He reached for her one last time, but the guards were already coming.

They told Prince Alaric a crown was an honor.

Nobody told him it would feel like a stone pressed onto his skull—heavy, cold, and impossible to ignore.

That evening, the palace was dressed in gold. Torches burned along the walls like trapped suns. The marble floors shone so bright they almost looked wet. Servants moved like shadows, quiet and careful, as if the air itself could break.

Alaric stood at the top of the palace steps, wearing a coat stitched with royal thread and rules. Behind him, the throne room waited—full of men with sharp eyes and sharper tongues. The Royal Council. The law. The future.

In front of him, beyond the gates, the city breathed.

You could smell it from here if you tried hard enough: smoke from cooking fires, salt from the sea, and the rough scent of tar from the docks. It smelled like life.

It smelled like her.

Mira.

She stood at the edge of the courtyard like she didn’t belong there—and maybe she didn’t. Her dress was simple. Her hands were rough from rope and water and work. Her dark hair was tied back, but a few strands escaped and danced in the wind like they were free.

Alaric’s chest tightened.

The crown on his head didn’t feel like gold anymore.

It felt like a warning.

He had met her by accident months ago, when he slipped out of the palace in plain clothes, hungry to feel normal for one hour. He had walked down to the docks and blended into the noise—men shouting, gulls crying, wood creaking under heavy boots. He thought he was invisible.

Until a girl looked straight at him and said, “You walk like you’re scared of the ground.”

He had laughed because it was true.

In the palace, everything was fragile. A wrong step could cause whispers. A wrong word could cause wars.

But at the docks, nothing pretended. People were tired, angry, hopeful, alive. And Mira… Mira was like the sea itself. Calm one moment, wild the next. Soft when she chose, strong when she had to be.

He hadn’t meant to fall.

But love doesn’t ask permission.

Now the Royal Council had found out. Or at least, they had found enough to suspect.

A future king, they reminded him, cannot love a girl from the docks.

Not because she was bad.

Because she was unapproved.

Because she was outside their control.

Because she had a name that didn’t come with land or bloodlines.

Because kings were supposed to marry alliances, not feelings.

The gates began to move.

A low groan rose from the iron hinges as guards pushed the palace gates inward. The sound rumbled through the courtyard like a warning thunder.

Mira stepped forward fast, her eyes wide.

Alaric stepped down from the palace steps without thinking. Each step felt like walking away from everything he had been taught, and toward everything his heart begged for.

“Mira,” he said, and her name felt like a prayer and a mistake at the same time.

She reached him before the gates could shut completely. For one heartbeat, they were close enough to share the same air.

“Alaric,” she whispered, and her voice shook. “They’re serious this time.”

He nodded. He didn’t need her to explain. He had heard the Council’s words like knives.

End it.
Forget her.
Be a king.

He wanted to tell them they didn’t understand what she was to him.

That when he was with Mira, he could breathe.

That her hand felt like home.

But the palace didn’t care about breathing.

The palace cared about control.

“I can’t come back here,” Mira said, her eyes flashing toward the guards. “If they see me again—”

“They’ll punish you,” Alaric finished quietly.

Her jaw clenched. “They’ll punish both of us.”

The gates moved another inch. Another groan. Another breath of time stolen from them.

Alaric looked at her hands. The way her fingers had small cuts, like the sea had kissed them too hard. The way her nails weren’t polished, but honest. The way those hands had held his face once, in a dark alley near the docks, when he told her he was tired of being a symbol.

“You shouldn’t have to carry this,” he said.

Mira’s laugh was small and bitter. “Funny. Because you’re the one wearing the crown.”

He flinched.

The crown.

The thing everyone wanted him to respect more than his own heart.

Behind him, he heard footsteps—heavy and quick. The sound of armor shifting. The guards were coming closer, not just to close the gates, but to make sure the prince obeyed.

Mira noticed too. Her breath quickened. Her eyes softened, just for a second, as if she was memorizing his face like a last sunset.

“I knew this day would come,” she said. “I just didn’t think it would feel like… drowning.”

