©NovelBuddy
The Prince's Arranged Marriage-Chapter 88: Lines in the Sand
The palace didn’t look different after a man died.
That was the part Lucien hated most.
The corridors were still bright. The windows still poured sunlight across white stone. Servants still moved in neat patterns, carrying trays and linens like nothing had shifted. Guards still stood at attention, faces blank, hands steady on polished spear shafts.
Everything continued.
As if Master Rellan hadn’t been laid on a cold office floor under a sheet.
As if the word *accident* could swallow a life whole and leave no trace behind.
Lucien walked with two guards at his back and one ahead of him, just like Alexander demanded. The escort was quiet, efficient, and suffocating.
He kept his chin lifted anyway.
He told himself it was temporary. He told himself he understood.
But every time a servant’s eyes flickered toward the guards and then away from him, a tightness formed in his chest.
It felt like being labeled.
Fragile. Target. Liability.
He forced the thought away.
When he reached the small sitting chamber near the east wing one of the rooms he’d always liked for morning work he stopped short.
A familiar table usually held the daily briefs. Provincial updates. Trade notes. Council summaries. The boring, normal pulse of the kingdom.
Today, the table was empty.
Lucien stared at it for a moment, then turned to the attendant standing nearby.
"Where are the briefs?" he asked.
The attendant’s smile was too quick. "His Highness Prince Alexander requested that all documents be delivered directly to his study first, Your Highness."
Lucien blinked once.
"First," he echoed.
"Yes, Your Highness," the attendant said, eyes lowered now, polite as stone. "He said he would share anything important with you."
Lucien’s throat tightened.
"I see," he said softly.
He dismissed the attendant and moved to the window, staring down at the gardens. They looked peaceful. Clean. Safe. A lie dressed in greenery.
Behind him, his guards shifted subtly, as if unsure whether he would turn and command something.
Lucien didn’t.
He stayed quiet.
Because if he spoke, the anger might come out sharper than it should.
And he couldn’t afford sharpness with servants. Not when the palace already felt like it was listening.
The morning dragged.
Lucien attended a small advisory session about cultural patronage safe topics, harmless obligations. The nobles in that meeting smiled brighter than usual, their voices warmer, their concern sweeter.
"How dreadful," one lady murmured, fluttering her fan. "Such a tragedy. You must be shaken, Your Highness."
Lucien gave a small smile. "It’s unfortunate."
Another noble leaned in. "Do take care. You’ve been working so hard. Too hard, some might say."
Lucien’s smile stayed in place. "Hard work is necessary."
The noble chuckled lightly. "Of course. But the kingdom values your health."
Lucien heard the unspoken words sitting beneath the polite ones.
Your health. Your stability. Your suitability.
The same language as last night’s dinner, just dressed in lace.
Lucien excused himself as soon as he could without being rude.
By the time he returned to his chambers, the sun had shifted higher in the sky. His guards remained outside. The door shut softly behind him.
Alexander wasn’t there.
Lucien stood in the quiet room for a long moment, listening.
Nothing.
He crossed the floor and found a single note on the writing desk, penned in Alexander’s precise hand.
*In my study. Don’t come alone -A.
Lucien stared at the ink until it blurred slightly.
Don’t come alone.
Even inside the palace, even within stone walls and royal corridors, Alexander was treating the place like enemy territory.
Lucien understood why.
He just hated what it did to him.
He left immediately, taking the guards with him because there was no point in arguing with air.
As they approached Alexander’s study, two additional guards stood outside the door Avalorian, not Veridian, dressed in the darker crest of Alexander’s personal command.
Lucien paused.
The guard bowed. "Your Highness."
"Is he inside?" Lucien asked.
"Yes, Your Highness."
Lucien stepped forward.
The guard didn’t move aside right away.
Lucien’s gaze sharpened. "Move."
The guard hesitated just long enough to be insulting then opened the door.
Lucien walked in with steady steps, refusing to let the small moment shake him.
Alexander was at the desk, sleeves rolled up, papers spread out in controlled chaos. Several unfamiliar men stood near the wall quiet, dressed plainly, carrying themselves like soldiers who didn’t want to look like soldiers.
Alexander looked up the moment Lucien entered.
His expression softened slightly just a fraction before it returned to calm control.
"Lucien," he said. "Good. You came."
Lucien’s eyes flicked to the men at the wall. "Busy?"
Alexander stood. "They’re leaving."
One of the men bowed quickly and exited. The others followed, silent as shadows.
When the last one slipped out, Alexander crossed the room and kissed Lucien brief but warm like the palace hadn’t started crawling under their skin.
Lucien kissed him back out of habit, out of love... and then pulled away.
