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#〓     ◟   (  muse.  )     ↬     gaze  into  the  abyss ‚  the  abyss  gazes  into  you .
sincerelyyycece · 5 months
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i'm letting go.
Y/N finally had enough of being James’s backburner
note: modern au, this is a part 2 of my “hey, are u still there? …good.” fic, inspired by niki’s song again but this time it’s “oceans and engines.”
tags: @dearmy-diary @moonteaxw @xcinnamonmalfoyx @box-of-kinderjoy @hisparentsgallerryy @alittlebirdswhisper @chi-ara (i can't seem to tag the last two accounts.)
sincerelyyycece © ─ all rights reserved. please do not repost/translate/copy any of my work.
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A symphony of heartbroken tears and quiet, mournful sniffles echoed throughout the room, rebounding off the cold, stark walls and filling the silence with their melancholy. "Here we go again," she mused to herself, a bitter chuckle escaping her lips as the painful reality of her situation hit her once more. Her gaze, heavy with unshed tears and the burden of heartbreak, fixed on the seemingly innocent photo of James and Lily, both ignorant of the emotional turmoil their image was causing.
As she studied their smiling faces, her heart, already fragile and wounded, sank even deeper into the abyss of disappointment. The realization that she had been cruelly sidelined for Lily once more was a blow she had not anticipated, a betrayal that echoed in the silent room. She could almost hear the sound of her heart shattering, each piece a testament to her unrequited love for James.
A nauseating wave of regret and self-reproach washed over her, threatening to drown her in its relentless current. As she pondered her own naivety, she wondered how she had allowed herself to fall into this trap.
What had she expected?
Did she truly believe that this time, against all odds, he would choose her?
How foolish she felt, how incredibly naïve she was for ever believing him!
Her eyes narrowed at James's enthusiastic grin, a stark reminder of the shared moments and whispered promises. She remembered how he had once smiled at her in the exact same way, his eyes twinkling with mischief and unspoken promises. How easily she had fallen for that smile, and how bitterly she regretted it now.
With a deep, shaky breath, she forced herself to look away from the picture, her hand moving to wipe away the stray tears that had begun to fall. She knew what she needed to do, as much as it hurt her. She had to let go. She had to let go of James, of her love for him, and of the hope she'd been foolishly clinging to.
She gazed at her phone, James's number illuminating the screen. Another shaky breath escaped her lips as she summoned the courage to press the call button. The room filled with the familiar sound of ringing as she anxiously awaited his response, her hands trembling with nerves. Thoughts raced through her mind as she contemplated the words she intended to speak to him.
Suddenly, a voice broke the silence, uttering a soft "Hello?" Her breath caught at the sound, her heart skipping a beat. Faint music played in the background as he called out her name, "Y/N." She swiftly composed herself, resisting the urge to melt at the sound of his voice. "Are you there, Angel?" he inquired, his tone gentle. Her throat felt parched as she struggled to form words, her mind urging her to speak, yet her voice failed her.
Frustration washed over her as she sensed the distant sounds of music and chatter, indicating his movement to another location. "Y/N, did you accidentally call me?" he teased, chuckling lightly. "Hey," she finally managed to utter. "Hey Angel, what's going on?" he responded, his voice tender. She blinks rapidly, searching for a way to conclude the conversation.
But then a familiar female voice interrupted from the other end, urging James to return inside for another round. Though faint, she recognized it immediately. James's affectionate response indicated his reluctance to end their conversation. Internally, she sighed, realizing it was time to let go. No more clinging to hope, no more waiting on the sidelines for him. It was time to move on.
She'd had enough; her heart was tired of playing second fiddle to Lily. She was tired of being the one he turned to when he was bored or lonely—the one who was there to fill his empty moments. "James," she started hesitantly, her voice barely above a whisper, "I think we should stop seeing each other." There was silence on the other end of the line, and for a moment, she thought he had hung up. "What?" he finally asked, sounding utterly shocked. "Why?”
"I'm tired, James," she admitted, her voice wavering as she spoke. "I'm tired of waiting for you, of being your second choice. I deserve better than this. I deserve to be someone's first choice, not their backup plan." There was a pause as she took a deep breath, gathering her courage before adding, "I'm letting go.”
"But, Y/N," James started desperately, but she cut him off. "No, James. It's over. Goodbye." With that, she ended the call, her heart aching as she did so. Up until that moment, she had hoped that things might change and that James might come to see her as more than just a friend, more than just a backup plan. But it was clear now that that was never going to happen. She had to let him go, for her own sake.
It was a painful decision, but she knew it was the right one. She deserved to be more than someone's second choice. She deserved to be loved and cherished as much as she loved and cherished others. And maybe one day she will find that person. But for now, it was time for her to focus on herself. It was time to heal and move forward. It was time to let go.
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pretzel-box · 1 month
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Hello!! I dont know if your requests are still open but if they are can you do one where sebastian realizes his feelings for reader? If your requests are close you can ignore this i love your writing
Mesmerised
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words: 1k
tags: love at first sight, sebastian crushes on you
authors note: I kinda made it into a first meeting scenario, where Sebastian falls in love with reader without knowing them
if you want a friends to lovers type of thing just send another ask❤️
One thing that Sebastian had quickly figured out in the Hadal Blackside was that resources were rare and had immense value. The best source for them? His own customers—unfortunate souls who met their end at the hands of nearly every danger the abyss had to offer.
He didn't need to worry about Pandemonium or Wall Dwellers; most visitors sent by Urbanshade died to mundane things like a brightly burning door or a gas leak in a pipe. To Sebastian, they were nothing more than loot bags, ripe for the picking. He never even had to stress about them getting their hands on the silly crystal. At this rate, they’d all be dead long before they got close.
Tonight, he was out on a routine scavenging run, roaming the dark hallways after spotting an angler rush by. His eyes, perfectly attuned to the darkness, quickly picked out a lifeless corpse lying on the wet ground. Poor guy, Sebastian mused with a smirk, must be embarrassing to die to something so simple. 
He didn’t waste time, immediately crouching down to collect the scattered belongings. Among the items, he found a blacklight in good condition. That would fetch a decent price. He was so absorbed in his task, so confident and sly about securing new items for his store, that he failed to notice a pair of curious eyes watching him from the shadows.
“It’s not healthy to look at things in a dark light,” a voice said, startling him. You turned on your flashlight, aiming it just low enough so as not to blind anyone. You'd learned that lesson the hard way with your now-deceased teammate.
Sebastian’s heart skipped a beat as you stepped into the dim glow, unbothered by his monstrous appearance. You were a striking contrast to the grim surroundings—calm, almost serene, as if this hellish place had nothing left that could surprise you. You offered him the flashlight, your expression unreadable.
“No need,” Sebastian muttered in his usual grumpy tone, not expecting to be caught in the act, especially not by someone like you. He raised one of his three arms, switching on his anglerfish lure to get a better look at you.
The soft, eerie glow illuminated your face, and for the first time in a long while, Sebastian felt something strange stir in his chest. You didn’t flinch, didn’t recoil in disgust or fear as most others did. Instead, you met his gaze with steady, almost curious eyes.
In that brief moment, Sebastian found himself captivated. There was something about the way you stood there, unfazed by the corpse, by him, by everything that should have sent you running. Your calm demeanor, your willingness to hand over your flashlight without a second thought, it all left him feeling... something. Was this what they called love at first sight?
He’d always thought it was nonsense, a ridiculous human sentiment that had no place in a world as brutal as this. But now, with you standing there, looking at him with an unreadable expression, he wasn’t so sure.
He cleared his throat, trying to shake off the unfamiliar feeling. “You’re awfully brave, aren’t you?” he said, his voice gruff but lacking the usual edge. “Walking around here alone. Don’t you know this place is dangerous?”
