To Strike True and Draw Slow-Chapter 9 : What Cannot Be Hidden
Sumamry:
Aelora enters court in blue—and nothing is the same after.
What was meant to be an ordinary evening becomes something sharper, more dangerous, when Baelor finally sees her. Not as a political piece. Not as a distant princess.
As something he cannot ignore.
The court watches. His family watches.
And Aelora?
Aelora knows exactly what she’s doing.
⚠️ Warnings
Slow burn shifting toward mutual awareness
Heavy romantic tension / charged eye contact
Possessive behavior (not yet acted on, but very present 👀)
Court politics & manipulation
Emotional repression / internal conflict
Jealousy (Baelor is STRUGGLING)
Power dynamics (royalty, court setting)
Public confrontation / secondhand embarrassment 😭
“You are not dancing” energy
The evening court glittered.
It always did.
Torchlight turned the Red Keep molten after dark—gold on stone, fire caught in polished goblets, jewels and silk and sharp smiles gleaming beneath painted ceilings. Music drifted lazily through the hall, not loud enough to command attention, only enough to soften the edges of conversation and make it easier for ambition to dress itself as charm.
The court was in one of its better moods.
Which meant it was more dangerous than usual.
Aelora paused just beyond the great doors.
Not for nerves.
For effect.
Behind her, Kiera adjusted one of the folds of her veil with open satisfaction.
“Oh, this is cruel,” Kiera murmured.
Aelora did not turn. “To whom?”
Kiera’s grin flashed in the reflection of the torchlight. “To all the men and at least three women.”
Aelora’s mouth twitched.
Maegelle’s note had arrived less than an hour before, written in an elegant hand that did not at all conceal delight.
Come to supper. Wear the blue one.
That had been all.
Aelora had stared at it for a full minute before Kiera snatched it from her fingers, read it once, and announced, with entirely too much joy, that the royal family had apparently decided to become interesting.
So she wore the blue one.
Deep blue velvet, rich as twilight, fitted close through the bodice before falling in a long, deliberate line to the floor. Silver embroidery traced the square neckline and sleeves in curling patterns fine enough to seem almost delicate—until torchlight struck the thread and made it gleam like frost. A pendant of silver and amethyst rested at the center of her chest, drawing the eye exactly where it should not linger and ensuring that everyone would do so anyway.
Her pale hair had been half drawn back from her face, braided and woven beneath a fine circlet set with small violet stones, the rest left loose in pale waves over her shoulders and down her back. A sheer veil fell from the circlet, softening nothing, hiding nothing, only catching the light when she moved.
It was not the sort of gown worn by girls hoping to be chosen.
It was the sort of gown worn by women who intended to make people regret looking away.
Kiera stepped back and sighed happily.
“You look like a political crisis.”
“Then let there be a political crisis.”
Kiera laughed softly. “Gods, I do love it when you choose violence.”
“I am choosing precision.”
“That is worse.”
Aelora turned her head slightly. “You may still flee.”
Kiera immediately linked their arms. “Absolutely not. If I am to witness the fall of a prince, I intend to be very comfortable while it happens.”
“You assume he will fall.”
“I assume,” Kiera said sweetly, “that he already has.”
Aelora said nothing.
Kiera leaned closer. “Tell me one thing.”
“What.”
“Are you doing this for him… or for yourself?”
Aelora’s gaze shifted forward as the doors began to open.
“For me.”
Then, softer—
“And he can suffer the consequences.”
Kiera grinned. “Perfect.”
She squeezed Aelora’s arm.
“Shall we destroy a prince’s composure?”
Aelora glanced sideways. “You say that as though he possesses any.”
Kiera laughed outright.
Then the herald announced them.
The hall turned.
Not all at once.
That would have been vulgar.
No, the court looked in waves.
The nearest lords first, their attention catching and holding. Then ladies at the lower tables, their conversations thinning as eyes lifted. Then the men along the far side of the hall, who looked once and then—foolishly—looked again.
By the time Aelora had taken three steps into the room, half the court had gone quiet.
The other half was pretending not to.
At the high table, King Daeron lifted his cup halfway to his mouth and stopped.
