Political Education
The morning dawned on my second day in the Iron Citadel, and the nightmare was still dressed in indigo silk. I sat on the edge of the enormous bed, hands resting on my knees, trying to find the pulse of myself beneath the weight of Demetrius Klein's lies. I was the True Luna—a title I wore like a suicide vest.
My survival strategy was simple: I had to be exactly what he needed, and nothing more. I was a tool for the Shadow Canyons. That was my expiration date. But if I could prove my mind was more valuable than my body, perhaps I could extend the lease on my life.
If I look like a Queen, they'll want me to act like one. I'll make sure I look like the worst, most ill-suited queen imaginable. But if I can speak the language of war better than his generals, I become necessary. Necessary is temporary safety.
A few minutes later, the procession of the King's mandates began. Commander Finn stood outside the door, a fixed, granite presence. The silent handmaids brought breakfast, which I again picked at, eating only what seemed simple and therefore less likely to be poisoned.
The first visitor was Lady Anya, a woman whose scent was cloying lavender and whose face was a study in condescending refinement. She was my tutor in etiquette.
"Luna Esmeralda," Lady Anya began, her voice brittle like spun glass, after performing a deep, elaborate curtsy that seemed designed to judge my lack of one. "I have been charged with preparing you for the Court. We must begin immediately. Your appearance yesterday… well, it must never be repeated."
I gave her a slow, deliberate smile. "It was certainly memorable, wasn't it?"
Lady Anya stiffened. "A Luna is meant to be refined, Luna. Elegant. You do not lounge. You do not speak directly unless invited. And you certainly do not make eye contact with every Alpha in the room; it is deemed aggressive."
I stood up, crossing my arms over the heavy silk. "A Luna is meant to secure the Kingdom. If my aggression keeps the Hunters out of their beds, I think the court can manage my eye contact."
Lady Anya drew a sharp, shocked breath. "Luna, that is not how one speaks of duty! You are a symbol of grace!"
"Grace won't guide Demetrius's troops through the canyons, Lady Anya. My knowledge will. Now, what is the most important thing a Luna must master?" I asked, leaning slightly forward, deliberately breaching the polite personal space she was guarding.
She nervously adjusted her pearls. "The curtsey, of course! The depth of the bow indicates the level of respect and lineage you acknowledge. Watch me."
Lady Anya demonstrated a sweeping, elaborate bow, her spine remaining impeccably straight. When she finished, she looked at me with expectation.
I copied her, but intentionally exaggerated my movement. I dropped too low, wobbled, and almost stumbled into a flower vase, catching myself with a graceless grunt.
"Like this?" I asked innocently.
Lady Anya's composure fractured. She squeezed her eyes shut, inhaling slowly. "No, Luna. You must maintain the line of your spine. It is the core of dignity."
"Ah," I said, trying again, but this time I made my curtsey too shallow, barely nodding my head. "Does this show enough dignity for the King who rejected me?"
The question was a bullet. Lady Anya gasped, her face flushing crimson. She stumbled back a step, horrified by the raw, unspoken truth I had flung at her.
"Luna, you must never—never—speak of such things. Especially not with such… bitterness," she whispered, as if the walls had ears.
"Why not?" I challenged, my voice low and fierce, fueled by the memory of Damon's boot and Demetrius's cold eyes. "Is the truth less acceptable than the lie I am wearing? I was told this title was a leash, Lady Anya. I am learning how to pull on it."
Lady Anya was near tears. She knew she was dealing with something feral, something that couldn't be tamed with silk and posture. She was terrified of me, and more terrified of reporting my intentional defiance.
"I... I must consult with the King's secretary. We will resume your lessons in presentation tomorrow," she stammered, gathering her papers and retreating hastily.
One down. I am a catastrophe of courtly manners. Good.
The second tutor arrived an hour later, and he was the opposite of Lady Anya. General Oris was a scarred, stoic Lycan who smelled of aged leather and dust. He was dressed in a simple, practical uniform, and he carried a roll of battle maps under his arm.
"Luna," he greeted me with a respectful but pragmatic nod. "I am here to teach you the modern strategy of the Lycan war machine, as per the King's orders. This is the only knowledge that matters."
Finally, something real.
He spread a large map across the dining table—a detailed, intimidating depiction of the northern border where the Human Hunters (Aegis Initiative) were pushing in.
"We are losing ground here, Luna," General Oris explained, pointing to a heavily fortified area called the Aura Gap. "The Hunters have developed sonic deterrents that disorient our warriors when they try to charge the line. We lose three battalions a month trying to breach this point."
He explained the current Lycan counter-strategy: using smaller, faster skirmish teams to draw out the enemy before a large force attacked the main fortifications. It was a standard, predictable Alpha maneuver, brute force disguised as cunning.
