Supreme Spouse System.
Chapter 204: The Princess Descends

Chapter 204: The Princess Descends

The Princess Descends

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Authors Notes: Dear Readers, Thanks so much for joining me on this adventure! Your enthusiasm, feedback, and encouragement really keep me motivated to keep bringing *Supreme Spouse System* into existence. If you’re loving the Chapters, I’d love it if you supported my book with a Powerstone, review, or even a Golden Ticket—it helps me develop as a writer and lets more readers enjoy the story. I look forward to hearing your ideas and thoughts, so please don’t hesitate to share!

With love,

Scorpio_saturn777

Creator of Supreme Spouse System

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The courtyard was motionless, shrouded in awed silence.

King Aurelian Moonlight now occupied his crescent-moon throne—noble, statuesque. His robes, midnight-black and silver, glimmered like constellations woven into silk. Beside him, Queen Sona sat carved in serenity, wearing an off-shoulder gown of deep midnight blue with sapphires embroidered along it. Her silver-white locks fell like a waterfall, shining under the lantern’s glow.

Behind them was Natasha—elegant, reserved. Her snow-white dress clung to her lean body, the line precise, the material flowing. Her black bob brushed against her shoulders, and a small, unreadable smile played around her lips.

The three were the epitome of royal power.

Below the twin thrones, on the lesser seats on either side of the grand stair, the kingdom’s trio of power had seated themselves.

To the right-hand thorn: Duke Leon Moonwalker, serene and unmoved, golden eyes shining with secret fire.

At center: Duchess Nova, a stunning figure of commanding beauty, her presence keen and silent, like a knife laid in velvet.

And to the left: Duke Edric Starlight, as suave as ever, his thin smile thinly concealing the cold brain behind his gaze. His hands lay on top of the gem-studded hilt of his cane.

The nobles did not dare move. All took their breath.

And then—the master of ceremonies emerged again, white-haired and dignified. The hush gave place to his returning voice, heavy with ceremonial authority:

He bowed low, and when he rose, his voice rung through the motionless air like a bell of tradition:

"Now that His Majesty and Her Majesty are seated... and the great dukes of the realm have taken their honored place—let the next star step forth."

A pause.

The hush grew deeper, as charged with anticipation—as heavy as storm-charged air.

"The daughter of Moonstone’s royal blood...

The Jewel of Moonspire...

She who bears the blessing of the moon in her very veins—"

He gestured, one arm sweeping toward the golden-arched gate.

"—Her Highness, Princess Lira Moonlight."

A single gesture.

The wind caught its breath.

Gasps ran through the crowd like rings of silver on water. Everyone turned.

Then—

Footsteps.

Light. Measured. Elegant.

Heel on marble. Silk on stone.

Unhurried. Elegant. Sure.

From the golden doors, she came out—silver grace in human form.

Princess Lira.

She was young—mayhap not yet fully opened—but her presence glimmered with soft nobility.

Her gown rustled with each move, a gossamer weave of pearl silk and pale sapphire strands, shining in lantern light like moonlight scattered across the water.

Her bodice, with snow lilies embroidered, hugged in soft modesty, molded to her shape with royal restraint.

Her gown swept in flowing silvers and bluish hues, curled crescent vines embroidered down its length, shining like frost at early dawn.

Sleeves dropped in elegant folds, caressing the waxed floor, as a gossamer train trailed behind her—moonlight, fabricated silk.

Lira was the perfect picture of young royalty—nearly eighteen, bright and untouched by deception.

She carried the face of her mother like an echo through years: gentle brows, high cheekbones, a finely chiseled jaw.

But eyes—those were hers.

Deep blue, not demanding like Queen Sona’s, but open and exploring. Dreaming. Questing.

Her lips retained the soft flush of innocence, unpainted and soft.

Her cheeks, with the most faint blush, shone in the golden light and endless gazes upon them.

And her hair—a river of moonlight silver-white cascade, falling softly down her back.

