The Heiress Carrying His Heir-Chapter 85 - 86: The corrupt ministers
Elara’s POV
The lines at the distribution point had grown long again, stretching down the street and around the corner. People stood in the sun with their children and their empty baskets, waiting for grain that would not last long enough. I lifted sack after sack, my arms numb now, my back a dull ache that I had stopped noticing. The other volunteers moved beside me, silent with exhaustion.
I was reaching for another sack when something made me look up.
A cart was moving down the main road, loaded with grain. I knew that cart. I had seen it loaded that morning, marked for the northern distribution point. But it was not heading north. It was turning down a side street, moving away from the crowds, away from the people who were waiting.
Something about it snagged my attention. I could not say what. The way it moved too quickly. The way the driver looked back over his shoulder. The way the canvas covering the sacks was pulled tight, like someone did not want anyone to see what was underneath.
I set down the sack I was holding.
"I need water," I said to the volunteer next to me. She nodded without looking up.
I moved away from the tables, away from the lines, away from the crowd. No one watched me go. No one noticed. I pulled my hood forward and walked toward the side street where the cart had disappeared.
The street was narrow, lined with old buildings that had not been kept up. The doors were closed. The windows were dark. I walked quickly, keeping close to the wall, my footsteps soft on the stone.
The cart was stopped at the end of the street. In front of a warehouse. A big one, the doors wide open, men moving in and out with sacks of grain on their shoulders.
I stopped in the shadow of a doorway and watched. 𝓯𝙧𝙚𝒆𝙬𝙚𝒃𝙣𝙤𝒗𝓮𝓵.𝙘𝙤𝙢
The grain was being unloaded quickly. Not the slow, careful work of men who were tired. The quick, efficient work of men who wanted to be done. They moved the sacks from the cart to the warehouse, stacking them in neat rows, covering them with tarps.
I counted. Twelve sacks. Twenty. More.
This was not a storage point. I knew all the storage points. Corvus had gone over them with me, marking them on the map, explaining the routes, the schedules, the security. This warehouse was not on any list.
Two men came out of the warehouse. They were not workers. They wore fine clothes, coats that cost more than most people in this district would see in a year. I knew them immediately.
Lord Ashford. Lord Mercer. Minor lords
I had sat across from them in a few council meetings. They stood in the doorway of the warehouse, watching the sacks being stacked, and they looked satisfied.
I pressed myself deeper into the shadow of the doorway and listened.
"Fourteen this morning," Ashford was saying. His voice was low, but the street was quiet and I could hear every word. "From the northern allocation. The northern point will run short by midday, but by then the crowds will have dispersed. No one will notice."
Mercer nodded. "The southern point is running light too. We can shift some of what we held from yesterday into the northern distribution tomorrow. Keep the shortage going another day, maybe two."
"The price will hold?"
"The price will climb." Mercer smiled. "People will pay. They have no choice. And when they are desperate enough, they will sell what they have to pay for what they need. Land, tools, whatever we want. That is how it works."
I stood in the shadow and let the words settle.
This was where the grain was going. Not to the people waiting in the lines. Not to the hungry children, the tired mothers, the old men who needed medicine more than they needed bread. To a warehouse. To be held until the shortage got worse. To be sold back at prices no one in this district could afford.
This was why the petitions disappeared. This was where the resupplies went. This was the rot running through the system I had been trying to operate as though it were sound.
Ashford was speaking again. "The queen will not notice. She is too busy with her plans, her distributions, her little performances of caring. She will sign whatever we put in front of her. She does not look at the details."
Mercer laughed. "She is young. She wants to help. That is the best kind of ruler. They want to do good, and they do not know how, and so they let people who do know handle everything else."
"Her father was the same."
"Her father was worse. He did not even pretend to care. At least she sends the grain." Mercer gestured at the warehouse. "It makes it easier. She gives, we take. She thinks she is helping. We profit. Everyone gets what they deserve."
I stood in the shadow and felt something cold and clarifying move through me. Not hot fury. Not panic.Just a clean, devastating clarity. Was my father’s reign really bad? How?. Was this part of what he had written in his diary, I didn’t have the time to think about that, there was a pending truth right In front of me.
They had been doing this for years. Before me, before my father, before anyone remembered a time when the grain that was meant for the people actually reached them. The system was not broken. The system was working exactly as it was designed to work. For them.
I thought about the tall girl at the distribution point. She’s young. She doesn’t know what she’s doing. I thought about the round-faced girl, defending me. At least she sent the grain. That’s something. I thought about the people in the lines, standing in the sun with their empty baskets, waiting for food that would not last long enough.
They were right. I did not know what I was doing. I had been trying to operate a system that was built to fail, and I had not even seen it. I had trusted the men who bowed to me. I had signed the papers they put in front of me. I had looked at the maps and the tallies and the neat reports and I had thought I was governing.
I was not governing. I was being managed.
Ashford was walking toward the warehouse door. Mercer followed. The cart was empty now. The workers were covering the last of the sacks with tarps. In a few minutes, the street would be empty again. The grain would be hidden. The shortage would continue. The people in the lines would go home with less than they needed, and they would blame the queen who did not care enough to send enough.
I pulled myself away. Slowly. Deliberately. One step back, then another, until I was deeper in the shadow of the alley.
I watched them for a moment longer. Lord Ashford. Lord Mercer. Their faces, the set of their shoulders, the way they moved. I would remember them. I would remember every detail.
I turned and walked back toward the distribution point.
The streets were crowded again. People moving toward the lines, their baskets empty, their faces tired. I passed through them like a ghost, my hood forward, my hands at my sides. No one looked at me. No one knew.
I reached the distribution point. The volunteers were still working, still lifting, still carrying. The lines were still long. The morning sun was high, the afternoon sun still to come. The work was not done.
I picked up a sack of grain and went back to work.
I lifted. I carried. I passed the sacks to the hands that reached for them. I smiled at the children, nodded at the mothers, said nothing about what I had seen. The grain was light in my hands now. I did not know why.
The men in the warehouse thought I was young. They thought I did not know what I was doing. They thought I would sign whatever they put in front of me, approve whatever they asked for, let them handle everything while I played at being queen.
They were right. I had been doing exactly that. For months, I had been doing exactly that.
But not anymore.
I lifted another sack. Carried it to the table. Passed it to a woman with a small child on her hip. She smiled at me, tired but grateful. I smiled back.
The sun was hot. My arms ached. The lines were long. The grain would run out before the day was over. The men in the warehouse had made sure of that.
I would remember their faces. I would remember the warehouse. I would remember the way they talked about me, about the people, about the grain that should have gone to hungry children and went instead to their private storage.
I would remember.
I picked up another sack and kept working. The day was not over. The work was not done. And there was nothing else I could do, not yet, not here.

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