It had been almost three days since sheâd sent Rogue off. Both Callida and Verum were actively pretending that nothing had happened, and for all anyone else in their lives knew, Rogue was at home studying and Flore was floating around the palace gardens. At least, no one had asked any related questions.
âYour Majesty,â Councilman Legatus, the council spokesman, stood up to outline the issues that had been submitted for discussion, ârespectfully, weâd like to request an update on the state of the military from the Lion General.â
âCallida, are you prepared to present the latest information?â Callida nodded curtly at Verum and Legatus continued.
âThere are some requests to discuss from a few of the Reguluses, the committee assigned to prepare for the Dapsilis Banquet next week has an updated report to submit, and the issue of succession has been submitted by sufficient among us toââ
âYes, yes,â Verum cut him off sourly, his eyes flickering briefly in Callidaâs direction. âIs that all, Legatus?â
âUhâ¦. Yes, Your Majesty.â
âSo you all want a report on my bedroom activities,â Verum growled irritably. âShall we get this over with first? Callida, would you like to kick this off?â
A startled council turned to a smirking Lion General. âCertainly, Your Majesty,â Callida silkily stepped forward, not missing a beat. âAs you all know, Her Majesty has suffered a series of pregnancy losses in rapid succession. Iâve been consulting with doctors that have confirmed that nearly constant pregnancy and repeated pregnancy loss is⦠taxing on the wellbeing of the hopeful mother. A simple nine month pregnancy ending with the delivery of a healthy baby is difficult enough, but Her Majesty has spent the better part of the last three years in a state of pregnancy with only heartache to show for it through no fault of her own. In fact, rapid, repeated loss may increase the likelihood of future loss. She needs a break, and I propose that we, the council, permit her up to a year to rest and recover before ordering her to try again.â
âWhat do you mean âthrough no fault of her ownâ? As the mother of His Majestyâs heir, it is her responsibility to carry the babies to term. She is required only to care for her own health and ensure that the birth of an heir is successful. She is failing in her commitment as the queen of this tribe.â
Callida glared at the offending, older councilman with nothing short of hatred for this statement. âItâs Councilman Sectarius?â The man nodded, his chest puffing up. âI understand that you were recently diagnosed with gout and a weak heart.â
âWhat do my personal ailments have to do with the issue at hand, General?â Sectariusâs puffed demeanor became combative.
âIâd have thought that was obvious, Councilman,â Callida simpered dangerously. âAre you not responsible for your own health â for the maintenance of your heart and joints? What should you have done differently to prevent such a grievous diagnosis from befalling you? You have failed, Councilman, in the maintenance of your own body.â
âI never!â Sectarius hissed. âI have taken the utmost care of my body for nearly eighty years, and Iâ!â
âWho are you to judge a young woman struggling to care for the health of another entity entirely when you canât maintain your own heart?â Callida asked with icy forbearance. âI assure you that Her Majesty is doing everything that she can to care for her own health and to provide the best possible outcomes for the children sheâs been struggling to bear. Just as your failing heart and arthritic joints are not your âfaultâ, Her Majestyâs pregnancy complications are not her fault. It is not productive to seek blame in this case, Councilman, and if you dare to accuse a bereft mother of somehow not doing enough to maintain the health of her own child, then it is only fair for me to accuse you of sabotaging your own health and, by extension, question your commitment to this council.â
âHow do you go from my poor health to my⦠loyalty to this council?!â Sectarius balked with a sudden fear.
âPoor health can only lead to poor performance, or, in severe cases, death. If you are committed to this council, you will surely maintain perfect health so you can fulfill your commitments in an unhindered, undistracted manner.â
âYour logic is flawed, General!â he spat.
âThen so too is yours, Councilman,â Callida said with a crooked smile that dared him to argue with her. âJust as you may need to seek special accommodation to perform your duties on account of your ailing health, so too should we, as a council, afford that same understanding to our queen. Again, I propose that we grant her up to a year of leave for her health. The time will be spent resting and recovering so that she can resume her duty of bearing the king an heir in earnest upon her return.â
âAnd if, upon her return, she still fails?â Councilman Trebax, one of the more quiet but calculating among them, asked. âIf this council allows the queen to take this leave of absence for her health, and it proves to be ineffective, what then?â
âI gather that you have something in mind, Trebax,â Callida stated shrewdly, offering him the floor, and the councilman stood up with a smirk of his own curling his lips and narrowing his eyes.
