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Ember Crown of Promise
Ember Crown of Promise
Penulis: Mira Elion

The Bell of Saint Varyn

Penulis: Mira Elion
last update Terakhir Diperbarui: 2026-01-15 21:01:11

The bell in Saint Varyn’s tower rang the way bad news always did. Slowly, deliberately, and without apology.

Alina of Brackenmere hovered around the edge of the herb garden, her fingers still wrapped around a stem of basil. The leaves were warm from the sun, their scent sharp and clean, but the sound of the bell cut through everything else. It moved over the palace walls and into the city beyond, heavy enough to settle in her chest.

Three tolls.

Not a celebration. Not a funeral.

A summons.

She did not need anyone to tell her what that meant.

Beyond the low stone wall, the palace rose in pale tiers, its windows catching the morning light like watchful eyes. From a distance, it looked strong. Up close, it always felt tired. The banners were clean and the courtyards swept, yet something unseen weighed the air. The kingdom felt stretched thin, as though it had been holding its breath for years and was running out of air.

Beside her, Mara clicked her tongue softly.

“They rang it for you,” the older woman said.

Alina tightened her grip on the basil. “They ring it for everyone.”

Mara shook her head. Her hands were stained with earth and berry juice, the marks of work that fed people rather than ruled them. “Not that bell. Not that pattern.”

Alina swallowed. “It cannot be.”

Mara looked at her, eyes steady and unafraid. “It is.”

The basil snapped under Alina’s fingers. She stared at the broken stem as if it had betrayed her. Inside the palace, servants would already be hurrying. Councilors would be gathering. Whispers would be moving faster than footsteps.

And the Ember Crown would be waiting.

“I did nothing,” Alina whispered.

Mara reached out and brushed dirt from Alina’s hands. “You were born. That is sometimes enough.”

Alina hated how true that was.

She wiped her hands on her skirt, plain linen instead of silk, practical instead of regal. It was easier to breathe when she dressed like this. Easier to forget that she belonged to a world of marble halls and measured expectations.

Mara pressed a small glass vial into her palm. “Rosemary oil. For steadiness.”

Alina closed her fingers around it. “They will not listen to me.”

“They might,” Mara said. “And if they do not, stand anyway.”

The bell rang once more, distant now.

Alina lifted her chin and turned toward the palace path.

The guards at the eastern gate straightened as she approached. They bowed, formal but not unkind.

“Your Highness.”

“Please,” Alina said softly. “Just Alina.”

One of them hesitated, then nodded and opened the gate.

Inside, the palace smelled of stone and beeswax and old decisions. Servants moved quickly, eyes lowered. Conversations stopped when Alina passed, then resumed in whispers once she was gone.

She walked the corridor without rushing. Fear did not deserve haste.

At the far end, the Council Chamber doors stood open.

Warmth spilled from within, along with tension thick enough to taste. The long blackwood table dominated the room, polished to a mirror shine. Maps and ledgers lay scattered across it like wounds that refused to close.

At the head sat King Roderic, her father, his hair more grey than black now. He wore no crown; he had not worn one in years.

Around him gathered the familiar faces of power. Chancellor Elowen with her careful smile. Lord Merrow with his sharp cologne and sharper opinions. High Priestess Sera, calm as winter light.

And near the hearth, half in shadow, stood a man Alina had not expected to see again.

Cael.

Her steps faltered.

Time folded in on itself. She remembered him laughing once in the stables. Remembered his hand on her wrist, stopping a horse from biting her. Remembered the night everything burned.

Cael lifted his head and met her gaze.

He looked older. Harder. His armor was gone, replaced by a dark coat worn thin at the edges. A faint scar cut through his brow.

He bowed, restrained and respectful.

Alina forced herself to look away.

Her father rose when she reached the table. “Alina.”

“Father.”

The Chancellor leaned forward. “You know why you were called.”

“No,” Alina said. “I do not.”

High Priestess Sera stood and unwrapped the cloth in her hands.

The Ember Crown lay beneath it.

Cold. Waiting.

And watching.

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  • Ember Crown of Promise   What Survives the Rupture

    They took Alina before sunrise. Not with chains. Not with raised voices. With lanterns held politely low and words shaped like concern. The escort waited in the courtyard as if for a guest departing too early, cloaks neat, horses calm, expressions carefully blank. Protection had learned to wear a smile. Alina stood at the threshold of the sanctuary with a single satchel at her feet. Inside it, nothing precious. No heirlooms. No tokens of office. Only a change of clothes and a folded note she had written in the night and never sealed. She had not slept. She had listened instead to the building breathe, to the city murmur, to the distant rhythm of a kingdom learning to stand without instructions. Or failing. A magistrate bowed shallowly. “Princess. We are ready.” Alina nodded. “I know.” She did not look back as she crossed the courtyard. She did not look for faces she recognized. She had learned that recognition had become a burden for others, something they carried like guilt.

