Part 2: The Locked Nursery and the Lie in His Legs

No one stopped Lucien when he turned his chair toward the west wing.
Not the guards.
Not the guests.
Not even Marcus, though he tried.

Because once the key appeared, the silence in the palace changed sides.

It was no longer protecting him.

It was waiting to betray him.

The barefoot girl ran beside the wheelchair the whole way, still trembling, still breathless, but no longer afraid enough to let go. Her name, she finally told him, was Nia.

“My mother was Dalia,” she whispered. “She was your nursemaid’s daughter. The queen trusted her.”

Lucien looked at her sharply.

He remembered Dalia.
The woman with warm hands and quiet songs.
The one who vanished the same month his mother died.

At the end of the west corridor stood the locked nursery door no one had opened in years.

Nia placed the silver key in Lucien’s hand.

“You have to do it,” she said.

His fingers shook as he turned it.

The lock clicked.

Inside, the room smelled like dust, cedar, and old sunlight. Faded curtains. A child’s wooden horse. Shelves of books. A piano covered in white cloth.

And against the far wall, behind the queen’s portrait, was a small iron safe.

Lucien’s breath caught.

Because he knew exactly where to look.

As if some part of him had been carrying the map his whole life.

He opened the safe.

Inside were three things:

a sealed letter in his mother’s hand,
a physician’s report,
and a tiny blue glass vial.

Marcus stopped in the doorway when he saw the vial.

He went white.

Lucien opened the physician’s report first.

The words blurred for a second before they came into focus:

Spinal trauma minimal. Walking expected after recovery. Avoid sedative compounds. Repeated use may cause prolonged weakness and learned paralysis.

Lucien stopped breathing.

Nia’s eyes filled with tears.

“That’s why I told you I could make you walk,” she whispered. “My mother said your legs were never the thing they stole first. They stole your trust.”

Marcus lunged for the papers.

A guard caught him before he reached the boy.

The guests behind them gasped.

Lucien opened his mother’s letter next.

My son,
If you found this, then Marcus has already done what I feared.
Your fall did not break you. His medicine will.
He wants you dependent, frightened, and grateful while he signs your name around the palace.
If Dalia’s child reaches you, believe her before you believe me too late.
— Mother

Lucien lowered the page slowly.

His whole face had emptied.

Not into rage.

Into devastation.

He looked up at Marcus.

“Every night,” he said quietly. “You brought me the tonic yourself.”

Marcus stopped struggling.

The fight went out of him because there was no lie left large enough to cover the room.

“I did what was necessary,” he said.

That sentence disgusted everyone who heard it.

Lucien stared at him.

“For what?”

Marcus laughed once, hollow and ashamed.

“For survival. Yours looked weak. Mine looked useful.”

Nia stepped closer to Lucien’s chair.

“My mother said the first day without the blue vial would hurt,” she said. “And the first step would scare you more than the chair ever did.”

Lucien looked down at his own legs.

Then at the floor.

Then back at Nia.

The whole room held its breath.

He placed both hands on the chair arms and pushed.

The first attempt failed.

A murmur moved through the guests.

Marcus almost smiled.

Then Nia knelt in front of Lucien, put both hands over his, and said softly:

“They made you afraid of falling. Not of standing.”

That did it.

Lucien tried again.

This time his knees shook violently — but he rose.

Not gracefully.
Not steadily.
But truly.

The room gasped as one.

Lucien stood in the nursery his mother had locked, on the legs he had been taught to mourn, while the uncle who stole his strength stared in horror.

A tear slid down his face.

Then another.

Nia was crying too now, looking up at him like she had not just completed a promise, but returned a life.

Lucien looked at Marcus from his unsteady feet and asked the one question that made the whole palace go colder than marble:

“When my mother died…”

His voice broke.

“…did she know you were the one I’d wake up beside?”

Marcus said nothing.

That silence was answer enough.

Lucien turned away from him and held out his hand to Nia instead.

She took it.

And in the hidden nursery, before the watching court and the ghosts of everyone too late to save him, the heir who had been kept seated all his life finally stood beside the only child brave enough to tell him he had been born to do it.

VA

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