âYou want to give Her Majesty a break. In the spirit of fairness, that is a reasonable request. However, if an entire year of recovery ends, and the queen returns still unable to bear a child to term, I believe it is also fair to require His Majesty to⦠outsource the task of bearing an heir.â
âIt never ceases to amaze me the lengths you all go to in order to avoid the term âmistressâ,â Callida snorted. âSo your terms are, in exchange for granting Her Majesty this leave of absence, His Majesty must agree to take a mistress if his wife is still unable to bear a child successfully upon her return?â Trebax nodded a slow, deliberate acknowledgement at Callida, his lips still twisted in an unfeeling grin of self-satisfaction. âThat is⦠reasonable. Your Majesty, are these terms acceptable?â
Verum swallowed and reluctantly nodded. âYes.â
âIn that case, I would also like to propose that His Majesty should declare to this council who he intends to take as a mistress within the next six months as a sign of good faith,â Trebax added, and Callidaâs eyes narrowed subtly at him.
So people can be put in position to sabotage another womanâs pregnancies? Note to self: look into Trebax. âYour Majesty, what do you think of this additional requirement?â
The narrative has been taken without permission. Report any sightings.
Verum shifted on his throne in Callidaâs peripheral vision while she continued to stare Trebax down. âWhy six months? Six months is quite arbitrary of a timeframe. If the council wants me to declare an intended mistress, why not wait until my wifeâs pregnancy fails first?â
âIf the mistress is already declared, you canât back out of the plan when the pregnancy does fail,â Trebax said simply, his eyes still locked unflinchingly with Callidaâs.
When it does fail.
âIâll be frank. This council is growing impatient, Your Majesty. You are nearly thirty years of age and have yet to father a child, let alone a male heir. Your own mother toiled for over ten years of successful pregnancies before she finally gave birth to a son. A throne without an heir is a recipe for civil war. This is as much about the future of our tribe as it is about the privacy of your bedchambers. Surely you can understand our concerns.â And then Trebaxâs eyes seemed to glint. âSince the Lion General has taken such a proactive interest in your private life, perhaps she would care to offer her own womb for the siring of your heir?â
The room went so still, the barest shift in movement was an audible disruption. Every eye in the room turned to Callida, her own eyes still locked with Trebaxâs.
âEveryone knows that you have an intimate history with His Majesty, General,â Trebax continued in a challenging hiss. âYou want to bully this council into granting Her Majesty reprieve? Your personal stakes should match your adamance.â
âYou want me to have personal stakes in the matter? Fine,â Callida declared with a darkness that gave Trebax his first moment of real pause since heâd started talking. âI will finance the queenâs entire retreat. Her year of rest will cost this tribe and this council nothing except a single year more without an heir to the throne. And if the subsequent pregnancy following that year fails, I will personally help His Majesty select a substitute âwombâ.â
âIndeed?â Trebax cooed. âYou are prepared to shoulder the burden of persuading His Majesty to take a mistress?â
âCorrect.â
âOn your honor, General?â Trebax pressed.
âYouâre asking me to swear it.â
âOf the members of this council, you are the one with the greatest influence on His Majesty,â Trebax stated with a certain flippancy that stoked Callidaâs already burning anger. âI, for one, would take great comfort in knowing that you, personally, were taking responsibility for His Majestyâs commitment to producing an heir one way or another, because, surely, with you pushing him, he will proceed in earnest.â
âHis Majesty is not a child to be ordered about and manipulated by your capricious whims! He is not only your king but also a man â a husband and a friend. And then you wonder why I have His Majestyâs ear and you do not. I am astounded by your lack of respect! Yes, I understand that the need to produce an heir is one that affects more than his private family, but if you cannot treat this matter with the sensitivity it deserves, then perhaps you shouldnât be here, Trebax.â
He laughed. âI make a valid point, and you threaten me?â
âHis Majesty already agreed to accept a mistress in the event that his wife is given time to recover and she is still unable to successfully bear a child, but apparently his word wasnât good enough for you. Now you want me to promise that I will personally coerce or seduce him into keeping his word. Never mind the personal insult to myself, how you can justify the insult to His Majestyâs honor I cannot fathom!â
An appraising eyebrow lifted, and Trebax backed down subtly. âThen, let us formally declare the terms of this agreement, shall we? The Lion General will generously sponsor a retreat for Her Majesty for up to one year. Upon the queenâs return, she will resume her duty to produce an heir. If, at that time, her pregnancy fails, His Majesty will take a mistress, and the Lion General will help him select an appropriate young woman to carry his child. Have I left anything out, General?â
âI believe that covers it,â Callida said icily.