Queen Myriah did not move at all.
Matarys made a soft, choking noise into his wine.
Valarr went still with the dreadful precision of a man who had just realized the evening had become dangerous in an entirely new way.
Maegelle, seated beside him, smiled.
Slowly.
Knowingly.
And Baelor—
Baelor noticed her the moment she entered.
Which was a problem.
Because he had been making a very deliberate effort not to.
His gaze lifted automatically toward the doors at the herald’s call.
Then stopped.
Not shifted.
Stopped.
For one clean, impossible moment, everything in the hall seemed to fall away—the music, the voices, the movement of servants between tables, the heat of the torches along the walls.
He saw only her.
The blue.
The silver.
The pale fall of her hair beneath the veil.
The line of her throat.
The fit of the gown.
The unmistakable, infuriating certainty with which she moved while wearing it.
His mind went briefly, disastrously blank.
He had seen beautiful women before.
The Red Keep was full of them.
Court produced beauty the way fields produced grain—cultivated, displayed, assessed for value.
Beauty was not rare.
It was also not relevant.
This—
This was something else.
His gaze dropped once, against his will, to the glinting amethyst at her chest, the dark velvet beneath it, the deliberate elegance of the gown’s cut.
Then his jaw tightened so hard it ached.
Control returned in a brutal, immediate line through his spine. His shoulders squared. His expression settled into something colder. Harder. Safer.
But the damage had already been done.
Because now he understood.
Not merely that she was beautiful.
He had known that already and refused to name it.
No—now he understood that everyone else would see it too.
And worse—
Aelora looked directly at him.
Across the hall.
Through the torchlight and the watching court and the careful distance he had been trying, with failing success, to keep between them.
She held his gaze.
Not shy.
Not coy.
Aware.
That was what unsettled him most.
She knew exactly what she had done.
And she had done it anyway.
Baelor looked away first.
The realization landed like an insult.
At the high table, Matarys lowered his cup very slowly.
“Oh,” he whispered.
Valarr did not blink. “Do not.”
“I have said nothing.”
“You have thought too loudly.”
Maegelle leaned delicately toward her husband. “He stopped breathing.”
Valarr, whose entire childhood had been spent cataloguing his father’s moods, said under his breath, “No. He started calculating casualties.”
Myriah heard them both.
Her mouth curved.
Daeron, beside her, said very quietly, “Well.”
Myriah did not answer immediately.
She was watching her son.
More precisely, she was watching the way Baelor’s control had tightened into something nearly visible. The way his stillness had become effort rather than instinct. The way his gaze had snapped away and then—despite himself—returned once more, brief and fierce and entirely too quick to be innocent.
“Yes,” she said at last.
Daeron looked back toward the hall doors as Aelora and Kiera made their way inward.
“She chose that gown deliberately.”
“Yes.”
“She is not subtle.”
“No.”
He glanced again at Baelor, who was now very carefully not looking at Aelora while radiating the kind of restrained tension that only invited more notice.
“And he is worse.”
That earned Daeron the faintest laugh from his queen.
“He threatened a lord this morning,” Myriah murmured.
“I know.”
“He has never done that over a marriage prospect.”
“I know.”
Another beat.
Daeron’s eyes narrowed thoughtfully, not with concern but with dawning delight.
“And she refuses every match.”
“Yes.”
“Without offering a reason.”
“Yes.”
They sat in silence for a moment.
Watching.
Understanding.
Then Daeron said, with all the gravity of a man announcing military strategy, “We should not rush her marriage.”
Myriah nodded at once. “We should not.”
“We should observe.”
“Yes.”
“We should perhaps also ensure she is not forced into proximity with lesser men.”
“Of course.”
“And,” Daeron added, thoughtful now, “we may wish to create… better opportunities.”
Myriah’s smile sharpened.
“Entirely by accident.”
“Entirely.”
At the lower tables, the first of the evening’s fools began to gather courage.
Lord Merryweather spoke first, because he had apparently been born without sense.
“She looks radiant tonight.”
Baelor did not turn his head.
“Yes.”
The single word should not have sounded like a warning.
It did.
Merryweather nevertheless persisted, drunk on wine and his own irrelevance.
