The council chamber emptied quickly after my humiliating audience. I stood alone, clutching my rejected marriage contract, when a soft voice called my name.
"Miss Edwards."
I turned to find the beautiful woman who had stood beside Aurelio. Up close, her eyes were even more calculating, though veiled with practiced sympathy.
"Eliana Gonzales," she introduced herself, her voice honey-sweet. "I believe we got off on the wrong foot."
I backed away instinctively. "What do you want?"
"To help you." Her smile didn't reach her eyes. "I've spoken with the prince and the council. We're willing to... accommodate your claim."
Hope flared painfully in my chest. "Aurelio remembers?"
"No." Her smile tightened. "But we're prepared to offer a compromise. A wedding ceremony."
"A wedding?" I echoed, confused.
"A formality," she clarified, examining her perfectly manicured nails. "To honor any possible debt. It would be a public ritual to satisfy your contract. No consummation, no real marriage."
The cruelty of it stole my breath. "You want me to go through with a fake wedding?"
"The palace physicians will provide medicine for your grandmother." She tilted her head. "Isn't that what you came for?"
I thought of Grandmother's labored breathing, her burning skin. "And Aurelio has agreed to this?"
"He doesn't need to agree to a formality." Eliana's voice hardened slightly. "Do you accept our terms?"
I had no choice. No alternatives. "Yes."
"Good." She turned to leave, then paused. "Oh, and Vanessa? Don't expect too much from your... ceremony."
---
The wedding day dawned cold and gray. I stood in a threadbare dress—my best, but still woefully inadequate—in a small side chapel far from the main cathedral. No flowers adorned the altar. No music filled the air.
Palace servants clustered in the corners, whispering and laughing behind their hands. Their eyes followed me with undisguised mockery.
"Look at her," one whispered loudly enough for me to hear. "Thinks she's a princess in that rag."
"I heard she forged the prince's signature," another replied.
I kept my gaze fixed on the empty altar, clinging to a desperate hope: perhaps when Aurelio spoke our vows, something would awaken in him. Perhaps the ceremony itself would restore his memories.
When he entered, my heart lurched painfully. He wore his princely regalia, but his eyes were distant, his movements mechanical. Beside him stood the same cold advisor who had dismissed my claims.
"Dearly beloved," the advisor began, his voice flat. "We gather today to honor a debt."
Not to celebrate love. Not to join two souls. To honor a debt.
Aurelio went through the vows without looking at me once. His responses were clipped, emotionless.
"Do you take this woman to be your lawfully wedded wife?"
"Yes."
"Do you promise to cherish and protect her until death parts you?"
"Yes."
No emotion. No recognition. Just mechanical responses.
When it came time for the kiss, he merely brushed his lips against mine—a perfunctory touch that felt like ice. Then he turned and walked away without a word, leaving me standing alone before the altar.
A sneering official thrust a document into my hands. "Here's your marriage certificate. The debt is paid. You're to leave palace grounds immediately."
I clutched the worthless paper, watching Aurelio's retreating back. Had there ever been a moment when he truly loved me? Or had it all been a dream?
---
I raced back to our cottage that evening, the precious medicine clutched against my chest. Hope drove my feet faster than they'd ever moved before.
"Grandmother," I called as I approached our home. "I've brought medicine from the palace!"
But something was wrong. Terribly wrong.
Smoke billowed into the sky, dark and ominous. As I drew closer, the acrid smell of burning wood and... something else... filled my nostrils.
"Grandmother!" I screamed, breaking into a run.
Palace guards surrounded my burning home. Villagers stood at a distance, their faces masks of horror and grief.
"What have you done?" I shrieked, trying to push past the guards. "Let me through!"
"Stand back, witch," one growled, shoving me away.
Through the flames, I caught a glimpse of movement inside. A figure huddled on the floor.
"Vanessa," came a weak voice—Grandmother's voice.
"Help her!" I begged the guards. "Please!"
"She cursed the prince," one replied coldly. "We caught her performing dark rituals. She must be purged by fire."
"No!" I fought wildly, trying to break through their line. "She's innocent! She's dying!"
Two guards held me back as I struggled and screamed. Through the roaring flames, I saw Grandmother look directly at me.
"Vanessa," she called, her voice surprisingly strong despite the smoke. "Don't cry for me. Remember... love is stronger than hate."
The roof collapsed with a thunderous crack, cutting off her final words as flames engulfed everything inside.
I collapsed to my knees, watching my world burn away.
