Standard POV Format
Something about Reginald volunteering for the front felt wrong. Brave men died in battle for reasons that made sense; men with comfortable lives did not sign up on whims. Two days later I called him in — the training ground, empty and honest, instead of a throne room laced with formality.
“Why are you really here?” I asked, cutting straight to it. Every minute without Phoebe felt like a wound; I didn’t have time for games.
Reginald mirrored calm like a shield. “No hidden agenda, Your Majesty. I want to help the kingdom.”
His voice was steady, but his story didn’t fit. A son of status didn’t come begging for danger, not unless something else drove him. He offered the same story I’d heard before — family friction, being a stepson, never quite belonging — and I listened without believing. Timothy might accept it, but I’d learned to read the spaces between words. Still, I let him into the palace ranks. If he was a threat, I wanted him where I could see him.
That night I went to Phoebe’s room. She was on the couch, lost in an old cartoon — the one childish thing that made her laugh. Watching her like that tore at something I didn’t want to name. The bandage was gone; a thin white line threaded her throat where my fingers had closed too hard. My hand moved before I’d decided to speak. I brushed the scar; she jumped and the smile in her face vanished.
“Dinner?” I offered, and the invitation was more mine than hers.
Phoebe — POV
The place he chose was quiet — a small tavern outside the palace where guards were unnecessary and conversation could be private. He never ate. He watched me the way a predator studies a shape: careful, appraising, unreadable.

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