The Heiress Carrying His Heir-Chapter 68 - 69: not killers
Kaelen’s pov
The abandoned building stood behind the broken the city’s edge had seen better days. Broken windows, crumbling walls, floors stained with years of spilled ale and neglect. But tonight it was alive with energy, packed with people who had nowhere else to celebrate victories they couldn’t claim openly. 𝒇𝒓𝒆𝒆𝙬𝒆𝒃𝓷𝒐𝓿𝙚𝙡.𝒄𝓸𝒎
The Rendered. And their growing network of supporters.
I stood near the back, mask still in place though I’d pushed it up onto my forehead, watching the crowd. Fifty, maybe sixty people filled the space. Not all of them were members, some were dock workers who’d helped spread rumors, merchants who’d looked the other way during our attacks, street runners who’d carried messages.
People who’d suffered under the crown’s rule and wanted to see it bleed.
The mood was jubilant. Reckless. Dangerous.
Marcus was holding court near the center, recounting the warehouse attack to a captive audience. His voice carried over the din.
"–and then The Voice just walks right past the guards, bold as anything! They were so busy looking for a gang of thieves they didn’t see one man in a mask strolling through their checkpoint–"
Laughter erupted. Someone passed around a bottle of stolen wine.
I should have been celebrating with them. We’d pulled off three successful attacks in a week. Made the crown look incompetent. Spread our message to thousands. The Voice was becoming a name people whispered in markets, a symbol of resistance.
"Brooding again?" Vera’s voice pulled me from my thoughts. She’d appeared beside me, moving with that eerie silence old age sometimes brought. "You should be out there. They want to see their leader celebrating."
"Let Marcus have his moment. He earned it." I gestured at the crowd. "Besides, someone needs to stay clearheaded. This is getting out of control."
"It’s supposed to get out of control." Vera studied the celebration with shrewd eyes. "That’s the point. Chaos breeds more chaos. Fear spreads faster than fire."
She was right, of course. That was the strategy. But watching it unfold, seeing people drink and laugh and plan more attacks like it was all a game, made something twist in my gut.
"Come." Vera tugged at my sleeve. "The inner circle is gathering in the back room. Time to plan the next move while everyone else is distracted."
I followed her through the crowd, ignoring the calls for The Voice to make a speech, to share in the celebration. Let them think I was mysterious, remote. It served the persona.
We slipped through a door at the back of the brewery into what had once been the master brewer’s office. Now it held a scarred table, a few chairs, and the people I actually trusted.
Marcus was already there, having extracted himself from his audience. Dmitri leaned against the wall, arms crossed. Two others I recognized, Soren, who’d run the distraction at the warehouse, and Rachel, who managed our network of street runners.
And Lena.
She sat in the corner, separate from the others, watching me with those cold eyes that had become her default expression since our confrontation and the uncompleted conversation that has been replaying in my mind since the last day.
"Everyone’s here," Vera said, closing the door behind us. The sound of celebration became muffled, distant.
"We can talk freely."
I pulled off the mask completely, set it on the table. The symbol of The Voice. Just black cloth and leather, but it had become something more in people’s minds. A promise. A threat. A hope.
"First," Marcus said, "the warehouse attack was a complete success. We got away clean, no one injured on either side, and the grain is already distributed to the lower districts. The Voice’s reputation grows."
"Second," Dmitri added, "the rumors are spreading faster than we predicted. Every tavern in the city is talking about the crown’s incompetence. About how the queen can’t even protect her own storage facilities."
"Third," Rachel spoke up, her voice quiet but sharp, "we’re getting recruitment inquiries. People want to join The Rendered. People who’ve lost land, family, livelihoods to royal taxes and policies. The movement is growing."
This should have been good news. This was exactly what we wanted.
So why did it feel like standing at the edge of a cliff?
"How is the palace responding?" I asked, directing the question at Lena.
She’d been silent until now, just watching. When she spoke, her voice was carefully neutral.
"Panic. Controlled, but there. The council is divided on how to handle it." She paused. "Corvus wants investigations, informant networks, increased security. Petrov thinks it’s beneath concern, just common criminals. The queen sided with Corvus."
Of course she did. Elara would never dismiss a threat, even a small one. It’s what made her dangerous, she paid attention when others didn’t.
"What about resources?" Soren asked. "Are they actually deploying investigators?"
"Yes." Lena’s eyes never left mine. "Corvus is methodical. He’s already set up informant networks in the markets, increased guard presence at remaining storage facilities, and is analyzing attack patterns to predict the next target."
