I Enslaved The Goddess Who Summoned Me-Chapter 662: Kastorian Feast after the Ceremony of Heir (1)

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Chapter 662: Kastorian Feast after the Ceremony of Heir (1)

The great dining hall of Kastoria’s royal castle had been transformed for the post-ceremony feast into something that justified the word lavish without apology.

Long cedar tables ran the hall’s length, draped in deep gold cloth and loaded with the finest the kingdom’s kitchens could produce — whole roasted birds glazed with honeyed sauces, lacquered dishes of seasoned rice and pickled vegetables arranged with careful deliberateness, ceramic flasks of warmed rice wine stationed at intervals alongside cut fruit and confections that had clearly required their preparers’ full attention for the better part of two days.

Lanterns hung in lines above the tables, their warm light catching the gold thread in the assembled nobles’ finest clothing and producing the particular amber glow that made every formal occasion feel slightly suspended from ordinary time.

The hall was full and alive with conversation — the layered, overlapping noise of important people performing their importance at each other, the particular social music of a court gathering where every exchange carried secondary meaning and nothing was entirely casual.

Kaguya occupied the hall’s focal point without effort or intention, simply by being present in it.

The nobles who had spent months or years seeking even a brief audience had recognized immediately that this evening offered something rare — Kaguya at a social function, accessible by proximity in a way that formal audiences never permitted. They had organized themselves into a patient rotation of approach, each noble waiting for the previous exchange to conclude before stepping forward with whatever carefully prepared words they had been rehearsing since the invitation arrived.

Kaguya received each of them with the same composed, genuine attention — answering questions, acknowledging concerns, offering the particular quality of divine presence that left people feeling seen without having been given anything specific to leverage afterward. Her white eyes moved between faces with unhurried clarity. Her beauty, in the close warmth of the hall’s lamplight, was producing its usual effect of rendering whatever she said more significant than the words alone could account for.

Several nobles forgot mid-sentence what they had come to say and had to reconstruct their thoughts while she waited with patient serenity.

At the table’s other primary point of gravity, Haruka sat with Ryuuji — awake still, though beginning to show the heavy-eyed quality of an infant approaching the boundary of his tolerance for stimulation — while Ryuuki stood nearby receiving the congratulations of nobles who understood that the Hero of Light was now, officially, the father of Kastoria’s designated heir.

The dynamic was clear to anyone reading the room: two centers of legitimate power, reinforcing each other, drawing the faithful and the ambitious in roughly equal measure.

And then, at a different section of the hall’s long tables, a third gravity.

Takehiko moved through the noble clusters with the ease of a man who had grown up in rooms exactly like this one and had never lost the fluency of it despite five years away. His orange eyes were warm and attentive to whoever stood before him, his laughter genuine-sounding, his memory for names and family details apparently undamaged by his banishment.

The nobles who had aligned themselves firmly with Haruka’s cause kept careful distance, their avoidance visible enough to be noted by anyone paying attention. But there were many who didn’t — not necessarily with hostile intent toward Haruka, not necessarily with any active allegiance to Takehiko’s cause, but operating from the simpler reality that he had been a known and liked figure before his removal and nothing had specifically replaced that impression.

He was speaking to them. They were responding. Relationships were being quietly, patiently rebuilt one conversation at a time.

"Look at him. I genuinely cannot believe it."

One of the girl Heroes spoke in a low, controlled voice, her gaze fixed on a specific figure across the hall with an expression mixing disbelief and contempt in equal measure.

The figure in question was Yusuke.

He had found himself a position at one of the side tables with considerable apparent satisfaction — eating well, drinking better, laughing at volume with the samurai companions who surrounded him with the comfortable ease of someone who had made his choices and settled fully into their consequences. Several servants had learned to route their paths away from his section of the table after the third time he’d pulled one good-naturedly into his orbit with zero consideration for whether they welcomed it.

He looked, by every visible measure, like someone having an excellent evening.

His former classmates tracked him with the particular quality of attention that contained no warmth whatsoever — the collective gaze of people who had shared years of their lives with someone and were now encountering the finished shape of a betrayal they had suspected before it became explicit.

Yusuke caught several of their looks across the room and held them with complete composure, then returned to his conversation without apparent concern.

