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The Heiress Carrying His Heir-Chapter 99 - 100: The spider moves
Thorin’s POV
The morning after the orgy, I sat alone in my private study.
The room was quiet. The candles had burned down to nothing hours ago, and gray light seeped through the windows, casting long shadows across the floor. My head ached. My body was tired. But my mind was already working.
The second intelligence report from Dravara had arrived overnight.
I unrolled the parchment and read it slowly, the way I read everything that mattered. The words were precise, clinical, the kind of language that men used when they were reporting facts they did not want to be held responsible for.
The situation around Queen Elara was deteriorating faster than expected.
I set the report down and leaned back in my chair.
"Interesting, still the same as the previous reports but better." I said to no one.
The servant who had brought the report was still standing near the door, his head bowed, his hands folded in front of him.
"Anything else?" I asked.
"The council is moving to expand the arrests, my king. They are targeting anyone connected to The Rendered. The queen has not stopped them."
"Can she stop them?"
He hesitated. "She could. In theory. But it would require her to overrule her advisors publicly. To stand against the council’s unified position. To appear weak on security."
"And she won’t do that."
"No, my king. Not with the city in chaos. Not with a dead girl in her own chambers."
I nodded. "She’s trapped. By her own council, by her own fear, by the situation they have created for her."
The servant said nothing.
"She doesn’t see it yet," I said. "But she will. And when she does, it will be too late."
I spent the morning writing letters.
Not to the queen. To her council. To Petrov, specifically, and to the other men who were positioning themselves in the power vacuum that Elara did not yet know existed.
The letters were formal. Diplomatic. The kind of correspondence that passed between kingdoms when they were not at war but were not quite at peace either. Trade agreements. Border adjustments. Mutual interests. Nothing that would raise suspicion. Nothing that could be used against me.
But the choice of recipient was deliberate.
By writing to the council and not to the queen, I was sending a message. A calculated insult, dressed in the language of diplomacy. You are the ones who matter. You are the ones I will deal with. The queen is a figurehead, nothing more.
Petrov would understand. He was not stupid. He would read the letter and see what I was offering, recognition, legitimacy, a relationship with Valerium that bypassed his queen entirely.
And he would want it. Men like Petrov always wanted it. They wanted to be seen. They wanted to be valued. They wanted to believe that they were the ones holding the kingdom together while the young queen fumbled.
I wrote carefully, choosing each word with precision. The letter was friendly but not familiar. Respectful but not deferential. It acknowledged Petrov’s position without acknowledging that his position was subordinate to anyone.
He would read it and think I saw him as an equal. He would read it and think I respected him more than I respected his queen.
He would read it and become mine.
The letters were sealed and handed to the courier by midday.
I watched the rider disappear down the road, the pouch of letters strapped to his saddle, and I felt something that might have been satisfaction.
The pieces were moving.
I had been thinking about Petrov for weeks now. Ever since the treaty negotiations, ever since Elara refused me, ever since I returned to my kingdom with less than I had come for.
He was a useful fool.
Ambitious. Resentful. A man who had spent decades serving the crown, watching younger men rise past him, watching a girl take the throne he thought he deserved. He wanted power. He wanted recognition. He wanted to be the one making decisions, not the one advising the person who made them.
Men like that were easy to manipulate.
You gave them a taste of what they wanted. You made them feel seen, valued, important. You let them believe that they were the ones using you, when really you were the one using them.
Petrov would read my letter and see an opportunity. He would respond, carefully, diplomatically, testing the waters. He would not commit to anything openly, he was too smart for that. But he would leave a door open. A channel of communication. A way for us to talk without talking.
And once that channel existed, I could feed him information. Suggestions. Ideas that he would think were his own.
He would become my piece on the board. And he would never even know it.
The servant brought wine. I drank it slowly, staring at the map on the wall.
Dravara. The kingdom that had refused me. The queen who had humiliated me in front of her entire court.
I had not forgotten. I never forgot.
But revenge was not what I wanted. Revenge was short-term, emotional, the province of men who thought with their hearts instead of their heads. I wanted something else. Something more durable.
I wanted control.
Not of Dravara, that was too much, too obvious, too likely to provoke a war I was not ready to fight. But of the queen. Of her decisions. Of the path her kingdom took.
If I could not marry her, I would isolate her. If I could not stand beside her, I would stand above her. If I could not make her my ally, I would make her my puppet.
And Petrov was the key.
The afternoon passed. The sun moved across the floor. I sat in my study and thought about the pieces on the board.
The queen. Isolated. Surrounded by advisors who were making decisions without her. Her handmaiden under investigation. Her guard dismissed. The council unified against a common enemy, an enemy that might not be the right one.
The Rendered. Blamed for a crime they did not commit. Their people arrested, questioned, held without trial. Their leader, the Voice, still out there, still speaking, still rallying the people who had been ignored for too long.
Petrov. Ambitious, resentful, ready to be used. He would not see it that way, of course. He would think he was advancing his own interests, securing his own power. And he would be right. But his interests and mine were not the same, and by the time he realized that, it would be too late.
And me. Watching from the shadows. Moving pieces. Planting agents. Waiting.
I had already begun planting agents inside Dravara’s merchant class.
Men who traveled, who traded, who moved between cities without being noticed. They were not spies in the traditional sense,they did not carry messages or steal documents or do anything that would draw attention. They simply listened. Watched. Reported on what they saw.
Trade relationships made excellent cover. No one questioned a merchant who asked questions about prices, about supply, about demand. No one thought twice about a trader who was curious about the political situation in a city where he did business.
My agents were everywhere. And they were invisible.
The first shipments of grain were scheduled to arrive next week. Grain that would be sold at fair prices, lower than the current market rates. Grain that would make the people grateful, not to their queen, but to the merchants who provided it. Grain that would open doors, create relationships, establish networks that I could use for years to come.
The servant returned in the evening. Another report. This one shorter, more urgent.
"Your orders have been carried out, my king. The agents are in place. The first shipments of grain are scheduled to arrive next week."
I nodded. "And Petrov?"
"No response yet. But the letter was delivered. It will take time."
"Time is all we have."
The servant bowed and left. I sat alone in the darkening room, the map of Dravara still on the wall, the pieces still moving.
I thought about the queen again.
Elara. Young. Beautiful. Alone.
She had refused me. She had chosen her pride over an alliance. She had chosen to stand alone rather than stand beside me. 𝘧𝓇ℯℯ𝑤ℯ𝘣𝓃ℴ𝓋𝑒𝑙.𝑐𝘰𝑚
I had admired her for it, in a way. It took courage to refuse a king. But admiration was not the same as respect. And respect was not the same as mercy.
She was surrounded by my pieces now. She just did not know it yet.
The council member who reported to me. The merchant who listened to conversations in the market. The servant who passed along information without knowing where it went. The agent who watched from the shadows, invisible, untraceable.
They were all mine. And she had no idea.
I smiled. It was not a kind smile.
"The queen is already surrounded by my pieces," I said to the empty room. "She just doesn’t know it yet."
The words hung in the air, cold and final.
I picked up my cup and drank. The wine was dark, expensive, imported from somewhere I had already forgotten.
Outside, the sun set. Inside, the spider waited.







