Chapter 93: The Queen Who Listened
Once, when the sky forgot how to be blue and wore a long white blanket - and never took it off, there was a queen who listened.
Her castle was high, with long quiet hallways. Children lived there. They did not laugh much. In the mornings and nights they woke with heavy hearts and sore hands. Some forgot their own names for a little while. Some stared at the floor and tugged their sleeves until the threads came loose. When they tried to play, the game broke first. When they tried to sing, the song fell down.
The queen went from room to room and listened.
"Give me your bad" she said, and the children did, because they were tired.
She put her hand over every small heart. The malice came like smoke. Not all of it, though. She breathed them in, and they stayed. The angry, the scared, the lonely, the sore, the guilt - the parts that bite and bite again - she kept them. When she stood, her shoulders bent a little, as if she were carrying weights no one else could see.
The children’s hands stopped shaking. A few games lasted until supper. A few songs made it to the last note.
But the seeds of Evil always sprout.
The bad came back, thicker. It ran faster than the queen could walk.
One night she made a hard choice.
She went to each bed again. She pressed two fingers to each forehead. "Give me all of it, and rest." she told the thoughts. "Rest and do not wake until the hurt is gone."
The children’s minds curled up like cursed kittens and slept in the queen’s keeping.
In the morning there was no crying. No shaking. No breaking. The children woke up and did not ask Why. They never tripped over their own thoughts, because their thoughts were safe and quiet - inside the queen.
The house became very neat. Games were perfect and silent. The halls did not echo with questions anymore.
The queen grew heavy. Every bad feeling lived in her now. Every fear, every ache, every spark of rage. She carried the sharp and the cold for all of them. Her plain crown pressed harder each day, as if it had thorns on the inside. When she spoke, her words were gentle and tired. When she smiled, it was small, so it wouldn’t crack.
The children went and ran and did not cry. Mindless. The queen sat very straight so nothing would fall. She kept everything sharp and quiet inside herself, because someone had to, and she had chosen.
Some whispered her name. Others wrote it like this, carefully, as if setting small stones in a line: ╎ᓭ𝙹ꖎ↸ᒷ.
They say she is still listening. They say the children are very fast. And very strong. They say the halls are very quiet. And they say she keeps everything on herself.
And all that was left from the evil, the crying, the minds - was the Queen, silently weeping on her throne.
Solomon’s voice stopped. The great, low room held his last word the way a hand holds a coin, feeling both sides before letting it go.
They were still in the chamber beneath the Council - stalactites above like a patient sky of stone, and row on row of human-high columns below, each one a different shade of impure luminite. The mineral had been too flawed for engines, too stubborn for weapons, a whisper of Eon caught in rock, touch woke its shy glow. It was beautiful and ruinously expensive. The stalactites were the mountain’s own work. The columns were carved by hands that understood debt.
Raizen realized he’d been leaning forward like a child at a hearth. He straightened, and the air pressed gently on the hinge of his jaw as if reminding him where he was.
"You memorized it?" he said.
Solomon nodded once. "It was on another fragment," he said. "We found it years ago near the old laboratory - the one Eon itself seallowed." A glance, quick and knowing; the ruined place where Raizen had first learned what Eon could sing and what it could burn. The place where Kori showed him the broken power of the world. "The reader barely worked. The voices were broken." He tapped his temple. "I kept the parts that didn’t break when you carry them."
Raizen’s gaze drifted along the close columns. Names. Weapons cut in small, stubborn lines. Dates that had stopped. The glow that woke where Solomon brushed a fingertip, then cooled when he passed. A room that remembered.
"What do you think it is?" Raizen asked. "A fable? A warning?"
Solomon’s mouth angled, unreadable. "A children’s tale" he said. "On paper. On a chip. In a voice that never learned how to lie well. No mention of kingdoms we know. No names like ours." His eyes flicked up to the stalactites, then down again. "It might just mean exactly what it says: a queen who took pain so children could stand up without shaking."
"And if it doesn’t...?" Raizen asked the obvious.
"Then it means something darker" Solomon said, tone as even as a level. "I don’t know which." He let himself breathe out. "Not many know it, but I wanted you to hear it... Before you go into battle."
The word rang a small bell inside Raizen’s chest. "Go into... battle?"
"Soon" Solomon said. Nothing more. The boy who ruled a city of metal and light did not add poetry to the calendar.
They stood with it. The room did the heavy lifting; it always had. When Solomon moved again, it was not to teach or to argue. It was to walk - slowly - between columns that had cost more than money.
They didn’t talk. They didn’t need to. Silence did everything.