âThen I propose that we put it to a vote,â Trebax declared and sat back on his seat with a flourish, and Callida finally looked away from him to nod at Councilman Legatus who took that as his signal to lead the vote.
âAll in favor?â Callida glared at Trebax from across the room while he raised his hand for the tallying. âAll opposed?â Another moment of tallying. âThe motion passes in a five to one vote,â Legatus announced, and Callidaâs eyes moved to exchange a glance with Verum.
âWhen will Her Majesty begin this leave of absence?â someone asked, and everyone turned once again to Callida for answers.
âOh,â Callida smiled, âshe already left.â The room erupted in angry comments and questions as everyone rose to their feet at once, an ubiquitous tirade that rolled harmlessly down Callidaâs back and shoulders. She was unconcerned with the indignation of the subverted council; instead, she glanced around the room looking for signs of genuine distress â like the quiet circle gathered in animated but hushed whispers near Trebaxâs seat that scattered as soon as Trebax noticed the return of Callidaâs observing gaze. Seven men returned to their seats. Seven men sat stoically in thought while the rest of the council berated Callida for her insolence.
âTHATâS ENOUGH!!â Verum shouted, and the council began the process of hushing each other back into their seats. âWhatâs done is done!â
âThis is outrageous, Your Majesty,â Sectarius declared adamantly. âThis is not the way things are done! It is a requirement to seek the approval of the council before the queen leaves the palace. To merely inform the council after the fact is⦠treason!â
âSit down, Sectarius!â Verum growled. âAnd it is not treason because I approved it.â
âWhen were you planning on informing this council of the queenâs absence?â Legatus asked with much more diplomacy.
âThe plan was to inform this council as soon as the matter of succession was brought up again, which, seeing as this has been a recurring discussion biweekly for the last year, you can rest assured that this is all a very recent development.â
âAnd where did you send Her Majesty?â someone towards the back shouted.
âI donât know,â Verum said honestly. âThe Lion General was put in charge of the details of the trip, and I know nothing.â
âOf course the General is behind this,â someone snarled.
âYou enjoy toying with this council,â someone else accused, and Callida accepted the impugnment of her character with barely an extra blink for acknowledgment.
Verum sighed and produced the cover-story Callida had fed him. âGeneral Yudha was ordered to help Flore seek alternative treatments and secondary medical opinions for her pregnancy struggles. It was recommended by multiple doctors that she take some time for herself to recover and to not be pregnant, and expediency in her treatment seemed prudent as producing an heir is somewhat time sensitive. In order to protect her sanctuary and privacy, only Callida knows Floreâs itinerary, accommodations, and all other travel-related details, and that was also the reason Flore left before seeking the councilâs approval for her trip. It was important to give Flore the best chance of a true break from the stresses of her everyday life. Seeing as you have now approved Her Majestyâs travels, I donât feel that it makes much difference whether she left last week or leaves tomorrow. And the conditions approved by this council concerning Her Majestyâs trip stand. You have my commitment to accept a mistress should this treatment fail.â
The room settled unwillingly even as Callida continued to field an excessive number of dirty looks without reacting to them. âAn approved trip and a concrete plan for the succession of the throneâ¦. Is it really worth quibbling over a few days and the order of operations?â Callida asked calmly. âHis Majesty and I predicted that the council would extend this measure of grace to Her Majesty, and, in return, youâve been granted long-sought concessions. Either His Majesty will have a child within the next two years, or he will have a mistress.â