The Heiress Carrying His Heir-Chapter 57 - 58: Transition
Elara’s POV
I stood at the window and watched Thorin’s procession disappear through the palace gates. The last horse, the last guard, the last flag of Valerium fading into the distance.
Gone.
One problem solved.
I turned from the window. The chamber was still full of people.
And my council. Still here. Still watching. Still waiting to see what I would do next.
Lord Malakor stood near the table, speaking in low tones with Lord Petrov. He looked pleased. Satisfied. Like a cat who had caught a mouse and was deciding how to play with it.
He probably thought this was his moment. His opportunity to reassert influence after the Thorin business. L
He was wrong.
My voice carried across the chamber, cutting through the noise like a knife.
"Council members. Remain here. We have matters to discuss."
The room went still.
Malakor looked up, surprise crossing his face. Petrov frowned. Other advisors exchanged glances, trying to read each other’s thoughts.
I walked back to the table. I did not retake my seat at the head. Instead, I stood at the end, facing them all. Let them see me standing. Let them understand that this was not a negotiation. This was not a discussion. This was me telling them how things would be from now on.
Lord Malakor cleared his throat. "Your Majesty, if this is about damage control with king Thorin, I assure you, we can manage–"
"It is not about king Thorin." I cut him off. "It is about several immediate changes to palace operations and council structure."
The room went even quieter. Someone stopped breathing. I could feel it.
I did not wait for them to sit. Did not wait for pleasantries. Did not wait for anyone to gather themselves or prepare their arguments.
"First." I paused. Let the silence stretch. "As you may have heard or not, I have dismissed Captain Kaelen from his position as my personal guard."
A ripple of surprise went through the room. Some of them had not heard. Some of them were hearing it for the first time.
Malakor’s expression shifted to something like satisfaction.
"I require a new captain of my personal guard." I turned to Lord Corvus. He was younger than most here. Sharp. Observant. He had led the investigation into Valerium that gave me the information I needed when everyone else was feeding me lies and half-truths. "Lord Corvus, I would appreciate your recommendations for candidates. Impeccable records. No... complicated loyalties."
Corvus looked surprised. Pleased, but trying not to show it "Of course, Your Majesty. I will prepare a list by tomorrow."
"Thank you."
I turned back to the group. Let my gaze move slowly, deliberately, across each face. Let them feel the weight of my attention. Let them wonder who would be next.
"Second." I stopped at Malakor. Held his eyes. "I have a significant assignment for you, Lord Malakor."
He straightened. I could see it in his face, the expectation. The anticipation. He thought I was going to reward him. Thank him for his years of service. Give him some honor, some title, some recognition that would cement his place at the center of power.
He had no idea what was coming.
"As you know," I continued, "my father’s campaigns in the northern territories resulted in the acquisition of substantial lands. These territories have been poorly integrated into Dravara’s administrative structure. They require oversight. Development. Proper governance."
I paused. Let the words sink in.
"I am assigning you as Governor of the Northern Territories. You will oversee their integration, establish proper tax collection, develop infrastructure, and report directly to the crown on their progress."
The room went absolutely silent.
You could have heard a pin drop. You could have heard hearts stop beating. You could have heard the dust settling on the furniture.
Malakor’s face drained of color. All that satisfaction, that anticipation, that smug certainty, gone. Replaced by shock. By disbelief. By the first stirrings of fury.
"Your Majesty." His voice was careful. Controlled. But I could hear the edge underneath, the sharpness he was trying to hide. "I serve on your council. My place is here, advising you on matters of state. The northern territories are–"
"Are vital to Dravara’s future prosperity." I cut him off smoothly. "They require someone of your skill and dedication. Someone with decades of administrative experience. Someone who can be trusted to handle a task of this importance."
I was giving him exactly what he had always claimed to want, recognition of his value. And there was nothing he could say against it without admitting that he did not actually care about serving the kingdom, only about maintaining his power and position close to the throne.
"But Your Majesty." His composure was cracking. I could see it in the tightness around his mouth, the way his hands gripped the edge of the table, the slight tremor in his voice. "My role here. The council. The day-to-day governance of the realm. I cannot simply–"
"Will be managed." My voice was firm. "Lord Corvus will assume your position as Chief Advisor to the Crown. As he showed his capability by digging into Valerium"
The shock rippled through the room like a wave crashing on shore.
Corvus himself looked stunned. His mouth opened. Closed. Opened again. No words came out. He looked around the room as if checking that this was real, that he had heard correctly.
Other council members exchanged glances. Some looked uncomfortable, shifting their weight from foot to foot. Others were watching carefully, calculating what this meant for their own positions, their own futures, their own plans.
But it was Malakor’s reaction I was watching.
He turned to Corvus. And the look on his face, it was not just surprise. It was not just anger.
It was betrayal.
His eyes narrowed. His jaw tightened. He looked at Corvus like he was seeing him for the first time. Like he was trying to understand how this had happened, how this man, this younger man, this man who had sat quietly through years of meetings, this man who had never challenged him openly, could have done this behind his back.
"I was not aware that Lord Corvus had earned such... confidence from the crown," Malakor said slowly. His voice was controlled, but barely. You could hear the effort it took to keep it steady. "When did you conduct this investigation into Valerium, Corvus? I do not recall it being discussed by this council."
Corvus shifted where he stood. "The queen requested–"
"I requested it." I cut in smoothly. "Privately. As is my right."
Malakor turned back to me. "Your Majesty, with respect, I was not informed of any such investigation. As Chief Advisor, I should have been–"
"You should have been what?" I raised an eyebrow. "Told? Consulted? Given the opportunity to shape the findings to suit your purposes?"
"I should have been aware of intelligence gathering regarding a foreign power. That is standard protocol. That is how things have always been done."
"Things change."
The words hung in the air between us.
Malakor’s face tightened. "Your Majesty, I am not questioning your right to seek information. But to conduct an investigation without informing your Chief Advisor–"
"I do not owe you an explanation, Lord Malakor." My voice was ice now. Cold. Sharp. Unforgiving. "I am the queen. When I require information, I am entitled to seek it through whatever channels I deem appropriate. Lord Corvus conducted that investigation because I asked him to. Because I trusted him to find truth rather than tell me what others wanted me to hear."
I paused. Let him feel the weight of my words. Let them settle on him like stones.
"You were not informed because I chose not to inform you. That is my right. That is my authority. And if you have questions about why I felt the need to seek information outside the usual channels, perhaps you should consider your own actions over the past months."
The accusation hung there, unspoken but understood.
You tried to control me. You tried to force me into a marriage I did not want. You tried to make decisions in my name without my consent. You cannot be trusted.
Malakor’s face went through several emotions in quick succession. Shock. Anger. Something that might have been fear, quickly hidden behind a mask of control.
He looked at Corvus again. That look, it was ugly. Full of promise. Full of threat. It said, I will remember this. I will not forget. I will make you pay.
"I see," he said quietly. "I see how it is."
I did not respond to that. Instead, I looked around the table, meeting each pair of eyes in turn. I let them see that I was not afraid. I let them see that I was in control.
"Are there any other objections?"
Silence.
The council members were still processing, still calculating what this meant for their own positions.
No one spoke. No one moved.
"Excellent." I turned back to Malakor. "Lord Malakor, you will have one week to transition your responsibilities and prepare for departure to the northern territories. My staff will provide you with the necessary documents and resources."
He said nothing. Just stared at me with eyes full of fury and something else, calculation. He was already planning. Already scheming. Already trying to figure out how to turn this back in his favor.







