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The Thessari Imperial Court is in crisis. Queen Seraphina's military campaign against separatist forces in the outer territories has suffered catastrophic defeat—three fleet groups destroyed, twelve thousand casualties, strategic objectives completely failed. The defeat isn't just military setback; it's political disaster that threatens Seraphina's authority and potentially her throne. In Thessari political culture, sovereign authority depends partly on demonstrated competence and success—catastrophic military failure creates vulnerability where rivals and ambitious nobles can challenge the monarch's fitness to rule. The emergency court session has been convened to address the crisis—to assess the military situation, to determine next steps, to manage the political fallout. But more fundamentally, it's moment where the nobles who have served Seraphina during successful years must decide whether to continue supporting her now that she's vulnerable, or whether to distance themselves in preparation for potential regime change. The session begins with formal presentations about the military defeat—casualty reports, strategic analysis, explanations of what went wrong. Seraphina receives these reports with controlled composure, acknowledging the magnitude of the disaster without showing emotional collapse that would further undermine her authority. Then comes the critical moment: Seraphina must address the court directly about the defeat, must take responsibility for the failed campaign, must demonstrate that despite catastrophic setback she remains capable of leading the empire. She rises from her throne to deliver her address—honest about the magnitude of the defeat, acknowledging her responsibility as sovereign who authorized the campaign, committing to addressing the strategic failures and to supporting the families of those who died in service. It's dignified response to disaster—neither deflecting blame nor collapsing into despair, but accepting accountability while projecting continued leadership capability. As she speaks, something becomes visible in the assembled nobles' behavior: they're averting their eyes. Not the respectful gaze-lowering that Thessari protocol sometimes requires, but deliberate refusal to meet the queen's gaze or to show any visible reaction to her words. It's calculated response—in Thessari political culture, making eye contact during sovereign's crisis moment creates implicit bond, witnessing the vulnerability, acknowledging the accountability, accepting some share of the burden. The nobles are refusing that bond, keeping their gazes averted to signal they're withholding support, maintaining distance, preserving their options to abandon Seraphina if the political situation deteriorates further. The entire court—hundreds of nobles, military officers, government officials—maintaining this collective aversion. Some staring at the floor, some examining the walls, some looking at anything except the queen who's addressing them and accepting responsibility for disaster that killed thousands of their people. The silence is profound—not attentive silence of people listening carefully, but empty silence of people refusing to engage, refusing to acknowledge, using their collective withdrawal as political weapon. Seraphina continues her address despite the visible abandonment. The speech concludes. She stands at the throne, having delivered honest accounting of catastrophic defeat and having received in return complete withdrawal from every noble and official in her court. Into this silence—this collective refusal to acknowledge or support—Captain Marcus Webb steps forward. He's human military officer, present as part of alliance military coordination mission, not formally part of Thessari court hierarchy. He has no political stake in Seraphina's authority, no obligation to support Thessari sovereign during internal crisis. He walks from his position in the diplomatic observer section toward the center of the court floor. Every eye follows him. He reaches the appropriate distance from the throne and kneels—not the elaborate ceremonial genuflection that Thessari court protocols specify, but simple clear gesture: one knee to the ground, head bowed briefly in respect, then raising his gaze to meet Seraphina's directly. The gesture is old, stripped of politics, offered without conditions or calculations about advantage. All stories shared on this channel are completely original content, created on my computer, and copyrights belong to me. No AI templates or pre-made content have been used—each story is written from scratch and is entirely unique. What did you think of Captain Marcus Webb's decision to step forward and kneel before Queen Seraphina when her entire court of hundreds of nobles was deliberately averting their eyes and refusing to acknowledge her moment of crisis and accountability, and do you believe that loyalty offered freely when it costs everything and promises