The Khatun Dowager's private chambers were suffocating in a way Lady Naram had never grown used to.
It was not just the thick air or the sharp incense that clung to her clothes and burned her lungs every time she breathed too deeply. It was the feeling that the room itself was watching her. The walls were dark, heavy with old silk hangings that swallowed light instead of reflecting it. Every sound seemed muted, as if even noise knew better than to linger here.
Lady Naram often thought the room felt like a web, and she was the insect trapped in it.
Once inside it, one could sense the presence of something dangerous, something patient. The kind of predator that did not rush, that waited calmly while its prey exhausted itself with fear.
She knelt before the raised platform with a flawless posture. She had been trained for this since childhood. Her tutors had drilled into her that a woman who belonged in power must never appear weak, even when she felt it.
Especially when she felt it.
Her gaze stayed lowered.
In this chamber, one did not look at the Khatun Dowager unless invited. To do so unprompted was not bravery. It was arrogance. And arrogance did not survive long in this palace.
The silence stretched long enough for discomfort to settle deep. It was not accidental silence. Lady Naram knew it was one of the Dowager's favored weapons. She liked to wait until her guests got uncomfortable enough to start talking, usually confessing things they shouldn't just to fill the quiet. Naram held her breath and waited.
She did not speak.
Her knees stayed pressed into the floor. The silence thickened until it felt like a weight on her shoulders.
Finally, the Dowager spoke.
"How is your relationship with the Khan?"
The question was light and casual, but still gave her the chill.
Lady Naram lifted her head slightly. Not too much, just enough to show respect, but not enough to seem bold.
Her expression softened into something gentle and composed. She had practiced this face in the mirror hundreds of times until it felt natural.
"We are… getting closer," she said evenly. "We enjoy each other's company."
The lie sounded weak even to her own ears. She knew it, and she was certain the woman in front of her knew it too.
The Khatun Dowager chuckled softly.
It wasn't loud or even particularly cruel. There was no warmth in the sound. If anything, it was deeply unsettling.
"Is that so?" the Dowager said, tilting her head. "That is not what I heard."
Lady Naram's fingers twitched against her skirts. She forced them to stay still immediately.
"There have been complications," she said honestly. "But I am confident I can secure his favor."
The Dowager's smile faded.
"Confident?" she repeated.
The single word felt heavier than a warning.
The Dowager leaned forward slightly, and the light caught her face at last. Her features were sharp, and her gaze sent a chill through the room. This was a woman who had never needed to raise her voice to be obeyed.
"You were confident before," the Dowager said. "And yet I see him defending a disgraced Hua woman in public while you stand invisible beside him."
The air seemed to freeze.
Lady Naram felt it along her spine, a slow chill that made her stomach tighten. She remained silent. The Dowager never accused without proof.
"You were placed beside the Khan for a reason," the Dowager continued. "You were given a position and a future." She paused. "All so you could serve a purpose."
Lady Naram's breathing slowed, but her pulse did not.
"If you cannot do what is required," the Dowager said calmly, "then you are easily replaced."
Lady Naram's breath caught.
"And if you are replaced," the Dowager went on, her tone remained even, "then your father becomes unnecessary as well."
The words struck her like thunder. Lady Naram dropped to the floor instantly, her entire body shaking. It wasn't just her life on the line anymore. It was her entire family.
"Please forgive me," she said quickly. "I will try again. I promise. I will not disappoint you."
Her voice trembled despite her efforts to stay steady. She hated that weakness more than anything.
The Dowager let her stay there.
She didn't speak or move. She simply watched the top of Naram's head, counting the seconds, allowing the fear to settle into Naram's bones until it took root.
"This is your last chance," the Dowager said at last. "I want more than his interest. I want his attention fixed on you. I want him looking at you the way he looks at that Hua girl."
Lady Naram swallowed.
"Do not waste it."
She rose slowly, keeping her head lowered. Her eyes burned, but she did not allow tears to fall. Tears were useless here.
The Dowager waved a hand, dismissing her.
As Lady Naram turned and prepared to leave, the Dowager spoke again, this time not to her.
"Send word to the Grand Prince," she said to her attendant. "Tell him it has been far too long since he visited his wife. A husband should keep his household in order."
The maid bowed and slipped away.
Lady Naram's heart lurched. She knew what that meant.
Bringing Kabil back into the picture would force Lian Zhi back into her place. That much, Lady Naram understood, and part of her felt a small satisfaction at it.
But the relief did not last as she understood what lies beneath.
The Dowager was not tightening the leash on Lian Zhi alone. She was reminding everyone who truly held the power. Today, it was the Hua princess. Tomorrow, it could just as easily be her.
Lady Naram walked out of the chamber with her head held high. The sunlight outside struck her eyes after the suffocating darkness within, but she did not flinch.
Her mind spun with a thousand different fears.
This wasn't about being the Dowager's favorite anymore. It was about staying alive.
As she smoothed her robes, her expression returned to serenity. But her eyes had changed. The softness was gone. In its place was something sharp and focused.
The game had changed. Lian Zhi was not just a nuisance. She was a problem. And in this palace, problems were removed.
Lady Naram turned down the corridor that led toward the Khan's quarters.
It was time to remind him who stood beside him.
And why.
