The Unbroken Crown
She was a princess born of a proud house, accustomed to courts that bowed at her feet and poets who sang of her grace. She knew her worth. Yet, destiny played a cruel trick the day she laid eyes on the Great King.
The moment was silent, but the shift inside her heart was seismic. It was a helpless, consuming adoration—the kind that makes a palace feel like a cage and the sky feel too small. She loved him not for his crown, but for the soul behind it.
But reality arrived with a crushing blow. The King was not lonely. Beside him sat his Queen, a woman who already held his smiles, his loyalty, and his heart. To the King, the visiting princess was merely a guest—a beautiful face in a crowded court, entirely invisible to his affections.
The whispers in the palace corridors began almost immediately. “A king can have many consorts,” the courtiers murmured. “A woman of her beauty could easily win his favor, step into his chambers, and claim a place in his shadow.”
But they did not know her.
"I am a princess," she whispered to her reflection, her voice trembling but resolute. "I was born to rule, not to beg. I will not step into a court of jealousy, competing with another woman for the crumbs of a man’s attention. If I cannot be his equal, I will be nothing to him."
With her pride intact but her heart shattered, she chose the hardest path: silence. She retreated to the furthest corners of the kingdom, choosing to admire him from a distance where her dignity could remain untouched. She would not lower herself to be a concubine, even if the longing tore her apart.
And tear her apart it did.
The war between her unyielding pride and her desperate love raged inside her body. Loneliness became a physical weight. The roses left her cheeks, the light faded from her eyes, and a deep, incurable illness took root in her chest. As weeks turned to months, she wasted away, dying not from disease, but from the sheer exhaustion of loving someone from afar.
On her final night, as the cold wind swept through her balcony, she looked toward the King’s distant palace one last time. A single, hot tear escaped her eye, but her expression was fierce.
She drew her last, shallow breath, closed her eyes, and sent a burning vow into the cosmos:
“In this life, my heart betrayed my pride. But hear me, heavens—if there is another life, if our threads ever cross again, I will pass him by like a stranger. I will never fall for that King again.”
With that final declaration of independence, her hand fell still. She died in loneliness, but she died a Queen.
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