You shrugged, your gaze never wavering from his. “Dangerous, sure, but I’ve seen worse. Besides, I’m not alone, am I?”
That simple statement caught him off guard. Not alone. Did you really mean him? The idea of someone seeing him as anything other than a monster, let alone company, was new. Unsettling, even. But it wasn’t entirely unpleasant.
Sebastian straightened up, awkwardly holding onto the blacklight he’d just looted. “Well, you should still be careful,” he grumbled, trying to mask his flustered state. “Not everyone’s as... understanding as me.”
A small, almost playful smile tugged at the corners of your lips. “Noted. But I think I can manage.”
Sebastian couldn’t help but admire your confidence. There was something magnetic about it, something that drew him in despite himself. He found himself wanting to know more about you, to understand what made you so different from the others who came through his shop.
“So, what brings you out here?” he asked, trying to keep the conversation going, though his usual gruffness couldn’t completely mask the curiosity in his voice. “You don’t exactly look like the looting type.”
You glanced down at the corpse, then back at Sebastian. “Just exploring for something. This place has a lot of... mysteries. Thought I might find something interesting.”
“Mysteries, huh?” He couldn’t help but chuckle, the sound deep and rumbling in his chest. “You’ve definitely found something. Not sure if I’d call it interesting, though.”
Your smile widened just a fraction, and Sebastian felt his heart skip again. Damn it, what was wrong with him? He was a shopkeeper, a scavenger, not some lovesick fool. But there was no denying it—he was drawn to you, and he had no idea what to do about it.
“Maybe I’ll find something even more interesting next time,” you said, your tone light, almost teasing. “Who knows?”
Sebastian found himself nodding before he could think better of it. “Yeah... maybe.”
As you turned to leave, he couldn’t stop himself from calling out, “Be careful out there. And if you ever need... supplies or anything, my shop’s just down the hall.”
You paused, glancing back at him with that same unreadable expression. “I’ll keep that in mind,” you said, your voice soft but clear.
And with that, you disappeared into the darkness, leaving Sebastian standing there, holding a looted blacklight and wondering what the hell had just happened. 
“I should have asked for the name…”
For the first time in what felt like forever, Sebastian felt a strange flutter of hope. Maybe, just maybe, there was something worth more than all the loot in the Hadal Blackside. And with such a cute prisoner in the hallways, he might feel generous enough to leave you the one or other discount. 
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floofeh-purpi · 2 months
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Creator x Destroyer. ♡
Sagau! Foul Legacy x Creator! Gn! Reader
『Beloved fluffball/s mentioned below! 💜』
@mc-cos-charm (Thank you for supporting my sagau fatui series Ilysm fluffball :3) @justmare @keirennyx @catratnap @fantasticarcadefan
A/n: My poetic side came out this night.
☆★☆★☆★☆★☆★☆★☆★☆★☆
• The world thrummed with discord, a harsh dissonance echoing in the very fabric of Teyvat. As the creator, you felt it keenly - a tremor, a crack in your creation.
• Locating the source, you found yourself hovering above a desolate landscape ravaged by a crimson storm. In the swirling chaos, a figure fought with a primal ferocity.
• It was Childe, or rather, Foul Legacy.
• Foul Legacy didn't possess Childe's usual mocking grin. Its face was a mask of cold fury, its movements mechanical, fueled by a raw, destructive power.
• Yet, you saw a flicker, a fleeting moment where the crimson energy seemed to dim, revealing a sliver of blue beneath. Briefly, the eyes locked with yours, a desperate plea flashing within their depths.
• Confused, you reached out, calming the storm with a thought. The world stilled, the crimson fading to reveal a kneeling Foul Legacy, its monstrous form trembling.
• You couldn't help but feel a pang of sympathy. Though destructive, it wasn't inherently evil. It was a part of Childe, warped by his past and the Abyss.
• "Why did you cause such destruction?" your voice resonated in the empty space.
• Foul Leagacy didn't speak, its roars and growls replaced by a chilling silence. You knelt before it, offering a hand.
• "Don't be afraid," you said gently, sensing the turmoil within. The monstrous being hesitated, then hesitantly reached out, a single claw brushing your outstretched palm.
• It was a small touch, but the world seemed to sigh in relief. You felt a surge of warmth, a strange connection to this being.
• It was a connection unlike any you'd experienced with your creations before, almost…affectionate? You dismissed it as your own projection, a desire to understand this part of Childe.
• "You're strong," you admitted, "but strength isn't everything. Perhaps... you could find another way to use your power."
• Foul Legacy seemed to ponder this, then slowly withdrew its hand. It bowed its head, a gesture that surprised you.
• Before you could press further, a surge of energy pulled you back. You reappeared in your sanctum, the echoes of Teyvat's unease a dull thrum in your mind.
• Meanwhile, Childe, stripped of Foul Legacy's power, lay unconscious in his Snezhnayan quarters. When he awoke, a strange feeling lingered - an echo of warmth, a memory of an oh-so tender touch.
• He dismissed it as a fever dream, yet couldn't shake the feeling that he'd interacted with you, the creator. His creator, in some form. A blush crept onto his face, a sensation entirely new and unnerving.
• Oblivious to Childe's internal turmoil, you continued to observe Teyvat, your gaze lingering on Snezhnaya for a moment longer. The strange connection to Foul Legacy puzzled you, but it also sparked a newfound curiosity about Childe himself.
• Perhaps, you mused, there was more to him than just his destructive tendencies.
• Little did you know, your gentle touch had awakened a spark within the Harbinger, a devotion that transcended his human form. As Foul Legacy, Childe would continue to fight, but now, a new purpose bloomed - to be worthy of your touch, to earn a place in the world you created.
Its my 1st time writing smth oike this, have some mercy please—
【Part 2.】
Published: July 21, 2024. 7:02pm.
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ɴᴏʙᴏᴅʏ'ꜱ ꜱᴏɴ, ɴᴏʙᴏᴅʏ'ꜱ ᴅᴀᴜɢʜᴛᴇʀ
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ᴀᴇᴍᴏɴᴅ x ʀᴇᴀᴅᴇʀ!ɴɪᴇᴄᴇ
"ᴡᴀɪᴛ ꜰᴏʀ ᴛʜᴇ ꜱɪɢɴᴀʟ ᴀɴᴅ ɪ'ʟʟ ᴍᴇᴇᴛ ʏᴏᴜ ᴀꜰᴛᴇʀ ᴅᴀʀᴋ…"
Word count: 5,000.
Fandom: House of the Dragon.
Pairing: Aemond x Reader!Velaryon!Niece.
RELEASE — 13. Her.
Their lips met with an increasing frequency, each kiss more insistent than the last, like an unquenchable flame demanded to be further stoked. Yet, just as the desire to surrender swelled like a tide ready to break, he would always pull back, extinguishing the moment. The frustration coiled tightly in her chest, a painful knot that throbbed with each missed connection.
She found herself adrift in uncertainty, grappling with the reasons behind his withdrawal. It gnawed at her, this need to understand and break through the obstacle that held them in this painful limbo. He seemed to revel in her company as much as she did, then a shadow would flicker across his expression, and he would retreat, an unseen force compelling him to do so. 
Was she simply too demanding? The thought lingered. Perhaps her expectations were the invisible walls. 
Usually, in those instances, she said nothing. Instead, she offered him a gentle kiss on the forehead before turning away, her back facing him. She would close her eyes, desperately trying to block out the unrelieved pressure that would keep her on edge as the night wore on and inevitably shadow her thoughts the following day. 
For him, that did not seem sufficient; he had begun to evade contact even in sleep, placing a pillow between them as if it could somehow contain the tempest of emotions swirling in the air. He believed himself subtle in this maneuver, convinced that she remained oblivious in her slumber. On more than one occasion, that act had elicited an amused chuckle from her. 
