
The kingdom fell silent the moment Prince Adrian's head rolled across the execution platform.
Thousands watched.
Some cried.
Some cheered.
And King Cedric, seated upon a golden throne built beside the scaffold, never looked away.
"Let history remember," the king declared, his voice carrying across the square, "that treason dies today."
The crowd erupted.
Prince Adrian—the beloved heir, the hero of the northern wars, the future king—was dead.
At least, that was what everyone believed.
Three days later, the entire kingdom gathered for his funeral.
Black banners covered the capital.
Church bells echoed through the streets.
Even the sky seemed to mourn.
Inside the Grand Hall of Ancestors, nobles lined both sides of the enormous chamber while priests surrounded Adrian's coffin.
King Cedric stood beside it wearing black robes.
His expression remained cold.
Unmoved.
Almost relieved.
The funeral was not merely a farewell.
It was a warning.
A reminder of what happened to anyone who challenged the crown.
The high priest raised his hands.
"We return Prince Adrian to the gods."
The massive doors suddenly exploded open.
Boom.
Everyone turned.
The room froze.
A lone figure stood in the doorway.
Covered in dust.
Wearing a dark travel cloak.
Alive.
Prince Adrian.
Gasps filled the chamber.
Several nobles stumbled backward.
One woman fainted instantly.
The king's face turned pale.
For the first time in years, fear appeared in his eyes.
Adrian slowly removed his hood.
"Interesting funeral."
Silence.
Absolute silence.
Then chaos erupted.
"Impossible!"
"He died!"
"I saw it happen!"
The high priest dropped his ceremonial staff.
King Cedric gripped the edge of the coffin so hard his knuckles turned white.
"No..." he whispered.
Adrian smiled.
"Oh yes, Father."
Nobody understood what was happening.
Not even Adrian's closest friends.
The execution had been public.
His death had been witnessed by thousands.
How could he possibly be standing there?
The answer began years earlier.
Long before the execution.
Long before the accusations of treason.
Long before his father decided to kill him.
It started with a secret hidden beneath the royal castle.
A secret older than the kingdom itself.
When Adrian was sixteen, he discovered a forgotten chamber beneath the palace.
Inside stood a mirror unlike anything he had ever seen.
The glass shimmered like liquid silver.
Ancient runes surrounded its frame.
An old guardian appeared from the shadows.
"Only royal blood may enter."
Adrian should have left.
Instead, he stepped closer.
The guardian studied him carefully.
"The mirror grants one gift."
"What gift?"
"A second life."
Adrian laughed.
The guardian did not.
"The day you die, another version of yourself will take your place."
Adrian thought it was a fairy tale.
Until the guardian grabbed his arm.
"Every gift demands a price."
"What price?"
"You will lose something you love most."
Adrian never forgot those words.
Years passed.
King Cedric grew paranoid.
Cruel.
Obsessed with power.
Anyone who questioned him disappeared.
Entire noble families vanished overnight.
Meanwhile Adrian became beloved by the people.
He protected villages.
Reduced taxes.
Led soldiers personally into battle.
The kingdom began whispering.
The prince would make a better king.
The king heard every whisper.
And he hated it.
One evening, Adrian discovered documents proving something horrifying.
His father had arranged the deaths of Queen Elena—Adrian's mother—and dozens of political rivals.
The king had murdered them all.
Including his own wife.
Adrian confronted him.
"You killed her."
Cedric remained calm.
"She became inconvenient."
Adrian felt sick.
"She loved you."
"No," Cedric replied. "She threatened me."
That night, father and son became enemies.
Weeks later, Adrian was arrested.
The charges were fabricated.
Treason.
Conspiracy.
Attempted assassination.
The trial lasted less than an hour.
The verdict had been decided beforehand.
Death.
Public execution.
The king wanted everyone to watch.
He wanted hope itself to die.
As Adrian knelt on the execution platform, he remembered the mirror.
The guardian.
The second life.
The executioner raised his blade.
The crowd held its breath.
The sword fell.
Darkness consumed everything.
