Reincarnated as an Elf Prince

Chapter 240: Meeting (2)



Lindarion stood still in the center.

The council took their time.

Of course they did.

They wanted him to feel the space.

But all he felt was focus.

'You don't need to convince them. You need to see them.'

He scanned the faces.

Three looked too polished, diplomats. Two looked too tired, academics or researchers. One was already halfway asleep. One was whispering to an aide too often.

Two watched him like he was a blade someone had accidentally dropped and couldn't figure out how to pick up again.

Eldrin entered last.

Not in armor.

Not in ceremony.

Just presence.

He took the center seat and folded his hands before him.

The room quieted.

The doors closed.

And the test began.

The silence held for a moment longer.

Then one of them moved.

A woman seated third from the left leaned forward, her sleeves gliding across the polished stone table. Her robe was cut from flowing storm-blue silk, fastened at the shoulder with a silver clasp shaped like a swallow's wing. Her voice was cool, but unforced.

"I suppose we should break the ice," she said. "Though you've already done that just by standing there."

Lindarion didn't speak. He let her fill the space.

"I am Velarien Maelis," she continued. "Councilor of Arcane Research. Representative of Sylvarion. I've served the High Table for seventy-three years. And I'm quite fond of sharp minds, so do try not to bore me."

Her eyes were like frost left in sunlight,pale silver with darker rings, narrowed slightly as if she were forever analyzing a riddle she hadn't solved yet.

She leaned back.

Next to her, a broader elf cleared his throat and folded his arms. He wore minimal ornamentation,just a charcoal tunic marked with the insignia of Eldorath's border rangers. His skin was sun-darkened, his long golden hair tied in a single knot at the nape of his neck.

"Calaron Vaelthorn," he said. "Military oversight. I represent the outer provinces. And before you ask, yes, I voted to send aid to Evernight, and no, it didn't pass."

His tone wasn't apologetic. Just blunt.

"I don't like wasting words, and I like even less when people waste lives."

The older elf seated beside him sighed through his nose, a drawn face, hair like dry parchment, braided tight and hung over one shoulder. He wore a layered vest of dull bronze, rings stacked up both hands, a scholar's crest marked on his collar.

"Narien Del," he said, dryly. "Historical oversight. Keeper of deep records. I remember when you were named heir in this very room. You were shorter."

Lindarion said nothing.

Narien gave a faint smile. "And quieter."

"I remember that," said a new voice, light, bright, youthful.

The speaker sat nearly opposite Velarien. He looked no older than thirty, which likely meant he was close to two hundred.

His features were smooth, almost too perfect, like someone had carved him for public approval. His golden robe shimmered faintly with heat enchantments, and a cluster of mana-stones hung around his neck.

"Councilor Sylas Morn. Diplomatic liaison. Court darling, charity patron, and—recently—voted Solrendel's most photogenic elf in the Royal Scroll. Three years in a row."

A few councilors rolled their eyes.

Sylas just grinned.

"I think the prince knows who I am," he added with a wink. "My mother always said we'd make a good pair."

Lindarion blinked once. Didn't dignify it.

Across from him, a shorter elf with dark bronze skin and white hair that fell to her waist cleared her throat. Her robes were dyed a deep ochre, and her arms were bare save for two bands inscribed with ancient Vaelorian script.

"Darethin Vei," she said. "Tirnaeth representative. Spiritual affairs."

Her tone was clipped, formal, but not unkind.

She didn't elaborate.

Didn't need to.

Her eyes lingered on Lindarion, not in judgment, but in measurement.

Next to her sat a man who hadn't spoken yet. He wore a layered robe of forest-green stitched with tiny leaves.

His beard was thick, unbraided, streaked with mossy grey, and his shoulders hunched slightly, as if unused to sitting indoors for long. His voice, when it came, was gravel rubbed smooth.

"Orlen Ironbark. Lorienya. Nature's seat."

Nothing more.

No title. No nod.

Just identity.

Lindarion nodded once.

A sharp inhale followed.

A woman straightened from the far right, her posture immaculate. Her hair was wound in coils, pinned with black pearl studs.

Her skin gleamed with subtle enchantment. Her voice was warm, but firm. Practiced.

"Maeralyn Vireth. Council Chair of Civil Harmony. If you intend to bring unrest into this room, I'll be the one cleaning it up. Politely."

Her smile didn't reach her eyes.

Her eyes were lined in faint blue.

Control in every syllable.

And finally—

Vaerelina stood.

She hadn't spoken until now.

Her cloak had been traded for a close-fitted tunic woven with thin gold fibers. Her long black hair was braided to one side today, and a thin arc-shaped crest shimmered faintly across her forehead, a mark of the Aetheric Court, still active.

"You already know me," she said.

Lindarion nodded.

She did not smile.

"Then," Eldrin said, voice low but absolute, "we are whole."

He leaned back.

Ten eyes. Ten voices. One seat of power.

Lindarion stood in the center of it all.

And now—

The game would begin.

The room settled.

Ten councilors. One king. Two guards posted silently at the edge.

And one shadow too many.

"Before we begin," Maeralyn said smoothly, without looking up from her notes, "I must raise a procedural matter."

Eldrin lifted one brow.

"The mercenary."

Everyone turned, slowly, toward the edge of the room, where Erebus stood, arms folded, hood down, coat still dusted with road and steel.

"His presence violates four standing policies," she continued. "He is not royal, not noble, not ranked, and not vetted."

"Neither are half your bodyguards," Erebus muttered.

"Mine don't walk into Council chambers during sovereign matters," she replied, voice still polite.

Eldrin glanced toward Lindarion.

Lindarion met Erebus's gaze.

No words passed between them. Just a look.

A short one.

Then Lindarion gave the smallest nod.

Erebus pushed off the wall, jaw tight, and strode toward the doors. His boots didn't echo. They never did.

He passed the seated councilors without flinching.

No bow.

No nod.

Just the sound of controlled, dismissive silence.

The doors closed behind him.

And now it was just them.

Lindarion stepped forward.


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