[Lavinia’s POV — Council Chamber—Later]
The sound of the doors closing behind me was like a verdict.
Every conversation inside the council chamber stopped. Dozens of heads turned—generals in polished armor, nobles draped in silks, ministers with scrolls clutched in nervous hands.
The air was heavy with tension and the sharp, metallic tang of ink and steel. The scent of war.
Papa stood at the far end of the table, his posture relaxed—but his gaze sharp enough to cut marble. Ravick stood behind him, silent as a blade sheathed in shadow.
"Your Highness," General Arwin, the Commander of the Imperial Forces, bowed stiffly. His salt-and-iron voice filled the chamber. "We were awaiting your presence before beginning."
I stepped forward, my pace measured. Every sound—the whisper of silk, the sharp rhythm of my heels—fell into the silence like punctuation in a sentence no one dared to interrupt.
"You may begin, General," I said, taking my place at Papa’s right. "The Meren border report?"
The doors opened again.
Osric entered.
For a heartbeat, the air shifted. His presence was steady—posture perfect, eyes composed — but I could feel the frost in the space between us.
I gave him one brief glance. Nothing more. He bowed and moved to his post at the table’s far side, the golden insignia of his new rank glinting like irony under the light.
General Arwin cleared his throat and unrolled a parchment across the polished table. "At dawn, a patrol from the western line was ambushed. Seventeen soldiers dead. Three missing. The Meren banners were seen retreating across the ridge."
A murmur rippled through the chamber—outrage, shock, and beneath it all, the subtle thrill of nobles who loved chaos more than peace.
"Was it confirmed?" Osric asked, his tone sharp and formal.
Ravick stepped forward, voice low and gravel-deep. "Confirmed by two scouts. The Merens have breached the treaty line."
My jaw tightened. "Then it’s not a border dispute." My voice dropped lower, colder. "It’s provocation."
"Provocation, yes," General Arwin said grimly. "But not yet a declaration. They’re testing our patience. They believe the Empire won’t retaliate."
"They believe wrong!" a noble barked. "We should march tonight!"
Papa’s eyes flicked toward the man—a single glance. The noble’s bravado dissolved instantly, his words dying halfway through his throat.
I leaned forward slightly. "And if we march tonight, unplanned, without knowing the terrain or securing supplies, what happens?"
The man fumbled, color draining from his face. "I—I suppose our soldiers might—"
"Die," I finished softly.
The word slid through the air like a blade through silk. "They’ll die on a battlefield our enemies chose. And Meren will feast on our arrogance while our people bury their sons."
The silence that followed was absolute. Even the torches seemed to flicker quieter.
Papa said nothing. But I could feel his gaze on me—proud, testing, sharp.
General Arwin inclined his head. "Wise words, Your Highness. However, inaction is dangerous too. If we hesitate, Meren will see it as weakness."
He was right. Every word is true. That was the cruel arithmetic of power—every choice demanded blood. The only question was whose.
I met his eyes evenly. "Then we show strength... without starting a war."
That made the room stir again. Ministers exchanged glances. The air crackled with uncertainty.
"How?" one of them asked cautiously. "You would send an envoy?"
"No." My voice cut clean through the question. "A warning."
I turned toward Ravick. "Summon our elite battalions to the northern base—quietly. Let Meren’s spies see them move. Make sure they see the banners of the Elorian Empire marching. Let them think war is already breathing down their borders."
Ravick’s brow rose slightly, approval flickering in his eyes. "And the message?"
I smiled—faintly, but not kindly. "That the Empire does not need to shout before it strikes."
Papa’s gaze sharpened, pride ghosting behind his stillness. "And if they still advance, Lavinia?"
I rose from my seat, the chair scraping softly against marble, my gown flaring like gold fire around me.
"Then we burn their borders before they touch ours," I said. My tone was quiet—too quiet—the kind that made men shiver.
I stepped closer to the table, my hand brushing the edge of the map. "Let Meren learn what mercy costs. They wanted a spark? We will show them how the Empire burns."
A chill swept through the room.
No one spoke. Not even Papa. But when I looked at him, I saw it—the faintest smirk tugging at the corner of his mouth. The look of a man who had just watched his heir step into the throne’s shadow.
I turned my gaze forward, scanning the faces around the table—nobles pale, generals stiff, Osric unreadable—before saying, clear and sharp:
"Prepare for war."
A collective inhale rippled through the chamber.
"And this time," I continued, letting the weight of my words settle like iron dust in the air, "I will be the one to lead it."
The silence that followed was deafening.
Then came the gasps—soft, horrified, disbelieving.

"Grand Duke Osric."
"Do you believe," I asked quietly, "that I cannot lead a war?"
"Then what did you mean?" My tone sharpened, steady and cold. "That a woman cannot lead soldiers? Or that a Crown Princess cannot lead her empire?"
"Enough."
"You are the Grand Duke, yes," I said, each word deliberate. "You will assist. You will advise. You will protect the supply lines and coordinate reinforcements. But the banner at the front of the army will bear my crest. The command will bear my voice."
"I will lead this war," I declared, my voice rising, not in volume but in power—a slow, relentless crescendo that wrapped the room in its gravity. "And I will kill King of Meren myself."
"Good." I nodded once. "Make sure every battalion knows this: I do not intend to defend our border." I looked up, my crimson eyes burning through the lamplight. "I intend to erase theirs."
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