The palace was
vast
Too vast for children who did not belong
Days passed in quiet neglect, blending into
one another without meaning. No tutors came. No servants lingered. Meals were
left behind like afterthoughts, often cold by the time Elira reached them.
But she endured.
For him.
Kael's cries had grown stronger over the past
few days—no longer the faint, easily ignored sounds of a newborn. He demanded
more now. Warmth. Food. Presence.
Things the palace refused to give.
So Elira learned.
Slowly.
Clumsily.
She memorized the times food arrived. She
stayed awake longer than her small body should allow. When the maids were
late—or simply didn't come—she found ways to soothe him, using water, scraps of
softened bread, anything she could manage with trembling hands.
It wasn't enough.
But it was something.
And each time Kael quieted in her arms,
something unfamiliar stirred within her chest.
A fragile sense of purpose.
"You're stubborn," she whispered one night,
watching his tiny fingers curl around hers.
Kael blinked up at her, silent now.
Alive.
That was enough.
But the palace was not a place where
unnoticed things stayed hidden forever.
It happened on the seventh day.
The door opened without warning.
Not like before—no hesitant creak, no brief
glance before retreat.
This time, it opened fully.
Deliberately.
Elira's body tensed.
She was seated beside the cradle, carefully
adjusting the cloth around Kael when the sound reached her. Her instincts
screamed before her thoughts could catch up.
Someone important had arrived.
Footsteps echoed against the marble
floor—measured, composed, carrying an unspoken authority that filled the room
without effort.
She turned.
A man stood at the entrance.
Tall. Imposing. Dressed in dark robes
embroidered with silver threads that shimmered faintly in the light. His
presence alone made the air feel heavier, colder.
Behind him, several attendants stood with
lowered heads.
No one spoke.
Elira's breath caught.
Even without memory—
She knew.
The Emperor.
Her father.
His gaze swept across the room, indifferent
and distant. It passed over the untouched corners, the cold tray, the silent
space—
Before landing on her.
For a moment, time stilled.
Not warmth.
Not recognition.
Just observation.
As though he were looking at something
insignificant… yet mildly unexpected.
"…You're awake," he said.
His voice was low, emotionless
Elira said nothing.
Her small body instinctively shifted, placing
herself slightly closer to the cradle.
A subtle movement.
But deliberate.
The Emperor's eyes flickered.
Then, slowly, his gaze moved past her—to the
child lying beside her.
Kael.
Silence stretched.
Heavy.
Uncomfortable.
One of the attendants stepped forward, bowing
deeply. "Your Majesty, shall we—"
"Leave it."
The command was quiet.
Absolute.
The attendant froze, immediately retreating.
The Emperor stepped closer.
Each step echoed like a verdict.
Elira's heart pounded.
Not fear.
Not entirely.
But something sharp. Alert.
She had read enough stories—lived enough
life—to understand what kind of man stood before her.
Powerful.
Detached.
Dangerous in the way only those who felt
nothing could be.
He stopped beside the cradle.
Looked down.
Kael stirred slightly, sensing the presence,
his small face tightening as if reacting to something unseen.
The Emperor watched him.
For a long moment—
Then spoke.
"This child," he said, his tone unreadable,
"is the cause of the Empress's death."
The words fell like a sentence.
Final.
Cold.
Elira's fingers tightened unconsciously.
She didn't speak.
Couldn't.
But she stepped forward.
Just slightly.
Enough to be noticed.
Enough to place herself—again—between him and
the child.
The room shifted.
The attendants lowered their heads further,
tension creeping into the air.
The Emperor's gaze dropped to her.
And this time—
It lingered.
"…You," he said slowly.
Not "daughter."
Not "princess."
Just—
You.
Elira lifted her chin.
Her body was small. Fragile. Weak.
But her eyes—
Steady.
Unwavering.
For the first time since entering the room,
something changed in the Emperor's expression.
Not warmth.
Not affection.
But… interest.
"A normal child," he murmured, almost to
himself.
A useless one.
The unspoken words hung in the air.
Then—
"Take the Third Prince."
The command came suddenly.
Sharp.
One of the attendants stepped forward
immediately.
Elira's breath hitched.
No.
Before she could think—
She moved.
Her small hands reached out, gripping the
edge of the cradle as she placed herself fully in front of it.
"Stop."
The word came out soft.
But clear.
The entire room froze.
The attendant hesitated mid-step, shock
flickering across his face.
The Emperor did not move.
But the air—
It changed.
Dangerous.
Slowly, deliberately, he looked down at her.
"…What did you say?"
Elira's heart pounded violently in her chest.
She was three.
Standing before the most powerful man in the
empire.
Defying him.
Every instinct screamed at her to step back.
To lower her head. To disappear.
But behind her—
Kael shifted.
Small. Defenseless.
Alone.
Just like she had once been.
Her fingers tightened.
"No," she said again.
Still soft.
Still trembling.
But this time—
Unshaken.
Silence crashed over the room.
For a long moment, no one dared to breathe.
Then—
The Emperor smiled.
It wasn't warm.
It wasn't kind.
But it wasn't anger either.
It was something far more unsettling.
"…Interesting."
The word lingered in the air.
And in that moment—
Elira realized something.
She had just done more than protect Kael.
She had stepped onto the stage of the empire
itself.
And from this point on—
She would no longer be invisible.
