Chapter 83: Chapter 83: And He’s Coming

"The Prince of Berkimhum," she roared, "is ALIVE!"

It hit like a hammer.

Gasps.

Cries.

A hundred voices surged, then drowned in their own disbelief.

Even Henry—grey, immovable Henry—staggered. His cane clattered against the marble as he turned, eyes wide, mouth parted.

He didn’t speak.

Couldn’t.

"AND HE’S COMING BACK!"

That did it.

The dam shattered.

The city screamed.

From the highest terraces to the blood-soaked courtyards, a single name ripped through the haze like prophecy fulfilled in flame:

Atlas.

Not as a boy.

Not even as a prince.

But as a myth reborn.

Lara felt the roar ripple through her ribs like a second heartbeat.

And still, she stood tall.

Unblinking.

Unyielding.

Behind her, nobles collapsed into hysteria.

A marquess dropped his wine. A countess nearly fainted. Someone shouted about warding glyphs. Another screamed that it was treason to invoke the name of a dead heir.

But the streets didn’t care.

The people didn’t care.

Atlas’s name leapt from their tongues like an anthem they forgot they knew.

Claire broke first.

She reached Lara in seconds, gripping her by the shoulders as though afraid she’d vanish.

Her pupils were blown wide, tears dancing in the corners of her lashes.

"Is it true?" she whispered—then louder. "You’re not lying—please, gods, tell me you’re not lying! I felt him! I heard his voice—it wasn’t a dream, it couldn’t have been—"

Lara didn’t blink.

She didn’t flinch.

She stared into Claire’s shaking face and nodded once.

"Yes," she said.

Simple.

Like a sword drawn.

And then, with iron certainty:

"He’s alive. And he’s grown stronger....much stronger."

The moment Lara’s voice declared her brother’s return, the palace changed.

The marble floor, once cold and reverent, now crackled with tension—like a storm had swept into the bones of the building and found it too small to hold its fury. The nobles shifted. Eyes darted. Fans snapped shut with audible clacks. Whispers flooded the chamber like a rising tide. And at the eye of the storm, Lara stood unshaken.

She saw them.

All of them.

The power-bloated dukes. The rusted old counts. The vultures of velvet who had let Atlas’s name rot for years—now desperate to dig him up if it meant saving their own titles.

Marquess Vorn was already turning to his scribe. "Verify that claim," he hissed. "Find someone—anyone—who’s seen the prince in the last weeks. We need evidence, not theatrics—"

Lady Mael’s voice sliced through the noise. "You think she’d lie? Do you not see her armor? Her wounds?"

"I see a bleeding soldier," Vorn snapped. "Not a prophet."

Claire didn’t flinch at the insult, but her hand drifted toward the thin knife she kept strapped behind her sleeve. Not out of fear. Out of memory. These men—these court-rotted leeches—were the same who tried to call her a traitor after Atlas vanished. The same who whispered that she was too close to the prince, too obsessed, too dangerous.

Now they hung on her every twitch like children at a bard’s tale.

Cowards.

Lara inhaled slowly, her fury laced with fatigue. The weight of her bloodied armor, the burn of the gash across her thigh, the ache in her shield arm—none of it mattered. The war was still here. It had only changed shape.

"I’m not here to argue," Lara said flatly, voice cutting through the room like a whetted blade. "You wanted heirs. You wanted royals. You wanted someone to fight your battles while you dressed your sons in ribbons and called it diplomacy."

She pointed toward the gathered nobles, her gauntlet trembling with restrained force.

"Well, congratulations. You have two now."

Gasps echoed again. Some from shock. Others from fear.

"Atlas is alive. Stronger than me. Changed by what he’s survived." She paced the court slowly, each footfall sending a ripple through the silence. "And if you plan to treat him like some lost dog or pawn, I promise—he won’t suffer your crowns. He’ll tear them from your heads."

Claire followed behind her, wordless, but sharp. Calculating. Watching the faces turn—from disbelief to panic to something rawer.

Hope.

Fear and hope often wore the same mask.

The King hadn’t moved. Still standing atop the dais, staring down at his daughter with eyes that refused to reveal anything.

Until he finally spoke.

"What proof do you offer, daughter?"

Lara turned sharply.

"My life."

The court went still.

"I watched him fight," she said. "I watched him fall into something else. Something larger than magic. Than blood. I saw what he left behind. You ask me for parchment and seal?" She stepped forward, eyes blazing. "I give you my word. The truth, bought in blood."

Henry said nothing.

But his fingers gripped the head of his cane tighter.

He was old.

But not yet dead.

And the name Atlas—spoken with such thunder in this sacred hall—had woken something he’d tried to bury.

The silence that followed Lara’s vow was no longer empty.

It was weight.

It was judgment.

Even the gold-leaf banners that lined the pillars of the great hall seemed to sag beneath it, like the palace itself had heard her words and didn’t know how to breathe.

Claire remained by Lara’s side, motionless, hands folded behind her back like the blade of a poised executioner. Her expression didn’t waver, but her eyes never left the king.

King Henry Von Roxweld had not yet sat. He stood alone, slightly hunched, his hand still clutched around the hilt of his cane as though it were the only thing tethering him to the present. Behind his eyes, a thousand gears turned—old ones, rusted from a decade of neglect.

Lara could feel them grinding.

And she was done waiting.

"You’re afraid," she said suddenly.

The nobles turned sharply.

Henry’s gaze didn’t move. But his jaw did.

Tightening.

"I see it now," Lara continued. "It’s not pride that keeps you silent. Not anger. It’s fear. Fear of your son. Of what he is. What he might become. What he already is."

"Mind your tone," one of the elder dukes snapped from the gallery above. "You speak to your king."

Lara didn’t even glance at him.

"My king?" she said, bitter. "A king who left his son to rot beneath the Dark Continent. Who pretended not to feel it when his heir fell. Who never once called for a search. A burial. A mourning. He wasn’t even worth a statue, was he?"

Henry still did not reply.

But something cracked in his breath.

Lara stepped up onto the dais.

One step.

Then another.

Her boots echoed like war drums across the marble.

"You think this throne will survive his return?" she asked, soft and deadly. "You think this court will hold against him?"

She was in front of him now.

Close enough to see the red veining in his tired eyes. The way his grip trembled slightly against the carved wood of the cane.

"You’re not afraid he’s dead," she whispered. "You’re afraid he’s not."

Henry met her gaze.

For the first time in months, perhaps years, the King looked not like a relic of a dying monarchy, but a man. An old, worn man who had made too many trades, and couldn’t remember which piece of his soul he gave away first.

"You know nothing of what I’ve sacrificed," he said, quietly. "Of what I still must."

"I know I bled for this kingdom," Lara replied. "And Atlas... he died for it."

Claire stepped forward then.

Her voice soft. But sharp.

"Not anymore."

Eyes turned to her.

"Not anymore," she repeated. "He’s alive. He’s changed. He’s stronger than anything that walks this court. And he’s coming. You all have to ask yourselves one question—"

She looked at them, one by one.

"—are you ready to bow... to someone you tried to bury?"

No one answered.

Not with words.

But the silence trembled.

And silence, in a place of power, was rarely neutral.

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