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Chapter 136: Chapter 137: The New Council

Elara’s POV

The council chamber was arranged differently than it had ever been arranged before.

The long table was the sa. The chairs were the sa. The carved walls, the high windows, the portraits of previous kings staring down from their fras. All of it was the sa. But the faces were not.

Lord Harwick sat at one end. His face was still. His hands were folded.

Corvus sat near the wall, not at the table. He had chosen to stand.

The remaining old council seats were empty. There was no one left to fill them.

The new seats were the ones that mattered.

I had invited them myself. mbers of The Rendered. People who had fought against the crown and lost.

They walked in slowly.

Marcus ca first. His face was hard. His jaw was tight.

He stopped in front of .

"Your majesty You got married," he said. His voice was flat. "Without telling us."

"I did."

"To Kaelen."

"Yes."

He looked at Kaelen. Kaelen looked back at him.

"You could have told us," Marcus said. "We would have co. We would have celebrated. We would have stood with you."

"I know."

"Then why didn’t you?"

Kaelen was quiet for a mont. "Because I did not know if you would accept it. Because I did not know if you would forgive . Because I did not know if you would still see

as your leader or as a traitor."

Marcus stared at him. Then he laughed. It was bitter. But there was sothing underneath it. Relief, maybe. Or exhaustion.

Kaelen smiled.

Dmitri ca next. He was younger than the others. His face was still soft. But his eyes were hard..

"The council," he said. He looked around the room. "You are putting us on the council."

"I am."

"You trust us?"

"I trust that you will tell

the truth. Even when I do not want to hear it. That is what I need."

He nodded slowly. "I can do that."

Vera ca last. She was older than the others.

She moved slowly. Her eyes were sharp despite her age. Missing nothing.

"Vera," I said.

"Your Majesty." Her voice was dry. "I never thought I would say those words in this room."

"Neither did I."

She looked at Kaelen. "You trust her?"

"I do."

"Then I will try." She looked at . "Do not make

regret it."

"I will try not to."

The dissatisfaction was present.

Harwick’s face was still. But I could see it in the set of his jaw. The way he held himself. The way he did not look at the new council mbers.

He was not outraged. He was too careful for outrage now.

He was dissatisfied quietly.

I noted it. Filed it. Did not address it directly. There would be ti for that.

I stood. The room went quiet.

"As you all know I am married," I said. "To Kaelen. The Voice. The father of my child."

The eting continued.

Appointnts were discussed. Strategies were outlined. The new council mbers spoke more than the old. They had ideas. They had energy. They had been waiting for soone to listen.

Marcus spoke about security. About the lower districts. About the people who still did not trust the crown and what it would take to earn their trust.

Dmitri spoke about the young people. The ones who had lost parents to the mines, to the arrests, to the crown’s indifference. He said they needed to see sothing change. Not just hear about it. See it.

Vera spoke about the old ones. The ones who had been fighting since before I was born. The ones who had lost children and spouses and friends. She said they needed to see justice. Not revenge. Justice.

Harwick was quiet. He listened. He watched. He did not interrupt.

Corvus took notes. He asked questions. He did not argue.

Kaelen sat beside . He did not speak much. But when he did, people listened.

At the end of the eting, Marcus stood.

"We are glad to be here," he said. "Even though you did not tell us about the wedding. Even though you did not invite us. Even though we had to hear about it from Corvus."

"I am sorry," Kaelen said.

"You should be." Marcus looked at him. Then he looked at . "But we are here now. And we will do the work. That is what matters."

He sat down.

Vera spoke. "The old chapel," she said. "Do you rember it?"

Kaelen nodded. "I rember."

"Every person in that room lost sothing to the crown. Every person in that room had a reason to hate you." She looked at . "And now we are sitting in your council chamber. Offering to help you. That is not nothing."

"No," I said. "It is not."

"Then do not waste it."

I looked around the room. Harwick, still and watchful. Corvus, steady and reliable. Marcus, Dmitri, Vera.

This was my council now.

Not perfect. Not unified. Not entirely trusted.

But it was mine.

"We have work to do," I said. "The water repairs are behind schedule. The grain distribution is still fragile. Thorn’s troops are massing on the border. We need to appoint military commanders. We need to secure supply lines. We need to prepare the people for what is coming."

"The people," Vera said. "How do we explain to them that the Voice is now the king consort? They have been told he was their enemy."

"We tell them the truth," I said. "That he was sent to destroy us. That instead, he chose to save us. That the man who was supposed to be our enemy is now our ally."

"They will not all accept it."

"So will. So will not. But they will have to live with it. Just as we all do."

I stood. The room stood with .

"This eting is adjourned," I said. "We will et again tomorrow. Sa ti. Sa place."

The council mbers filed out. The new ones walked together, talking quietly. Marcus and Dmitri and Vera. They had lost everything to the crown. Now they were part of it.

Kaelen took my hand.

"They will do well," he said.

"I hope so."

"They will. Because they have to."

I squeezed his hand. He squeezed back.

We walked out of the council chamber together. The corridor was empty. The palace was quiet. The sun was setting.

Tomorrow, there would be more work.

But tonight, there was just this. Just us. Just the quiet.

It was enough.

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