Supreme Spouse System. -
Chapter 198: Eyes to the Gate
Chapter 198: Eyes to the Gate
Eyes to the Gate
There was perfume and ambition in the air.
Lanterns glowed over the courtyard like captured stars, illuminating the marbled floor with a warm golden light. The fragrance of freshly cut roses, garlands of sandalwood, and spiced wine wafted through the throng. Nobles in silks and velvets glittered like jewels, their laughter light, rehearsed. Midnights-uniformed servants with the crescent moon insignia glided like shadows, distributing trays of gold goblets and delicate hors d’oeuvres.
And then—
"Ladies and gentlemen of Moonspire—lift your gazes and hold your breath, hold your hearts...
For the Lord of the Starlight Duchy.
The illustrious tactician and celebrated diplomat—Duke Edric Starlight—enters the banquet!"
The courtyard became frozen, as if time itself had breathed in and refused to breathe out.
He arrived.
He walked with the calm assurance of someone who had staked out the room first before entering it. Every step was an exercise in self-control—neither rushed nor uncertain, as if the ground he walked on yielded by instinct.
He sported a robe of sapphire, dark and commanding, the color of the deepest ocean at dawn—just before sunrise. Constellations sparkled on the robes in fine silver and starlight yarn, constellations that seemed to change and ripple as he walked, as if the sky itself had shared its cloak.
Golden light danced over the embroidery, highlighting the glint of silver clasps and metal burnished to a sheen, casting him in a circle of royal radiance. His dark hair, brushed back in smooth precision, framed a face chiseled in ice-cold precision—razor-sharp cheekbones, proud jaw, and obsidian-black eyes that mirrored nothing, showed nothing.
He was nobility personified—remote, refined, perfect.
But under that chiseled poise, tautness curled like the thrum of a blade before it sings.
Not only a diplomat. Not simply a duke.
His dark eyes raked the high chamber, surveying the crowd not with interest, but intent—like a sword searching for its scabbard. Calculated. Unwavering. Cold.
Laughter in the hall receded. Glasses were set down in mid-toast. Sentences hung suspended, unfinished, in the tense air. A wave of silence radiated outward from him like the tide, quiet but unmistakable.
And at the very center, Edric Starlight—with barely suppressed gratification.
The whispers, the stiffened backs, the manner in which nobility straightened within their silks upon even glimpsing him—it was all he had anticipated. All he liked. He didn’t require the limelight. He was the gravity that drew it from others. And he noticed.
He always did.
Within, Edric savored the moment—the quiet before the court forgot to breathe. The flash of wonder before masks slid back into position.
He moved purposeful, each pace ringing out across the stone as a discreet command. His well-oiled boots struck with measured authority, slow and deliberate.
At a vine-clad pillar, two noblewomen stood close, the aroma of rose powder and wine hanging in their silks.
"Gods... he’s even more beautiful than last time, I saw him," one breathed, gasp catching on the edge of wonder.
"Is it the hair? Or the way he moves?" the other woman whispered, her hand fan in hand shaking a little.
Their whispers were low, almost silent—but Edric listened. He always listened. He didn’t glance their direction, didn’t nod, but within, a tiny smile grew beneath his serenity—keen, hidden, aware.
At the room’s periphery, additional women leaned forward ever so slightly, hearts racing from the tumult in a man’s body. Their fans fluttered like panicked butterflies, working feverishly to cover flushed cheeks. Younger lords across the room pulled at their collars, faces a mixture of admiration, jealousy, and concealed animosity. Each of them recognized the name. Recognized the burden it bore.
Duke Edric Starlight.
The gentleman who could make a court bend the knee with a word. Who ended wars over wine and laughter—then departed before the toast cooled.
He was nobility fleshed out—remote, refined, spotless.
His very presence stilled gossip and stiffened backs. The silver embroidery on his black midnight-blue robe glistened like starlight in the chandeliers, a subtle reminder of his title—Duke Edric Starlight.
Your Grace," one of the noblewomen ventured, curtsying with elegant ease. Her dress shimmered like a moon-kissed rose, pale and subtle. "We did not anticipate such early elegance tonight."
Edric shifted slightly, the tip of his lip curving into a smile—slow, calculated, and ruinously practiced.
"Aha," he declared, his tone so smooth as the finest velvet,
"And yet here you are, blessed already.
There was a hushed breath. Some of the younger women looked at each other, their eyes glinting with quiet calculation. He was still unmarried—a peculiarity in power. A prize not won.
"But surely," one of the nobles dared, with half-a-bow and a mocking smile, "such attention is due the Princess this evening?"
One of the lesser lords advanced, in green robes and wrapped in diplomatic charm.
"Your Grace," he said with a grin that warped just shy of sincerity, "your presence does us honor."
Edric gave a calculated nod.
"And you compliment me by observing."
Gentle chuckles ran through the crowd—measured, polite, contained. Nobody laughed too hard. Nobody would dare.
In back of his handsome smile, Edric calculated everything: who bowed earliest, who lingered in his shadow, who did not dare glance his way. Allies. Envy. Opportunity.
"I would never dream of stealing attention from royalty," he whispered, eyes intense under his lashes.
And yet, the tiny tilt of his smile gave away his secret—he was royalty, if not in name.
As the crowd moved, attracted ever nearer by the weight of his charm, Edric was at its center. The eye of the storm.
This was his domain. Every compliment, a probe. Every smile, a dagger shrouded in silk.
And he received them all.
And then—
The rhythm of the orchestra grew soft, subsiding into a solitary held note. Chatter caught in mid-syllable. Glasses halted in mid-air. The air itself stood still, as if the ballroom paused to inhale.
A herald stepped forward at the entrance hall, his voice crisp, ringing clear with ceremonial pride:
"Ladies and gentlemen of Moonspire—prepare yourselves.".
For now you see the approach...
Make room for the war hero, the Guardian of the Southern Frontier,
The man who once carried kingdoms’ woes upon his shoulders,
The Sleeping Lion of Moonstone....
And finally, but never last... the most handsome and charming man alive to tread Galvia—!"
"...Duke Leon Moonwalker of House Moonwalker —in the company of his wives, entering the banquet hall!"
Silence split the courtyard like thunder.
Fans froze in mid-snap. Goblets stopped in mid-air. Conversations snapped into shocked pieces. Even the laughter that had just moments before rippled through the gardens died instantly in its tracks.
Eyes turned—all of them—to the great entrance, waiting for one man to arrive.
Duke Leon.
The crowd had anticipated being amazed—he was a legend, after all. But what kept their breath in its grip was not the majesty of his arrival... it was who stood beside him.
Not a wife.
Wives.
Plural.
One word sliced the air like a shard of glass.
"Wives?"
It traveled from noble to noble, borne on astonished whispers, stifled gasps, and open-mouthed incredulity.
"Wives?"
"Did the announcer say wives?"
"But... he’s unmarried..."
"He was. Wasn’t he?"
"They say he spurned every noble offer—even ones from other kingdoms!"
The whispers began to grow louder, a swell of uncertainty churning beneath the surface of silks and baubles. The very foundations of what they believed they knew started to break.
And still, the doors hung open. His shadow had not yet moved into full sight.
But the shiver that he sent through the crowd?
It had already started.
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