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The Heiress Carrying His Heir-Chapter 86 - 87: He spoke
Elara’s pov
The afternoon faded into evening, and the work did not stop.
The lines grew shorter. The grain ran out. The volunteers packed up the tables and counted what was left and told the last people waiting that there would be more tomorrow. I helped stack the empty sacks. I carried the last of the supplies. I moved through the motions like I had been doing it my whole life.
The girls I had been working with were packing up near me. We had been together all day, lifting and carrying and passing grain to the hands that reached for us. They had accepted me without question, the way strangers do when shared labour creates the shorthand of acquaintance. I had given them a name that was not mine. They had given me theirs. It was surprisingly, almost painfully, uncomplicated.
One of them was tying off the last sack.
"Are you coming tonight?" she asked.
I looked up. "Tonight?"
"The meeting." She pulled her shawl tighter against the evening cold. "The Rendered. There’s a gathering in the lower district. Word passed through the usual channels. The Voice is speaking."
She said it the way people say things that are simply part of daily life. Not conspiratorial. Not frightened. Normal. Like she was telling me about a market day or a festival. You should come, she said. Everyone’s going.
I stood there with a sack of grain in my hands and felt the world shift slightly beneath my feet.
The Voice. The leader of The Rendered.
Everyone’s going.
I thought about Corvus. About the palace. About the investigation still running its course two corridors from my empty chambers. About every sensible reason to go back now, quietly, before anyone realized I was gone.
"Why not," I said.
She smiled. "Good. We’re leaving now. Come with us."
The lower district was dark by the time we reached it.
The streets were narrow, the buildings close together, the windows dark. But there was a current moving through the darkness, a flow of people walking the same direction, quietly, purposefully. We moved with them. No words. No torches. Just the sound of footsteps on stone.
The building was a warehouse, or maybe an old hall, something that should not hold this many people but did. The doors were open. The space inside was large and dark, lit only by candles at the front, and it was packed. People standing shoulder to shoulder, pressed together, the heat of bodies filling the space.
I moved through the crowd, keeping my hood forward, keeping my face down. No one looked at me. No one cared. They were all watching the front of the room, where a single figure stood waiting.
The crowd was not what I expected. Not what the council’s reports described. They were not desperate. Not dangerous. Ordinary. Merchants and labourers and young mothers with children on their hips. Old men leaning on sticks. The girls I had worked with all day, standing near the front, their faces turned toward the stage.
They were packed together with the particular energy of people who have been given permission to hope for something.
And then the Voice spoke.
He arrived without theatre. Or rather, his theatre was so controlled it felt like the absence of it. He walked onto the platform slowly, deliberately, and the room shifted. The murmuring stopped. The crowd stilled. All the attention in that packed space focused on one figure in a mask.
The mask was plain. Dark cloth, no features, no expression. It covered his face completely, left nothing to read. The voice that came from behind it was altered, metallic, flattened into something that could have belonged to anyone. A man. Maybe young. Maybe old. Impossible to tell. I couldn’t really see his form.
I expected anger. I expected rhetoric designed to frighten people into action, the kind of speeches the council warned about, the kind that turned crowds into mobs.
What I got was something else entirely.
He was calm. His voice was steady, measured, the voice of someone who had thought about every word before he spoke it
I stood in the crowd and listened.
He was not saying anything I had not heard that day. The woman with the sick son, the old man with the water, the girl waiting for her brother,bhey had told me the same things, in their own words, in their own voices. But hearing it from the platform, in this packed room, with all these people listening, it was different. It was not just one story. It was all of them, together, the weight of a year of silence pressing down on everyone in the room.
He talked about what was broken. The system that took grain from the hungry and put it in private warehouses. The council that approved funding for repairs and watched the money disappear. The petitions that went to the palace and were filed and forgotten.
He talked about how it could be rebuilt. Not vague promises, not easy answers. Specifics. A water system that worked. Grain that reached the people who needed it. A government that answered when its people called. 𝚏𝕣𝕖𝚎𝚠𝚎𝚋𝚗𝐨𝐯𝕖𝕝.𝕔𝐨𝕞
He was calm in a way that was more unsettling than fury would have been. Fury you could dismiss. Fury you could point to and say, this is a man who wants to tear things down. This was something else. This was a man who had thought about how to build something better, and the room knew it, and I was standing inside that knowledge with nowhere to put it.
I stood alone in the crowd and listened and found, with a feeling I had no clean name for, that I had no argument to make against him.
Not because he was right about everything. He was not. He did not know about the water reports I had approved that morning, the funding I had authorized, the repairs that would start next week. He did not know about the grain distribution, the volunteers, the queen who had spent the day lifting sacks until her arms gave out.
But he was right about enough. The water channels had been broken for a year. The petitions had disappeared. The grain had been stolen. And he had noticed, and I had not, and the room was full of people who had noticed too.
He finished speaking. The room was quiet for a moment. Then the crowd began to move, shifting, murmuring, the energy of the meeting dissolving back into ordinary bodies in ordinary space.
Who is he.
The question sat quiet and persistent in my chest while the crowd moved around me. I watched the platform, the mask, the way he held himself. The particular stillness he had between sentences, the stillness of someone entirely unbothered by being watched.
I did not realize the meeting had ended until the crowd began to carry me toward the door.
I let myself be carried out with it, back into the cold night air. The street was dark, the crowd dispersing, people melting back into the city they had come from. I stood alone in the alley for a moment, watching them go.
The Voice’s words were still turning in my mind, like something I could not put down. The water channels. The grain. The system that was built to fail. He had named it all, and I had no answer for it, and the room had known.
Find out who he is.
The thought was directed at no one, because there was no one with me. Just me and the dark street and my hand pressed flat against my stomach and the knowledge that tomorrow everything had to change.
The palace was dark when I reached it. The gate I had slipped through that morning was still unguarded, the servant corridors empty, the long walk back to my chambers uninterrupted. No one saw me. No one knew I had been gone.
I closed the door behind me and stood in the dark of my own room, my hands raw, my arms aching, my head full of the Voice’s words.
I should have felt something. Relief, maybe, that I had not been caught. Fury at the men in the warehouse. Fear at what I had done, where I had gone, what I had heard.
Instead, I just felt tired. The kind of tired that went deeper than my arms, deeper than my back, deeper than the long day of work. The kind of tired that settled in your bones and stayed there.
I thought about the water channels. The grain. The petitions that had been sent and never answered. The men in the warehouse, counting their sacks, laughing about the queen who did not know what she was doing.
I thought about the Voice. The calm voice behind the mask. The way he had named the rot in the system, precisely, specifically, like someone who had been living inside it for a long time.
I thought about the crowd. The way they had listened.. The way they had looked at him like he was giving them something they had been waiting for.
I stood in the dark with my hand on my stomach and the Voice’s words still turning in my mind.
Find out who he is.







