She did not move when he turned to face her.
Not at first.
The fog curled between them like breath not yet exhaled. And yet, despite the chill, she felt heat. A slow-blooming ember of something—
not anger. No, anger was familiar, hers to wield.
This was insult.
Her long ears flicked once—an unconscious twitch, quick and sharp, betraying her tension. She blinked, once. Slowly. Regal even in her disbelief.
Dainty…
she echoed, the word landing like a shard on her tongue.
Zat is what you see?
Not sovereign. Not flame. Not awe.
Dainty.
She stepped forward in light, calculated steps, hooves landing with surgical grace despite the unfamiliar terrain. Her neck arched slightly, a habitual gesture of dignity that now mimicked challenge in this new form of hers. She lifted her chin, exposing the delicate line of her throat, not in trust, but in silent defiance.
He did not flinch. Merely spoke once more with a voice like crumbling wood:
"Eat. Or it will remember your bones first."
Let it remember, then.
Her voice was steady now, but cool—too cool.
Let it remember ze perfume of a bloodline zat ruled suns.
The indignity struck like cold water.
Her muscles tensed. She felt her hind legs shift—a subtle, instinctive motion, a step backward disguised as poise. Her tail flicked once. Sharp. Irritated. It was the kind of tell she would’ve punished in a courtier. She felt it now in herself.
For a long moment, she only watched him—this creature made of ruin and dusk, one antler like a broken crown curved against the sky. He did not fear her. Did not marvel. Did not kneel.
And neither did the trees.
Neither did the fog.
Neither did the world.
Her muscles tensed. She felt her hind legs shift—a subtle, instinctive motion, a step backward disguised as poise. Her tail flicked once. Sharp. Irritated. It was the kind of tell she would’ve punished in a courtier. She felt it now in herself.
"This place… it will not bow," she thought.
"Not because it defies me. But because it does not know me. Not yet."
There had been a time when her name alone parted rooms. When courtiers adjusted their posture to mirror hers. When light itself bent around her figure in the mirrored halls of Cyrelienne.
Here, the trees did not whisper. The air did not shift.
This forest did not care what she had been.
It would not fawn. It would not flatter.
Not unless she
made it.
Her head dipped—not in humility, but calculation. Neck slow and curved, like a dancer descending into the bow that precedes a killing act. Her hooves parted frostbitten grass. The first bite was small. Reluctant. She chewed slowly, ears angled toward him still, like blades still half-unsheathed.
It tasted like mourning.
Zis world… it is not ruled,
she said softly, bitterly.
It devours.
She straightened again, this time with steadier grace. Her flanks tightened beneath her gilded coat and her gaze no longer begged for recognition.
"
Then let it learn to choke on me."