“Blue becomes her.”
Baelor looked at him then.
Only looked.
It was sufficient.
Merryweather discovered, very suddenly, that his goblet required all his attention.
Across the hall, Aelora reached the foot of the dais.
She bowed first to the king and queen, proper but not meek.
“Your Graces.”
“My dear,” Myriah said warmly, extending a hand at once. “Come nearer.”
Aelora obeyed, though not before noticing the softness in the queen’s expression and the openly amused intelligence in Daeron’s eyes.
“You look beautiful,” Myriah said.
Aelora smiled faintly. “You are kind.”
“No,” Myriah replied. “Only accurate.”
Daeron leaned back in his chair, studying her with cheerful frankness that felt almost paternal.
“You have done something unfortunate,” he said.
Aelora blinked. “Have I, Your Grace?”
“Yes,” Daeron said. “You have made several men at court think they are interesting.”
Kiera made a strangled noise somewhere behind her.
Aelora’s lips twitched. “A terrible burden.”
“A dreadful one,” Daeron agreed.
Myriah patted the place beside the queen’s table. “Sit with us tonight.”
Aelora hesitated only a moment before inclining her head. “As you wish.”
Baelor’s gaze snapped upward.
It was a very small movement.
Too small for most to notice.
Not too small for his family.
Matarys bit the inside of his cheek to keep from grinning like a lunatic.
Valarr looked down into his cup, which was safer than looking at his father.
Maegelle, who had requested the blue gown and now watched the result with serene satisfaction, folded her hands in her lap and behaved as though nothing at all was happening.
A servant moved swiftly to adjust the seating.
The original place at the queen’s side—occupied by Lady Rowan, a perfectly decent woman with perfectly tedious opinions—was suddenly discovered to have been reassigned.
Lady Rowan, to her credit, noticed at once that resisting the queen’s polite redirection would be fatal to her social life and accepted a lower table with good grace.
Aelora took the newly offered seat.
Across from Baelor.
Not beside him.
Not yet.
But near enough.
Near enough that the candlelight touched both their faces in the same glow.
Near enough that he could see the violet stones in her circlet when she turned her head.
Near enough that the scent of her—something soft, floral, sharpened faintly by spice—reached him beneath the smoke and wine and roasted meat of the hall.
Baelor wanted, with sudden and unreasonable force, to blame someone.
Unfortunately, several someones were visibly enjoying themselves.
Matarys leaned toward Maegelle. “Did we do this?”
Maegelle sipped her wine. “No.”
A beat.
Then, with perfect calm—
“But I do admire it.”
The meal began.
It did not improve.
Which was to say, it became much worse for Baelor.
Because Aelora was not merely beautiful tonight.
She was alive in the room.
Talking easily with Myriah, listening with deceptive attentiveness whenever Daeron chose to draw her into conversation, laughing softly at something Kiera muttered from further down the table.
And every time she smiled—
Every time torchlight caught on the silver at her throat—
Every time she lifted a hand to tuck a pale strand of hair behind her ear—
Baelor noticed.
He noticed the men who noticed.
He noticed which ones stared too long.
He noticed Lord Estermont attempting, with astonishing lack of self-preservation, to angle himself nearer whenever the servants passed.
He noticed Ser Damon Yelshire leaning across one of the lower benches to ask something that made Aelora’s expression go politely blank.
He noticed Lord Caswell smiling in a way that suggested matrimonial calculation.
He noticed everything.
Which meant that when Daeron said, in the middle of carving a slice from the capon before him, “Baelor, my son, you appear tense,” Baelor nearly broke the knife in his hand.
“I am not tense.”
Across from him, Aelora lifted her goblet and drank.
Very calmly.
Myriah said, “You are holding that fork like it insulted the crown.”
Baelor looked down.
The queen was not wrong.
He set the fork down with deliberate care.
Matarys, who had by now given up all hope of propriety, said, “To be fair, several things have insulted the crown tonight.”
Valarr closed his eyes briefly.
“Matarys,” Maegelle said.
“I am merely observing.”
“That is new for you,” Baelor muttered.
Matarys smiled brightly. “I am growing.”
