The letter sat on the table in Lady Mira Corvin's room, small and plain, but heavy as a stone.
> "You are seen."
Three words. No signature. No explanation. Just that.
Mira had found it under her door the night before, after her meeting with Prince Cyrus in the garden. She had read it once, then again, then a third time, as if the words might change. They didn't.
She was not afraid. Not yet. But she was careful.
She knew what it meant. Cyrus was not courting her. He was testing her. He was telling her that he saw through her — her ambition, her pride, her hunger for power. And he was warning her: *I know what you are. And I will use it.*
Mira smiled, cold, as she folded the letter and placed it in a locked drawer.
"Then let us see," she whispered, "who is really using whom."
***
The next morning, the palace was quiet, but the silence was not peace. It was the silence of men who had been reminded of their place. Lords who had spoken loudly in the council now kept their heads down. Servants moved like shadows, afraid to be seen, afraid to be noticed.
Cyrus felt it.
He stood in his study, looking out over the city. The sun was weak, pale, but it was there. The city moved below — carts, guards, merchants, beggars — all of them blind to the real war being fought inside the palace.
A knock came at the door.
"Enter," he said.
The door opened. Silas Arren stepped in, his face calm, his one good eye sharp.
"She read it," Silas said.
Cyrus did not turn. "And?"
"She did not panic. She did not run. She locked it away, like a secret she plans to use."
Cyrus smiled, cold. "Good. She is not stupid. She will be more dangerous than the others."
Silas studied him. "She is already moving. She asked to speak with the Queen's chamberlain. She requested a private audience with the Queen."
Cyrus finally turned. "And the Queen agreed?"
"She did."
Cyrus's eyes narrowed. "Then the Queen is using her too. She sees Mira as a way to control me. A soft hand where Corin is the fist."
Silas nodded. "And Mira knows it. She is playing both of them."
Cyrus sat. "Then let her play. I will watch. I will learn. And when the time comes, I will decide whether she is a weapon… or a corpse."
Silas said nothing. He knew better than to argue.
After a moment, Cyrus spoke again. "What about Lysara?"
"The Lirath envoy is pushing hard," Silas said. "They want the marriage alliance. They are offering more trade rights, more gold, even military support if we face trouble in the Borderlands."
Cyrus leaned back. "And what does my father want?"
"Stability. He fears rebellion. He fears war. He wants peace, even if it is bought with gold and a foreign princess."
Cyrus's voice was flat. "Then he is weak. A king who buys peace is not a king. He is a merchant."
Silas did not argue. He only watched.
Cyrus stood. "Bring me Lysara. Not as a bride. Not as a princess. Bring her as a question."
Silas hesitated. "She is not a fool, Cyrus. She will not come if she thinks you are testing her."
Cyrus smiled, cold. "Then I will not test her. I will let her believe she is testing me."
***
That evening, Mira stood before Queen Seraphine in the royal chambers.
The room was rich, warm, filled with the scent of incense and the soft light of candles. The Queen sat on a low couch, dressed in deep red, her face calm, but her eyes sharp.
"You asked to speak with me," the Queen said.
Mira bowed. "Your Majesty. I wished to speak of the Prince."
The Queen's fingers tightened slightly on her cup. "Of which prince?"
"Prince Cyrus," Mira said.
The Queen studied her. "He is the heir. It is natural that you would think of him."
Mira did not flinch. "It is also natural that others would wish to bind him to their houses, to their interests."
The Queen's voice was soft, but cold. "And what do *you* wish, Lady Mira?"
Mira met her eyes. "I wish to understand him. Not as a prince. Not as a future king. But as a man."
The Queen smiled, but it did not reach her eyes. "Men are not meant to be understood, child. They are meant to be guided. Controlled. Used."
Mira said nothing.
The Queen leaned forward. "You are clever. You are ambitious. I see that. But ambition without power is nothing. And power without loyalty is death."
Mira bowed her head. "I only wish to serve the throne, Your Majesty."
The Queen watched her for a long moment. Then she nodded. "Then serve it. Watch him. Learn him. And when the time comes, tell me what you see."
Mira bowed again. "I will, Your Majesty."
She left the chamber, her face calm, but her mind sharp.
The Queen wanted her to spy on Cyrus. Good.
But Mira had no intention of being anyone's tool.
She would use them all.
***
The next day, Cyrus received a message.
> *Princess Lysara of Lirath requests a private audience with His Royal Highness, Prince Cyrus Vael, to discuss matters of state and alliance.*
Cyrus read it once, then again, then smiled.
Lysara was not coming to flirt. She was coming to test him. To see if he was a boy to be controlled, or a man to be feared.
Good.
He sent back a simple reply:
> *The Prince will receive Her Highness in the eastern garden at noon. No guards. No attendants. Only truth.*
***
At noon, the eastern garden was quiet, the sun weak, the air cold.
Cyrus stood by a fountain, hands behind his back, his face calm. He did not look up when Lysara entered.
She was twenty, tall, golden-haired, dressed in elegant but practical silks. Her eyes were sharp, her smile smooth, like a contract written in blood.
"Your Highness," she said, bowing slightly.
Cyrus turned. "Princess Lysara. You wished to speak of truth."
She smiled. "I wished to speak of alliance. But if truth is what you offer, I will take it."
Cyrus stepped closer. "Then let us begin. Why are you here?"
Lysara did not hesitate. "Because my house wants the alliance. Because Vaelis needs Lirath's trade and navy. Because a marriage between us would bring peace."
Cyrus's voice was flat. "And what does *you* want?"
She met his eyes. "Power. Influence. A voice in the councils of kings."
Cyrus smiled, cold. "Honest. I like that. Most people here lie to themselves as much as they lie to others."
Lysara's smile did not change. "And what do *you* want, Prince Cyrus?"
Cyrus looked at her, really looked. "I want to know what lies beneath the throne. I want to know who is truly in power. And I want to know who I can use."
Lysara did not flinch. "Then let me be clear: I am not here to love you. I am here to build a future. If that future includes you, good. If it does not, I will find another path."
Cyrus stepped even closer. "Then we understand each other. I will not marry you for love. I will not marry you for peace. I will marry you when it serves my power. And when you are no longer useful, I will discard you."
Lysara's eyes narrowed. "And if I refuse?"
Cyrus's voice was calm. "Then you are weak. And weak people do not survive in this court."
For a long moment, they stood there, two predators measuring each other.
Then Lysara smiled, cold, sharp. "Then let us begin, Prince Cyrus. Let us see who uses whom."
Cyrus smiled back. "I already know the answer."
***
That night, Cyrus sat in his study, a single candle burning.
He did not read. He did not write. He only thought.
Mira was moving. Lysara was moving. The Queen was moving. Lord Corin was moving.
Good.
He opened a drawer and took out a blank sheet of paper. At the top, he wrote:
> **The Harem of Questions**
Below it, he added two new lines:
- **Princess Lysara of Lirath**
- Use: Bind Vaelis to Lirath's wealth and navy.
- Weakness: Ambition. She wants power, not love.
- Plan: Let her believe she controls the alliance. Use her to control Lirath.
- **Lady Mira Corvin**
- Use: Control the noble houses, spread rumors, eliminate rivals.
- Weakness: Pride. She believes she is smarter than most.
- Plan: Make her believe she is my only real love. Use her to do the dirty work no one else will touch.
He stared at the list.
He did not love any of them. He would never love anyone.
But he would use them.
And when they were no longer useful, he would discard them.
He blew out the candle and sat in the dark.
The first move had been made.
The war had truly begun.
