In the kingdom of Eldoria, every noble family believed their daughter would be the one to wear the crown beside Prince Lysander. Balls were held, gowns were sewn with gold thread, smiles practiced in mirrors for months. Yet the prince’s heart turned toward a girl no one had ever thought to invite—a quiet, mistreated orphan named Elara who lived in the shadows of her uncle’s house.
How did the prince find this hidden girl?(u cant rubb me)
And why, out of every dazzling beauty in the land, did he choose her?
The road to the village of Briar Glen was dusty and silent when Lysander’s black car rolled in one late afternoon. The sky burned orange, and children paused their games to stare at the gleaming vehicle. Lysander did not wave. He sat by the window, eyes open but seeing nothing of the present—only the face of his father, King Theron, now gone.
Two weeks earlier he had been half a world away, slicing onions in a small overseas apartment, when his phone rang. His mother’s voice cracked like thin ice.
“Lysander… your father has left us.”
The knife slipped from his hand and clanged against the tile.
“Come home, my son. The kingdom needs its king.”
Now the palace gates opened wide, and Queen Isolde ran to him, burying her face in his shoulder. Elders in white robes bowed low. Drums mourned softly. The funeral rites had already begun.
That same evening, in a cramped compound on the far edge of Briar Glen, a girl stepped outside with a cracked plastic bucket. Elara. Thin, barefoot, eyes permanently lowered. She lived with her uncle, Lord Baldwin—one of the twelve high councilors—his wife Margot, and their two spoiled daughters, Vivienne and Celeste. To them, Elara was not family. She was free labor.
“Elara! Water—now!” Margot’s voice cut across the yard.
Vivienne smirked from the doorway. “Born to fetch and carry, that one.”
Celeste laughed. “Don’t come back slow, or the dogs get your mat again.”
Elara only nodded, gripped the bucket tighter, and walked toward the village well. She had learned long ago to hide pain behind a small, polite smile.
She did not know that everything was about to change.
Two weeks after the king’s burial, the council summoned Lysander to the great hall.
“You will take the throne,” the high councilor declared.
Lysander bowed his head. “I will honor my father.”
Then came the second decree: “A king cannot rule alone. Tradition demands a queen.”
Lysander’s jaw tightened. He had studied abroad, built a life far from crowns and customs. Marriage felt like another chain. But his mother’s quiet words echoed: Sometimes the path chooses us.
That night Lord Baldwin invited the prince to his home “for palm wine and council.” Inside the compound, Vivienne and Celeste were dressed like peacocks—silk gowns, jeweled combs, practiced laughter. Baldwin’s plan was simple: one of his daughters would catch the prince’s eye and lift the family forever.
Elara was sent on endless errands so she would not be seen.
When Lysander arrived, the family fawned and fluttered. He sat beneath the old fig tree, watching their performance with cool, distant eyes. Then Elara returned from the well, a heavy bucket balanced on her head, moonlight catching the quiet grace of her movements. She bowed low.
“Good evening, Your Highness.”
Baldwin waved her away sharply. “Inside, girl. Quickly.”
But Lysander had already seen—the flicker of fear in her eyes, the false warmth in Baldwin’s voice. Something inside him stirred.
Days later, driving to clear his head, he found her again at the riverbank helping a pregnant woman lift a water jar onto her head. Elara smiled at the stranger with genuine kindness, then returned to her own load without complaint.
Lysander watched from the car, heart racing in a way no grand ball had ever caused.
He stepped out.
“Good evening,” he said softly.
Elara dropped into a startled curtsy, nearly spilling her water. “Your Highness.”
“Please,” he smiled, “just Lysander.”
They began to meet in secret—under the ancient baobab, by the quiet bend of the river. She told him, voice low, about losing her parents, about the uncle who took her father’s land and turned her into a servant. She never complained, only spoke with calm acceptance that broke his heart more than tears ever could.
And Lysander—haunted by duty, pressured by ambitious fathers and painted smiles—found peace for the first time since his father died.
He fell in love with the girl who owned nothing but kindness.
When he finally confessed his feelings beneath the baobab, Elara’s eyes filled with disbelieving tears.
“I feel the same,” she whispered, “but I am only the orphan girl.”
“You are everything,” he answered.