"So we change the pattern," Marcus said immediately. "Hit somewhere unexpected. Keep them guessing."
"Or," Vera said slowly, "we give them exactly what they expect and turn it into a trap."
That got everyone’s attention.
"Explain," I said.
Vera moved to the table, using her finger to trace an invisible map. "Corvus is smart. He’ll predict we’ll hit another storage facility. So we plan one. We leak information, not obviously, but carefully, that we’re targeting the southern grain depot in four days."
"And then we don’t hit it," Dmitri said, catching on. "We let them waste resources protecting the wrong target while we strike somewhere else."
"No." Vera’s smile was sharp. "We DO hit it. But we make sure the guards are ready. We make sure it fails."
Silence as we processed that.
"You want us to fail on purpose?" Marcus sounded incredulous. "Why?"
"Because a failed attack makes Corvus look competent," Vera explained. "Makes the queen look strong. Makes the council think they’re getting control of the situation." She paused. "And when people relax, when they think the threat is contained, that’s when we hit them with something they can’t ignore. Something that proves The Voice isn’t just a nuisance, it’s a genuine threat to the crown’s authority."
It was brilliant. Cruel, but brilliant.
"What kind of something?" I asked carefully.
"That," Vera said, "is what we need to decide. What would shake the crown’s authority more than anything else?"
Suggestions started flying:
"Hit multiple targets
simultaneously, show we’re organized enough for coordinated strikes."
"Target a noble’s people show that wealth doesn’t protect them from the people’s anger."
"Interrupt any upcoming event, humiliate the queen in front of everyone."
I listened to them plan escalation after escalation, each idea more dangerous than the last, and felt that cliff edge getting closer.
This was spiraling. We’d started with grain theft and rumors. Now they were talking about attacking nobles, disrupting public gatherings, creating genuine chaos that could hurt innocent people.
"No." My voice cut through the discussion.
Everyone stopped, looked at me.
"No?" Marcus frowned. "No to which part?"
"No to targeting nobles. No to disrupting public events where civilians could be hurt. No to anything that turns us from freedom fighters into terrorists."
The word landed hard.
"We’re not terrorists," Dmitri said, but he sounded uncertain.
"We’re not yet," I corrected. "But that’s the path this conversation is heading down. We started this to free people from oppression, not to create more fear and suffering."
"The crown created fear and suffering for years," Soren argued. "Your father was executed for trying to help people. Vera’s son died in their mines. Elena’s family lost everything to their taxes. Why do they deserve protection from fear?"
"Because we’re supposed to be better than them." The words came out harder than I intended. "If we become monsters to fight monsters, what’s the point? We just trade one tyranny for another."
Lena spoke for the first time in minutes, her voice cutting. "How noble. The man who infiltrated the palace to kill a queen is now concerned about being a monster."
The accusation hung in the air.
"I didn’t kill her," I said quietly.
"No, you didn’t. You fell for her instead." Lena stood, moved closer to the table. "And now you’re suddenly developing a conscience about hurting people. Forgive me if I’m skeptical about your motivations."
"My motivations–"
"Are compromised," she interrupted. "We all know it. You can’t even think clearly about this because you’re still in love with her. Still protecting her, even now."
Marcus shifted uncomfortably. Dmitri looked away. Even Vera seemed uncertain.
"That’s not" I started.
"Isn’t it?" Lena leaned forward, palms flat on the table. "Every time someone suggests something that might actually threaten the queen directly, you shut it down. Every time we discuss escalation, you pump the brakes. You’re not leading The Rendered anymore, Kaelen. You’re protecting her."
"I’m protecting innocent people from becoming collateral damage in our war."
"There’s no such thing as innocent people in a palace," Lena shot back. "Everyone there benefits from the crown’s oppression. The nobles, the guards, the servants who eat while others starve. They’re all complicit."
"That’s not true and you know it."
"What I know," Lena said, voice cold as winter, "is that you’ve lost sight of the mission. And if you can’t lead us where we need to go, maybe you shouldn’t be leading us at all."
The challenge was explicit. Direct. In front of everyone.
Marcus stood quickly. "Lena, that’s–"
"What?" She turned on him. "Unfair?
Untrue? Look at him. Look at how he hesitates every time we discuss real action. That’s not the man who swore to avenge his parents. That’s someone torn between two loyalties. And we can’t afford a compromised leader."