One particular night, they had surrendered to kisses that left their lips red and swollen, their breaths ragged and their hearts racing. Driven by desire, she attempted to slide her leg over his hip, seeking a more intimate contact, but he pulled away once more, maintaining that chivalrous gentleness that she so longed to shatter.
For her, it was a titanic effort to hold back. Her entire body, rebellious and restless, screamed for resolution, a warmth coursed through her from head to toe.
A frustrated sigh escaped her lips as she distanced herself, feeling the weight of unspoken words pressing down on them. He, with his eyes closed and jaw clenched, buried his head in the pillow.
“What troubles you?” she inquired, barely breaking the stillness. “What is it that holds you back?” It was the first time she dared to voice that question.
He was rigid beneath her touch; she could feel the strain under her hand as she gently cupped his face, coaxing him to meet her gaze. He obeyed reluctantly.
“What holds me back is the certainty that if I continue, I shall not be able to stop” he confessed, each word laced with raw sincerity. Her breath caught in her lungs.
Though she wanted to dismiss it, she knew he was right; someone had to be the anchor, the steady force that kept them afloat. Her mind, intoxicated by desire, struggled to think clearly, and she realized that if they didn’t find a way to slow down, they could plunge into an abyss that would ruin the delicate order they were meant to uphold. But, gods, how she longed to abandon all caution and lose herself completely in him.
She merely nodded, her throat tight and parched. In the depths of her thoughts, she mused that if he wished to stem the tide, his words didn’t quite fulfill their intention. For that night, she couldn’t shake the dream of persuading him to surrender fully and to intertwine so completely that there was no trace of where one ended and the other began.
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The corridors of the castle hummed with frenetic activity, buzzing with a level of commotion far beyond the ordinary. The upcoming celebration in honor of the King had ignited a whirlwind of anticipation and hustle. Servants scurried about, their footsteps a rhythmic clatter on the stone floors, while emissaries from the most powerful lords mingled, their conversations filled with hushed politics
She moved with a determined stride, her mind set on a single destination: finding the one person she knew could offer the guidance she needed in these… delicate matters. Their interactions since their arrival had been fleeting, limited to brief exchanges during meals—a great contrast to the time they used to spend together in Dragonstone, where constant proximity was the norm.
Upon reaching the room, she noticed the door slightly ajar. Even so, she announced her presence, feeling a slight flutter of nervous anticipation in her stomach.
Baela, hearing the knock, spun around with a beaming smile. “Sister, how great it is to see you!” she exclaimed. She was dressed in her riding attire, adjusting her leather gloves. “I was just about to take Moondancer for a little flight. She has been so restless since we arrived. Come join me! We need to escape this madness for a bit” she added with a laugh.
“Yes, I would love to” she replied, though her tone carried a touch of seriousness. Clearing her throat, she added, “However, I came here to talk to you about something.”
Baela’s curiosity was immediately piqued. Her eyebrows shot up in interest as she motioned for her to enter. The door closed softly behind her as she made her way to one of the room’s armchairs. Baela soon joined her, her demeanor shifting to a more serious, concerned expression.
Before she could ask any questions, she blurted out the words in an excited rush, her voice rising higher than was prudent: “I am with a man.”
Baela’s eyes widened in astonishment, her face lighting up with a gleam of excitement. She sprang to her feet, her energy bubbling over. “This calls for wine!” she declared, heading towards the door with the same determination one might use to conquer a battlefield.
Upon returning, she tossed her gloves disdainfully, letting them fall into the floor and sank back into her chair, taking her hands into her own. Her hands reached out and clasped hers, her eyes alight with eager curiosity. “Pray, tell me everything” she implored. An alleviated chuckle escaped her lips as she nestled into the intimate atmosphere.
“Who is he? A lord? A knight? Or perhaps a mysterious stranger?” She couldn’t help but smile at the hunger for details. “Is it… casual?”
“He is courting me.” 
“Then he must be someone of significance” Baela exclaimed. “Do not leave me in suspense. Who is he? At least provide me with a clue. Is he from court?”
“It is quite complicated” she murmured, wrestling to withhold too much information.
Baela frowned, her tone shifting to one of persuasion, as if she were unearthing a buried treasure. “Complicated? You cannot drop such a bombshell and then just remain silent. Do I know him?”
The directness of the question made her bite her lip, caught between the impulse to confide and her loyalty to Aemond, who had requested discretion. The truth burned in her chest, eager to be released, but breaking his trust was a boundary she was unwilling to cross.
“He wishes to keep it a secret, at least for the time being.”
Her eyes watched every small gesture attentively, searching for a clue, anything that might betray her. “Come now, you are not going to keep this from me, are you?” Baela exhaled with playful exasperation, her fingers drumming impatiently. “This is torturous.”
“I cannot, Baela” she insisted, pleading for understanding, even as her smile betrayed her longing to share. “I promised not to.”
“Oh, by the Gods.” Baela reclined dramatically against the back of the chair, feigning frustration, though her face still shone with excitement. “What if I were to uncover it myself? You know I excel at these things” she said with a confident grin, certain that she would unravel the puzzle sooner or later.
“Then that would not be my fault.” She let out a small laugh, well aware of her sister’s determination. “But everything in its own time.”
“At least tell me this. Does he treat you well? Does he make you happy?” 
She took a deep breath, allowing the warmth of those memories to envelop her. “Yes, Baela. He treats me wonderfully, and yes, he makes me happy. Truly happy.”
“That sounds magnificent” Baela responded, gently. “And what was it you wished to discuss specifically?” she sought, taking on a knowing mischief.
She bit her lower lip, feeling a rosy flush creep onto her cheeks at the mere thought. “Well,” she began, intertwining her hands and playing with her fingers, searching for a way to start without giving too much away, “I have been spending a few nights in his company” she confessed, drifting into a dreamy tone.
“Do not tell me you have shared a bed with him?” Baela looked at her, her mouth slightly agape, a glint in her eyes. “This is getting better and better!”
Suddenly, firm knocks echoed, and Baela dashed toward it, almost running with the speed of someone unwilling to miss a single word. The tray waiting at the threshold was deftly received. “Do not stop speaking!” she exclaimed, as she closed the door.
With swift and assured movements, she placed the tray on the table beside them, the delicate clink of crystal glasses punctuating the air as she filled them with white wine, their favored choice. “I have long awaited this moment” she remarked, her laughter filling the room.
Her words rang true, and were far from exaggeration. In the past, Baela had queried numerous times about those certain topics, but she had never been able to provide the satisfying answers she was hoping for. Even on more than one occasion, Baela had introduced her to various lords. Although they seemed kind, none managed to awaken in her an interest beyond courtesy.
“The truth is, he is a gentleman, Baela, truly” she asserted. “And while I am grateful for it, I find myself immensely frustrated” she added, lowering her voice slightly as she savored a sip of wine, the liquid emboldening her spirit. “I am at a loss as to how to encourage him to relax. We have only kissed, as he will not even allow me to touch him.”
“Well, I understand that it can be quite complicated to halt once you have begun” Baela replied, leaning forward with keen interest. “Sometimes, a touch of patience and a dash of cunning can lead you further than you might expect.”
The atmosphere in the room shifted, charged with a new energy as she continued, her tone blending wisdom with a frolicsome charm, as if she were sharing an enchanting secret. “However, it is not always necessary to delve to the depths right away. There are many ways to explore the waters before taking that final leap. Although I am certain your mysterious man is aware of that. Perhaps he simply wishes to proceed with caution, or he is waiting for your signal.”
