft strands, forcing his head up ever so gently.
"Haldor," I said, my voice softer than I intended, "I understand your intentions. They weren’t reckless. They were human."
My thumb brushed lightly across his temple.
"So don’t speak of punishnt again."
He looked up at fully then, eyes locking with mine in a way that made the night feel too fragile to breathe.
"Thank you," he whispered—not to a ruler, not to a crown—but to .
For a heartbeat, neither of us moved.
The world was at war, but every night... it feels like it’s about him and .
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