The guards didn't wait for the flames to die. They seized me while Grandmother's body was still burning, her final words echoing in my ears: "Love is stronger than hate."
Their hands were rough as they dragged me away from the inferno that had consumed my entire world. I fought wildly, my screams tearing at my throat.
"Let me go!" I clawed at their armor, drawing blood. "She's innocent! She's dying!"
"Innocent?" One guard spat in my face. "She cursed the prince. And you're her accomplice."
They bound my wrists with coarse rope that bit into my skin. Through my tears, I watched our cottage—our home—collapse into embers. The medicine I'd fought so hard to obtain had come too late. All of it—the contract, the wedding, the desperate journey—had been for nothing.
---
The dungeon cell stank of mold and decay. They threw me inside without ceremony, the iron door clanging shut with finality. Water dripped somewhere in the darkness, each drop a countdown to my own execution.
I huddled in the corner, shivering on the damp stone floor. My wedding dress—that pathetic symbol of my foolish hopes—clung to my skin, torn and filthy.
"Your prince husband sends his regards," a guard called through the bars, his voice echoing in the cold corridor. "He's quite pleased with how today turned out."
Another guard laughed. "Did you hear? He left straight from the ceremony. Didn't even stay for the... after-party."
"After-party?" I whispered, my voice breaking.
"The burning," the first guard clarified with a cruel smile. "But that wasn't the real celebration. He's at the country estate with Lady Eliana, celebrating his escape from the peasant's trap."
The words hit me like physical blows. While I stood alone at the altar, while Grandmother burned alive, Aurelio had been rushing to his mistress's arms.
"Wine and passion," the second guard continued conversationally. "That's what he's enjoying while you rot down here."
Something broke inside me then—something fundamental that could never be repaired. The last fragile thread of hope snapped, leaving only a cold, hollow space where my heart had been.
---
Days blurred together in the darkness. They brought me water just often enough to keep me alive, food that was little more than scraps. Palace servants took turns tormenting me, their faces alight with malicious pleasure.
"Look at the prince's bride," one mocked, throwing a crust of bread through the bars. "Not so pretty now, is she?"
"Did you know," another confided loudly, "that Prince Aurelio calls Lady Eliana his true love? Says she's the only woman who ever mattered."
I pressed my hands over my ears, but their words seeped through my fingers like poison.
"They're planning a real wedding," a third servant announced. "Once the peasant problem is disposed of."
"Disposal" became their favorite word. They spoke of it casually, as if discussing the weather.
I learned that Eliana had been Aurelio's constant companion since his return from injury. That she nursed him through his "headaches" with special medicine. That he trusted her completely, spoke of her with devotion he'd never shown his legal wife.
"Stupid peasant girl," they taunted. "Did you really think he'd choose someone like you?"
---
I didn't hear her approach. One moment I was alone in darkness; the next, light flooded the cell as the door swung open.
Eliana stood before me, resplendent in silks that shimmered like water. Diamonds glittered at her throat, rubies adorned her fingers—all gifts from Aurelio.
"Leave us," she commanded the guards, her voice honey-sweet.
When we were alone, her mask slipped. She circled me slowly, like a predator studying wounded prey.
"Poor Vanessa," she murmured. "Did you really believe he loved you?"
She produced a small ceramic urn from the folds of her gown. "Do you know what this is?"
Something about its shape made my blood run cold.
"Your grandmother," she confirmed, her eyes gleaming with malice. "All that's left of her."
She drew a jeweled dagger from her belt. "Open your mouth."
I pressed my lips together, shaking my head.
"Open. It." Her voice hardened as she pressed the blade against my throat.
When I still refused, she grabbed my jaw with brutal force, wrenching it open. With her other hand, she unscrewed the urn.
"Swallow," she commanded, pouring ashes into my mouth. "Eat what remains of your beloved grandmother."
The taste was indescribable—ashes and death and betrayal. I choked, gagging on the fine powder.
"Bite by bite," Eliana whispered, forcing another spoonful past my lips. "Just like you'll swallow your pride, your dignity, your pathetic dreams of love."
Between gasps, she told me everything—the memory-suppressing drugs she'd been giving Aurelio for months, how she'd orchestrated Grandmother's murder, how General Gonzales had planned it all to secure their family's control of the throne.
"You were nothing but a nuisance," she concluded, wiping the blade clean. "A stupid peasant who should have known her place."
As she turned to leave, ashes still coating my tongue, I realized that the last piece of my soul had died with Grandmother. In its place was something new—something cold and hard and unforgiving.
Something that would never forget or forgive.