“I doubt that is the case, for he must be just as unfamiliar with this as I am.” She recognized the unlikelihood of him seeking counsel, given his reserved nature. As Baela regarded her with a sidelong glance, as if demanding more insight, she continued. “He has awaited for me, just as I have for him.”
“Has he?” Baela mused, brimming with astonishment. “That is a rare find indeed. Men typically do not place the same significance on the first time as we do” she remarked, amazed. A smile blossomed on her face, pleased to have further confirmation of his exceptional nature.
“He is unlike any of the others” she asserted, confidence radiating from her as thoughts of Aemond illuminated her features.
Baela returned the smile, her look warm with affection. “You deserve someone like that” she said earnestly. “Now, would you care to know more, or can you guess what occupies my thoughts?” she teased, pouring more wine into their glasses, the golden liquid sparkling in the light.
She let out a soft laugh, relishing the thrilling direction their conversation was taking. “I can surmise a few things, but I suspect you will guide me better than my imagination” she replied.
With a twinkle in her eye, Baela began to outline a series of possibilities that had never crossed her mind. Each word she spoke drew her in deeper, and as the hours slipped away, they delved into the topic with fervor. Their lunch transformed into a delightful symphony of laughter and wine, with Baela sharing her insights and past escapades, imparting wisdom she had gathered along the way.
“I understand now why you fought so fiercely to prevent Daemon from cutting off that cook’s hand” she said, recalling a past incident.
“It would have been a crime to lose those hands” Baela burst into laughter at the memory, biting her lip with a mix of nostalgia and amusement. “But back to you. Do you wish to go further with him, or would you prefer to wait?” 
“Unlike him, I cannot think so coldly” she responded with a soft chuckle. “If it were up to me, we would have crossed that bridge the very day I arrived. The only thing restraining me back is, well, the consequences that follow.”
“In that case, I shall tell you that as long as you take the proper precautions, there is no reason not to indulge yourself” Baela explained. Noticing the confusion on her face, she continued, “We live in a world where men hold precedence, deemed superior and untouchable. They can enjoy and not face repercussions or lose their prestige.” Her pitch grew sharper with discontent.
She listened, surprised by the depth. She had never reflected so deeply on such matters before.
“There are truths that neither the maesters nor the septas dare to share with us” Baela continued, her tone energetic. “Because if we yield to temptation, just as they do, we shall bear a lifetime mark. We will be branded, lose our worth, and be judged mercilessly. Is that not a dreadful injustice?” She nodded fervently, her frown reflecting their shared indignation.
Then Baela smiled, relaxing a bit as she said, “Well, I apologize, I can be rather passionate about these topics at times.”
“There are ways to avoid such fates—tricks discovered by and for women to prevent unwanted consequences and to enjoy ourselves just as they do” Baela continued, in a conspiratorial whisper. “You must pay heed to the signs of your body and the cycles of your moon. You see, it is crucial that,” she paused briefly, allowing her words to linger in the air, fostering understanding without the need for explicit explanation, “that must occur outside. And if, in the heat of the moment, things spiral out of control, there are certain teas one can consume to ensure no remnants remain.”
Her advice was clear and precise. Then, a new doubt crept into her mind. “The septa always claims that before a wedding, a maester will… examine us to ensure we are still pure.”
Baela frowned for a moment, her expression thoughtful before she replied, “Yes, that is true. But do not fret too much, it is not as common as it once was” she reassured her. “If it comes to it, you can always claim you lost it while riding, no one would be able to verify such a tale” she added with a roguish grin. She nodded, appreciating the logic and irony behind her words.
“Is it as painful as they say it is?” she questioned, feeling a twinge of apprehension.
“That is merely a rumor, spread by those wishing to scare us into submission, to deter us from pursuing our desires. I am certain of it” Baela said, dismantling her fears with confidence. “Or perhaps by someone who has not been with a partner who knows how to treat them. Personally, I did not suffer at all. It all hinges on preparation.”
“Thank you for this, I truly needed it.”
Baela threw her arms around her, rocking her back and forth. “Thank you” she said between giggles, “you cannot fathom how long I have been waiting for us to finally speak about this.”
“Let us toast!” Baela exclaimed, raising her glass with enthusiasm. “To us, to you two.”
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After the evening's revelry, she staggered towards her room, each step feeling heavier under the weight of the wine. As she reached her chambers, she crumpled onto the bed, her body sinking into the softness with a sigh of relief. As her head met the pillow, an unrelenting tide of fatigue swept over her, pulling her into the depths of slumber with a fierce, unyielding force. And, in the realm of her dreams, Aemond appeared once more as the central figure, just like he always did.
The next night, after a dinner that seemed to stretch endlessly, she sought solace in a soothing bath to calm her frayed nerves. Lyra, her ever-loyal companion, moved with practiced ease, adding a few drops of fragrant rose oil to the steaming water and tenderly massaging the lather into her hair. 
As the steam curled around them with the delicate scent, the room filled with a determination, as calming as invigorating. She longed to unleash every detail of her conversation with Baela and the recent developments with Aemond, but she was well aware that such revelations would compel her lady-in-waiting to remain vigilantly at her side until dawn. Lyra’s watchful presence, akin to that of a protective elder sister, would ensure that no indiscretions slipped through the cracks.
She couldn’t fault Lyra for her vigilant demeanor; her innate caution was a virtue she greatly valued. It was the tether that kept her grounded in moments of temptation. Yet, in that moment, she felt an overwhelming urge to cast aside prudence, to indulge in reckless abandon, and to surrender to her impulses, regardless of where they might lead.
Once she bid farewell to Lyra, she secured the door, as if the simple act could seal away any swirling fears. With a flutter of anticipation in her chest, she prepared to change her attire. She stipped off her usual comfortable nightgown, replacing it with a more revealing garment that clung to her figure like a second skin, each seam accentuating her curves. Her still-damp hair cascaded in soft waves over her chest, leaving glistening trails of moisture on the fabric, creating an almost translucent effect that hinted at the secrets hidden beneath.
As she glanced at her reflection in the mirror, a gesture of satisfaction appeared on her face. She mused that if Aemond could withstand her tonight, his strength of will would surely merit accolades, destined to be celebrated as a remarkable triumph.
A soft knock at the back door made her heart skip a beat, quickening with the anticipation she had nurtured throughout the day. She wrapped herself in a cloak, concealing her figure like a precious gift, enhancing the element of surprise. Besides, she knew he wouldn’t allow her to traverse the halls without it.
The previous day and part of this one had been spent apart from him, and she hoped that the distance would work in her favor, making him yearn for her in her absence, allowing desire to blossom with the wait.
Taking a couple of deep breaths to steady herself, she opened the door. Aemond’s expression upon seeing her was enough to affirm her choice, relief washing over him, illuminating his face as if she were his guiding beacon. He took her hand gently, and she allowed him to lead her.
Once inside, and after closing the door, the stillness embraced them, as if all the words he might have spoken were left outside. She slowly removed the cloak in front of the window, allowing the moonlight to caress her skin. For a few moments, her eyes wandered over the vast night landscape, feeling the heat of Aemond's attention on her back. A confident smile tugged at her lips, but she masked it before turning to face him.
He was watching her, utterly absorbed. Letting the cloak fall gracefully onto the armchair, she advanced toward him with measured, deliberate steps, her stare locked on him. Her face wore a calm expression that belied the bubbling excitement within, waiting for the perfect moment to overflow.
When she stood before him, Aemond lifted his gaze, appraising her body with a burning intensity that placed a blush across his own cheeks. She was entranced by the warmth spreading through his skin, as if his emotions were laid bare before her—vulnerable and sincere.
Without uttering a word, she turned away and glided toward the bed, presenting her back to him once more. She settled in the center, extending her legs to one side, partially veiled by the delicate fabric, leaning on one arm.
