Chapter 16

The Festival of Lights




The first chill of winter lingered in the air, but the capital blazed with color. Lanterns stretched across every street like constellations brought to earth, and the scent of roasted almonds, mulled wine, and honey cakes filled the city’s veins. Bells rang from every spire. The Festival of Lights — once a hollow tradition of splendor — had become something real again.


This year, the Emperor and Empress walked among their people.




Morning — The Procession of Renewal


Elisana stepped through the palace gates in a gown of ivory silk threaded with silver and pale jade. Beside her, Marcus wore deep crimson and gold, his cloak clasped by the sun emblem of Salastian, now reworked to encircle a small crescent moon. Together, they embodied the empire’s balance — light and reflection, strength and grace.


As they entered the market square, cheers rippled through the crowd. Children perched on their fathers’ shoulders, merchants waved pennants, and old women tossed flower petals that clung to the Empress’s skirts.


Elisana bowed her head slightly, her smile serene but unfeigned. “The people’s joy feels different now,” she whispered to Marcus.


“Because it’s shared,” he replied, watching a young boy run up to offer them a paper lantern. “Because we finally listen.”


The child handed Marcus the lantern — shaped like a tiny sun — and pointed shyly at Elisana. “My sister made it,” he said. “She said the moon should hold it so it won’t burn too bright.”


Elisana knelt, accepting the gift with both hands. “Then I shall keep it safe,” she said gently. “Thank you, little one.”


When she rose, the child’s mother bowed through tears. Marcus’s hand brushed Elisana’s briefly, a silent acknowledgment — that moments like this meant more than any decree or treaty ever could.




Midday — The Heart of the City


By noon, the palace carriages were empty, the royal guard standing back as Marcus and Elisana strolled through the streets unescorted. The people followed at a respectful distance, letting the Emperor and Empress wander freely among them.


Vendors pressed gifts into their hands — marzipan shaped like stars, woven bracelets, glass charms painted with blessings. Elisana thanked each one personally, learning names, asking about harvests and families.


Marcus watched her with quiet awe. How easily she bridged the distance he had once built. Years ago, he had stood above this same crowd, seeing only his own reflection in their awe. Now, he saw what she saw — individuals, not subjects. Hearts, not numbers.


They reached the artisans’ square, where a young blacksmith presented a sculpture he’d forged — a sun and moon intertwined, forged from gold and silver scraps left over from the palace’s renovation. “For the imperial garden,” he said nervously. “It’s flawed — but I hoped—”


“It’s beautiful,” Elisana said before he could finish. She touched the cool metal where light kissed shadow. “Flaws make truth visible.”


Marcus smiled at her words, memorizing them. Flaws make truth visible.




Afternoon — Shadows Beneath the Light

The festival wound toward the river, where thousands of floating lanterns waited to be lit. Yet even joy has its shadows.


Whispers trailed through the crowd — faint, restrained, but familiar. A pair of older nobles exchanged disapproving looks, murmuring behind their fans. “A ruler walking the streets like a merchant’s son,” one scoffed.


Marcus heard. But before he could respond, Elisana turned, her tone calm but clear enough for all to hear. “If walking among one’s people is unbecoming of an emperor,” she said, “then the crown has forgotten its weight.”


The nobles froze. Around them, applause rippled softly.


Marcus looked at her — pride swelling, but not the kind he had once clung to. This was a pride tempered by humility, born from love.


He leaned close, voice low enough for only her to hear. “You have no idea how many times I wish I had listened to you sooner.”


She smiled faintly. “Then listen now — not just to me, but to them.”




Evening — The River of Light

As dusk fell, the river came alive. From every bridge and bank, thousands of lanterns were lit and set adrift — stars reborn on water. The reflection of gold and crimson shimmered against the current, a mirrored galaxy moving toward the horizon.


Marcus and Elisana stood at the water’s edge, surrounded by their people. A young girl approached — the same one from the morning, clutching her lantern. Her eyes sparkled. “Will you help me send it?”


Elisana knelt, guiding the girl’s small hands as they lowered the lantern to the water. “For whom is this light?”


“For my brother, Timo,” she said proudly. “He’s sick, but I think the moon will watch him.”


Elisana smiled. “The moon always watches the kind-hearted.”


Marcus crouched beside them, his deep voice soft. “And the sun will warm him when morning comes.”


Together, they watched as the lantern joined the river’s slow parade — a fragile light finding its way forward.


Above them, the bells of Solencia tolled the Hour of Blessing.




Night — Fireworks and Promises

Later that night, the palace terraces filled with nobles and commoners alike. It was tradition for the Emperor to release the final lantern — a massive golden orb symbolizing the empire’s future. But this time, two lanterns rose side by side: one gold, one silver, bound by a single white ribbon.

The crowd gasped softly, then cheered.


Elisana looked at Marcus. “Two lights?”


He nodded. “The empire has always had two. I just refused to see it.”


Their hands brushed as the lanterns rose higher and higher until they vanished among the stars.


Moments later, fireworks burst across the sky — scarlet suns and silver moons scattering over the city. The air trembled with applause and awe.


But amid the noise, the two of them found a quiet place in the palace gardens.


There, beneath the same cherry trees that had once witnessed their heartbreak, they sat together, watching the glow of distant lights fade to embers.


Marcus broke the silence first. “When I was young, I thought ruling meant never showing weakness. That an emperor’s heart was a luxury he couldn’t afford.”


Elisana turned to him. “And now?”


“Now I think a kingdom without heart is already lost.”


She smiled faintly. “You’re learning.”


He exhaled a laugh — quiet, genuine. “I have the best teacher.”




The Vow of Light

Before they returned inside, Marcus stopped near the reflecting pool, where the stars shimmered in the water’s surface. He drew something from his coat pocket — the twin pendants they had bought months before at the festival market.


He held out the small crescent to her. “I never wore mine,” he admitted. “I wanted to wait for the right night.”


Elisana’s eyes softened. “Then tonight is perfect.”


He fastened the crescent at her neck and touched the sun pendant that hung beneath his collar. “Two halves,” he said quietly. “Neither complete without the other.”


She met his gaze. “Then let’s make sure they never drift apart again.”


They clasped hands — not as rulers, but as two souls who had fought, fallen, and chosen to begin again.


The moon rose higher, washing the gardens in silver. Lanterns floated far downstream, their glow reflected in the palace windows. The city slept beneath the quiet rhythm of light and water.


And somewhere within that glow — amid laughter, music, and the promise of dawn — the Emperor and Empress found a peace neither crown nor kingdom had ever given them before.


As the final fireworks faded into the winter sky, Marcus turned to Elisana. “Tomorrow will be cold,” he murmured.


“Then tonight,” she said softly, “let’s remember the warmth.”


They walked back toward the palace, hand in hand. The river shimmered behind them, carrying a thousand lights into the horizon — and with them, a love reborn not in grandeur, but in grace.