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Bloodhoundhearts
img img Bloodhoundhearts img Chapter 4 A shadow in disguise
4 Chapters
Chapter 6 Shadows Beneath the Crown img
Chapter 7 The Lie That Wore Her Face img
Chapter 8 Whispers from the Forgotten Village img
Chapter 9 Chains, Curses, and Silent Betrayals img
Chapter 10 The Banquet of Omened Eyes img
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Chapter 4 A shadow in disguise

The palace corridors breathed silence.

Not the peaceful kind-but the kind that pressed against the skin, heavy with things unsaid. Torchlight flickered along marble walls as servants passed quietly, heads bowed, footsteps careful. Whispers had not stopped since dawn. They had only learned to hide.

Elenma walked alone, carrying a folded stack of linens against her chest. Her steps were measured, calm on the surface, but her heart beat too fast. She could feel it again-that unease crawling beneath her skin.

Someone was watching. Someone was waiting.

She turned a corner-

And nearly collided with him.

"Elenma."

Her breath caught.

Prince Aiden stood before her, tall and unmoving, dressed in dark royal attire. His expression was unreadable, his jaw tense, his eyes sharp with something that unsettled her more than anger ever could.

Disappointment.

"My... my prince," she said quickly, bowing low. The linens slipped slightly in her arms, and she tightened her grip. "Forgive me, I did not see you."

"Lift your head," he said.

She hesitated, then obeyed.

Their eyes met.

The air shifted.

Aiden studied her closely, searching-probing-for something he could not yet name. His gift stirred faintly, brushing against her presence, but what he felt only confused him further. There was fear in her. Surprise. Respect.

But no guilt.

And yet...

"Where were you last night?" he asked.

The question struck her like a blade.

"I... I was in the maids' quarters, my prince," she answered truthfully. "Sleeping."

His brow furrowed.

"Are you certain?" he pressed.

"Yes," she said softly, confusion threading her voice. "I did not leave my room."

Silence stretched between them.

Aiden exhaled slowly. "Then explain this."

He stepped closer-not threatening, but close enough that she could feel the warmth of him, the restrained storm behind his calm.

"You were seen in my hallway," he said. "Near my chambers. Late into the night."

Elenma's eyes widened.

"No," she whispered. "That cannot be. I was not there. I swear it."

She shook her head, panic beginning to rise. "I would never-never enter your chambers without permission. I wouldn't dare."

Her heart pounded so loudly she feared he could hear it.

Aiden searched her face.

Her eyes. Her breath. Her trembling hands.

Nothing about her felt false.

And yet...

"Last night," he said slowly, "someone wearing your face stood before me."

The words drained the color from her world.

"My... my face?" she repeated faintly.

"Yes," he said, his voice lower now. "She looked like you. Spoke like you. Stood where only trusted servants are allowed."

Elenma felt the floor tilt beneath her feet.

"That wasn't me," she said quickly. "I don't know how-how that's possible, but I wasn't there. Please believe me."

Her power stirred, faint and instinctive, brushing against him. She searched his intentions without meaning to-and found turmoil. Confusion. A heart pulled in two directions.

He wanted to believe her.

But doubt had already been planted.

"Call Maris," Aiden said suddenly, turning to a nearby guard. "The maid who sleeps beside her."

The guard nodded and hurried away.

Elenma's hands trembled now. Not from guilt-but fear. Something was very wrong. She could feel it, like a thread tightening around her chest.

Moments later, Maris arrived.

She was pale, eyes darting nervously. She bowed quickly to the prince.

"My prince."

"Maris," Aiden said calmly, "tell me-was Elenma in the maids' quarters last night?"

Maris hesitated.

Just for a moment.

Elenma noticed.

Her heart sank.

"I... I didn't see her," Maris said finally. "When I woke in the night, her bed was empty."

The words fell like stones.

Elenma stared at her. "That's not true," she whispered. "I was there. You-you were asleep."

Maris looked away.

"I'm sorry," she murmured. "But I didn't see you."

Something dark stirred nearby.

Unseen, Ramela watched from behind a column, her thoughts carefully hidden, her lips curved in the faintest smile. A whisper of suggestion still lingered in Maris's mind-planted earlier, subtle and convincing.

The lie had taken root.

Aiden closed his eyes briefly.

When he opened them again, something had changed.

"I see," he said quietly.

"My prince," Elenma pleaded, stepping forward before she could stop herself. "Someone is lying. I don't know who, but someone wants to harm me. Please-"

"That will be enough," he interrupted.

Not harsh. Not loud.

But final.

She stopped.

The distance between them felt wider than the corridor itself.

"I will look into this," Aiden said, his tone carefully controlled. "Until then, you will keep your distance from my chambers."

Her chest ached.

"Yes, my prince," she whispered.

She bowed deeply, then turned and walked away before her tears could fall.

Aiden watched her go.

His heart twisted painfully.

Everything in him screamed that something was wrong-that she was not the threat here. But the palace did not run on feelings. It ran on evidence, whispers, and order.

And doubt was poison.

Elenma did not stop walking until she reached the servants' wing. Once inside the quiet of her small room, she pressed her back to the door and slid down to the floor.

Her breath shook.

Her eyes burned.

"I didn't do anything wrong," she whispered to the empty room.

Her power pulsed faintly, responding to her distress. Somewhere deep within her, something ancient stirred-watching, waiting.

Pink flickered at the edges of her vision.

She squeezed her eyes shut, frightened.

Not yet, she thought. I don't understand it yet.

Elsewhere, Aiden stood alone in the corridor long after she had gone.

Why does this feel like a mistake? he wondered.

And in the shadows, Ramela turned away, satisfied.

The first crack had formed.

Trust had begun to fracture.

And fate, patient and merciless, tightened its grip-drawing them all closer to the moment when truth, blood, and heart would collide.

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