Aelora, without quite looking at Baelor, asked, “Is he always like this?”
“No,” Valarr said dryly. “Sometimes he is louder.”
That won a laugh from her.
A soft one.
Brief.
It should not have mattered.
It did.
Because Baelor looked up at the sound and found her already looking at him.
Again.
That steady, searching gaze.
As though she could see him too clearly and had decided not to be kind enough to pretend otherwise.
He held her eyes for one heartbeat.
Then two.
It would have been easier if there was mockery in her expression.
There was not.
Only awareness.
Recognition.
And something warmer tonight than before.
That was dangerous.
He looked away.
Again.
Which was worse.
Daeron saw.
Myriah saw.
At the lower end of the table, Kiera definitely saw.
“So,” Kiera said pleasantly to Matarys, who had taken it upon himself to shift two seats nearer through methods no one had successfully stopped, “how long do you think before he drags some poor lord out by the throat?”
Valarr answered before Matarys could. “If they are lucky? An hour.”
Aelora almost choked on her wine.
Baelor did not react.
Outwardly.
Inwardly, he was beginning to suspect murder might in fact restore peace.
Then Lord Caswell rose.
The hall quieted in that subtle way it always did when a man believed himself about to be charming.
Caswell bowed toward the dais.
“Your Grace, if I may request the princess for the next dance.”
Aelora had not yet answered.
That was the first mistake.
The second was that Baelor spoke before she could.
“No.”
The word cut clean across the hall.
Silence followed.
Absolute.
Caswell blinked.
Daeron, to his vast credit, did not immediately laugh.
Myriah lowered her goblet very carefully.
Aelora turned her head.
Slowly.
Toward Baelor.
Lord Caswell, who had clearly not expected resistance from the crown prince, tried to recover. “I was addressing the princess.”
“I heard you,” Baelor said.
Caswell swallowed. “Then perhaps the princess may answer for herself.”
Aelora, who had by now gone entirely still, folded her hands in her lap.
“How bold of you,” she murmured.
Baelor did not take his eyes off Caswell.
“You are not dancing tonight.”
Aelora’s brows lifted. “I am not?”
“No.”
There were perhaps twenty different ways this could have gone better.
Baelor chose none of them.
Caswell made one last foolish attempt. “Your Highness, I meant no offense.”
“You have it anyway.”
That did it.
Daeron set down his knife.
“Baelor.”
The single word carried enough royal weight to stop the room from tipping fully into scandal.
Baelor’s jaw tightened.
He knew exactly how this looked.
He knew.
He simply no longer seemed capable of stopping.
Aelora leaned back slightly in her chair and regarded him as though he had become unexpectedly fascinating.
“Am I forbidden from dancing, then?” she asked.
He turned to her.
That was a mistake too.
Because up close—in this light, with that gown, with her mouth curved just enough to suggest she already knew the answer she would drag from him if he gave her time—he found himself suddenly, viciously aware of how beautiful she was.
Not in the vague way men at court used the word.
Not pretty.
Not merely elegant.
Beautiful in a way that made restraint feel like injury.
His voice, when it came, was lower than before.
“You are being watched.”
Aelora tilted her head.
“So are you.”
A beat.
Then Myriah said lightly, into the silence, “Lord Caswell, I believe my son means that the princess has already been overbothered this evening.”
Caswell turned at once toward the queen, grateful for rescue.
“Of course, Your Grace.”
Daeron smiled pleasantly. “Perhaps another night.”
Caswell bowed and sat.
The danger passed.
Technically.
Baelor did not move.
Aelora did not look away.
Then she said, quiet enough that only those nearest could hear, “You interfere often for a man pretending not to.”
Something in his expression changed.
Not softened.
Never that.
But something in it yielded, if only a fraction, to truth.
Across from them, Daeron watched the shift and thought, Ah. There it is.
Myriah, beside him, gave a smile.
Neither said anything aloud.
Yet.
Music rose again.
Conversation returned in uneven ripples.
The room breathed.
But Baelor did not hear much of it.
Because the battle had simply moved inward.
Later, when the first course had been cleared and the musicians settled into something slower, Baelor finally escaped.
