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Supreme Spouse System.-Chapter 246: Whispers After the Crown
Chapter 246: Whispers After the Crown
Whispers After the Crown
The doors to the Royal Court had hardly closed when the room started to change. King Aurelian’s footsteps grew distant, yet the press of his edict lingered in the great hall like a suspended breath.
Silence was not for long. One after another, the nobles came to life—like chess pieces stirring back into action after a master move. Lords leaned in, their whispers; ladies fiddled with veils with jerking fingers, eyes blazing with calculation. Tension, once crushed beneath kingly orders, now billowed like smoke in the air.
A few nobles slipped quietly away, cloaks sweeping against the gleaming marble as they left with pursed lips and hasty steps. Their silence, weighted and deliberate, was louder than any public vow could have been—far louder, in fact. Others gravitated in small groups by the pillars and alcoves, heads ducked low as they exchanged vows and prophecies. The chamber resounded with the buzz of strategy, low and charged.
Supplies. Routes. Deployments. Gossip of old and new alliances. There were no loud pronouncements here—only whispers, as sharp and menacing as drawn swords.
The hallways were beyond the court became motion arteries. Silks whispered against steel; soft clinking of armor was stifled beneath velvet cloaks. Laughter, when it did emerge, sounded hollow—too rehearsed, too keen. Eyes flicked. All of the nobles seemed to sport two faces: the face they presented and the one that they bore just behind their eyes.
And then, amidst the unraveling tension of leaving, the center of the hall stood oddly quiet.
Duke Edric had not stirred.
He stood like a statue carved of midnight and determination, dressed in dark navy overlaid with black velvet, the silver crest of his lineage glowing dimly at his throat. His mere presence caused attention—unwavering, controlled, magnetic. Nobles gravitated to him not solely out of loyalty, but gravity.
"Duke Edric, House Vellore stands with you. We’ll send grain and steel before the week’s end."
"Our archers are yours. Just send word if the Eastern front weakens."
Their voices came one after another, overlapping with urgency. The words were generous, but not without weight. Promises wrapped in expectation. Assistance knotted to ambition.
Edric met each one with calm restraint. "Your support honors me," he said. "But rest easy. Starlight will not falter."
It wasn’t just what he said—it was how he said it. His voice carried quiet certainty, and somehow, that was more reassuring than fire or bravado. Those who approached him left with nods and lowered voices, their confidence either renewed—or carefully masked.
Off-center, by the large arched entrance, another couple strode with intent through the throng.
Duke Leon and Duchess Nova strolled abreast, their silence more cacophonous than most of the surrounding chatter.
Nova, as always, carried elegance with consummate ease—her dress a dark forest green that glimmered like dew drops in darkness, her face impassive except for the tension wound just at the back of her eyes. Leon, on the other hand, had the restless ease of a warrior who never quite let go, even within a palace. His cloak rustled behind him with every step, boots thudding on the marble with muted rhythm.
Some of the nobles saw them and started to slide their way over, catching another courtly chess game of questions, offers disguised as concern.
But Leon’s icy stare stopped them in their tracks before they even attempted to speak. One look, and the point was made: not now.
Nova didn’t even give them that consideration. Her eyes stayed fixed ahead, detached, uninterested. The court understood.
The two of them walked through the corridor in a silence, leaving murmurs and stares that hung in the air like smoke.
It wasn’t until they had walked into the more quiet section of the palace—where the din thinned and the air was thick with thought—that Nova finally spoke.
"Leon. Visit my manor after this."
Her voice, low though it was, sliced clean across the stillness. It wasn’t an invitation—it was purpose plain.
Leon leaned toward her with a small smirk playing on his lips. "Oh? Are you calling for me now, Duchess?" he queried, his teasing voice unmistakable. "Do I need to bring wine, or shall there be shackles involved?"
Nova gave him a sidelong look, lips curling, but her look soon became serious. "For once, be serious," she said in a flat tone. "I want to talk. Alone. No guards. No ears. No diversions."
That gave him pause. He studied her face—not just the beauty that others saw, but the shift beneath it. A certain sharpness had crept into her eyes, like a thought she hadn’t finished wrestling yet.
His smile faded into something gentler. "Of course," he murmured. "Say no more, my love."
She nodded once, and without saying another word, she headed down the corridor to her own private wing. Her steps were deliberate, but Leon saw a small jerk of her fingers at her waist—a tell he knew. Nova always did that when she was thinking too intently, computing something from too many sides.
He did not pursue her right away. He just stood there, his eyes tracing the line of her as she disappeared down the corridor. Her outline—so elegant, so brutal—passed like a glint sheathed in velvet.
He released a sigh, one that was not forced and low, as if he were blowing out not only air, but burdensome thoughts.
Then, spinning on his heel, he began toward a second passageway—one that would wind around and take him, eventually, to her manor.
But before his foot departed the marble—
"Duke Leon. Wait."
The voice froze him in his tracks.
Silken. Steady. And unmistakable.
He spun around slowly.
Duke Edric stood a short distance behind, the torchlight of the corridor reflecting from the soft sheen of his dark hair. That peaceful smile played on his lips—but Leon knew better than to believe the tranquility.
"Duke Edric," Leon greeted, voice even. "Is everything all right?" freeweɓnovel-cøm
"Not in the least," Edric said, fingers folded behind his back, ever the image of noble dignity. "I simply wished for a word. With tea, perhaps. We have much to talk about—of the war, naturally."
Leon looked at him for a moment, the silence thinning.
The King had just declared his decree.
War waited at every door.
And yet, here stood Edric—slow-paced, smiling, and inviting him to tea.
Leon’s jaw clenched, just once.
"Tea," he echoed, his tone low. "Now?"
Edric’s smile remained absolutely in position, calm as ever. "There are times when simplicity is found in serenity, not turmoil. You and I know—war is not just fought on the field."
Leon breathed slowly, eyes keen. "True. But there are games that cost blood too."
The space between them was charged with tense silence. Not unfriendly, not quite. But tense—like two expert fencers parrying, feeling out each other’s range with the slightest scrape of their swords.
He watched Edric for a moment of deliberation. This fox did not speak idly. And an offer of tea? From Edric? That was not nothing.
"No, by no means, Duke Edric," Leon replied finally, voice carefully controlled. "It’s simply... I fear I have pressing business."
Edric leaned his head in a gracious gesture, covering whatever disappointment perhaps had briefly appeared in his eyes. "Naturally. I see. I wished to speak with you, however briefly. Of the war... and something else."
Leon’s voice did not waver. "Perhaps another time, Duke Edric. I have a conference I must take."