Alexander noticed immediately. He always did.
"What’s wrong?" Alexander asked, voice low.
Lucien didn’t answer right away. He looked past Alexander at the papers on the desk. He saw the provincial stamps, the ribbon ties, the wax seals.
His stomach twisted.
"You have the briefs," Lucien said flatly.
Alexander’s gaze didn’t move. "Yes."
"You didn’t tell me."
Alexander’s tone stayed calm. "I said I would handle the channels."
Lucien took a slow breath. "Handling the channels is one thing. Handling the information is another."
Alexander’s jaw tightened slightly. "Lucien"
Lucien stepped closer to the desk, fingertips grazing the edge of a report. "I asked for these. I requested documents. I questioned the council. And now I’m finding out through servants that everything goes to you first."
Alexander’s eyes cooled. "Because someone is touching them."
Lucien’s voice sharpened despite himself. "And you think I can’t handle that?"
"That’s not what I said."
"It’s what you’re doing."
A brief silence fell between them.
Alexander exhaled slowly, as if choosing patience. "I’m keeping you alive."
Lucien laughed once short, bitter. "So your solution is to keep me uninformed?"
Alexander’s gaze snapped up. "No. My solution is to keep you from being fed poison."
Lucien’s hands curled into fists. "I’m not a child."
Alexander’s voice dropped. "No. You’re the target."
Lucien flinched, not because the words were new, but because hearing them again made them heavier.
"And what am I supposed to do?" Lucien demanded. "Sit quietly? Smile in meetings? Let them talk about regency while you do everything behind closed doors?"
Alexander’s eyes darkened. "Yes, if that’s what it takes."
Lucien stared at him. "You can’t mean that."
Alexander stepped closer. "I do."
Lucien’s chest rose too fast. "Alexander"
Alexander cut in, voice firm. "Rellan is dead."
The words landed like a slap.
Lucien went still.
Alexander’s gaze didn’t soften. "He died because he had information they didn’t want reaching you. Do you understand that? It wasn’t a warning to frighten you. It was a warning to limit you."
Lucien swallowed hard. "And limiting me further fixes that?"
Alexander’s hands slid to Lucien’s waist, not rough, but firm. Possessive. Grounding.
"It buys time," Alexander said quietly. "Time to find who is doing this before they find a better way to send the message."
Lucien’s throat tightened. "A better way."
Alexander’s eyes held his. "Yes."
Lucien’s anger flickered... and something colder rose behind it.
Fear.
He hated that he felt it. Hated that it was real.
He pushed Alexander’s hands away gently not because he didn’t want the touch, but because it made him want to give in.
"I don’t like being handled," Lucien said, voice quieter now.
Alexander’s jaw tightened again. "I’m not handling you."
Lucien looked at him. "Then stop treating me like a piece you can move."
For a moment, Alexander didn’t speak.
Then he crossed the small distance between them and kissed Lucien slow, deliberate, full of warmth that should have soothed.
Lucien kissed back for two heartbeats... then stopped.
Alexander’s lips hovered near his. "Lucien."
Lucien’s eyes burned. "You promised you wouldn’t push me aside."
Alexander’s voice softened, just slightly. "I’m not pushing you aside."
Lucien gave a small, humorless smile. "But I’m finding out what’s happening through servants."
Alexander flinched at that barely, but it was there.
He turned back to the desk, picked up a sealed report, and held it out.
"Then read," Alexander said.
Lucien took it, fingers steady. He broke the wax seal and unfolded the pages.
The numbers stared back at him.
Clean. Rounded. Perfect.
And now, knowing someone had died to keep certain papers from him, every line felt like a threat.
Lucien read quickly, eyes narrowing.
Then he looked up. "These are still wrong."
Alexander nodded. "Yes."
Lucien’s voice went tight. "So they’re still lying."
"Yes."
Lucien set the paper down with controlled care. "So what are we doing about it?"
Alexander stepped closer again. "I’m doing something about it."
Lucien’s gaze snapped to him. "We."
A pause.
Alexander stared at him for a long moment, expression unreadable.
Then he spoke, very quietly. "I need you to trust me."
Lucien’s chest tightened.
"I do trust you," Lucien said. "That’s not the problem."
Alexander’s brow lifted slightly. "Then what is?"
Lucien held his gaze, voice steady even as the emotion underneath it shook. "The problem is... I can’t tell if you’re building a wall to keep them out"
He paused.
His throat tightened.
"or building it to keep me in."
The room went silent.
Alexander didn’t answer immediately.
And that hesitationnjust that fraction of a second pfelt like the true line in the sand.