"He has absolutely no shame," Kazuto observed, pushing his glasses up.

"That’s clearly not something he considers relevant to his current situation," someone else muttered.

"Just leave him," Teiji said. He scanned the room with the restless energy of someone looking for something specific. "Has anyone seen the Arima sisters? They weren’t at the table earlier."

"You really don’t know when to stop," one of his male classmates said with a laugh.

"I said shut up."

The hall’s main doors opened.

Ayaka and Akane entered together.

The collective response was quite huge. Men mid-conversation lost the thread. Nobles who had been calculating their next approach to Kaguya or Ryuuki found their attention temporarily taken.

The twins moved through the hall in their kimonos — Ayaka’s warm amber, Akane’s deep indigo — with the natural composure of people entirely accustomed to this response and entirely unbothered by it.

But there was something different about them tonight.

Both of them were smiling.

Not the polite, social smile deployed for formal occasions — genuinely smiling, with the particular warmth of people carrying something good that hasn’t fully settled yet. Ayaka’s eyes were bright and her cheeks held a flush that the hall’s warmth alone didn’t fully account for. Akane, whose expressions were normally kept at such careful distance from her interior life that most people in the hall had never seen anything beyond her serene composure — Akane had a small, quiet smile on her lips that transformed her face entirely.

It made her look, somehow, even more beautiful than before.

Teiji stared.

He had seen Akane in her kimono that morning, had thought then that she was the most extraordinary thing he had ever seen, and had revised that opinion approximately four times during the ceremony. But right now, with that unguarded smile on her face and whatever warmth was living behind her eyes tonight, the revision happened again and he ran out of adequate language for it.

He was far from alone in this.

Within moments a cluster of nobles had oriented themselves toward the twins. The dynamics of the hall around Heroes like Ayaka, Akane, Yumiko, and Rena had been established over three years into something almost institutional — every noble family of sufficient ambition understood that marrying a Hero was the most significant social and political advancement available to them, and among the Heroes the four of them occupied a tier so far above ordinary desirability that the competition for their attention had become its own elaborate sub-politics.

Proposals had arrived in waves since their first year — from the wealthiest families, the most ancient bloodlines, the most politically significant names in Kastoria’s nobility. Some of their classmates had accepted such arrangements, finding in them either genuine connection or practical peace with a life that was beginning to feel permanent.

But not these four. Not any of them.

The reasons varied with the person. Yumiko loved Ryuuki and clearly didn’t mind being his second wife. Ayaka and Akane clearly had a certain step brother in mind and Rena well, for her all men weren’t worthy of her, maybe there was exception however...

And underneath all of it, for most of them, the persistent quiet belief that Japan was still out there somewhere. That going back was still possible. That committing fully to a life here meant closing a door they weren’t yet ready to close.

The nobles approached anyway, because hope was also an institutional force.

"They should honestly just give up at this point," Kazuto sighed, watching the cluster of nobles competing for the twins’ attention.

"That’s the depressing part though, isn’t it?" one of the boys said, leaning back with the philosophical resignation of someone who had arrived at an uncomfortable conclusion. "If even the wealthiest nobles in Kastoria can’t get a single one of them to accept — what chances did any of us ever actually hold back in Japan?"

"None," another said flatly. "Zero. Both of them come from actual nobility in Japan. Old money, old name, old standards. That’s exactly why you should just let it go." He patted Teiji’s shoulder with the solemn gravity of a man delivering a medical diagnosis.

"Fuck off completely," Teiji said, shrugging the hand away with feeling. "That just means they don’t care about shallow things like money and titles. Which actually means there’s more room for someone who isn’t shallow, which means—"

"Oh — look."

The observation cut through the conversation and every head among the group turned simultaneously.

Takehiko was moving.

Teiji’s stomach dropped immediately as he tracked the direction, his eyes jumping ahead of the movement to calculate the destination — and for three seconds he was completely certain Takehiko was heading toward Akane, and those three seconds contained a quantity of murderous feeling that surprised even him.

Then the trajectory clarified itself.

Takehiko wasn’t heading toward the twins at all.

He was heading toward the far end of the hall where a single girl sat alone at the edge of the long table, eating with calm self-possession while the feast’s noise and movement washed around her without apparently touching her in any way she acknowledged.

