Supreme Spouse System. -
Chapter 202: When Kings Enter
Chapter 202: When Kings Enter
When Kings Enter
The music failed.
No crescendo. No last note. Just an abrupt, accurate silence—as if even the instruments did not dare breathe.
The pause held on.
And then—footsteps.
Heavy. Measured. Authority in sound.
The crowd shifted.
Even those caught laughter, caught toast, caught whisper—turned.
Because they knew.
The last guests had come.
From under the sweeping marble gates, a herald stepped forth—attired in violet and silver, his voice sharpened by tradition, his breath calm with ceremony.
"Lords and ladies of the Moonstone Kingdome... prepare your hearts, and bend your gaze."
The silence deepened.
Fans froze in mid-air. Cups were slowly set down.
Even the servants were motionless, spines straight, chins tucked.
The herald’s voice resonated with centuries of ritual and awe:
"You now stand in the presence of the Crown. The Light of Moonstone Kingdome. The Storm that wards the kingdom."
A biting burst of wind shredded across the open arches, pulling at banners, dancing torchlight like agitated whispers.
Then, the last summons—handed down with practiced pageantry:
"Presenting His Brilliance, His Majesty, King Aurelian Moonlight—of House Moonlight and lord of Galvia, protector of the realm, monarch of the Crescent Throne.
With Her Majesty—at his side—Her Grace, the Moon of Mercy, the Rose of Starfall, Queen Sona.
And finally—Lady Natasha, the King’s personal secretary."
The quiet did not shatter.
It grew deeper.
As if even the air bowed under the gravity of three names.
The doors creaked open.
And from inside, came the thunder.
Not of turmoil—
—but of boots.
Heavy. Purposeful.
The rumble of law incarnate. The pulse of a kingdom’s backbone.
They crashed into the marble with conviction. One. Then two. Then three.
They arrived.
And then he moved out of his place.
King Aurelian Moonlight.
Aurelian Moonlight walked like stone that had been carved and was now brought to movement—every step purposeful, weighted with authority. He was tall and commanding, shoulders shrouded under the burden of a robe woven from silver-white and darkest navy—like snowlight swathed around midnight. Over his chest glimmered the Moonlight royal crest in platinum thread that reflected the torches like lightning frozen.
A high collar defined his neck—such a crown, but not of metal, yet of woven power. His fur-lined cloak trailed behind him, not pulled, but carried by his presence, like the wind of an impending storm.
His jaw was sharp, honed by age and muscle, softened only by a beautifully maintained beard. His dark hair fell in tightly disciplined waves, parted with stately restraint above a noble brow. But it was his eyes that froze the air—
Ice-blue. Unblinking.
So cold they burned.
These were the eyes of a man who had seen empires rise and empires fall—eyes that had looked treason, blood, and history dead in the face. He did not behold people.
He measured them.
His eyes swept the hall like a blade cutting silk—gently, cleanly, but with nothing unmeasured. Lords, dukes, generals, sons of ancient blood—none were passed whole under the silent judgment. His eyes did not blink, did not hesitate. They pierced.
To his right—
And beside him—silver radiance.
Queen Sona.
Her loveliness did not merely demand notice. It stilled time. Elemental, royal—such as the quiet of moonlight on water.
She was attired in a night-blue gown, the material flowing off her shoulders like star-kissed velvet. Her bodice was embroidered in silver with celestial shapes—rivers, wings, ancient sigils of lineage and blood.
Gossamer netting covered the gown, studded with star-gems that glimmered with every elegant breath.
Her neck swooped in a soft heart-shape, outlining her collarbone like delicate sculpture. Her silver-white hair fell to her shoulders in waves as soft as dusk. Each strand caught the light, so that her hair seemed to glow from the inside out.
Her cosmetics were subtle and calculated: a touch of rouge on high cheeks, fluttering lashes framing eyes a shade of deep ocean. Her rose-wine-stained lips had a subtle curve—neither smile nor sneer. Her brows, winged in quiet rebellion, finished the face of a queen who had learned silence without yielding.
Yet it was not the white gold crown that kept the nobles agog.
Not the jewels, nor even the face for which artists once pleaded to make immortal.
It was the manner in which she wore them.
Her stance was poetry: unyielding, tranquil, and unbudgeably proud. She walked as one with nothing to demonstrate—because the room already knew it.
And then, as her eyes swept over the gathering—composed, detached—it lingered.
For a breath.
And in that breath, her eyes landed on him.
Leon.
Her breath hitched—so small it could’ve been imagined.
A spark in her eyes.
A memory.
A wound.
She didn’t wince. Didn’t stumble.
But she felt it—cold as frost under silk.
Behind the King’s left shoulder, another woman stepped.
Poised.
Ethereal.
Woman forged by winter.
Queen Sona, all silver peace, was blooming grace. But this woman—
She was something else.
And on the other side of the King, another vision.
Natasha.
If Sona was moonlight, then Natasha was midnight—dark, menacing, and impenetrable.