As she walked down the garden path, nobles bowed in simultaneous devotion—a tidal wave of velvet and silks dipping low beneath her person.

"Saluting Her Highness, Princess Lira!" they shouted in a single voice of harmony.

Leon, Nova, and Edric didn’t bow—they stayed sitting by etiquette on the stair thrones, though their eyes came up to greet her with steady attention.

But in the throng—

Rias’s scarlet eyes flared with sudden joy.

Aria bent close, her mouth hardly moving as she spoke something on a breath that only Kyra—ever keenly observing—heard. The green-haired girl nodded infinitesimally, her eyes gentle with curiosity.

Syra leaned her head to one side, a contemplative hum struggling to find voice beneath the music.

Even in their close friendship with the princess, the six—Rias, Aria, Syra, Kyra, Cynthia, and Mia—provided a subtle, elegant curtsy. In public, in the presence of court, even friendship deferred to decorum. Respect was required by protocol, and so they provided it—quiet, elegant, but no less genuine.

Their expressions were warm, wondering, a soft radiance of fondness in their eyes.

The princess strode through the crowd in elegant, unhasty steps, her head held high. Sheathed in silk and moonlight, she walked with poise learned since girlhood—but the flash in her eyes was entirely hers.

At the foot of the stairs up to the royal dais, she hesitated.

Her eyes lifted—first to the crescent-moon throne upon which her father sat, motionless. His jaw was squared, his eyes impassive, chiseled from the same quiet as the stone upon which he sat.

Then to her mother.

Queen Sona smiled. Not resplendently—but quietly, just enough to be genuine. A spark of warmth glided between them, softly and stabilizing.

Lira’s shoulders relaxed. Her chest rose with a breath she hadn’t known she’d held.

And she nodded her head—just slightly.

The princess nodded deeply, her words melodic and distinct:

"In accordance with our house and kingdom," she declared, "I greet my king—my father. And my queen—my mother."

A pause.

King Aurelian nodded curtly, his face impassive.

But Queen Sona—gracious as always—gave a softer nod, warmth dancing like candle flames behind her eyes.

The princess’s eyes dropped.

Down the stairs. Across the mirrored marble floor.

And then...

Lira’s eyes wandered further—beneath the high thrones of her parents—to the three lesser chairs below.

Her breath caught.

There he sat.

Leon.

Duke Leon Moonwalker.

The man who, in mere moments, had disturbed her heart more than anyone ever had. The man whose name held weight, whose presence commanded attention.

Her sky-blue eyes met his golden ones.

And time... stalled.

Her breath caught. A sudden fluttering filled her chest. The world around her grew darker, as if a candle’s flame was withdrawing from an oncoming storm.

He sat with easy tranquility—posture dignified, robe a flowing work of art in midnight silk with embroidery that glowed like phoenix fire. The golden crest on his chest glowed in the light of the chandelier and flared like a living flame.

And then... his eyes.

Those golden eyes.

They greeted hers with the indifference of a man accustomed to being observed. Polite. Unfazed. But the longer she dared to meet his eyes, the more it unraveled something within her.

For an instant of lost breath, the world disappeared. The banquet. The whispering nobles. The garden under lantern light. Everything.

They had previously encountered each other—Duke Leon, war hero, legend spoken of in the corridors of court. And yet each time she saw him, it seemed like the first.

And now... it was.

The smooth, authoritative line of his jaw. The still confidence in the way he sat, as if the chair bent before him, and not vice versa. Those golden eyes that looked at her—not hungrily, not kindly, but with the dispassionate interest of a lion observing a deer blunder into its glade.

Her heart betrayed her.

Was it attraction? Maybe. Maybe it was something else—something deeper than lust, quieter than infatuation. Something like love. Not the fairy tale wove in music, but something real and impossible to ignore. A spark. A weight. A sudden, unexplainable attraction to a man who never had to lift his voice to be heard.