He followed her, moving carefully until he positioned himself beside her. She watched him, quiet, allowing the tension to fill the space between them, tangible and warm.
“Are you upset with me?” Aemond’s voice emerged as an unexpected whisper, laden with uncertainty that contrasted with the confidence his presence always exuded. She furrowed her brow slightly, taken aback by the inquiry, her confusion evident in the slight tilt of her head.
“Why would I be?” she replied, with confusion and tenderness, wanting to understand the root of his fears.
He opened his mouth, but words did not immediately follow, creating a hesitant silence. After a brief pause, he finally expressed, “You have not wanted to see me all of yesterday, nor this afternoon.” There was a trace of fragility in him, and she felt a sharp pang of guilt for having kept him waiting, her heart constricting with remorse. She resolved to set aside any notion of repeating the plan.
She hurried to shake her head, offering a small smile that aimed to reassure him. “I spent the other day with Baela; as soon as I arrived in my room, I collapsed from exhaustion. Today, I was with my family, but do not believe that you were not on my mind” she explained, and he nodded slowly, relief easing his features.
She extended her free hand and gently caressed his face, her fingers brushing his skin with love. Aemond closed his eyes at the touch, leaning his cheek into her palm and seeking solace in her warmth. “I have missed you” he confessed.
“I have missed you as well” she replied, her smile reflecting the sincerity of her words. 
“I feared I caused you discomfort with what I said the other night” he added in a subdued tone, as if alarmed about having ventured onto forbidden ground; yet, those very boundaries he feared were precisely what she yearned to blur within his arms.
“That did not cause me discomfort.” A cheeky smile curling on her lips, the spark in her semblant showing her true feelings. “In fact, it was quite the contrary.”
Aemond regarded her with a flicker of surprise and relief as she continued, her tone seemingly indifferent yet heavy with intention. “Yesterday, when I spoke with Baela, I asked her some questions.” There was an undertone in her words, an unspoken invitation to explore the topic that now hung tantalizingly between them, waiting to be uncovered.
The fitted dress she wore restricted her movements, so, without breaking eye contact, she directed her hands to the hem, slowly lifting it. Her thumb and index finger grasped the silk, while the rest of her fingers glided over her skin, leaving a trail of warmth in their wake. Aemond’s intense look returned, shedding any remnants of vulnerability, as if her actions had reignited his desire in an instant.
“Questions?” He seemed torn, wanting to focus on her conversation, but his eyes roamed to the mesmerizing play of her hand, capturing every subtle movement.
She slid her hand over her knee, then paused when the dress creased against her thighs. “I thought she could guide us.” Aemond's eye locked onto hers, concern passing through his face. “I did not mention your name” she clarified. He nodded gently, returning to the observation of her legs, this time with deliberate intent. A slight smile graced her lips, reveling in the attention. “She told me a few things.”
“What did she say?” he wondered, unable to tear his mind from the exposed skin that beckoned for touch.
“That there are certain pleasures we can explore before taking the big step” she breathed, letting her words hang in the air like a fragrant invitation. “But if we so desired, we could let ourselves go.”
She sat up, leaning toward him, parting her legs. Sliding one over his, she settled herself atop him, wrapping her arms around him. Her face nestled against the crook of his neck, her warm breath caressing his ear.
“And I have been thinking about this, about us, repeatedly” she confessed, her fingers tangling gently in his long hair while the other hand traced the taut muscles in his back. “I do not want you to stop” she uttered. “Do you want to stop?” Her voice a blend of uncertainty and desire that made him shiver. His answer came swiftly, charged with raw emotion: he shook her head, breathing heavily, as if on the brink of diving into the void.
Just as their lips were about to meet, Aemond sliced through the quiet like a dagger, rough and filled with deep sorrow. “Wait.”
She froze at his hesitation, the moment stretching taut between them. With a compassionate softness, she said, “We do not have to continue if you are not ready.”
He rested his forehead against her shoulder, hiding his face as his body slumped inward, a silent testament to his isolation. The sense of confinement was palpable, as though he were ensnared in a labyrinth with no escape.
“Aemond, what is it?” A murmur, an attempt to clear the clouds of uncertainty surrounding him. Yet he remained silent, as if each potential answer would only deepen his anguish. “Would you prefer me to leave?” She tried to offer space and time.
“No” he murmured, his voice muffled and low, softened by his hidden head. “I am afraid.”
“I am a little scared as well” she admitted, her fear transforming into empathy. She tried to lighten the weight that he carried with a small soft laugh.
“Not of that” Hh corrected, almost inaudible, and the air thickened, as if a silent storm was brewing. “I must tell you something” he finally said, the urgency in his tone making her grasp the magnitude of what was to come. Even though he wasn’t looking at her, she nodded, her fingers brushing his neck with a delicacy that sought not to rush him.
After an eternity of hush, Aemond lifted his head, his face a silent plea for understanding. His expression was a painful portrait of fear and desolation. His troubled eye met hers, and that was enough for her to move her hands to his face, feeling a wave of concern crash over her.
“You can trust me” she reassured him, a soothing promise of the safe space between them.
“I” he began, trembling, “I have laid with another woman.” The words slipped from his lips like a sigh, a feather descending slowly through the air. Yet, despite the soft delivery, they fell on her with the force of a thunderclap.
She remained motionless for a moment, her hands still on his face, as if trying to steady herself amid the crumbling world crumbled around her. Her heart, once beating with feverish intensity, faltered and stopped for an unbearable instant. Confusion engulfed her, as if a dense, opaque fog had descended, darkening the truth she thought she knew and held dear.
“What... what are you saying?” Her voice a fragile thread, disbelief etched into her eyes.
The realization hit her like a physical blow, and once it settled in her mind, a chilling clarity turned the warmth she had felt into unfeeling ice. The cold spread from her core to the tips of her fingers. Her breathing grew erratic, each heartbeat a drum resonating with the fury of her emotions, and her denial was evident in every involuntary tremor of her body, every shake of her head. 
“No, that cannot be true” she murmured, as though saying the denial aloud would somehow make his words less real. She sprang to her feet, desperate to flee the new reality.
“Wait” he called out, reaching for her hand, but she recoiled with a speed that seemed to accelerate with each passing heartbeat.
“Did you... were you with someone else?” she demanded, the words escaping her lips like a strangled cry, full of deep disappointment. The chasm that opened between them felt insurmountable, a void threatening to swallow everything they had.
“I can explain.” With his face twisted in a grimace of desperation, he tried to approach her again, but she moved farther away, her rejection clear and emphatic.
“Do not dare touch me” she warned, choking with a mix of anger and sadness as she frantically searched for her shoes. Her body trembled, not solely from the cold.
“I did not wish for it to happen” he explained.
She let out a bitter, hollow laugh. “Did she force you?” she spat rhetorically, disbelief biting through her tone. She quickly donned her shoes and made her way to the door, unwilling to listen to another word.
The certainty that the separation had been a sharing agony was crumbling in the face of the fact that he had been there, savoring the company and touch of another woman, while she had languished alone. Her breathing grew more labored, the storm of pain and rage becoming an uncontrollable tempest beyond her control.
“Please, stay” he begged, desperation in his manner as he reached out to grasp the remnants of what was slipping away. “Let me explain.”
But she didn’t heed his pleas. With hurried strides and a heart fractured into a mosaic of pain, she moved towards the back door, each step widening the rupture between them. He trailed behind, his desperate calls fading into a distant echo as she reached her room. With a resounding thud, she slammed the door, plunging him into the darkness, left alone with nothing but his supposed regrets.
