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The Heiress Carrying His Heir-Chapter 71 - 72: not my responsibility
Kaelen’s pov
"Then they die for something." The words felt harsh even to me, but I meant them. "Better that than dying slowly in the mines, gasping for air while the rock crushes them. Better than dying from starvation, watching their children waste away. Better than the slow death of hopelessness that comes from living under a system that treats them like cattle."
Vera finally spoke. Her old voice cut through the tension like a knife. "You’re asking them to become a symbol themselves. To offer up their lives so that others might have hope."
"Yes."
"And you think they’ll do it? Risk their lives for a symbol? For an idea?"
I met her eyes. "I think they’ll do it for hope. Because right now, hope is the only thing they don’t have. They have hunger. They have fear. They have exhaustion and grief and the weight of years of oppression. But hope? That’s been taken from them." I paused. "And if we can give them that, if we can show them that change is possible, that the crown can bleed, that they’re not alone then yes. I think they’ll stand with us."
The room was quiet as they processed this. I could see them thinking, weighing, deciding.
Then Marcus stood. "I’m in. You know I’m in. I’ve been in since the beginning, and I’m not stopping now." He paused, something across his face. "But Kaelen, this is riskier than anything we’ve ever done. Riskier than the palace infiltration, riskier than the grain thefts, riskier than anything. If it goes wrong–"
"If it goes wrong, we lose." I didn’t look away. "Maybe we all die. Maybe The Rendered ends tonight, in this room, with this conversation. But if we don’t try, we’ve already lost. We’ll just keep stealing grain and spreading rumors until Corvus’s investigations finally catch up to us. Until someone betrays us for coin. Until The Rendered becomes a footnote in history instead of the spark that lit a revolution."
Dmitri pushed off from the wall where he’d been leaning. His young face was serious, determined. "When do we do this?" 𝑓𝘳𝑒𝑒𝓌𝘦𝘣𝘯ℴ𝑣𝘦𝑙.𝘤𝑜𝑚
"Two days from now. We use tomorrow to rally supporters, spread the word, prepare everyone who’s willing to stand with us." I looked around the room. "I want every person who’s ever helped us to know about this. Every dock worker who looked the other way while we moved grain. Every merchant who spread our rumors. Every family that received our food and asked no questions. This is their fight as much as ours. They deserve to know what we’re planning."
"And if they don’t show?" Soren asked. "If we spread the word and no one comes?"
"Then we fight with whoever does." I picked up the mask again, turning it in my hands. "Even if it’s just us. Even if it’s just the people in this room. Because someone has to be first. Someone has to show that it’s possible. And if we’re the ones, then that’s what we do."
The planning began in earnest then. Marcus and Dmitri coordinating outreach to the lower districts, finding the people who’d already proven they could be trusted. Rachel organizing the street runners to spread word throughout the city, quietly at first, then more openly as the time grew closer. Soren working out logistics, how to move that many people through the city without attracting attention, where to position them for maximum impact, how to make the confrontation as visible as possible to the largest number of witnesses.
Vera sat back, watching, occasionally offering quiet suggestions that revealed decades of living, decades of watching movements rise and fall.
Through it all, I felt Lena’s absence like a missing limb. Like a part of me had been cut away. She should have been here, managing the intelligence networks, advising on palace vulnerabilities, helping coordinate the complexity of what we were attempting.
But she was gone.
And I had no one to blame but myself.
Hours later, when the others had finally left to begin preparations, I sat alone in the abandoned office with just a guttering candle for light.
The mask sat on the table in front of me. The Voice. The symbol I’d created that had grown beyond my control, beyond my ability to guide.
In two days, I would lead hundreds of people into open confrontation with the crown’s forces. Would risk their lives on a gamble that showing strength would inspire more resistance than it would provoke retaliation. Would ask ordinary people to become extraordinary, to stand in front of armed guards and refuse to move.
Would face Elara’s guards, and possibly Elara herself, as an enemy.
Lena’s final words echoed in my head, not the ones she’d screamed at me in front of everyone, but what she’d hissed at me as she’d pushed past on her way out. The words she’d meant for me alone.
"She’s barely eating anymore, you know. Can’t keep anything down...figure it out yourself."
Then she was gone.
At the time, I’d been too angry, too focused on maintaining control in front of the others, to process what she’d meant.
But now, alone in the darkness with only a dying candle for company, the words replayed over and over.
Barely eating. Can’t keep anything down. Exhausted. Mood swings.
My heart began to pound.
No.
It couldn’t be.
Could it?
I thought back to those last weeks in the palace. The mornings when Elara had looked pale, almost green, waving away breakfast saying she wasn’t hungry. The way she’d gripped the corridor wall sometimes like she needed the support just to stand. The exhaustion I’d seen in her eyes that went far beyond normal stress, that looked like something deeper.
The way she’d pressed her hand to her stomach when she thought no one was watching. A habit, unconscious, repeated.
The way she’d pushed me away so suddenly, so completely, right after I’d started noticing those things. Like she was protecting something. Like she was afraid I’d see too much.
"Figure it out yourself."
Oh gods.
What must be wrong with Elara? What illness could cause all those symptoms together? What condition would make her so secretive, so defensive, so desperate to push everyone away?
My mind supplied answers I didn’t want to consider.
But fuck Elara. She’s no longer under my protection. She’s not my responsibility anymore. She made that very clear when she dismissed me, when she looked at me with ice in her eyes and told me to stay away.
She gets whatever is coming for her.