Not quickly.
Not abruptly.
He would not give them that.
He waited until conversation at the high table had shifted toward some dispute in the Reach and then rose with measured calm, offered the king a slight bow, and left by the side passage as if he had merely remembered some piece of state business too dull to delay.
No one stopped him.
That, perhaps, was the cruelest part.
Because he knew his family well enough to understand that silence from them was never accidental.
The corridor beyond the hall was cool and dim after the heat of the feast.
Stone swallowed sound. Torchlight thinned. Air moved more freely through the narrower passage, carrying with it the faint night scent from the outer courts.
Baelor did not stop until he reached the alcove overlooking the darkened garden below.
Then—
Only then—
He braced one hand against the cold stone and exhaled.
Slowly.
Carefully.
It did nothing.
He had spent years mastering himself.
Years.
Battle was easier than this.
War made sense. Men moved, plans broke, blood was spilled, choices were made. There was pain in war, and grief, and consequence—but all of it had shape. All of it could be met directly.
This—
This was absurd.
He closed his eyes.
Saw blue.
Not the hall.
Not the banners.
Her.
That gown.
The silver at her throat. The veil in her hair. The shameless, infuriating certainty with which she had walked into a room full of predators and made them feel like prey.
He had thought she was beautiful before.
He had refused to say it plainly, even in the privacy of his own mind, but he had known.
Tonight stripped even that defense from him.
Pretty.
The word was insufficient to the point of insult.
She was not pretty.
She was arresting.
She was elegant and dangerous and entirely too alive.
And when other men looked at her—
His hand tightened against the stone.
That was the ugliest part.
Not the wanting.
He could have hidden wanting, perhaps. Buried it beneath duty, pressed it thin beneath routine, named it weakness and starved it until it obeyed.
But this sharp, possessive fury when others looked too long—
This immediate instinct to block, to cut off, to remove—
That was something else.
That was not courtly interest.
That was not a passing attraction.
That was not a strategy.
And if he named it fully, even here, alone—
He did not know what would happen next.
Baelor opened his eyes.
The dark garden below gave him nothing.
He could still hear her voice.
Am I forbidden from dancing, then?
Gods.
He had answered too quickly.
Again.
Like a fool.
Worse—
Like a man already acting on a right he did not possess.
His mouth flattened.
He knew what Daeron had seen.
He knew what Myriah had seen.
He knew what Aelora had seen.
And perhaps that was the most intolerable thing of all.
Not that he wanted her.
Not that he thought her beautiful.
Not that tonight, for one reckless instant, he had looked across the hall and thought mine with a violence that nearly frightened him.
But that she knew.
She saw him.
Saw the places where discipline was thinning. Saw the shape of the thing he was trying not to become. Saw how often he had stepped between her and every man foolish enough to approach.
And she was not afraid of it.
A soft step behind him.
Baelor did not turn immediately.
He knew who it was before she spoke.
“You left without saying anything.”
Aelora.
Of course.
His eyes closed once.
Very briefly.
Then he straightened and turned.
She had shed the veil.
Without it, the pale braids in her hair were even more visible, the violet stones at her crown catching torchlight from the corridor. The blue velvet looked darker here, richer, and for one helpless second all he could do was look.
Aelora noticed.
Noted it.
Said nothing.
That was somehow worse than if she had smiled.
“I had nothing useful to say,” he replied.
“You rarely do when you are angry.”
“I am not angry.”
She glanced toward the hand he had only just lowered from the stone.
“Of course not.”
“Aelora.”
His tone should have been warning.
It came out tired.
That shifted something in her expression.
The teasing edge remained, but it softened.
“You forbade me to dance.”
“You were not going to accept.”
“No,” she said. “I was not.”
Silence.
Then, quieter—
“But you did not know that.”
Baelor looked at her.
Torchlight moved between them.
“You are right,” he said at last.
She blinked, clearly not expecting it.
“I did not know that.”
There was no defense in him for the truth now. Not enough left.
Aelora stepped nearer.
Not enough to crowd.
Enough that the corridor felt smaller.
“Then why did you do it?”
Because I could not bear him touching you.