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@callsignwidow @helaenaluvr @purplegardenwhispers @scarletbedlam @fics-i-love-and-recommend @squidscottjeans @fossface @truly-abysmal @congenialcat @that-girl-named-alex @oh-you-mean-me @barnes70stark
The next one is the best I have written so far, I can't wait to upload it 🥹
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barbieaemond · 10 months
Text
Iron on Silk
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Pairings: Prince Regent Aemond Targaryen x wife!reader
Warnings: mild angst at the beginning, definitely angst at the end, smut, oral sex (f and m receiving), choking, fingering, p in v, war dirtytalk.
Word count: 3.2k
Author's note: This was my little gift to you for the Aemondsversary. And it's still a gift now, for thanking you for 500 followers in such a short time since I remade my blog. There's a filthy extra in this filthy piece. Enjoy! :)
MASTERLIST
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He wears it proudly. He wears it cruelly. It falls on his head like a halo, holy and dark. Black iron on white silk, and little stars of blood.
The crown is heavy with conquest, with tyranny, with the fire that forged it and the blood shed in its name.
"It looks better on me than it ever did on him."
It is true enough, but it does not make it any less heavy. He hides it well, but you can see it, as if looking down at a thick layer of ice, still and cold, and seeing the raging abyss underneath.
You can hear it in his deep sigh, even more in his short ones, when blinding rage is gaping its jaws to swallow reason.
You can feel it in the way he fucks you every night. Relentless. Ruthless. Merciless.
Hopeless.
Desperate to shake it off, to shake off the burden—the crown's burden, the death's burden. The one he lashed out on his family, the one who took Jaehaerys’ life, and Helaena’s. For Helaena is good as dead.
You tend to her every morning, at least you try. You try to get her to take a bath, to hold Maelor. Maelor, who cries and looks for his mother. Maelor who laughs and looks for his mother. You look at her and see her ghost while she still breathes. You look at the Queen Mother and see a shadow of flesh.
You look at him sitting in the Small Council, wearing iron on silk, and see a crown of thorns piercing through the skull.
“Does it hurt, my love?” you ask in the empty room while he strokes the skin around the sapphire. He mumbles something in return, and you walk to his seat at the end of the table, leaning your low back against it.
“No.” you say quietly “I meant the crown.”
He looks up and just stares at you, jaw clenched to trap words, the storm in his eye bubbling up from the depths.
“I have a war to plot.” He says, and that’s all he’s been saying for days.
“You have done nothing else. You look at your Lords and wait for a stab at your back. You look at our bed and see a battlefield. You lay with me holding a knife to my throat.”
He rests his lean shoulders against the seat and the wrinkles on his forehead unfold. "Tis' the first time I hear you complain about my marital duties." he says tilting his head with a cruel grin "It didn't seem much of a burden when you begged for more right after I spilled in your mouth last night." 
"Must it always come back to duty? If I wanted to spread my legs for a cock to warm me every night, I would've thrived in any brothel of Flee Bottom."
He laughs at this, but it comes out wrong, like a rusted gear, oiled too little. "Such lewd words for a Queen."
“Is that what I am?” You ask with a half-teasing smile “I thought you chose not to style yourself as King.”
“Hmm.” he muses, taking hold of your waist with his long fingers, to pull you to him. “I am wearing the Crown, am I not?”
You lean over him, placing your hands on his shoulders, looking at the sharp black edges cutting the soft white silk, wondering how it could have fallen on his head by mistake when it seems that the Gods have always meant to place it there.
Your back collides against the table and you slowly hop on it, your gaze fixed on him, whose eye widens slightly, mesmerized and thrilled. A rustling of paper fills the room, and he looks at the table and then back at you, lips curling up.
“Those are my war plans.”
“It seems my husband is not capable of talking about anything else these days. Fine, then.” You incline your head, mirroring his smile “Tell me about your war.”
He remains still and quiet for so long, looking at you with that glint you know so well, so much that your chest goes up and down fast, and his hands are not anywhere near you.
But then he stands up, forcing you to raise your chin, and leans over you, slowly, silky hair tickling your chest. “It seems my wife is in need of some warfare lessons.” he whispers, ghosting his lips against yours, and you eagerly part them to kiss him.
“Ah.” he counters, pulling his head back with a sly grin “First, we need to ensure our armies are ready.” his deft and long fingers climb on your corset and he starts to pull harshly at the laces, making you jump twice.
“What if someone enters?” you ask, as shivers run down your back like ice drops.
“Indeed, what if someone enters?” he turns your question around and stops his unlacing, challenge and hunger dance on his lips.
“Then you tell them you are the King and the King can fuck his Queen wherever he wishes to.”
His eye blazes under the candles, and after a moment of trepid silence, he brings both his hands to your corset, and with a swift and strong move he rips it apart.
You fall with your back on the table, your breasts are out, nipples hardening for the cold air and the arousal slowly coiling in your belly. He grabs your ankles and pulls you close to him, making you slide on the table to tie your legs around his waist.
You pull yourself up, holding onto your elbows and frantically reach for his belt but he stops your wrists. “Alreay eager to surrender?” he hums with amusement, eye roaming on your exposed body and the hold on your wrists grows impossibly tight, hurting. “If you were in charge, we would lose the war within a day.”
“Or win it.” you suggest, tightening your legs around him until you feel his hardening crotch, winning a quiet whimper from his throat. “Women could end any kind of war, my King. We own the most powerful weapon.”
“Say it again.” he orders, hands hiking up your skirt until it’s nothing more than a heap of fabric around your waist.
“My King.” You say, shuddering as his long fingers hover on your thighs, almost tickling—a gentle touch born out of so much violence.
“Again.”
“My—King.” The words come out wrong, broken by a soft gasp as his fingers unexpectedly breach your walls. Your eyes flutter shut as you feel him go deep inside, deeper than ever, and your mouth falls open.
“You are not so bold about your weapon now, are you?” he asks with a tone ridden with cruel enjoyment.
“Tis’ unfair.” You mumble, resting your head on the table.
“There is no fairness in war, my love.” he says, looking down at your damp flesh and how it clenches endlessly on his hand, and he watches and watches, wetting his lips as if pondering which move to strike on a war map. “It’s best not to be caught…unprepared when you expect an assault from your enemy. Do you know why?”
You whine quietly, biting your lip as he pumps his fingers deeper and deeper and his thumb draws circles on your apex. He does not accept that as an answer, so he slides out, and his large hand grabs your core, fully and almost painfully. “I said, do you know why?”
His tone is demanding, words laced with thunder as he does when commanding the Lords. “Why?”
“Because” he says lessening the grip on you “you give open field for what comes next.”
Air feels scorching in your throat as you look at him, black and silver and blue.
“What comes next?”
He grins like the most ruthless general at the front, the one who takes no prisoners and wipes the bloodied sword on his green cloak. “Siege.”
In a blink, your legs go up on his shoulders, a frame of flesh around iron, silk and sapphire.
He takes his seat again as if sitting down to feast, and you lift your head, breathing hard with anticipation, meeting his eye as his face hovers over your center, feeling his scorching breath lighting a fuse that quickly burns away every rational thought left in your head, if there ever was one since he touched you.
“Aemond, please…” you beg shamelessly, hands flying down to touch him, to bring his head closer and closer.
But he grabs your wrists and holds them still on your stomach. “Call me properly.”
“Please…” you say with your voice cracking, like the nerves in your neck because you can't stop looking at him “Please, my King.”
“Do you know how to conduct a siege?” he is speaking so close to your apex that you can feel his voice reverberating through your skin long before hearing it. “You strike first, hard. And then you wait, watching your enemy starve to death, until they surrender.”
He puts his words into practice by running his tongue flat on your folds and then he is sucking, hard, so hard you fear he is about to devour you.
He moans contentedly, closing his eye for a moment as his jaw moves nimbly and his tongue pierces inside. Your head falls back and you cry so loud you are sure the guards outside are aware of what's happening in the Small Council room.
