WebNovels

Chapter 56 - Chapter 56 – The Conspiracy

The Great Hall of Riverbend glittered that night with silver goblets and

white linen covering the long banquet table. Flutes and hand drums played from

a small stage while folk dancers twirled in wheat-colored skirts, mimicking the

movement of the river's waves. Laughter rang out, but unevenly—relief on the

peasants' side after the harvest, restrained courtesy among the nobles who wore

their unease like masks. It was a performance everyone played together.

King Alden sat on the high seat, his hair white but his eyes still sharp.

Lines of weariness, however, betrayed the burden on his shoulders. Beside him

sat Princess Elara, her silver-blue gown catching the light. She listened to

the flow of conversations like she was mapping tributaries—where words

branched, where they ran dry, who was stirring the currents.

At the far end of the table stood Duke Roderic Blackmere. His black mantle

bore gold embroidery in the shape of chains coiled around a raven. When a

servant poured him wine, he did not wait to be invited.

"How much longer will we send our grain to Valoria?" His voice carried

without needing to be raised. "How much longer will our people bow, while

others feast on bread baked from Riverbend sweat?"

Whispers spread. A young lord—Edwyn, still clinging to ideals—dared to

answer. "Duke Roderic, the treaty prevents war. This year's harvest was spared

from fire. Isn't that… something?"

Roderic turned, lips curling faintly. "Something we paid with our dignity,

young lord. You may call it peace. I call it a golden chain—shining to the eye,

but a chain nonetheless."

King Alden lifted his hand for quiet. "The grain we give is the price of

peace. As long as peace holds, fathers return home, children sleep without the

sound of war horns. That is the choice I made."

"A choice that feeds fear," Roderic replied softly, his words sharp. "Fear

of Valoria. Fear of a single man who tore down a city's iron wall as if it were

a garden fence." He let the name hang unspoken—Arthur.

Elara felt her skin prickle. She saw how the neutral nobles—those who

normally avoided sides—leaned subtly toward Roderic. No loud cheers, only

glances exchanged: We will speak again, somewhere darker.

Music resumed, but the rhythm faltered. The dancers still spun, but their

steps lost their lightness. Elara sipped her wine only to wet her lips, then

set the goblet down. "Father," she whispered, "this is not a feast. It's a

stage."

Alden nodded slowly. "Leadership often means sitting in the chair everyone

else wants to remove."

A few nights after the banquet, Elara walked into the palace garden. The air

carried the river's chill; night-blooming flowers released faint fragrance. On

a stone bench by the pond, she opened her small notebook—pages filled with

names, signs, impressions. She wrote quickly: Roderic—growing bolder; Ulricnames, signs, impressions. She wrote quickly: Roderic—growing bolder; Ulric

Fenmarsh—seen circling his private barracks; Selene Harrowind—gathering newsFenmarsh—seen circling his private barracks; Selene Harrowind—gathering news

like a merchant gathers spices. She dotted the page like a map forming.

Her mother had once told her Riverbend's peace was born of fair taxes and a

clear-flowing river. Elara stared at the water's surface; the moon's reflection

split on ripples, then joined again. "If this river could speak," she murmured,

"it would warn us before the flood."

Elsewhere, in a dark hall, sharper words were spoken than any blade could

cut. Roderic spread a map of the palace across a wooden table. A lone torch

stretched his fingers' shadows long, as if he already held the city.

Baron Ulric Fenmarsh sat with arms crossed. His clothes reeked of marsh, his

hands scarred. "My men are restless. They keep asking when the torches will be

lit."

"On the night of the harvest festival," Roderic answered without pause. "The

side gate used by traders—that's where the guard is weakest. We'll take Alden

alive. Elara… she must be in our hands. Her name will be the seal on my claim

to power."

Countess Selene Harrowind turned the emerald ring on her finger. "To the

world, Elara must die. A crafted grief is the sharpest tool. People stop asking

questions when they're too busy weeping."

Ulric let out a harsh laugh. "I'll block the underground passages. The river

princess will find no escape."

"Good." Roderic sipped his wine, eyes fixed on the torch. "Riverbend will be

freed from Valoria's shadow. In seven nights, the palace lights will not burn

for Alden, but for me."

