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The Heiress Carrying His Heir-Chapter 104 - 105: old enough
Elara’s POV
The room exploded.
Petrov was still on his feet before the mask had finished falling, his chair scraping against the floor, his face purple with rage. "This is proof! This is exactly what we suspected! The Voice was never a movement, it was one man. An opportunist. A manipulator who used the people’s suffering for his own agenda."
Other council members piled on. Voices rose, overlapped, competed.
"Arrest him immediately"
"He came here under false pretenses"
"He has been operating a seditious organization under a false identity"
"He had access to everything"
"The queen’s own former guard"
"Standing in this chamber lying to all of us"
Lord Harwick stood. "Your Majesty, this man stood in your councils. He stood outside your chambers. He knew your routines, your guards, your blind spots. The threats in your rooms, he could have placed them himself. He could have been the one leaving blood on your pillow."
Petrov nodded vigorously. "He was inside the palace. Inside the queen’s confidence. And all the while, he was building an army against the crown. Against you. Against everything we are trying to protect."
Lord Ashworth spoke from the end of the table. "The girl who died, Mira. He could have arranged that too. A distraction."
"This is speculation," Corvus finally said quietly. He had not moved from the wall. His arms were still crossed. His face was still unreadable.
"This is necessity," Petrov shot back. "The man is standing in our council chamber without his mask. We have the proof we need. We have the man himself. What more do you want?"
"A trial," Corvus said trying to be reasonable "Evidence. Something more than the fact that he was the queen’s guard and also wore a mask."
Petrov laughed. It was not a kind sound. "He was the queen’s guard. He was the Voice. He was sleeping in her palace while plotting against her. What more evidence do you need? Do you need him to confess again? He already confessed when he took off the mask."
The guards at the door looked to me, waiting for orders. Hands were on sword hilts. The room was chaos, papers scattering, chairs scraping, voices rising.
I did not move.
Petrov turned to me. "Your Majesty. You saw it yourself. He stood in this room and lied to your face. He used the people’s suffering as a weapon against your crown. He has been playing you since the moment he walked into this palace. With respect, you are young. You trusted the wrong man. It happens to all of us. But now you must let us handle this–"
"Let you handle this."
"Yes, Your Majesty. You have made mistakes. We all understand. No one blames you. He deceived you. He manipulated you. But now–"
"Mistakes." I stepped around the table. My voice was quiet, but the room went silent. "You stand in my council chamber and tell me I have made mistakes."
Petrov’s face flickered. "I meant no offense. I only meant that you are young, and men like him take advantage of that. You cannot be expected to see every threat. That is why you have us. That is why we are here, to see what you cannot."
"I cannot be expected to see every threat."
"It is not a criticism. It is simply the truth. You have not been queen long enough to–"
"Not been queen long enough." I laughed. There was no humor in it. "I have been queen long enough to know that my council has been feeding information to my enemies. I have been queen long enough to know that my private thoughts have been appearing on agendas before I spoke them. I have been queen long enough to know that someone in this room has been playing me like a fool while smiling at my face."
Petrov opened his mouth.
"Let me finish." My voice was ice. "I have sat in this chair for months. I have listened to men tell me what I cannot do. What I cannot see. What I cannot understand. I have been told that I am young, that I am inexperienced, that I need guidance. That I should trust my advisors. That I should let them handle things while I learn." I looked around the table. "And all the while, I was being fed information. Shaped. Moved like a piece on a board. And I let it happen. Because I trusted the men around this table."
The room was silent.
"No more." I looked at Petrov. "You speak of mistakes, my lord. You speak of trust. But I am the queen. I can dismiss every person in this room. I can empty this council and fill it with people who have never heard your names. I do not care what the books say about tradition. I do not care what the laws say about procedure. I do not care about precedent or protocol or any of the words you use to tell me what I cannot do"
Petrov’s face was white.
"I am the queen." My voice was quiet but every word landed like a stone. "If I decide that this council no longer serves me, I will burn it to the ground and build a new one from the ashes. Do you understand me?" 𝑓𝘳𝑒𝑒𝓌𝘦𝘣𝘯ℴ𝑣𝘦𝑙.𝘤𝑜𝑚
He nodded. He did not speak.
"All of you." I looked around the table. "Do you understand me?"
Nods. Murmurs. No one met my eyes.
I turned to Kaelen.
He was not looking at the council. He was not looking at Petrov, or Corvus, or any of the other men whose voices had been rising around him. He was not looking at the guards, or the doors, or the windows, or any of the exits he might have been calculating.
He kept his eyes on me.
He had stopped performing anything. The mask was gone. The altered voice was gone. The careful stillness of the Voice, the controlled presence, the deliberate way he had been holding himself, all of it was gone. He was just standing there, himself, in the ruins of the mask, waiting for me to decide what happened next.
His hands were at his sides. His face was bare. His eyes were on mine.
He was not pleading. He was not explaining. He was not defending. He was just waiting.
I looked at him for a long moment.
"I believe we have nothing else to say" I said. I did not look away from Kaelen. "Council clear the room."