Just when your hips are beginning to rock on their own against his face, feeling the bone of his long nose, he licks a long stripe and then pulls back.
You raise your head with a sound of protest, but his hands are still pinning your wrists like iron chains, and he is looking at you with a victorious smile, face all wet. And he licks his lips, thoroughly. "If only my enemies tasted half as sweet as your cunt."
With cruel delight, he watches you writhe beneath his hands, breathing hard and unconsciously rocking your hips on nothing to soothe the painful ache between your legs.
“Perhaps I should say mine by now.” he ponders, roaming his gaze on your whole body “This siege seems to be surprisingly short. Do you wish to surrender, my Queen?”
“Yes. Yes, I surrender.” And you press your ankles on his shoulders, hands desperate to free from his hold and seize him, to force him to seize you.
He finally releases your hands and stands up, your legs sliding down and your hands going to his breeches. You pull two laces, but then your right hand locks on his wrist as you see him about to take the crown off his head.
"No, keep it."
His eye turns pitch black, making a deadly contrast with the sparkling blue of the sapphire, and your hands go back to the laces, pulling quickly until you have just enough room to slip your hand in and grab his hard cock.
His lips twitch as pleasure makes his head numb, makes his limbs heavy and his blood boiling and falling down, right where you can feel it, harder than the iron resting on silk. You feel his breath changing with every stroke of your palm, his waist moving almost imperceptibly as he chases your skin, like falling into the warm embrace of a siren’s chant.
The sight only makes you smile, though it stokes your ache for him so much that you mirror his heavy and slow breaths. “Who’s besieging who now?” you point out, almost regretting it when he grabs your neck, squeezing lightly with a dark promise curling his smirk.
“This is your lesson, not mine.” He declares, despite the labored breathing.
You swallow, quietly gasping for air as you look at him.
“Who told you to stop?” he asks, with the same cold purpose he questions the up-and-coming Lords who seek council in that very room, tightening the grip on your throat, almost relishing in the choked sound that escapes your lips.
“Did you forget, sweet girl? You surrendered.” His eye lingers on every detail on your face, and his free hand flies through your hair, tucking a lock behind your ear. The gesture is gentle, almost delicate, the opposite of the hold of steel around your throat. Hostility and devotion doomed to a ceaseless chase to purge one another.
“Siege is over.” He says, sliding his hand up your chin “Now it’s time to claim.” two of his long fingers breach into your mouth, grazing your tongue, and you sense the faint taste of yourself. “There will be some fool who will rebel against the new order. But the rest? They will kneel before their new King.” he leaves your mouth only to grab you by your cheeks, angling your head so he’s whispering to your ear “And who will you be, my dear wife? A fool on a spike or a dutiful subject?”
You recognize that tone, playful but dangerous—the one that will make you wonder if the next grip will be hostile devotion or the opposite. “What if I’m both?” you whisper, moving your head so you can look at him once more. “What if I want to serve you and die by your hand?”
“Then kneel.” He orders, but in your ears is the sweetest death sentence.
His eye glints as soon as your knees hit the ground; it thrills him, it always does, to have you like this and he’s not shy about showing it, for how his chest heaves more and more rapidly as you part your lips to pledge to him.
“No.” he croaks, almost sneeringly given the trepidation pulling his bones so taut, so close to snap. “Look at me and speak the words.”  
“I pledge my allegiance to you, your Grace. I vow to honor and serve you until the last of my days." you swear and there's no acting in it. "Long may he reign.”
Your mouth closes around him and he gasps deeply, jaw falling slack as he looks down, at your lips so perfectly laced around the tip, at your eyes looking up with devotion, no hostility. Never. “Gods, you are so beautiful like this.” He pants, pulling your hair away from your forehead and immediately thrusting his hips so you can take all of it, up to the base.
It's a matter of moments before his hand tangles in your hair, pulling and pushing slightly to give you a steady pace that leaves you breathless and gasping for air. It doesn’t matter though, not when his eye almost rolls back for the pleasure you’re giving him, not when he’s so lost for words that he has not even breath for his snarky remarks. He just moans and groans like a primitive beast, thrusting his cock as deep as he can, growling when you hollow your cheeks around his wet and hard flesh.
Suddenly he tugs at your hair harshly, pulling away as you recline your head to look at him, mouth open to catch your breath. “Why?” you whisper, panting “Did I not serve you well, my King?”
He helps you get up only to make you sit on the Small Council table once again. “You served me exceptionally well, my love. But you will serve me even better by taking my seed into your sweet cunt.”
He hikes up your skirts and revels in the way you spread your legs for him. “Do you wish for a King to fuck you?”
“Not a king, no. My King.”
“I shall do more than that.” He says, panting slowly, eye all foggy but urgent with pleasure, and he takes your face, cradling it between his hands. “I shall put a child inside of you, to strengthen the Crown and see you swell with my offspring.”
“Here?” You tease “On your war maps?”
“Fuck the war.” His delicate hold turns to iron, and then he’s kissing you, as he always does, harshly, smothering, slumping his tongue into your throat.
His hand moves yours away, and your jaw falls slack as he thrusts into you, sliding easily all the way in. You fasten an arm around his shoulders, your parted lips brushing against his, struggling to breathe. He ties your legs around his slender waist and climbs halfway up the table, leaning over you.
Papers rustle and fall to the floor, a sound soon covered by your flesh clashing hard against each other as he ruts into you, and you are utterly besieged. The air fills with moans and growls, and you are not sure whether it is him or you as you climb together toward the final peak.
"Look at me." He laces his fingers around your neck, squeezing lightly. "Look at your King."
You do as he asks, straining to keep your eyes open, frowning with painful pleasure. "Yes, like this, my good girl." He praises, panting loudly, "My Queen."
He thrusts even harder, sweat dampening your skin and his forehead, and he is the most beautiful and dreadful sight you have ever seen. Black iron and white silk, blue sapphire and fire, fire and fire.
"I want you to come with me." He whispers, grabbing your chin with his fingertips, his hand still clutching your throat. "Can you do that for me?"
"Y-yes." You manage to choke out, "Anything."
"My beautiful wife. So dutiful." he says laying wet kisses on your chest "So perfect for me."
His words, uttered so gently compared to the violence of his sieging thrusts, only pushes you up and up, staggering to not fall. "Aemond, I can't—" you whine, digging your nail into his shoulders "I can't last for long."
Your legs are trembling helplessly around his waist, but he fastens the grip on your throat, hard, making you gasp for air. “Hold it.” he orders, groaning because he’s close too, “Just a little more, my darling. I know you can take it.”
It is true, but it does not make the coiling pressure between your legs any less painful, beautiful and painful. He turns sloppy, panting and cursing each time more loudly while you whine, pleading under your breath for him to let you fall into a depth of bliss.
And finally, when your muscles were starting to ache for how much you were holding it back, you hear his breath change, slow and labored, and you know the end is near.
At last, he comes with a choked groan, making sure that not a drop of his seed goes to waste. And you are falling with him, spasming all around his waist, shoulders and cock.
His head falls on your chest, covered by silk and iron, and perhaps the crown has never been less of a burden as it is in this moment, while he rests against your collarbones, as a place where he can lie, or even die.
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When sunbeams filter through the bars of your cell, you look through them, though no heat is able to warm you anymore. Except for the life growing inside you.
From a distance, you hear a clamor of men in the courtyard, guards getting ready to carry out the sentence.
If you stand up on your toes, you can even catch a glimpse of the pike on which your head will be mounted in a few days, or perhaps a few moments.
It doesn't really matter.
You look at the puddle of mud on the ground and think of the lake.
You wonder if, at least under the Gods' Eye, the raging abyss beneath the ice has gone quiet, or if the waters have simply swallowed him.