She wasn’t entirely alone — her yokais surrounded her, and by any honest measure they were consuming considerably more of the feast than she was, Kiiro in particular approaching the arrangement with remarkable dedication. But the effect around Rena herself was solitary, a pocket of cool stillness in the middle of the hall’s warmth.

It wasn’t for lack of interested parties.

Rena looked the way she always looked at formal occasions — extraordinary, in the particular way that required no assistance from context or framing. Her honey-blonde hair was still arranged from the ceremony, her kimono immaculate, her posture carrying the absolute self-possession that had been her defining characteristic since before anyone in this room had met her.

Several nobles had already attempted the approach. The pattern had been consistent: they crossed toward her table with varying degrees of confidence, Aka and Ao materialized between them and their destination with a speed and solidity that communicated the situation’s parameters without requiring words, the nobles recalculated their evening’s agenda and found other priorities.

All of this had been proceeding smoothly under Rena’s complete indifference until Takehiko arrived.

Aka and Ao moved the instant he drew close — precise, practiced, entirely prepared to manage this the same way they had managed the previous twelve attempts.

Two samurai in full red lacquer armor stepped smoothly in front of them.

Not attacking, not threatening — simply present, immovable and stopping them.

"Rena-sama." Midori floated close to Rena’s ear, her voice low and waiting for instruction.

Rena said nothing.

"May I take a seat, my lady?" Takehiko asked smiling wide.

"Whatever," Rena replied.

The word landed with the particular weight of genuine indifference rather than performed dismissal — she truly, completely didn’t care whether he sat or stood or left, and it showed in every syllable.

The Heroes’ table registered this with a collective wince. Takehiko was royalty. Exiled royalty, technically, but royalty nonetheless — and speaking to him like a mildly tolerated interruption to one’s dinner was the kind of thing that created incidents.

Takehiko sat.

And rather than the flicker of offense that most people would have shown, his orange eyes narrowed with something that was pleasure. The arrogance had delighted him. The complete absence of deference from a woman who clearly understood exactly who she was speaking to and had decided it changed nothing — he found this interesting in a way that was visible and not entirely comfortable to observe.

"Someone as beautiful as the finest Princess has every right to carry herself with such confidence," he said smoothly.

Rena didn’t respond. Her gaze moved briefly across the hall — a scan, quick and specific, looking for something or someone — and finding whatever she was looking for absent, she returned to her food.

"You seem rather isolated this evening," Takehiko continued, entirely unbothered by the lack of engagement. "My palace has rooms that would suit you considerably better than a corner seat at someone else’s feast. I would be glad to show you."

"I’m not interested," Rena said, with the flat finality of someone closing a door.

"What would interest you, then?" Takehiko asked, a slight laugh in his voice.

"Nothing." 𝙧𝙚𝙚𝔀𝒆𝓫𝓷𝙤𝓿𝒆𝙡.𝒄𝙤𝓶

"I find that genuinely difficult to believe. Every person wants something. I’ve yet to meet anyone who didn’t, given the right offer."

"Then I am your first," Rena replied. "And what I want presently is silence. So leave."

A beat passed.

"Your Highness." One of the armored samurai beside Takehiko spoke — voice muffled through the heavy helmet’s interior but clear enough to make it as masculine "If it would please you, I can simply bring her."

Rena’s eyes moved to the samurai with a sharpness that was its own form of temperature drop.

Midori went very still.

"No." Takehiko raised one hand with relaxed authority. "We are not savages. There is no occasion for that."

He stood, smoothed his white kimono with unhurried ease, and looked down at Rena with a smile that had not changed in the slightest throughout the entire exchange — which was, in its own way, the most unsettling thing about him.

"I’m certain we will find ourselves in the same room again soon," he said pleasantly.

Rena didn’t answer. She picked up her chopsticks and resumed eating with the composure of someone from whom nothing whatsoever had been taken.

Takehiko walked away.

Aka and Ao drifted back to Rena’s sides immediately, both visibly agitated in ways they were managing with varying degrees of success.

"Rena-sama—"

"Eat something," Rena told them, not looking up.

A silence settled briefly over that end of the table.

Then the hall’s main doors opened again.

When Ayaka and Akane arrived the men first turned but this time women were the first who turned and looked.