Chapter 6
Six
Rules
The bride wing woke before dawn under bells that rang too softly to be called alarming and too regularly to be ignored.
Sabine rose in the dark, lit no candle, and dressed by memory and the thin pre-morning light coming through the high window.
The token lay against her wrist where she had left it overnight, black-and-gold ribbon cutting a neat line across pale skin.
She had considered removing it to sleep.
The instructions had not forbidden that.
But the absence of prohibition felt deliberate, which made the choice feel watched even in private.
She pinned her hair without a mirror, chose the darkest gown from the wardrobe, severe cut, plain cuffs, nothing soft and was lacing her second boot when the knock came.
Linet entered carrying a folded note on a small silver tray.
“The Rose Withdrawing Room,” she said. “First bell. Attendance is required.”
Sabine took the note without reading it. “What happens if a bride is late.”
Linet’s expression remained perfectly pleasant. “I cannot imagine anyone would risk finding out.”
Which was not an answer, only palace phrasing for consequences left unnamed.
Sabine set the note on the writing desk. “Thank you.”
Linet withdrew. The door clicked shut with the kind of finality that made even courtesy feel like containment.
The corridor outside filled quickly after the summons.
Doors opened in sequence. Attendants moved between chambers with the disciplined efficiency of women who had performed this exact routine through previous seasons of brides.
Sabine joined the flow toward the withdrawing room and watched the early alignments form.
House Vale moved together, two daughters and a cousin, all dressed in coordinated shades of green that announced family solidarity before speech could.
Brinna appeared from her chamber looking even more carefully arranged than yesterday, every pin placed, every fold exact, her hands clasped so tightly the knuckles went bloodless.
Tavi emerged three doors down with damp hair hastily pinned and her gown buttoned slightly off-center at the collar, which read less as carelessness than as refusal to spend energy on performance she did not value.
Their eyes met once across the passage. Tavi’s mouth shifted.
Yselle was already in the corridor when Sabine reached the main turn.
She wore pale rose silk with darker gloves and had positioned herself near the stair landing where the light caught her best. Not vanity.
Strategy. Let the other women see her first, centered and composed, so the room would already belong to her before they entered it.
Sabine passed without speaking. Yselle’s gaze tracked her once, brief and assessing, then moved on.
The Rose Withdrawing Room stood at the end of the east gallery, accessed through double doors inlaid with carved panels showing women in classical drapery kneeling before faceless crowns.
A warden stood beside the entrance, silent and armed, which made the room feel less like a salon and more like the antechamber to something harsher.
Inside, mirrors.
Every wall held gilt-framed glass set at angles designed to multiply the women back at themselves until the room felt less occupied than surveilled.
Pale flowers sat in crystal vases on narrow tables.
The chairs had been arranged in three shallow arcs facing a single raised seat near the mantel.
Light came from shaded lamps and the high windows, soft enough to flatter and bright enough to show every flaw.
Sabine chose a seat in the second arc on the left, close enough to hear clearly but far enough back to observe the full room.
Tavi took a place two seats down. Brinna sat near the outer edge, spine rigid, hands folded in her lap.
Others filled in by house, by rank, by the small cruelties of proximity.
Yselle, unsurprisingly, claimed the center of the first arc as if the room had been waiting for her to anchor it.
When the last bride entered, the doors closed.
Mistress Halvine appeared from a side entrance so quietly it felt less like arrival than materialization.
She wore the same dark silk as yesterday, the same thin chain at her throat, the same immaculate exactness in every line.
She did not carry notes. She did not glance at the seating chart.
She simply crossed to the raised chair, settled into it with perfect economy, and let the silence deepen until it became its own form of discipline.
Then she spoke.
“You have been brought to Halcyr under crown and temple protection to participate in the Nine Trials, which will determine the sacred consort of Prince Lucien Vhalor and sanctify the succession of the throne. During your residence in the bride wing, you will be housed, instructed, and prepared. What follows is not negotiation. It is structure.”
No one moved.
“The Trials consist of nine stages,” Halvine continued.
