
“Broken crowns can still cut.”
Prologue
—Mama, can you tell me the story again?
Princess Guinevere looked at her son, sitting quietly in his new room.
She smiled, walked over, and opened the book once more.
—Of course, Clément is king.
—Clément no! Clim! —the boy said, crossing his arms.
He was adorable.
—You'll always be my baby.
—Ma...
—Alright, alright, —she said, turning the first page— listen now.

“They say that before our people lived in castles, we walked alongside wolves and slept beneath the stars.
Our ancestors — the distant Shewigad — crossed these lands, fleeing.”
“Fleeing from who?” asked the boy.
“From the Magi,” she replied. “They could breathe fire from their mouths.

Guinevere shook her head with a soft smile.
“They crossed the Black Mountains, into a land where magic could no longer touch them.
But even then, we were just a scattered noble folk, hunted from the north by the Ocyjazane barbarians, and from behind by the Estiliacs.
It all seemed lost —
—until he came.”
“Bastione!” the boy said proudly.

“Exactly,” she whispered. “King Bastione. He gathered the peoples of Chevalie along these marches, between mountain and sea.
The people begged him: ‘We need someone to lead us. We don’t know how to fight.’
And they saw him — a sailor with a sword at his side and men in leather hauberks.
They asked him to teach them the way of war.”
“And what did he say?”
“He said: ‘I will fight beside you. And I will be your king.’
The Shewigad, surrounded by so many enemies, accepted.
And he showed them the paths of knighthood — how to break vile sorcery.
There was peace.”
“For a long time?”
“No, my son,” she said. “Peace is short in the Marches.
We were caught in the middle of everything.
The Aversarians came from the south… and beyond the northern snows, the undead marched.
Many kings came and went…
Until, finally — we came to our own house.
The Von Seignons.”

“You see, the king of that time, Valden, died sick in his bed.
And as often happens… Chevalie had no High King.
So there was war.
Wicked lords fought over plunder and women, caring nothing for the undead that marched from the north.”
“What happened then?” asked Clément.
“Kierre von Seignon,” she replied.
“Your great-great-great-great… oh, your many-times-great-grandfather,” she said, laughing.
“He stood with the noble house of von Seignon and many other honorable lords. Together, they crushed those scoundrels.
And as a reward, his son, Chryse von Seignon, was crowned King.

And since then, the von Seignon line has ruled for three hundred and seventy years.”
“But I read that we’ve only been kings for a hundred years...” Clément said.
“That’s not true,” Guinevere replied.
“Don’t believe everything you read.”
Clément fell silent.
“Mama… what happened to Papa at that banquet?”
Guinevere's face tightened, as if she had just bitten into a lemon.
“Your father… lost his mind,” she said quietly.
“He listened to someone he never should have listened to.”
She leaned closer, her voice firm:
“Be careful who you listen to, Clément. Always trust your mother — and never trust strangers.”

“But Mama, you trust Spencer...”
Guinevere looked away for a moment.
“Because he helped me bring you here,” she said.
“There are people you can trust… and people you can’t.”
Clément fell silent, clearly confused—
unable to see the contradiction.

“Mama… I’m scared,” Clément whispered.
“Why do you say my brothers might hurt me?
Benout was always fun to play with, and Ansfrei... he barely talked, he just read all the time.”
Guinevere said nothing. She reached into her pocket.
Clément recognized it instantly:
a fragment of his father’s crown.
“It’s because of this,” she said softly.
“They want this.”
“But... it’s just a piece,” Clément said.
She nodded.
“Yes. But these pieces… they’re the key to the entire throne of Chevalie.
And people might hurt you for it.”
She embraced him tightly.
“I don’t want them to hurt me, Mama. I won’t let them.”
“I know,” she whispered.
“That’s why we came to Varrdevet.
Here, everyone wants to serve you.
Everyone wants to protect you.”
Clément looked down at the fragment, confused.
“What am I supposed to do with this?”
Guinevere paused at the door.
Without turning, she whispered:
“Put it back together.”
Then she left.
Clément remained there, silent,
staring at the jagged metal in his hand.
Put it back together?
What did she mean?

Welcome this is my first aar narrative using the mod Godherja coments will be apreciete about the story
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