He finally, after a long, profound moment of silent, reverent admiration, looked at them. “It is a masterpiece,” he said, and the words were not a simple compliment; they were a benediction, a pronouncement from the very god whose gospel they had just, so magnificently, made manifest. “It is the beginning of a new age.” He then, with the practiced, familiar, and deeply, profoundly ingrained muscle memory of a soldier who had spent a lifetime on the range, raised the rifle to his shoulder. He did not aim at a target. He simply sighted down the barrel, his finger resting lightly on the trigger, and he felt the world… settle. The chaos of his life, the political intrigues, the emotional minefields, the looming, apocalyptic threat of a continental war… it all faded away. In that moment, there was only the rifle, the clear, perfect, and logical line of the sight, and the simple, absolute, and beautiful certainty of its purpose. He was a warrior. He was an engineer. He was a king. But here, in this room, with this beautiful, terrible, and utterly perfect instrument of death in his hands, he was, for the first time in a very, very long time, simply, and completely, and absolutely, himself. He lowered the rifle, a slow, predatory, and deeply, profoundly satisfied smile on his lips. “Gentlemen,” he said, his gaze including the brilliant, pragmatic, and now utterly indispensable Lyra in that masculine title. “And lady. We have work to do. We have just built the first, beautiful note in a new and very, very loud symphony of change. Now… it is time we build the orchestra.” The age of quiet, subtle, and alchemical revolution was over. The age of loud, beautiful, and industrial-scale war had just, with a quiet, satisfying, and metallic click, begun. In a rare, and perhaps foolishly optimistic, attempt at a moment of peace, Lloyd had decided to host a small, informal tea party in the estate’s main garden. The official, plausible reason was to allow the esteemed Princess Amina to enjoy the unique, rugged beauty of the northern flora. The true, and far more desperate, reason was to try and manage the three, beautiful, powerful, and utterly volatile storms that had now become a permanent, and deeply, profoundly complicated, fixture in his life. The scene was a masterpiece of tense, and almost comically awkward, social diplomacy. He sat at a small, white, ironwork table, a man on a very, very small island, surrounded by a churning, treacherous sea of feminine power. On his right sat Princess Amina, a vision of serene, regal grace. She was the calm, quiet, and deeply, profoundly dangerous eye of the hurricane. She sipped her tea, her expression one of polite, academic interest, but her obsidian eyes, sharp and intelligent, missed nothing. She was a grandmaster, observing the chaotic, unpredictable moves on the board with a quiet, analytical amusement. On his left sat Faria Kruts, a living, breathing inferno of barely suppressed, passionate energy. She was a storm of a different, and far more volatile, kind. She was not sipping her tea; she was attacking it, her movements sharp, jerky, a testament to the raw, turbulent emotions that were churning just beneath her beautiful, composed facade. She was a volcano, and he was sitting, with a very polite, and very strained, smile, directly in its shadow. And across from him, serving the tea with a quiet, efficient, and almost invisible grace, was Jasmin, his first, and most loyal, soldier. She was the ghost at this strange, chaotic feast, a silent, watchful presence whose loyalty was a quiet, unshakeable anchor in this sea of royal and aristocratic turmoil. The conversation, such as it was, was a masterclass in polite, and utterly meaningless, courtly chatter. Amina would ask a sharp, insightful question about the political implications of a new trade route. Faria would counter with a passionate, and deeply, profoundly sarcastic, observation on the aesthetic failings of northern architecture. And Lloyd… Lloyd would simply try to keep the peace, to act as a buffer, a referee, in a game whose rules he did not understand and whose stakes were, he was beginning to suspect, his own sanity. It was into this delicate, and deeply, profoundly unstable, political and emotional ecosystem that a new, and even more chaotic, variable was about to be introduced. The voice was a familiar, cool, and beautifully, precisely cutting instrument that shattered the fragile, tense peace of the tea party like a pane of thin ice. Lloyd looked up, and his heart, which had already been performing a series of complex, stress-induced acrobatics, performed a new, and particularly violent, flip. His sister, Jothi, stood at the edge of the garden, a solitary, and deeply, profoundly intimidating, figure. She was no longer the