Chapter 258: The Price of Returning
By Gideon Vale · 170 words
The day begins with a detail that should be ordinary and refuses to remain that way.
Prince Lucan Grey confronts the chancellor who plans to trade the kingdom for a crown at the heart of a frontier kingdom besieged by three empires.
An ally makes the wrong decision for the right reason, and repairing it costs more than the original mistake.
Prince Lucan Grey keeps the larger goal in view: turn farmers, smugglers, and defeated soldiers into a defense no empire expects. The immediate problem is smaller, sharper, and impossible to postpone.
They stand close enough to feel the argument beneath the silence. Neither mistakes desire for trust, but neither can pretend desire is absent.
Captain Mira Holt refuses to remain a prize or a rescue and changes the outcome as an equal.
The recurring signs of battle maps, iron, ravens return with a different meaning, linking this choice to what came before.
The final choice cannot save the old life. It can only decide what deserves to replace it.