
The Rise Of Queen Arwen
Chapter 7
Then the world dissolved into silence.
Gasps rippled through the grand hall. The music died mid-note. Servants froze, goblets half-raised. Arwen’s head lolled against Lucien’s shoulder as her body went limp, pale as marble beneath the chandeliers.
“Fetch the healer!” someone cried.
Lucien’s arms tightened around her. “Arwen—Arwen, look at me!” His voice cracked through the noise, raw and unguarded. “Someone help her!”
The guards moved swiftly, lifting her from her chair. Her crown slid askew, glinting under the torchlight before tumbling to the floor with a ringing note that silenced even the whispers.
Queen Aurelia rose slowly. Her expression did not change. “Get her to her chambers,” she said coolly. “At once.”
Lucien gathered Arwen in his arms and strode from the hall, his steps heavy and urgent. Cassian followed close behind, the King and Queen trailing with a retinue of healers and courtiers whose curiosity gleamed sharper than their concern.
The Queen of Ravendale was laid upon her bed, her skin cold and damp beneath the flicker of candlelight. Her maids hovered nearby — Faye trembling, Mira issuing quiet orders, and Liora standing as still as a statue, her eyes sharp and unreadable.
The palace healer bent over her, muttering prayers as he pressed fingers to her wrist. “She’s been poisoned,” he said at last, voice grim. “It’s faint… but deliberate.”
Lucien’s head snapped up. “Poisoned?”
“Yes, Your Highness. The signs are clear — muscle weakness, shallow pulse, pallor.” He reached for his satchel. “We’ll need to draw it out at once.”
King Renard’s expression hardened. “Do what you must. Spare no expense.” He turned to Lucien. “Stay with her. See that the truth of this treachery is uncovered.”
Lucien nodded, jaw tight.
Queen Aurelia lingered near the foot of the bed, her face a portrait of regal composure. “How tragic,” she said softly. “To think the young queen’s constitution so fragile.”
Her words were honey, but her eyes were ice.
“Mother,” Lucien warned.
She raised a delicate brow. “I merely wish her a swift recovery.”
Then, with a faint, knowing smile, she turned and swept from the room.
King Renard followed, issuing curt instructions to the guards. The door closed behind them, leaving the faint scent of incense and dread in their wake.
Only Lucien, Cassian, and Arwen’s handmaidens remained.
Lucien sat on the edge of the bed, his hand enveloping hers. “You’re safe now,” he whispered, voice low and fervent. “I’ll find who did this. I swear it, Arwen.”
Her eyelids fluttered, just enough for him to see a flicker of life behind them. “Lucien…” she murmured faintly, voice slurred.
“I’m here,” he said quickly, leaning closer. “Rest. I won’t leave you.”
But when the healer insisted she needed quiet, he hesitated — then pressed a kiss to her hand and rose. “I’ll have answers before morning.”
Cassian’s gaze followed him as he left, something unreadable passing behind his eyes. When the door closed again, the room exhaled. Silence hung heavy — until Liora crossed to the door and turned the key in the lock.
The click echoed like a confession.
Cassian stepped closer to the bed. “How do you feel, Majesty?”
Arwen opened her eyes fully now, her breathing steady though her voice was still soft. “Weak,” she said. “But not dying.”
Cassian frowned. “Then…?”
Liora let out a quiet laugh. “A drop of medicine,” she said lightly. “Enough to still her limbs and pale her skin. The act had to feel real.”
Cassian’s brows rose in astonishment, then admiration. “You planned this?”
“Adapted,” Arwen said, sitting up slowly. “Cassian warned me in time.” Her gaze found him — steady, unwavering. “And for that, I owe you my life.”
He smiled faintly, though there was warmth in his eyes that startled her. “A fair trade. You’ve given me a reason to care who wears Valoria’s crown.”
Faye let out a shaky breath, laughter trembling at its edge. Mira smiled in relief, pressing a hand to her chest. “For a moment, I thought—”
“You thought right,” Arwen said quietly. “Had Cassian been wrong, I’d be dead.”
Cassian inclined his head. “Then perhaps you’ll forgive the intrusion.”
She met his gaze, something unreadable flickering behind hers. “You’ve earned that forgiveness — and my thanks.”
He looked at her for a long moment before speaking again, his voice softer now. “Anytime, Majesty.”
The way he said it — low, sincere — made something stir in her chest. She looked away first.
He straightened, nodding to her maidens. “Rest well, then. I’ll make certain no one disturbs you tonight.”
When the door closed behind him, silence returned — but it was not empty.
Mira leaned against the wall, exhaling. “He’s brave,” she said. “And bold.”
Liora smirked. “And smitten.”
Faye’s giggle broke the tension like sunlight through smoke. “You saw how he looked at her.”
Arwen shot them a glare — though her cheeks coloured faintly. “Enough.”
Liora only grinned wider. “Oh, he likes you, Majesty. A bastard with a heart and a sword — that’s dangerous.”
Arwen turned away, smoothing the coverlet with careful fingers. “He was doing his duty. Nothing more.”
“Of course,” Mira teased. “And the blush is purely diplomatic.”
That earned a small, reluctant laugh from Arwen herself. “You forget who you serve,” she murmured — though there was affection in her tone.
The laughter faded. What lingered was resolve.
Arwen rose and crossed to the window. Outside, the city glittered beneath the moon — beautiful, treacherous, unaware. Her reflection looked back at her in the glass, pale but unbroken.
“They’ve made their move,” she said softly. “Now I must make mine.”
Her maidens fell silent behind her.
“They’ll not stop until I’m buried,” she continued, her voice low, calm. “If I am to survive this court, I’ll need allies who can stand against the Queen herself.”
Mira stepped forward. “Lucien?”
Arwen’s gaze hardened. “Tomorrow, I’ll speak to him. Whatever games Aurelia plays — I’ll end them before they end me.”
Outside, thunder rolled faintly over the sea, as if the gods themselves stirred in warning.
And in the quiet that followed, Arwen Valehart, the hidden Queen of Ravendale, smiled — a small, dangerous thing.
“Let the next move be mine.”
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