Because the thought of another man’s hand at your waist made something vicious rise up in me.
Because I have been losing ground with every conversation we have had and tonight I realized I may already be lost.
Instead, he said, “Because he was looking at you like he had already decided.”
Aelora held still.
“And that offended you.”
“Yes.”
“Why.”
He laughed once.
Not with humor.
More like disbelief.
“You do not make anything easy.”
“No,” she agreed softly. “I do not.”
The silence that followed was not empty.
It was full to the edges.
Baelor could hear her breathing.
Could see the pulse at the base of her throat above the amethyst pendant.
Could feel, with awful clarity, how little distance remained between them.
He should leave.
Immediately.
Instead he said, very quietly, “You should not wear that gown where men can see you.”
Aelora’s lips parted.
Then curved.
Not triumphant.
Not mocking.
Something warmer. Something more dangerous.
“And yet,” she murmured, “you have seen it.”
His jaw tightened.
“Yes.”
The single word landed between them like flame.
For one suspended moment, neither moved.
Then footsteps sounded at the end of the corridor.
Not hurried.
Not secretive.
Royal.
Daeron’s voice arrived before the man himself did.
“There you are.”
Baelor stepped back at once.
So did Aelora.
Not enough to suggest guilt.
Enough to restore form.
King Daeron emerged into the corridor with Queen Myriah at his side, both wearing the sort of composed expressions that only parents and monarchs ever truly perfected.
“My apologies,” Daeron said, in the tone of a man who was not sorry in the slightest. “Am I interrupting something?”
“No,” Baelor said immediately.
“Yes,” Aelora said at the exact same moment.
Myriah looked between them and very nearly smiled.
Daeron, who had never in his life been subtle when delight was available instead, clasped his hands behind his back.
“Excellent,” he said. “That means we may proceed.”
Baelor stared. “Proceed with what.”
“With family arrangements,” Daeron said.
“That is not a phrase that has ever led anywhere good,” Baelor muttered.
Myriah ignored him and addressed Aelora instead.
“My dear, tomorrow I mean to review the old Dornish garden terraces. They have been neglected. I would value your opinion.”
Aelora, who was far too intelligent not to hear the offer beneath the words, inclined her head. “You honor me, Your Grace.”
“Wonderful,” said Myriah.
Daeron turned to Baelor.
“And you, my son, will accompany us.”
“No.”
“Yes.”
“I have actual duties.”
Daeron looked offended. “Do you imply that escorting your mother and your niece through a garden terrace is not a duty?”
“It is not one that requires me.”
“On the contrary,” Myriah said smoothly, “it requires you specifically.”
Baelor opened his mouth.
Closed it again.
Aelora looked down, very likely to hide a smile.
Daeron, sensing weakness like a battlefield commander, continued, “Afterward, there will be a hawking party in the western court.”
Baelor’s expression darkened. “I am not hawking.”
“You are attending,” Daeron corrected. “As the princess is newly returned, it would be inhospitable not to include her.”
“Hospitable,” Baelor said flatly, “is rapidly becoming indistinguishable from entrapment.”
Myriah finally smiled outright.
“Good,” she said.
A beat.
Then, gentler—
“Do try to enjoy yourself.”
Baelor looked from his mother to his father to Aelora, who was now failing very badly to appear unaffected.
He knew.
Gods, he knew.
The seating tonight.
The queen’s invitation.
The interruption in the corridor delivered just late enough to prove a point.
This was coordinated.
His family had seen too much.
And worse—
They had decided they approved.
Daeron, wholly unashamed, offered Aelora his arm. “Come, child. Let us return before the court invents something truly scandalous.”
Aelora glanced once at Baelor before accepting.
It was a brief look.
Steady.
Luminous in the torchlight.
Enough to leave damage.
Then she let the king lead her away.
Myriah lingered one moment longer.
Her gaze rested on her son’s face with all the terrible tenderness of a mother who knew exactly where the wound had opened.
“Do not frighten her by making this harder than it already is,” she said softly.
Baelor’s throat tightened.
“I am not—”
“Yes,” Myriah replied, and touched his sleeve once before following the others. “You are.”
He was left alone in the corridor.