That same night, at the lower docks, Roderic addressed two dozen

mercenaries. The old warehouse smelled of rope and salt, barrels served as

seats. "You are not tools," he said, his voice low, almost personal. "You are

pathfinders. Your children will not grow beneath foreign banners. When morning

comes, you will be called heroes. And heroes do not go hungry." Small sacks of

coin slid across the floor, clinking like a promise.

While Riverbend nursed its shadows, Valoria sharpened its watch. Hadrick,

head of intelligence, sat at a desk littered with scrolls. A candle burned low;

he hadn't blinked in hours. The last report was brief: unusual movements in

Riverbend. Private troops gathered. The name Roderic whispered. Hadrick shut

his eyes, weighing his choice. Intervene too soon, and Valoria would be accused

of pulling Riverbend's strings. Too late, and the flood would break the bridge.

He wrote to Arthur: "A calm river hides currents. Strengthen the border,He wrote to Arthur: "A calm river hides currents. Strengthen the border,

not with proclamations, but with readiness. Our eyes need time, yet time isnot with proclamations, but with readiness. Our eyes need time, yet time is

what the enemy seeks to steal." He sealed the letter, then studied the

great map of Etheria. The blue line of the Riverbend spread like veins. "If

this vein is choked," he muttered, "blood will seek another path. And that path

is always more dangerous."

Close to midnight, Elara returned through the palace halls. Torches

flickered, her shadow stretching across the stone floor. Two servants froze

mid-conversation when she appeared. "We were just… checking linens, Your

Highness," one stammered, bowing too deeply. Roderic's name had almost slipped

from their lips, but drowned when Elara stepped near. She didn't press. She

simply noted the pattern: when people fear to speak, someone has taught them

fear.

That same night she knocked on her father's study door. Alden sat over the

map of the river, tracing lines he knew by heart.

"Father," Elara began, "I've seen meetings that shouldn't happen. Roderic is

gathering his men. Selene is sending messages outside the city under pretense

of cloth orders. Ulric lingers around private barracks." She paused to steady

her breath. "I fear the storm is already at our door."

Alden looked at her for a long moment, then placed his hand on hers.

"Politics has always been full of shadows. We cannot arrest shadows." He

paused, then added quietly, "But we can prepare spare candles for when the

lights go out."

Elara nodded, warmed but unsatisfied. "Then let me strengthen the palace

wings—servants who are loyal, guards who swear to Riverbend alone."

"Do it," Alden said. "But carefully. The loudest voice often hides the

quietest dagger."

By the next dusk, the river's wind carried the smell of wet earth. In the

marketplace, rumors spread like dry leaves: grain prices rising, taxes

changing, someone promising to "save" Riverbend from its burdens. The word save

shifted from mouth to mouth, gleaming differently on each tongue. Elara walked

among the stalls, listening to how the word clung to people's ears. She studied

the fishmongers' faces, the mothers carrying infants, the children chasing

shadows of birds—they cared little who gave speeches in the Great Hall; they

only cared that bellies were filled and nights were safe.

On a brick rooftop, a raven perched, watching. Elara followed it with her

gaze, sensing the Blackmere crest had stepped down from banners into living

flesh, eavesdropping.

The seventh night drew close. On his balcony, Roderic stared at the torchlit

palace. Wine swirled in his goblet, dark as intent. From afar, the guards'

serenade faded into silence. He raised the cup to eye level, as if toasting the

walls he meant to claim.

"In seven nights," he whispered, "those lights will not shine for Alden…

they will shine for me."

River wind carried small sounds—flags tapping poles, leaves brushing tiles,

horses nickering faintly as a hatch closed carefully. Riverbend, usually fast

asleep under the moon, felt tonight like someone with eyes shut but mind

restless.

In her chamber, Elara stood at the window, notebook in hand. The last page

she left blank. "For tomorrow," she finally wrote, "if tomorrow isshe left blank. "For tomorrow," she finally wrote, "if tomorrow is

different from today." She blew out the candle, letting the dark reclaim

the room's honest shapes.

In Valoria, Hadrick watched the sealed letter depart by courier, bound for

Arthur before dawn. He had not closed his eyes. One thought repeated: the

calmest river is the one most likely to overflow when its banks are weakened

from within.

And through it all, Riverbend kept flowing, reflecting the moon as though

the world weren't being redrawn by hidden hands. But the water knew more than

it spoke. If one pressed an ear close, one might hear: a ripple already

promising to become a wave.

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