Supreme Spouse System. -
Chapter 206: The Queen’s Poise, the Woman’s Grief
Chapter 206: The Queen’s Poise, the Woman’s Grief
The Queen’s Poise, the Woman’s Grief
Each one in turn obeyed.
Eyes closed.
Bowed heads.
Hearts covered by palms.
The King.
The Queen.
The Dukes.
The Court.
Even Leon. He sat up straight, back ramrod stiff, fists on his knees. His lids came down in stillness.
At his side, Duke Edric closed his eyes, as did Nova, her breathing slow, her eyes serene.
On the thrones, Queen Sona placed a hand on her chest. King Aurelian didn’t move. Lady Natasha stood at his shoulder.
Sona’s breath caught—silently.
Then her lashes fell closed, like a door on a memory.
Now, only the breeze moved.
Only the light.
The courtyard was empty-breathed, but in every chest the heart of the kingdom pulsed as one.
And then—Lira closed her eyes.
The last.
Moonlight streamed down across her flesh in uninterrupted stillness.
She stood at the center of that silver light, as if she were in the arms of something big and holy.
It was like a lover’s caress down her shoulders—cold, but not icy.
The light played on her skin like ethereal hands, inquisitive, caressing.
Not heat.
But a sharp feeling—like walking barefoot into pristine snow that greeted instead of stinging.
Calming.
Purifying.
Nurturing.
She breathed deeply, slowly.
So this. this is what it feels like? she thought.
A blessing of the moon. A sweep of silver that didn’t just kiss the flesh—but stills the mind, calms the heart, and cuts deep.
She felt. lighter. Grounded.
The weight she’d been carrying—fear, doubt, expectation—seemed to melt away, as if the moonlight had gently unbored her spirit.
And with that release came strength. Not the kind forged in muscle or will, but something older. An awakening.
As though the world itself had finally turned to see her—truly see her—and now waited in hushed anticipation to witness what she might become.
High above, the twin moons hovered in rarer alignment, their silver light pouring down in heavenly cadence. This was it. A once-in-twenty-year night.
In far-off kingdoms, adulthood came through blood, flame, or gold.
But in Moonstone... by the moon.
Here, the light itself was holy.
It did not merely witness.
It changed.
That radiance was not just light—it was a second coming.
A touch of the divine that shed her youth like a husk.
It enveloped her in something sacred.
And she was no longer merely a girl.
She was becoming.
Across the wide courtyard, each head bowed, eyes closed—not in terror, but in awe. The brilliance of the moonlight intensified, as if the heavens themselves bent closer.
Even behind closed eyes, they felt it.
A pressure.
A heat.
A radiance that clung to skin and soul both.
Nobody dared open their eyes.
Because they knew—
The more the burn, the more the blessing.
Leon felt it on his lesser throne too. Even with his eyes closed, the light pushed against his senses.
Not heat, really—but presence.
A command.
A holy force that hummed through the stone under his feet and curled in his chest.
His hands balled softly.
He longed to open his eyes. To see her—changing.
To see the very instant that the child disappeared and the woman appeared in his stead.
But he didn’t.
Because certain rituals were not to be witnessed.
They were to be believed.
And to violate that holiness, even for love, would be to betray what she was gaining.
So, he stayed stationary.
His head downcast—not in compliance, but in silent submission to something greater than crowns and kings.
He would not steal this from her.
He would not desecrate the holy.
He waited.
He lowered his head further—not because he was obedient, but because he respected something more than kings or empires.
He did not shatter the moment.
But his mind murmured:
So, this... is the legacy of the Moonlight royal family.
At the dais, Queen Sona sat silently. Her stance was composed, regal as ever—yet her fingers flexed faintly over her lap. Her lips were motionless, serene... but her chest expanded with a breath that quivered ever so slightly.
She was proud.
Deeply proud.
To watch her daughter—her daughter—accept the sacred heritage of their line under the watchful stars. To behold Lira Moonlight flower in all her glory before the court was something she had never prepared herself for.
Her eyelids fluttered closed.
She was radiant. Untouched. A beacon of hope, of strength, of the royal promise revitalized.
And yet. under the pride grew sorrow.
Because youth, however divine, was transitory.
Because this light—this ritual—did not just signify a daughter’s transition.
It signified her gradual goodbye.
The wedding day would arrive. The alliances. The decisions she would no longer take for Lira.
And even though Sona had been preparing for this moment in thought and obligation... her heart was behind.
It hurt.
Because daughters weren’t daughters forever.
Because once the moon acknowledged them as women, they didn’t belong to their mothers anymore.
They were the property of history. To duty.
To fate.
Her daughter’s first steps away from her had started.
I should be happy, she reminded herself. I should be proud.
But the ache in her chest whispered otherwise.
Yet, she kept her composure. She did not weep. She did not allow her voice to crack. She sat straight. Regal.
And. she recalled.
She recalled the gradual drifting of a husband’s eyes—how the King’s eyes, once warm, had become distant.
How love had never actually grounded their marriage, and how she’d attempted—attempted—to turn it into something it was never meant to be.
She’d offered her heart for duty. And received it back as a withered thing.
There were nights she came close to drowning in that silence. Nights she’d considered ending everything—not because she was weak, but because being unwanted hurt so very much.
She had invested everything in a loveless marriage. And yet, rejection was always waiting for her at every door.
And still... in all of it... there had always remained one recollection that shone in the darkness.
Leon.
A boy with golden eyes who had ever gazed at her as if she were something greater than a queen. Greater than a name.
He had never been hers.
But the memory of him had sustained her breath where it seemed to fade.
She fixed her eyes low now, and set her fingers lightly on her lap—calm, but trembling inside.
What kept her... what sustained her...
Was a memory.
Of him... Leon’s. And a daughter with silver hair still smiling like the girl she was.
She came close to shattering.
But those two things—his memory, and that daughter who had been the product of that marriage without love—kept her anchored.
So, she did not fall.
Her back always remained straight.
She walked through storms with dignity, wore sorrow like silk, and approached every test with a smile that never broke.
And now—on her throne—
Her eyes were still closed.
And her soul... remained Queen.
She would not stumble.
She would not succumb.
Not tonight.
Not in the presence of the kingdom.
Not under the watchful eye of the moon.
So, she waited.
The courtyard stood still, as if heaven itself was afraid to breathe.
Time lost its edges—its boundaries blurred.
Was it an instant? An eternity?
There was silence, until—
A noise. Whispers. Cracked.
A breath.
No one was brave enough to open their eyes.
Then— Crack. Crack. Cra—
A voice.
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