For all of three seconds.
Then Matarys appeared from behind a pillar.
Baelor stared at him. “How long have you been there?”
“Long enough,” Matarys said cheerfully. “Not long enough to hear anything truly useful.”
“Go away.”
“No. I came to tell you that Vallar has threatened two different lords and knight from looking at Magelle"
Baelor closed his eyes.
“Also,” Matarys added, “Valarr says if you glower at one more lord, half the court will have your intentions settled before breakfast.”
Baelor opened his eyes again. “My intentions are none of their concern.”
Matarys grinned.
“Yes,” he said. “That is what makes this funny.”
Baelor stepped forward.
Matarys stepped back immediately.
“Good talk,” he said, and vanished down the corridor before Baelor could decide whether kinslaying would be right with the gods in this situation.
The next morning dawned clear and merciless.
The old garden terraces on the western side of the keep had once been designed for queens.
That much was obvious.
Even half neglected, they retained elegance—long stone paths edged in rosemary and pale climbing roses, shallow reflecting pools gone slightly wild at the corners, carved benches warmed by early sun. Beyond the low walls, King’s Landing spread in a haze of gold and smoke beneath the brightening sky.
Myriah arrived first.
Of course she did.
She was already speaking to a steward when Aelora entered the terrace, Kiera at her side, both dressed more simply than the night before.
Simpler for Aelora still meant lovely.
Baelor noticed that too when he arrived moments later and immediately resented himself for it.
This time she wore pale silver-blue, light enough for morning, her hair half braided and uncovered. Less armor. More softness.
It was not an improvement.
It was a new problem.
Myriah turned with visible pleasure. “Excellent. We are all here.”
Baelor looked around. “We are not all here.”
“Your father dislikes mornings,” Myriah said.
As if summoned by the insult, Daeron appeared through the archway with Matarys beside him and Valarr trailing at a more dignified pace.
“I heard that,” said the king.
“You were meant to.”
Daeron kissed his wife’s cheek in passing, then surveyed the terrace as though he had personally invented gardens.
“Beautiful,” he declared. “It requires very little from me.”
Baelor folded his arms. “Why am I here?”
Myriah gestured toward a series of broken stone steps leading to the upper walk. “Because those are uneven and I will not have the princess slipping.”
Aelora looked at the steps, then at the queen.
Then at Baelor.
“I see.”
Baelor did too.
He ground his teeth.
Still—when Aelora approached the steps, he moved without thinking, offering his hand.
She paused.
Looked at it.
Looked at him.
There was no court here. No audience beyond family. No need to pretend the gesture was anything but what it was.
“Thank you,” she said.
Her hand slid into his.
Warm.
Light.
Entirely too easy.
Baelor helped her up the steps and let go immediately.
Not because he wanted to.
Because he had to.
Behind them, Daeron murmured to Myriah, “Coward.”
Myriah nodded. “That is your son you're talking about.”
Matarys, overhearing, nearly laughed himself sick.
And so the morning unfolded exactly as the king and queen had intended—quietly, relentlessly, full of opportunities that did not feel accidental because they were not.
Bad matches were redirected before they could appear.
A lord who requested an introduction was politely informed that the princess was occupied.
A lady with three unmarried sons found herself detained by Myriah for an exhaustive discussion of Dornish silks.
A walk meant for six became, through a sequence of entirely unbelievable coincidences, a stretch of shaded terrace where Aelora and Baelor moved a few steps ahead of the others with only enough distance behind them to deny privacy while creating it anyway.
And through it all, Daeron and Myriah watched.
Not anxiously.
Hopeful.
Careful.
As though handling something rare enough not to frighten.
At one point, when Aelora laughed at something Matarys shouted from the far path and Baelor turned toward the sound at the same moment she did, nearly colliding with her in the narrow curve of the terrace, Myriah touched her husband’s sleeve.
“They are both starting to see,” she said softly.
Daeron watched Baelor steady Aelora with one hand at her elbow, his expression gone intent and unguarded for one brief heartbeat before discipline returned.
“Yes,” he murmured.
Then, with deep satisfaction—
“Let’s not ruin it.”