Alaric swallowed hard.

“Mira,” he said, and his voice broke. “Listen to me.”

She looked up.

His heart was beating so loud he could almost hear it over the creaking iron.

“I’m supposed to be their future,” he whispered. “Their perfect king. Their polished promise.”

Her eyes glistened. “And I’m supposed to disappear.”

“No.” He leaned closer, lowering his voice as the gates narrowed the space between them. “No more disappearing. Not you.”

She stared at him as if she didn’t dare to hope.

Alaric’s fingers found hers, and when their hands touched, warmth rushed through him like sunlight breaking through storm clouds.

For a moment, the palace, the law, the guards—everything faded.

There was only her.

Only this.

“You once told me I walked like I was scared of the ground,” he said, trying to smile. “You were right.”

Mira’s lips trembled. “And now?”

“Now I’m scared of losing you.”

Her eyes filled, and a tear slipped down her cheek. She didn’t wipe it away. She didn’t pretend she was fine.

That was one of the things he loved most about her.

She was real.

“I don’t want you hurt,” she whispered. “I don’t want you ruined because of me.”

Alaric squeezed her hand tighter. “You’re not a ruin. You’re the only thing that ever felt like truth.”

The gates were nearly shut now. The guards’ boots were almost behind him.

He could feel the pressure of duty like a hand on his neck.

He could also feel Mira’s fingers in his.

And that felt like life.

“I made you a promise,” he said.

Mira blinked. “A promise?”

Alaric lowered his forehead to hers through the narrow space, careful, desperate, like he could pour courage into her skin.

“I will not let a law decide what my heart is allowed to be,” he whispered. “I will not become a king who rules the people but cannot even choose love.”

Her breath caught.

“That’s dangerous talk,” she said, voice shaking.

“I know.”

“Alaric—”

His eyes burned. “If they want a king without a soul, they picked the wrong man.”

Behind him, a voice shouted, “Your Highness!”

Alaric didn’t turn.

Mira’s fingers tightened around his.

The gate was closing fast now, iron swallowing the last inches between them.

Alaric spoke quickly, like someone whispering fire into the dark.

“Go back to the docks,” he said. “Tell them the truth. Tell them what the Council does behind these walls. Tell them the prince they’ve never met is tired of being owned.”

Mira stared at him, fear and hope battling in her eyes.

“You’re asking for a revolution,” she breathed.

Alaric’s mouth turned into something like a smile, but it was full of pain.

“I’m promising one,” he said. “If that’s what it takes to bring you back to me.”

The guards were right there now. He could feel them reaching for his shoulder.

Mira’s hand slipped as the gate narrowed.

Alaric held on.

Just one more second.

Just one more heartbeat.

“Mira!” he whispered, and his voice sounded like it came from deep underwater. “When the bells ring at dawn—listen.”

Her eyes widened. “What—”

“The bell at the docks,” he said fast. “The one that calls the boats in. If it rings three times… it means I kept my word.”

The gate shut another inch.

Mira’s fingers started to slide.

“No,” she gasped.

Alaric reached through the bars as far as he could, ignoring the guards shouting, ignoring their hands grabbing his arm.

“Mira!” he said again, raw and desperate. “Don’t let them make you small. Don’t let them erase you.”

Her fingers slipped free.

The gate slammed shut with a final, brutal sound.

The iron stood between them like a wall between worlds.

Mira pressed her palm against the cold bars, tears shining on her lashes.

Alaric mirrored her on the other side.

For one silent moment, they stared at each other through iron and law and fear.

Then the guards pulled him back.

Hard.

Mira’s face blurred as she stepped away, swallowed by the shadows beyond the palace walls.

But before she disappeared, she lifted her chin.

And in her eyes, Alaric saw it.

Not just heartbreak.

Not just loss.

A spark.

The kind of spark that could ignite a revolution…

Or cost them their lives.

And as the palace swallowed him whole again, Alaric held onto the last warmth of her hand and whispered into the cold air:

“Three bells at dawn, Mira.

Three bells… and the world will change.”