Chapter Four: The Glided Cage

1018 Words
Sera's POV We arrived at Duskborne Palace by nightfall, which I suspected was deliberate. The palace looked almost impossible at night, lit from within by thousands of lights that turned every window gold, the dark stone towers rising against the sky like something that had grown there rather than been built. The gates were twice the height of Thornwall's and moved silently, which meant they were maintained constantly, which meant this place had resources that would make Betha weep for an entirely different reason. I kept my face neutral. Inside was worse. Everything was enormous, beautiful and deliberately overwhelming—ceilings that made you feel small, corridors lined with tapestries that told wolf history in vivid thread, floors so polished I could see myself walking across them. Warmth everywhere, real warmth, from fireplaces large enough to stand in. I’d spent three winters rationing firewood. I kept walking. I was given a wing. Not a room. Four rooms connected by an inner corridor, all of it mine, with tall windows that looked out over manicured grounds and mountains beyond. A wardrobe already stocked with gowns in Duskborne colors that fit me perfectly, which meant someone had noted my measurements before I arrived, which I also filed away. A human attendant showed me around with shaking hands and wide eyes. She couldn’t have been more than seventeen. She kept looking at me like I was something between a miracle and a disaster. "What is your name?" I asked her. She startled. "Mira, my… my Luna." "Just Sera is fine." She looked like I’d said something dangerous. I let it go for now without speaking further. …… The formal introduction happened the next morning. The throne room was full. Every wolf noble house had sent representatives, standing in careful clusters with the particular stillness of people performing ease. Human delegates were there too, a small group, brought in specifically for this moment, dressed in their best and trying not to look as outnumbered as they were. Cael walked in first. The room shifted toward him the way rooms always shifted toward him, not from fear exactly, more like gravity. He had that quality, and I was already tired of it. Then I followed. The silence was different for me… thicker, and more complicated. I was human, and was small by wolf standards. I was wearing deep red again because I’d decided it was my color now and nobody was going to change that. I walked to the front of that room and stood beside the wolf king and looked out at a sea of faces that ranged from carefully welcoming to barely concealed hostile. Cael introduced me in a voice that filled every corner. "Luna Seraphina of the Duskborne Dynasty. Humanity's voice. The bridge between our peoples. The proof that a new age is possible." Wolves applauded. The human delegates, six of them, people I didn’t know, chosen by Duskborne invitation—several of them were crying. One older man pressed his fist to his heart and bowed his head and I’d to look slightly away because if I held that image too long I would feel something, and feeling things in this room was not something I could afford yet. Lira stood to the side of the room and watched the whole thing with those flat grey eyes and when our gazes met she gave me a smile so precise it could have been measured with a ruler. I smiled back the same way anyway. That night, I sat at the dinner table for the first time as Luna. The food was extraordinary. Course after course of things I’d not tasted in years—real meat, fresh bread, fruit that hadn’t been rationed or preserved. I ate slowly and moderately and noticed that Cael watched me do it. "You are not eating much," he said. "I am eating exactly enough," I shot in sharply. He considered that. "You don’t trust the food." "I don’t trust anything yet," I said pleasantly. "Give me time." The nobles near enough to hear went very quiet. Cael looked at me with that unreadable expression and then he spoke quietly, so only I could hear. "Fair enough." After dinner there were formalities. More introductions, more careful conversations, more faces to file away. I shook hands and smiled and said the right things and watched everything. By the time the evening wore down, I was tired in a way that didn’t come from physical work, but from never once letting your guard down. Mira was waiting in my wing to help me out of the formal gown. She worked quickly and silently, and when she was done she curtsied and moved toward the door. "Goodnight, Mira," I said. "Goodnight, my… goodnight, Sera." She was almost at the door when a knock came from the other side, making her freeze. I looked at the door, then at her face, which had gone carefully blank. "Who is it?" I called. But the door opened before I could breath out from asking. Cael stood in the frame. He’d changed from his formal wear into something simpler—dark shirt, sleeves pushed to the elbows, looking entirely relaxed in the way he always looked relaxed, like ease was something he wore rather than something he felt. He looked at Mira once, she hurriedly curtsied and slipped out past him without a word, pulling the door almost closed behind her. He looked at me across the room. "It is our wedding night," he said simply. I was standing in the middle of my wing in a dressing robe with my hair unbraided and my sword on the table, six feet to my left and my mind running very fast through very specific calculations. I kept my voice even. "It is." He took one step inside the room. "I think it’s time," he said quietly, "that we discussed what this marriage actually looks like." He was not being crude, he was being exactly what he always was—calm, measured, certain, and somehow that was the most dangerous version of this conversation.
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