They walked. The chamber replied in small ways - light here, a faint mineral scent there, a whisper of grit under boot.
The tale tugged at the edges of Raizen’s thinking, rearranged the furniture. A queen with a sharp crown, taking over... What others couldn’t. Minds taken and kept safe, so the hurt was gone. Halls that were quiet because questions slept. It sounded like mercy. It sounded like something else if you held it to the light too long. He didn’t know which side of the coin to call.
"What if the story isn’t about a human queen at all?" he asked before he could stop himself. "What if the names were always wrong, and we’ve been talking about something that isn’t us like it is?" He waited for the rebuke that never came.
Solomon’s hands, as careful as a conservator’s, moved along another line of stone. "Then we will learn that later" he said. "And do the work that learning asks. Until then, I let it be what it says it is. A queen who took it all so the little ones wouldn’t break."
They reached a point where the stalactites above came down lower, as if listening. The light that woke under Solomon’s touch reflected back in a hundred soft glints. Raizen stood in it and let the quiet get inside his bones.
"You asked me what I wanted," he said at last. His voice didn’t have to be loud; the room would carry it. "I said kill the Nyxes. Yes, I meant it." He looked at the stone in front of him the way you look at someone who is about to tell you a hard truth. "But that’s not a plan. It’s a direction. So here is the part you didn’t ask for: I don’t care if I die doing it. If I can break a path anyone else can walk - if I can take one bite out of the dark and leave the teeth behind for the next mouth - then I go down knowing I bought someone a safer morning." He breathed, slow. "I’m not eager to die. I just don’t intend to let fear write the terms."
He expected a lecture. He expected the kind of gentle cruelty leaders learn: the one where they replace your vow with a speech about caution and call it care.
Solomon didn’t do that. He stepped close enough that their shoulders could have touched if either of them had forgotten who they were in public. A hand settled, light as a chord, at the top of Raizen’s arm - not a command, not a weight; a note.
"Courage is good" he said, almost conversational. "Messy is expensive." His gaze traveled over the columns as if they were a ledger. "I would like fewer names in stone. I would like fewer invoices from quarries. If you can build what you were trying to build when you redecorated my test room..." The corner of his mouth acknowledged a smile without hiring it. "If you can arrive where you intend to arrive, and bring others along, and leave them standing at the end - then yes. Go break paths. And I’ll pay for the damage earlier."
Raizen let out a breath he hadn’t noticed he’d been saving. The boy beside him was a kid, a ruler, a brother to a fallen legend, a leader to souls that left too early, and others that still want to make the world a safer place - with the price of their very lives.
"Soon" Solomon repeated, like a weather report he trusted. "Rest while you can. Your friends will need you loud and clean."
The elevator waited at the far wall, a glass box in a cave of names and memories - of death. They walked toward it; their steps had the right sound. At the edge of the car, Raizen stopped. He turned back and let his eyes find the cluster again - the three circles; the worn blade; the place where touch had smoothed the chisel’s stutter. He didn’t speak. He didn’t have to. He set his palm an inch from the nearest face. A faint sheen rose under the stone’s skin, answered and gone.
Solomon watched without staring. When Raizen stepped into the elevator, the doors sighed shut.
They rose. Numbers appeared again, then chose modesty to rise. Air warmed. The hum of the underworks bled into the finer noises of a city that had convinced itself it was only alive because people kept telling it so.
"Ruler" Raizen said, eyes on the reflected stalactites fading from the glass.
"Yes?" Solomon’s tone suggested a boy who had learned to fit answers into their boxes.
"If the tale is only a tale" Raizen said, "it still matters." The reflection of his mouth found a shape that might be called a smile if you were generous. "And if it isn’t, we’re late."
Solomon’s expression didn’t change. His eyes did. "We are always late" he said. The doors opened, and Neoshima’s light, clean and human-made, met them. "That’s we need men like you. So try to make up the difference."
They stepped into the hallway above the world. Somewhere up here there were people whose jobs were to file edges off difficult decisions. Somewhere below, stone teeth listened to names and glowed when someone remembered to touch them.
Solomon went left toward obligations. Raizen stood a heartbeat longer and then went right - toward a lab that smelled like warm metal and coffee and arguments about safety, toward a rig that could punch through armor and possibly spines, toward friends who would call him an idiot and then stand in front of cars so he didn’t have to.
As the sound of the city folded back around him, he held the tale in his head the way the boy in white had - word for word, like a map you might need at speed. A queen with a crown. Children who ran fast and didn’t ask why. Halls that were very quiet. Hurt gathered into one place so the little ones wouldn’t break.
He didn’t know what it meant yet. He didn’t need to.
He had work to do.