For one terrifying moment, Adrian truly died.
Then he opened his eyes.
He was standing before the silver mirror.
The guardian waited nearby.
"It worked."
Adrian stared at his hands.
Alive.
Breathing.
Impossible.
The guardian looked sad.
"The gift has been fulfilled."
"What price must I pay?"
The old man lowered his gaze.
Adrian suddenly understood.
His heart shattered.
"No."
The guardian nodded.
"The person you loved most."
Adrian thought of his mother.
Gone.
Then his closest friend.
No.
Then someone else.
Someone whose smile he could never forget.
Princess Lyra.
His fiancée.
The woman he planned to marry.
He rushed toward the palace.
But he already knew.
When Adrian secretly entered the capital that night, he found Lyra's chambers empty.
Servants wept in the halls.
The royal physician delivered the news.
She had died suddenly.
At the exact moment of Adrian's execution.
No illness.
No wound.
No explanation.
Simply gone.
The mirror had taken its payment.
Adrian collapsed.
Everything hurt.
The kingdom believed he was dead.
The woman he loved truly was.
For several days, grief nearly destroyed him.
Then he learned another truth.
Lyra had left him a letter.
"My beloved Adrian,
If you are reading this, then the impossible has happened.
I always suspected the king feared you more than any enemy.
I also discovered something terrible.
Your father isn't the true king.
He never was.
The real heir was hidden years ago.
Find the Chamber of Stars.
Trust no one.
And remember...
I loved you in every lifetime."
Adrian's hands trembled.
The Chamber of Stars.
A forgotten legend.
A place said to contain the kingdom's oldest secrets.
If Lyra believed it existed, he would find it.
And he did.
Beneath the palace.
Hidden beyond ancient stone doors.
Inside he uncovered the greatest secret in royal history.
King Cedric was not descended from the royal bloodline.
He was the son of a palace guard who had stolen the throne decades earlier.
The entire dynasty was built upon a lie.
Adrian gathered evidence.
Ancient records.
Royal seals.
Witness testimonies.
Then he waited.
For the perfect moment.
His funeral.
Now he stood inside the Grand Hall.
Alive.
Before the entire kingdom.
Before every noble house.
Before his terrified father.
King Cedric recovered enough to speak.
"Seize him!"
No soldier moved.
Adrian stepped forward.
"You executed me because I learned the truth."
The crowd listened.
Every word echoed through the hall.
"You murdered my mother."
Murmurs spread.
"You stole the throne."
Shock followed.
"You ruled through fear."
Nobles exchanged nervous glances.
Then Adrian revealed the evidence.
One document after another.
The truth unfolded before everyone.
The king's allies abandoned him.
His generals stepped away.
Even his royal guards lowered their weapons.
Cedric realized he was alone.
For the first time in his life.
Alone.
"You would destroy your own father?" Cedric shouted.
Adrian looked at him quietly.
"You destroyed yourself."
The king drew a hidden dagger.
With a scream of rage, he charged.
But an arrow struck his hand.
A second hit his leg.
Royal guards surrounded him instantly.
The same guards who once obeyed every command.
Now they knelt before Adrian.
"It is over."
Cedric stared around the hall.
Nobody came to save him.
Nobody.
The throne he sacrificed everything to keep had abandoned him.
Months later, Adrian was crowned king.
The kingdom celebrated for seven days and seven nights.
Peace returned.
Taxes were reduced.
Prisoners wrongly accused by Cedric were freed.
The future finally seemed bright.
Yet one chair remained empty during every celebration.
Lyra's.
Adrian never married.
Never forgot.
Never stopped loving her.
Sometimes, late at night, he visited the ancient mirror.
He would stare into the silver surface and whisper her name.
One evening, years later, the mirror shimmered.
For a brief second, he saw her reflection smiling back.
Not sad.
Not lost.
Waiting.
Then the image vanished.
Adrian smiled through tears.
Perhaps some loves were stronger than death.
Stronger than time.
Stronger even than magic.
And in the end, that was the greatest kingdom anyone could ever rule.
Katen Doe
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