He wears a crown that weighs more with every passing year, not because of the nation it represents, but because of the two empty spaces it cannot fill. The world sees a statesman, a symbol, a steady hand in turbulent times. They do not see the man who counts the ages of children he has never tucked into bed, who knows their milestones only through headlines and hushed briefings. In rooms lined with portraits of ancestors, he wonders what they would think of a legacy built on such a quiet loss.
He tells himself that time remains, that one gesture, one letter, one softened word might still change the story they will tell about him. Not the story inscribed in stone, but the one spoken in living rooms decades from now. In that version, he is not just the king on the balcony, but the old man who finally chose love over silence.