angry, resentful girl who had so contemptuously dismissed him at the family summit. The time away, the brutal, tempering crucible of the Azure Shield Tournament, had changed her. The old, raw contempt in her eyes had been replaced by a new, and far more unnerving, kind of light. A wary, cool, and deeply, profoundly analytical curiosity. She was no longer just his sister; she was an assessor, a fellow player in the Great Game, and she was here, it seemed, to gauge the true, and deeply, profoundly confusing, nature of her strange, and suddenly very, very interesting, older brother. The strained, polite introductions were a new, and even more awkward, kind of social torture. He introduced the fiery, southern artist. He introduced the serene, northern princess. And he watched as his sister, with her own brand of icy, southern (by way of her mother) grace, met them both with a cool, polite, and utterly unreadable neutrality. After the perfunctory, and deeply, profoundly uncomfortable, pleasantries had been exchanged, Jothi turned her full, undivided, and deeply, profoundly unsettling, attention to him. Her expression was a complex, and deeply, profoundly irritating, mixture of a long-suffering sibling’s annoyance and a genuine, and very real, strategic concern. “Lloyd,” she began, her voice a low, confidential, and deeply, profoundly ominous instrument. “We need to talk. About Princess Isabella.” Lloyd felt a new, and very, very cold, wave of dread wash over him. Isabella. The one storm he had, for a brief, beautiful moment, actually forgotten about. “She has become… obsessed,” Jothi continued, her voice a low, frustrated whisper. “With a new, and utterly, magnificently, and profoundly dangerous, theory.” She leaned forward, and her next words were a hammer blow to the fragile, precarious, and now utterly, completely, and absolutely doomed peace of his afternoon. “She has become completely, and unshakeably, convinced that our house, that our father, has a secret. A hidden, third child. A powerful, brilliant, and warrior-born son, who was trained in the deepest, darkest shadows of the estate, while you… you were presented to the world as a harmless, mediocre, and utterly, completely, and absolutely useless failure.” The words were a brutal, casual, and deeply, profoundly sisterly, insult. But it was the theory itself that sent a jolt of pure, unadulterated, and ice-cold fear through Lloyd’s very soul. Lloyd’s blood, which had been a calm, steady river, turned to a frantic, icy torrent in his veins. The world, which had been a complex, but manageable, juggling act of three powerful women, had just had a fourth, and perhaps the most dangerously volatile, grenade tossed into the mix. Isabella. And her insane, beautiful, and terrifyingly, dangerously accurate, in its own flawed, logical way, conspiracy theory. He maintained his calm, polite, and now utterly, completely, and absolutely fraudulent facade. He even managed a small, amused, and deeply, profoundly strained, laugh. “A secret brother?” he said, his voice a masterpiece of light, dismissive amusement. “Jothi, that is the most ridiculous thing I have ever heard. Where in the seven hells did she get such a preposterous idea?” Jothi’s gaze was sharp, analytical, a scalpel that was trying to dissect the very truth of his soul. “From you, you idiot,” she hissed, her voice a low, furious whisper. “Or at least, from the stories about you. Or rather, the stories about the other you.” She leaned even closer, her voice dropping to a near-inaudible, and deeply, profoundly ominous, murmur. “The White Mask.” Content orıginally comes from 𝔫𝔬𝔳𝔢𝔩⚫𝔣𝔦𝔯𝔢⚫𝔫𝔢𝔱 The name, his secret identity, his perfect, anonymous tool of justice and chaos, spoken aloud in the bright, cheerful, and now utterly, completely, and absolutely unsafe sunlight of his own garden, was a physical blow. “She was there,” Jothi continued, her voice a relentless, logical, and deeply, profoundly frustrating instrument of his own impending doom. “She saw the Curse Knight. She saw the White Mask appear. She saw him command a demon of fire. She saw a level of power, of control, of a terrifying, absolute will, that she has never seen before. A power that, by all logical, rational, and verifiable accounts, you, my dear, disappointing brother, should not, and could not, possibly possess.” He could see the flawless, beautiful, and utterly, completely, and absolutely incorrect logic of Isabella’s theory. She had seen an impossible power. She knew he was, supposedly, a powerless failure. Therefore, the power could not belong to him. It had to belong to another. A secret. A ghost. A brother. She was hunting his secret identity. And while she was looking for the wrong man, she was digging in exactly the right, and very, very dangerous, place.