I spent the next twenty minutes silently absorbing the map. I didn't look at the Lycan fortifications; I focused entirely on the enemy's positions, the topography, and the logistical bottlenecks.
"The skirmish teams are ineffective," I stated flatly, interrupting his explanation of troop deployment.
General Oris paused, clearly unused to being questioned by anyone, let alone a supposed novice. "Luna, they draw out half the enemy's forces."
"They draw out the predictable half," I countered, pointing to the enemy's supply lines, which snaked through a narrow, forested valley far from the main battlefront. "The Hunters are using the sonic field to pin the Lycan troops and bleed them dry while they consolidate their new territory. The skirmish teams are exactly what they want you to send."
I tapped the forested valley, my finger tracing the narrow road. "This is the flaw. Look at the road: it's too close to that abandoned logging mill. If a battalion hit the supply line here, they wouldn't just cut off resources; they'd force the main Hunter defense to collapse the sonic field and reroute their entire northern command to protect their logistics. It's a clean kill on their stability."
General Oris stared at the map, then at the mill, then back at the road. He had been so focused on the front line, he hadn't considered the vulnerable artery twenty miles away. His jaw went slack.
"That… that would work, Luna," he murmured, his voice thick with disbelief. "It would require a daring force, but it would shatter their momentum."
It was at that moment the doors to the dining hall swung open with a powerful authority that had no need for a knock.
King Demetrius Klein entered.
He strode into the room, his long coat swirling around him, his expression an intense mask of cold assessment. He was framed by Rhys, his ever-present Beta. Demetrius had clearly come for General Oris's report and Lady Anya's horrified assessment.
He glanced at the hastily retreating form of Lady Anya in the corridor, then at my uneaten food, and finally, his gaze settled on the map, where my finger was still hovering over the critical supply line.
"General," Demetrius commanded, ignoring me entirely. "Give me your report on the Luna's progress."
General Oris snapped to attention. "Your Majesty, Lady Anya reports she is… unteachable in courtly manners, and openly defiant."
Demetrius's eyes narrowed, confirming his expectation of my failure. "And in strategy, General?"
General Oris swallowed hard, looking genuinely rattled. "In strategy, Your Majesty… the Luna has identified a flaw in the Aegis Initiative's Aura Gap defense that has eluded our entire tactical unit for six months. She suggests striking the supply bottleneck near the old logging mill."
Demetrius's gaze finally, slowly, swung to me. The raw, intelligent intensity of his scrutiny was devastating. He walked to the table, standing close enough that the Mate Bond thrummed violently, his iron scent dominating the air.
"Explain it to me, Omega," he ordered, his voice low, challenging, and laced with suppressed fury that I was proving Rhys and his own instincts wrong.
I didn't flinch. I kept my voice clinical, professional, and devoid of emotion, fighting the urge to press myself against him.
"The Aura Gap strategy is sound in defense, Your Majesty, but the weakness is the human element: fear of starvation," I explained, pointing precisely to the map. "They value logistics over the temporary gain of territory. A decisive, small attack here," I tapped the bottleneck, "will force them to abandon the sonic field at the Gap to protect their vulnerable supply route. It conserves your resources and breaks their momentum with a single, surgical strike."
Demetrius stared at the map, then at me. His expression was a volatile mix of cold acknowledgment and profound suspicion.
"You understand the risks, Esmeralda," he stated, using my first name like a verbal lash. "If that battalion is lost, the entire northern front collapses. It's an aggressive, audacious play."
"It's the move a Queen would make, Your Majesty," I replied softly, meeting his gaze without blinking, the silver chain heavy against my neck. "Not a symbol of grace, but a surgical knife."
Demetrius leaned back, his massive form radiating raw, calculating thought. He nodded once, a sharp, decisive motion, before turning back to General Oris.
"Prepare the contingency. Begin scouting the logging mill route immediately. The Luna's suggestion will be tested."
He looked at me one last time, and there was no pity, no affection, but a horrifying new intensity in his eyes. He had found another use for his tool.
After Demetrius swept out, leaving General Oris staring at the map with stunned respect, I walked back to the window. The silence was back, but now it felt different. It was the silence of a King who had just been given a terrifying new piece on his chessboard.
You wanted a strategic asset, Demetrius? You have one, I thought, pressing my palm against the cool glass. I just made the leash tighter. I just made myself too dangerous to discard.
My body was trembling, not from fear of his coldness, but from the sudden rush of power that came from proving my intelligence to the man who controlled my fate. I had traded the soft, slow death of being useless for the sharp, immediate danger of being indispensable. And in the gilded cage, I kn
ew exactly which one gave me a better chance of survival.