He didn’t crave attention; the world just moved when he did.

And she? What was she in the presence of such seriousness?

She took a shaking breath. Nobody saw.

Composure, she told herself. You are a Moonlight. You are a princess.

She stood up straighter, tilting her chin with the practiced dignity her mother had taught her since she was a child. Each movement, each breath—measured, calculated.

And then, in a soft but audible voice, she said:

"Your Grace."

Leon’s brow rose—just so. His smile was slow, quiet, almost wry. unreadable. But there was something in his eyes. Something that hung.

Nevertheless, her back remained stiff.

She breathed. Then, with elegance, she bent her head again.

"I extend salutation to the noble Duke Leon, to Duke Edric, and to Duchess Nova. May your intellect always benefit the crown. I, Lira Moonlight, extend my deference."

Nova was the first to rise. Her voice, smooth and refined, held a subtle power.

"Lift your head, Princess. Your presence dignifies us."

Lira did so, getting up slowly. Her eyes, though, stayed on Leon—just for the instant of a heartbeat—before she ripped them away.

She spun around to the gathered nobles with a practiced air.

But within, she was seeking.

Her eyes scanned over embroidered gowns, jeweled necklaces, and shining masks.

Then—she spotted them.

Rias. Aria. Cynthia. Syra. Kyra. Mia—all standing in a cluster by the marble fountain, a cluster of stars, separate but linked by orbit.

Rias, in blood-red satin and levity, smiled and offered a mischievous, silent wave. Her red lips curled into a flirtatious smile, eyes sparkling with mirth.

From across, Princess Lira saw the gesture and shook her head minutely, lips curling despite herself.

Don’t play with me, Rias, she silently thought in her heart, affection unfurling like a spring flower.

For she already knew—Rias would play with her. That was as certain as the stars in heaven.

And then the master of ceremonies went forward, his voice strong and firm as it rang through the marble hall.

"Her Highness will now begin the ceremonial procession."

Music swelled like sunlight over a morning lake—soft, victorious, replete with hope and youth.

As Lira started to climb the dais, the nobles bowed a second time. Murmurs flowed through the room like wind across silk:

"She’s just like her mother..."

"Silver hair... moon eyes. A true Moonlight heir."

"She’s grown so gracefully."

"Like a dream walking..."

Several young lords couldn’t look away from her, their faces silently awed, their gazes frozen on a beauty that was too noble to be touched.

King Aurelian above them all remained silent. His eyes, as keen as a drawn sword, watched his daughter—unwarmly, but calculatedly. Each step she made, each wayward tilt of chin—measured. Recorded.

Even Queen Sona gazed at her without guarded pride, the kind that only a mother had to wear.

Next to her, Natasha stood mutely, eyes darting from the princess, Leon, and the crowd.

Watching.

Always watching.

Lira climbed the last step and turned to regard her parents. The courtyard glimmered—sunlight colliding with silence in an instant of pure ceremony.

And yet, far below, Leon remained seated upon his throne of darkwood-polished smoothness.

His gaze lifted—just a breath—to greet the girl with the smile of her mother and the essence of the kingdom in the marrow of her bones.

And he thought...

She’s young. Lovely, like her mother was. But she possesses something more—

the key to mold this vulnerable kingdom.

And at the back of his chest, a hidden truth awakened:

For the dream that I bear... I will require her.

The court, blinded to the storm below his eyes, stood silent.

The silence broke as a voice came out—smooth, formal, anticipatory:

"Now that Her Highness has done us the grace of gracing us with her presence... So shall we proceed with the age coming ceremonial occasion."

Chairs scraped against the floor. Silks rustled against silks. The crowd moved like a expanse of grass swept by the wind, turning as one to regard the royal dais. The lanterns overhead flared brighter, their golden light enveloping the moment in rapt expectation.

The moon looked on in silence.

And suspended in the air...

The dance of hearts, politics, and destiny had just started.

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