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Every single one of them looks dangerous. Every single one of them notices me. Not all with interest. Some only glance. Some barely look at all. But enough do that heat crawls under my skin. I can feel the difference in myself here. Too small. Too soft. Too human. I do not belong in this place yet. Every stare reminds me.

Marat leads me through a secured corridor and out into the city proper. The sounds hit next. Low voices in a language I don’t know. Boots striking stone. Wheels humming over smooth road surfaces. Distant animal cries I can’t place. Bells somewhere far off. Wind moving through banners high above.

The city is alive in a way Mars never was. Not crowded exactly. Not frantic. Just full. Dense. Built on power instead of scraps.

I turn my head slowly, trying to take it in without looking frightened. A market square opens to the left as we pass. Tables heavy with fruit I have never seen. Hanging meats, some dark and glossy, some pale and thick-cut. Strips of dried drenak meat hanging from iron hooks. Bundles of herbs. Colored cloth. Bone combs. Shining tools. Flowering plants taller than I am. Water running through carved channels along the edges of the street.

Actual running water. Out in the open. Not hidden behind pay systems and ration locks.

I stare at it so openly that Marat notices.

“You will see stranger things than water,” he says.

I drag my eyes away. “I know.”

But I don’t. Not really.

A pair of Tigris females crosses ahead of us, and my attention catches on them hard and fast. They are taller than I am. Strong through the body. Dressed in layered fabric and fitted leather. They carry themselves with the kind of ease that comes from never wondering whether the world was built with your body in mind. One has metal woven through a braid at her temple. The other wears a knife at her hip like it belongs there as naturally as jewelry.

One of them glances at me, then at Marat, then away. No smile. No hostility either. Just assessment. I feel that too. I am being looked at from every direction today. Not because I am special. Because I am new. Because I am small. Because I am human. Because somewhere in this city, a king is waiting for thewife they matched to his body through blood, pheromones, and fertility.

My stomach tightens.

Marat leads me into a quieter government quarter where the buildings are broader and lower, set around courtyards and open stone paths lined with dark-leaved trees. Guards stand at entrances. Officials and servants move with neat, practiced purpose. The air here smells less like the city and more like polished wood, warm stone, and some bitter resin I can’t name.

“This is where legal match unions are processed?” I ask, mostly because I need to say something normal.

“For city documentation,” Marat says. “Yes.”

Marriage in a government building. On another planet. To a male I have never seen. The absurdity catches in me so sharply I almost laugh. Instead I keep walking.

We stop outside a building with wide stone steps and doors taller than any human architect on Mars would waste money on. Carved above the arch is a symbol I don’t know, but I can feel the importance of it anyway. The guards at the entrance glance at Marat, then at me, then step aside without question.

Inside, the air is cooler. The floor beneath my boots is dark smooth stone threaded with lighter lines that catch the light. The ceilings arch high. Tall windows cast long strips of gold sun across the walls. The place should feel grand. Instead what I feel most is size.

Everything is too large. The halls. The doors. The furniture. I have the sudden horrible image of myself standing beside this world forever, always just a little too small for it.

Marat says something to the clerk at the front desk in Tigris. This time I catch more.

“Keandra. Sahri transfer. Kai Kaiven of Vek Talan.”

The clerk’s eyes flick to me and stay there half a second too long before he nods and gestures toward an inner chamber.

“Wait here,” Marat says.

I step inside and stop near the wall instead of sitting. I can’t seem to make myself relax enough to sit. The room is beautiful in the way expensive places are beautiful. A low carved table. A thick woven rug. Pale fruit in a bowl on the sideboard. Cool water in glass. Sun warming the far wall.

None of it matters.

My pulse has changed. Sharpened. Turned uneasy. I know what comes next. My husband. The word does not feel real inside my head.

I smooth my hands over the front of my dress. Realize I’m doing it. Stop. Then do it again anyway. I brushed my hair carefully before leaving, but the shuttle and the travel shook loose some of the waves around my face. I tuck them back with fingers that are not as steady as I want them to be.

What if he hates the sight of me?

The thought lands so suddenly I almost flinch. I am thin. Too thin. My dress is new, but cheap by the standards of this place. I look human in every obvious way. Small bones. Round face. Soft mouth. Nothing sharp about me. Nothing queen-like. Nothing grand.

Maybe that should not matter. This is a contract match, not courtship.