  • Ember Crown of Promise   Distance Learned the Hard Way

    Cael learned the new rules by the way people looked at his hands.Not his face. Not the sword at his side. His hands.They watched them the way a starving man watched bread. With calculation. With hunger. With suspicion that gratitude might be a trap. In the aftermath of Alina’s confession, everyone was measuring everyone else, trying to decide who would become the next enemy, and who could be trusted not to lie.The kingdom had lost its shared story.Now it lived on fragments.Cael stood at the sanctuary gate at dawn, cloak fastened high against the cold, and listened to the city breathe. It did not breathe like a city that had been saved. It breathed like a patient who had survived a fever and was waking to discover what the illness had stolen.The streets beyond were already stirring.Stalls opened without shouting. Vendors spoke in low tones. People bought food as if afraid it might be confiscated again, hands moving too quickly, eyes darting toward guards and clergy. Children tra

  • Ember Crown of Promise   The Day After Truth

    The morning after truth did not feel like dawn.It arrived without ceremony, pale and strained, as if the sun itself were unsure whether it was welcome. Light crept into the city reluctantly, slipping between buildings and across empty streets that should have been busy by now. The bells did not ring.That was the first aftershock.Alina stood at the narrow window of the sanctuary chamber where she had been kept overnight, her hands resting against the cold stone sill. Below, the courtyard lay quiet in a way that felt unnatural, not peaceful but stunned. People moved in ones and twos rather than crowds, heads lowered, conversations muted. No songs. No chants. No prayers spoken aloud.Truth had a way of stealing sound.She drew a slow breath and felt it catch halfway in, her chest still tight from the day before. Confession did not drain you all at once. It lingered, resurfacing in waves, each one carrying a different weight. Shame that was not hers. Grief that belonged to everyone. Fe

  • Ember Crown of Promise   The Prayer that Starved the Kingdom

    The bells rang before dawn.Not the measured toll of ritual hours, not the gentle summons to prayer that once felt like invitation. These bells were sharp and insistent, struck too hard, too fast. They carried urgency rather than reverence, as if metal itself had learned fear.Alina was already awake.She had not slept.She knelt on the stone floor of the sanctuary, knees aching, palms pressed flat before her, forehead lowered not in performance but in exhaustion. The night had stretched long and thin, every breath measured, every thought circling the same unavoidable truth.Silence had crossed its final threshold.It was no longer restraint.It was harm.When she rose, her legs trembled. She steadied herself against the wall, breathing slowly until the dizziness passed. The air felt wrong. Thinner than it should have been. As if something vital had stepped back from the world and was waiting to see what would happen next.The Crown.Not present, yet felt all the same.She could sense

  • Ember Crown of Promise   When Heaven Is Used as Cover

    The prayer did not sound like desperation.That was what unsettled Alina most.When it began in earnest, spreading from the capital outward like a slow tide, it carried the cadence of discipline rather than need. Bells rang at measured hours. Processions moved in clean lines. Fasts were declared with schedules attached. Silence was observed not as grief, but as order.It looked righteous.It felt wrong.Alina learned of it in fragments.A novice priestess brought the first word, breathless, eyes bright with a kind of fervor that bordered on fear. “They’ve declared a kingdom-wide fast,” she said. “Three days. Then seven. The people are calling it purification.”Purification.Alina closed her eyes.That word always arrived when someone wanted suffering to feel earned.By the second day, the roads into Lethwyn thinned. Caravans that would normally pass through turned away instead, diverted by clerical advisories warning against “unnecessary indulgence during sacred appeal.” Grain wagons

  • Ember Crown of Promise   When Inquiry Becomes a Cage

    The inquiry opened at dawn.Not with bells.Not with proclamation.With silence.Alina stood at the edge of the council hall as the doors closed behind her, the sound heavy and final. The room had been rearranged again, but this time not to suggest order. This time it was arranged to contain.Chairs formed a shallow crescent. No table. No distance. The space was intimate by design, every face close enough to read, every reaction impossible to miss. Light filtered in through high windows, pale and unforgiving, illuminating dust in the air like suspended judgment.The Crown was not present.That absence pressed harder than its weight ever had.Elowen sat near the center, composed as ever, hands folded neatly in her lap. The magistrates flanked her. Clerics lined the far wall, robes immaculate, eyes lowered in practiced humility.No one offered Alina a seat.She remained standing.Exile had ta

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