Chapter 67

The grand hall was suffocating with tension. The nobles had gathered, their silk-draped forms stiff with veiled contempt. Aeliana could feel it in the air-the weight of their judgment, the unspoken expectation that she would fail.

She had felt many things in battle. Fear. Adrenaline. The cold bite of a blade nearly missing her throat.

But this was different.

This was war fought with words and silence, with politics and power plays.

She sat at the head of the court, alone.

Tharx was not beside her today.

This was her fight.

The nobles watched her.

They bowed-just enough to remain civil. But their eyes burned with resentment, some glimmering with barely concealed amusement, as if they were waiting for her to stumble.

Aeliana did not stumble.

"Let us begin," she said, voice clear, unshaken.

Silence stretched. A test. Would she hesitate?

She didn't.

The first noble to rise was Lord Maric, an elder of the court, his estate spanning one of the wealthiest regions in the empire. He moved with calculated grace, the kind of man who spoke only when his words would cut the deepest.

"My Queen," he said, tone polished and dripping with condescension, "there is a matter of land distribution that we must discuss."

Aeliana gave him nothing. "Go on."

"The recent wars have left several noble houses weakened. Their lands sit unused, untended. We suggest redistributing them among the more established families-those who have always been loyal to the empire."

Aeliana knew what he was doing.

They expected her to agree. They wanted more land, more power, more control.

She let the silence stretch. Let Maric believe she was considering it. Let the court lean in ever so slightly.

Then, with perfect calm, she spoke.

"No."

A sharp pause. Maric's lips parted slightly, but she saw it-the flicker of surprise, the brief moment of confusion.

Aeliana sat forward. "The lands in question were owned by houses that chose to stand against Tharx," she said smoothly. "And now, they will serve the empire."

She let her gaze sweep the room, deliberately taking her time. "Not by gifting them to the nobility that already drowns in wealth and resources. The land will go to those who have fought for this empire-soldiers, warriors, scholars who serve with purpose."

The shift in the room was palpable.

Maric's smile thinned. "My Queen, that is not the way things are done."

Aeliana tilted her head slightly. "Then it is time for things to change."

Silence. Powerful, weighted.

No one spoke against her.

Not because they agreed.

Because they had not been expecting this.

They had thought they were dealing with a girl pretending to be a queen.

Now, they were realizing their mistake.

They hated it.

She let them stew in it.

More matters were brought forth. More challenges, some subtle, some outright defiant.

She met each one with unflinching resolve.

She did not hesitate.

She did not bend.

And then came the moment they had been waiting for.

Lord Sorran stood. One of the oldest, wealthiest nobles in the empire. He carried himself with the weight of generations behind him, the kind of man who had never known fear.

Aeliana had been waiting for this.

"My Queen," he said, bowing-but not low enough.

She did not smile.

Sorran's voice was carefully measured, full of false politeness. "You rule with strength, and that is admirable. But strength is not the only thing that makes a ruler."

She let him speak.

"There is a difference between conquering a throne and keeping it. Leadership is more than battle. It is understanding tradition. Understanding the people."

And then, he delivered the blow.

"And how can you understand the people when you are not one of them?"

Silence.

A shift, a ripple.

He had said what they were all thinking.

She was human.

She would never be one of them.

The court watched her.

Waiting for rage. Waiting for weakness.

Aeliana stood.

She walked down the steps of the dais, slowly, purposefully.

She stopped before Sorran.

And then, she smiled.

A slow, calculated smile.

"You are right," she said.

Sorran blinked. Just once.

Aeliana's voice was smooth as silk, sharp as glass.

"I am not one of you."

She let that sit.

And then, she destroyed him.

"Perhaps that is why I see the flaws you have ignored for generations."

She turned from him, addressing the entire court.

"The empire will no longer be ruled by birthright," she declared.

The shift was instant. A ripple of unease. A flicker of fear.

"From this day forward, noble houses will not keep their status unless they serve the empire. Those who hold power must prove their worth. Those who sit on this court must earn their place."

The uproar that followed was expected.

She let them rage.

Let them spit their protests.

Then, she raised a hand.

And the hall fell silent once more.

She turned back to Sorran.

"You ask if I understand this empire?"

She leaned in slightly, her voice now only for him.

"I understand it well enough to burn it down if it does not obey."

His throat bobbed.

And for the first time, he looked afraid.

She stepped back, letting the weight of her decree settle.

And one by one-the nobles knelt.

It was not loyalty.

It was surrender.

And she had won.

That night, she stood by the window of her chambers, staring out at the darkened city.

She had won today.

But it did not feel like victory.

She heard footsteps behind her.

Tharx.

She felt him watching her before he spoke.

"You are not just surviving."

She turned, meeting his golden eyes.

"You are winning."

His voice was proud. Impressed.

Aeliana exhaled slowly.

She turned back toward the window, her heart heavy.

"Then why do I feel so alone?"

Tharx did not answer immediately.

Then-his arms wrapped around her from behind, his warmth steady, grounding.

He did not promise her that it would get easier.

He did not promise that she was safe.

But he held her.

And for now, that was enough.