Chapter 104

The empire was built on strength, but strength was not always about brute force. Aeliana had come to learn that power did not come only from battlefields and bloodshed. Power was in knowledge. Power was in understanding your enemy before they had the chance to strike.

Tharx had conquered the empire through war. He had bent entire worlds to his will, forced cities to their knees, and carved his rule into history with a blade. But this war was different. This war was not fought in open battle. It was hidden in whispers, in shifting shadows, in the movements of people who had already infiltrated their home.

Aeliana had seen it before. The slow, creeping nature of betrayal. It always started in the quiet places, in the moments people dismissed. A passing glance. A servant who had been there one day and gone the next. A noble who had once spoken too freely but had now fallen into silence.

Silence was more dangerous than words.

Silence meant waiting. Silence meant planning.

And she would not let them wait any longer.

She could not rely on Tharx's methods alone. If it were up to him, he would drag nobles from their estates, force confessions from them through fear, and execute those who refused to swear loyalty. But this was not a war that could be won by breaking a few skulls. This enemy was too careful, too patient. If they had been bold enough to slip messages into Seraphina's cradle and onto Aeliana's desk, then they were close.

And that meant they needed to be caught before they vanished entirely.

So Aeliana did what she did best.

She watched.

She listened.

And then, she prepared for war.

Vaelkor was the first person she sought out.

He was the most well-connected man in the empire-not through nobility, but through knowledge. He spent his life in the archives, among records and secrets, in the forgotten places of the empire where history was not just remembered but controlled.

When she found him in the royal library, he was already watching her with a knowing look.

"You need something," he said, voice calm, measured.

Aeliana slid into the chair across from him. "I need names."

Vaelkor arched a brow. "Of?"

"The nobles who still whisper against Seraphina. The ones who have grown quiet but have not sworn loyalty. The ones who listen to dissenters but do not speak against them. I need to know who they are talking to. I need to know who they are listening to. I need to know who is a threat before they strike."

Vaelkor's expression darkened slightly. He exhaled, rubbing his jaw. "That list will be longer than you think."

"Then start writing," Aeliana said.

The scholar studied her carefully, his sharp gaze missing nothing. "This is more than just information gathering, isn't it?"

Aeliana didn't answer right away. She held his gaze, let the silence stretch between them.

Then, she said, "I am not waiting for them to make the first move."

Vaelkor sighed, shaking his head as he reached for a fresh parchment. "Very well. But tread carefully, Aeliana."

She leaned back in her chair. "I am always careful."

Vaelkor gave her a pointed look. "No. You are always determined. And that is not the same thing."

She smirked faintly, but she didn't argue.

Because he was right.

Vaelkor's list would give her suspicions.

But suspicions were not proof.

And if she was going to bring names to Tharx, she needed proof.

So she built her own network.

It started with the unseen.

The palace functioned like a living thing, a machine made of thousands of moving parts. Nobles ruled, generals waged war, but it was the servants who made the palace move.

They were invisible to those in power.

And that made them the most dangerous players of all.

Aeliana spent weeks carefully observing. She learned who overheard what, who passed freely through the noble halls, who carried messages from one courtier to another.

Then she chose her pieces.

The kitchen workers, the chambermaids, the stable hands who were always listening, always watching. The overlooked. The forgotten.

The ones who saw everything.

One by one, she recruited them.

And before long, she had a system.

A web of spies inside her own palace.

But spies were not enough.

If someone came for Seraphina, Aeliana would not just be a queen.

She would be a mother.

And she would not be powerless.

She had never been a warrior. She did not swing a sword like Tharx, did not command armies or thrive in battle.

But she did not need to.

She trained for survival.

For the moment that mattered.

She worked with her guards, learning how to disable, disarm, and kill if necessary.

She learned how to use a dagger, not as a weapon of war, but as a tool of protection.

She would never charge into battle.

But if someone tried to take Seraphina, they would not leave the palace alive.

Tharx noticed.

Of course, he did.

She saw it in the way he watched her in court, the way his golden eyes flickered toward her more often than usual. She saw it in the way his lips pressed into a thin line when she moved through the halls with a measured, deliberate step.

He let it go for a time.

Until he didn't.

It happened in the training hall.

Aeliana was alone. The guards had left for the evening, the torches burning low. She held a dagger in her grip, practicing the same movement over and over again.

She heard him enter, but she didn't stop.

Only when he spoke did she lower the blade.

"Tell me what you know," Tharx said, his voice quiet, but undeniable.

Aeliana exhaled, lowering the dagger. "Not yet."

Tharx took another step forward. "That is not an answer."

She turned to face him, meeting his golden gaze.

"I don't have names yet," she said. "Not the right ones."

His jaw tightened. "And when you do?"

"Then," Aeliana murmured, "I will tell you."

He studied her, his gaze burning.

"You are different," he said finally.

Aeliana tilted her head. "Am I?"

His eyes darkened. "You are not just waiting anymore."

She smirked faintly. "I told you. Waiting is over."

For a long moment, he just looked at her.

Then, slowly, he stepped forward.

His fingers brushed against hers, against the dagger in her grip.

"You are learning to fight," he murmured.

Aeliana did not flinch. "I am learning to protect what is mine."

Something flickered in his expression-something dark, something proud.

His grip tightened briefly on the dagger.

Then, in a voice low and unshakable, he said:

"You will not need to."

Aeliana held his gaze.

"Perhaps," she whispered.

"But I will be ready anyway."

Tharx exhaled, his fingers releasing the blade.

His golden eyes burned.

"Find me when you have names," he said.

Then he turned and walked away.

Leaving her alone in the flickering light.

Aeliana watched him go, her heart steady, her mind racing.

This was only the beginning.

When she finally had names?

There would be no mercy.

This was not a game.

This was war.