The Calm Before The True Negotation
The Exile Council Chamber was cleared, leaving Jerrick, Kael, the Queen, and the children under the watchful eyes of the newly stationed guards. These weren't the silent, heavily-furred sentinels of the High Cave; they were younger, sharper, and held their spears with an air of cold professionalism.
A gruff, silent Exile woman—a healer by her simple leather kit—entered the chamber. She didn't speak a word to the Queen, but her movements were practiced and efficient. She cleaned and re-bandaged the Queen’s bruised torso, applying a thick, cold poultice made of mountain herbs that smelled strongly of mint and iron. Kael kept a tight, silent watch on the healer, his hand ready to draw steel at the slightest provocation.
Jerrick watched the healer go, then immediately knelt beside the Queen. The Exile guards were far enough away that their words were swallowed by the high, echoing cavern ceiling.
“The distraction held,” Jerrick murmured, his voice a low hum of relief and exhaustion. His physical performance had taken a toll; he felt the draining ache in his muscles that always followed a deep suppression of the Elder God’s power. “They fought over the **Obsidian Gate**. They will take the fortress. They won’t risk violating their ancestral oath for a chance at the Forges, not yet.”
The Queen let out a slow, careful breath, the herbal scent of the poultice strong in the air. “Theron knows we played him, Jerrick. The look in his eyes was not of an Exile who lost a trade. It was of a hunter who has identified his target. He let the Council handle the politics, and now he is free to handle the **true negotiation**.”
“He threatened as much,” Jerrick confirmed, his gaze intense. “The final words: *‘The true negotiation begins soon.’* They want me. They want to know how to control the Elder God that lives in the Dragon-kin line. How do we survive that demand without breaking the last of our leverage?”
The Queen gently reached for his hand, her touch surprisingly steady. “We don’t survive it, Jerrick. We **sacrifice it.**”
The Sacrifice and the Shard
Jerrick’s jaw tightened. "My Queen, the Elder God is your shield. If I give them a way to manage the temper, they gain the upper hand not just against us, but against Atlas. They become unstoppable. I won't risk that."
“You misunderstand the nature of sacrifice, my love,” the Queen whispered, pulling him closer until his ear was near her mouth, blocking any potential eavesdropper. “They think the Elder God is a **key** to endless, volatile power. But it is a **lock**—a weakness that must be managed to keep the whole kingdom stable. I am not offering them the knowledge of power. I am offering them the knowledge of **control**.”
She explained quickly, her voice a rush of desperate strategy. “The Dragon-kin line has held the *secret of suppression* for millennia. It is a series of precise, ritualistic bindings, runes, and disciplines that prevent the Elder God from consuming the host. If a Dragon Guard fails to perform the full rites, he breaks, and the power is released—uncontrollable, deadly, and short-lived. That is the truth of the temper.”
Jerrick felt a cold shock. "You mean to offer them the **complete suppression rites**? The very heart of our stability?"
"Yes. But not as a gift," she corrected, a flicker of fierce triumph in her eyes. "As a **poisoned shackle**. I will give them the knowledge to contain the Elder God—to make you harmless, Theron’s greatest fear neutralized. But the rites are dangerous, immensely complex, and specifically tuned to the Dragon-kin lineage. If an Exile attempts to use the suppression rites on *their* own volatile magic, the effect will be catastrophic. It will **destabilize their own mages** who attempt the ritual, not contain them."
Jerrick grasped the depth of the deception. The Queen was offering a dangerous, useless solution, wrapped in the promise of ultimate control.
“They will not know it is a poison until they try to use it for themselves,” Jerrick concluded. “It buys us years. Time to heal, rebuild, and secure our line.”
“Precisely,” the Queen affirmed. “But for the deception to work, you must be successfully contained. **You must allow Theron to place the first binding rune on you.** It must appear authentic. It must be humiliating.”