“Each stage measures qualities necessary to queenship: composure, endurance, discernment, obedience, faith, sacrifice, and worthiness under scrutiny. Some stages are public. Some are private. Some are ceremonial. Some are bodily. You will be informed of each trial’s nature only when you are called to it. ”
A girl near the front, House Lerren, Sabine thought, lifted her hand slightly as if to ask a question, then lowered it before Halvine’s gaze reached her.
“Candidates may fail a trial,” Halvine said. “Candidates may withdraw from the rite. Candidates may be dismissed by the crown or temple if they are judged unsuitable. Any of these outcomes ends your participation.”
Tavi leaned forward a fraction, eyes narrowed.
“While you remain in the bride wing,” Halvine went on, “you will observe the following structure. You may not leave palace grounds. You may not seek private audience with the prince before the Hall of Selection. You may not move beyond the bride wing without escort. You may not retain personal correspondence unreviewed. You may not refuse summons. Candles are extinguished by house staff only. Tokens remain worn at all times.”
The room absorbed the list in silence.
Halvine adjusted one cuff by a degree so small it might have been unconscious.
“Daily instruction will include etiquette, ceremony, sacred text, and physical preparation. Chapel attendance is required. Mealtimes are scheduled. Rest periods are supervised. You will comport yourselves with the dignity expected of women offered this honor.”
Honor.
The word landed in the room and settled like a coating of something beautiful and suffocating.
Brinna’s breathing had gone shallow. One of the Vale daughters looked toward the mirrors as if seeking confirmation that this was real.
Yselle sat motionless, expression serene, which meant she had either expected every word or had decided that visible unease was a weakness she would not permit herself.
A hand rose near the back. A narrow-faced girl Sabine did not recognize.
“Yes,” Halvine said.
“What happens if a bride fails a trial?”
Halvine’s expression did not change. “You are eliminated.”
“But—” The girl hesitated. “Eliminated to where. Do we return home, or—”
“You are no longer a candidate.”
The answer gave nothing. The girl opened her mouth, then closed it again.
Tavi spoke without raising her hand. “Are we permitted to withdraw before a trial, or only after we’ve already failed it.”
Halvine turned her head toward Tavi with the kind of measured attention that made correction feel imminent. “Withdrawal is permitted at any stage prior to final vows. However, withdrawal declares to the kingdom that your house has reconsidered its commitment to the rite.”
Which meant: withdraw, and you mark your family as unreliable. Politically weak. Unsuitable for future favor.
Sabine watched Halvine’s hands. No tension. No fidget. Perfect stillness even when delivering threats dressed as clarification.
Another bride, braver or more desperate, tried again. “If we’re dismissed, or if we fail, do we leave with references? With—” She stopped, seemed to lose courage, then forced the rest out. “With our reputations intact?”
“That depends,” Halvine said, “on the nature of the failure.”
The room went colder.
No explanation. No reassurance. Just the acknowledgment that ruin was possible and would be decided case by case, behind doors these women would never enter.
Sabine filed the omission carefully. Halvine had outlined nine trials, three forms of exit, and a dozen restrictions.
She had not once used the word choice. She had not explained what happened to the bodies or reputations of women who left before coronation.
She had not said whether failure meant disgrace, exile, or simply being erased from record as if they had never been called at all.
The entire structure relied on women being too frightened to ask the next question.
Yselle raised one gloved hand with the kind of poise that made even interruption look graceful. “Mistress Halvine, are there established protocols for communication with our families during the Trials?”
“Letters may be written and will be reviewed before delivery. Visits are not permitted until after final selection.”
“And if urgent family business arises?”
“It will be communicated to you through appropriate channels.”
Which meant: filtered, delayed, and controlled by the palace before it ever reached a bride’s hands.
Yselle inclined her head as if satisfied, though Sabine suspected she had asked less for herself and more to demonstrate she understood how to navigate authority without flinching.
The rest of the assembly proceeded in the same vein. More rules. More evasions. Halvine described daily schedules, chapel requirements, etiquette instruction, and ceremonial dress codes with the same immaculate precision she used to avoid answering what any of it cost.