Her black hair was cropped just below the shoulder, cut into a severe bob, side parted and falling behind one ear. It rimmed a face rendered in hard, unyielding lines. Her eyes shone like dark-polished obsidian under starlight.
Cheekbones chiseled up. Jawline sharp-cut. Her lips—muted crimson-red—are unsmiling.
She stood in a gown of ivory silk that flowed over her form like liquid light. It hugged with a tailored quiet—sleeveless, cut high up one thigh. No frill. No lace.
Only restraint.
Only control.
A simple silver chain necklace around her throat. Black lace gloves covering her hands. Every detail—cold, deliberate.
A mirror-opposite to the Queen in every sense, yet just as compelling.
They stood on either side of the King like twin moons: One veiled by far-off warmth. The other in intentional shadow.
Natasha’s eyes swept the courtyard like a queen glancing over a gameboard. Calculated. Unyielding.
Then—she spotted him. Leon.
Her step hitched—beneath half a breath. A beat hidden behind her ribcage. Her mask, practiced and immaculate, shook. It lasted only a fraction of a second. But to Natasha? Everything.
Leon was standing by the front terrace. Tall. Collected.
Nova to his side, aflame in green silk.
Behind him—Rias, Aria, Cynthia, Syra, Kyra, Mia. Glowing. Regal.
All of them watching. Watching her.
The King’s eyes scanned the terrace. They rested on Edric first—keen, icy. Then—Leon. Then—Nova.
There they stood. The triad of the court: Edric, the hawk. Leon, the lion. Nova, the flame.
A single step from the King set the stillness alive. Eyes flickered. Spines stiffened. Even the music paused.
His eyes went from left to right. Wherever he looked, the buildings reared up were beset by nobles bowing their heads. Some shrank back—tactfully repelled by sheer weight.
And the three started to move.
Edric led off. The broad folds of his robe slid over shining stone. He bowed deep, back uncurved, face dignified but unobtrusively thoughtful.
Leon followed.
Unspoken, the crowd parted for him. His black and gold cape flowed behind him with weighty dignity. Every step was effortless purpose. Behind him, his wives moved with soundless dignity. They moved around him in a gentle curve of devotional oneness.
Then Nova moved forward.
One fluid movement, and she stood beside him. Her gown glowed beneath the lanterns like drawn steel. Her eyes, locked on the King, were unshaken.
At the forefront of the court stood the unmovable three:
Edric. Leon. Nova.
No words. No motion wasted. Only presence.
Behind Leon, six women stood in perfect poise. To the side of him, Nova was a blade drawn but not yet swung.
And then—
They bowed.
Not a courtesy. A declaration.
Leon. Nova. Edric.
The six wives followed—measured, graceful, exact.
And then the court.
As moonlight summons tides, nobles responded as a single tide. Silks rustled. Knees brushed marble. Palms folded over hearts.
Their voices lifted:
"Your Majesty. Your Grace."
A ritual in sync. A nation curving—not shattering—to crown.
Only the guards stood straight. And the three who sat on the throne.
The noble hosts bent low—right knees down, hands firm over hearts. One voice broke above the rest:
"We welcome His Majesty the King! And Her Majesty the Queen!"
But Leon, Edric, and Nova did not kneel blindly in reverence.
Their salute was theirs.
Right fists to hearts. Eyes cast downward—but not in submission.
Their backs remained straight. Spines unbent. Fists still clenched to chests. Left feet forward, a warrior’s stance. Eyes lowered, yet proud.
It was respect. Not surrender.
Because royalty could command obedience.
But never fear. Not from them.
The King observed them still.
His gaze lingered on Edric. Then passed—
To Nova, aglow with the inward light of a storm contained.
And finally— Leon.
A longer hesitation.
Chilled air, heavy with memory and burden.
And then, the subtlest inclination of the head.
Leon stood up once more, first among peers. Not just a Duke—but a Guardian. A war-hardened shield of the realm.
And men like him bowed willingly. Never in coercion.
Then Queen Sona’s voice.
Steely. Focused. Diamond. With soft smile.
"We are honored by your presence tonight, Lords and Ladies."
She smiled—a small, ceremonial curve of the lips.
But her true gaze?
It locked on Leon.
Unmoving. Measuring.
And then—Nova.
Their eyes met. Neither blinked.
Then back to Leon. Longer now. A beat too long.
And just briefly, the King’s gaze shifted.
To the women behind Leon.
To Rias. To the others.
And to Nova once more.
His expression remained unreadable.
But the tension in the hall grew taut as wire.
Queen Sona gave a nod—graceful, controlled.
But her eyes also lingered again on Nova. On the women.
Something flashed there. Quiet. Deep. Private.
Like the echo of a memory.
Something lost. Or something taken.
And then—others side Lady Natasha.
She moved half a step beside king other side,
Her eyes ran over the crowd like a blade—sharp, seeking.
Then over Leon and the six wives.
She blinked.
Just once.
But behind her controlled mask...Something changed.
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