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notlhecxzsa · 26 days
Text
Never Wield Such Power, You Forget To Be Polite - N.R
Summary: Where did all the time go? Years have passed yet memories are still fresh for both of them, especially Natasha. Would it still be after the rotten smell of the present? Digging up the graveyard of unknown feelings and innocent glances, their story is about the start... or continue?
Author's Note: GOSH! Finally I'm able to updateeee, sorry for making you wait for too long! Might update within this week again or the end of this week if I got free time! Mwa (⁠っ⁠˘⁠з⁠(⁠˘⁠⌣⁠˘⁠ ⁠)
Warnings: Mean Natasha!, asshole parents, cursing, degradation words, angst
°^~°^~°^~°^~°^~°^~°^~°^~°^~°^~
Y/n's POV:
"Oh-... did I interrupt something?" I asked, genuinely worried if I did interrupt a conversation that was going on before I came in.
"No, no, it's fine. We just finished talking." Yelena, whom I learned earlier, said while walking past me, Natalia stayed silent as my gaze caught her figure on my peripheral vision. "If you'll excuse me, I'll head back inside now." I gave her a smile and nod following an awkward wave of my hand.
I gaze at the back of Natalia's head, my mouth agape a little as curiosity filled my wide eyes. "Hello..." I muttered, my voice almost coming out as a whisper.
I cleared my throat when I received no response from the red head, ducking my head as I stepped forward beside her, keeping a certain distance. I turned my head upwards, gazing at her side profile, my mouth still agape as I waited and waited for her to speak to me. To see me.
She grew so much! I remember a very brief and vivid memory of her, she surely does not look so beautiful like this. I wonder what she did to her face, maybe it has some make up on? I don't know much about make up, but it was said to have the power to transform people's faces.
"You won't get anything from looking at me, kid." I jumped a little, blinking my eyes as I closed my mouth. Interlocking both of my hands with one another, I averted my gaze towards our backyard.
"S-sorry... Uhm-... Hi?" I did my best not to look at her as I spoke, my heart started to beat loudly inside my chest.
"What do you need?" I heard her voice that was slightly husky and at the same time heavy. I gulped, fear started to crept up into me. God, I should've just told Dada that I don't feel well when he told me to accompany Natalia, not that it would work. What he says is to be done with no arguments or reasoning.
I tried to find the right words to say, but found nothing as I kept muttering. "I-... Uh..." I fiddled with my hand as my head slowly moved down, looking at the cast that was wrapped around my arm.
"Y/n." My head immediately perked up, but stayed facing away from her at the sudden call of my name after a moment of silence. "Do you know what will happen?" I frowned softly, my mind clouded with so much confusion. Golly, so many things have happened already, I'm starting to feel drained already.
"W-what?" I asked, gazing into the abyss.
I felt her pair of eyes burning holes to the side of my head, making me more nervous. We were once again met with silence, I kept shifting from one foot to another as I fiddled with whatever my hand will touch, trying my best not to meet her burning gaze.  From my peripheral vision, I saw a blurry motion of her head moving side to side as if something had disappointed her, as if I disappointed her.
Gollly! I just want to be eaten whole by a big buzzing bee and fly me away from here! Maybe a dragonfly that will stung me in the back and carry me all the way to paris. Yeah, maybe the second one.
"We came here all the way to New York and you won't give me a normal conversation?" There was a mused tone in her voice, I couldn't put a finger on what kind of expression she was wearing, or what kind of message she was trying to give me.
I bit my bottom lip, once again trying to find words. "I-... What... I mean, I don't know what you're talking about, Natalia..." I confessed with a gentle voice, which is just my normal voice as I tried to cover up the raging storm inside my head. I looked up to meet her gaze that was already on mine the moment I averted my eyes upwards.
I saw a glint in her eyes before she looked away, a smirk visible on her face. "Pathetic... stupid dipshits." I heard her whisper, I know that was what she said. I have a good hearing, Lucy cleans my ear weekly.
I gulped, immediately looking down. My heart is breaking at the humiliation and degradation I had just received from someone I don't even know. I should be used to it already, I got it daily from my parents, but I am not. Lucy always tells me that I am not what they call me. Always reminding me that I am not someone who they pertain to me.
I could accept it easily from my parents, but from someone, I just can't. But, hearing it from Natalia, my stomach did a backflips, it is different from what I have felt from the others. Maybe, it's because I've known her before, or maybe it's because she was my first ever friend to call.
I smiled a little at the vivid memory of her giving me that yummy cupcake! I was devastated that day when I finished my tutoring class and found her gone. Lucy told me I'll see her next time, but that never came. Now, I saw her again. But, she's different. Not just physically. She's just... different.
"Uhm... Did you like the foods? Is there uhm... is there anything I uh... I could entertain you with? Oh, would you like a tour of the house?" I asked, looking anywhere but her, still facing her as I rambled. I heard her let out a sigh, almost like an out of boredom one. "We- we have a music room..." Finally looking up at her face, I saw how her head swayed away from me, as if she was already gazing at mine, I waited for her eyes and mine to meet.
I eyed her pointed nose first, how it widened ever so slightly as she took deep breaths, then down to her sharp jaw, it is so well defined, just like her green forest eyes along with those thick eyelashes and eyebrows. I almost felt like an insecure kid with how perfect she looks, my jaw's not the sharp, my eyelashes may be thick but it looks messy, not like hers.
As the light from the moon and stars cascaded down on us, mixing up with the electric lights that radiate from our house, I could see how smooth her skin is, how freckles littered along the curves of her face.
"Seems like you're the one who's getting entertained here." My eyes immediately snapped to meet her, widening as she gave me an amused look, a smirk appearing on her face as she looked down on me.
Blush crept into my face, heating it up with a crimson red color. "I-I'm sorry..." Looking down immediately, I crossed my arms on my front, finding the atmosphere rather too cold for my liking as goosebumps littered my skin, mixing up with the embarrassment I just fell into. "I didn't- I didn't mean to stare, I'm really sorry." I said,  genuinely concerned. Stupid, Y/n.
"I'm not talking about you." Once again, my head snapped up to look at her, confusion written all over my face as I took in what she said. Did i hear it right? What was she talking about? Am I deaf? "I meant... you're not... pathetic." She continued, sounding so unsure of what she was saying. Hesitation flew by in her eyes, almost wanting to take back the explanation she just made.
My mouth is agape a little in an O shaped, nodding my head as relief flush inside my chest. I wanted to ask who she was talking about, but asking questions is not my forte, especially with what I would usually get from doing it. "You should head back inside..." She started, her head turning away from me as her gaze averted to somewhere unknown. "You're getting cold." She said, still avoiding meeting my gaze.
Without knowing it, I blurted, "Lucy told me it's not nice to not look at people when you're talking to them..." I muttered, slowing down as I realized what I was saying. Her eyes are averted to meet mine, raising an eyebrow as she lets out a small chuckle that I almost didn't hear. "Well, Y/n..." She began, turning her whole body to face mine, just then did I notice how tall she is than me. I must be just under her chin, or maybe her chest since I'm wearing sandals with 3 inch heels. "Let's just say... I'm not nice. How about we start with that?" She finished, her crossed arms were pulled away and down to her sides.
My eyes went down from her captivating eyes, down to her nose, then to her lips. My mouth opened, trying to find the right words to say. "I think..." Averting my eyes up to look at her again. "I think you are." She looked like she was taken aback from my 'bold' answer, if you could call it that. But, it is the truth. I do think she is nice. Maybe, she just did not want to look at my ugly face while talking to me? Or maybe, she just didn't want to strain herself while talking and looking down on me? Golly! I shouldn't have quoted Lucy.
I heard her clear her throat, both her hands going inside the pockets of her pants. "You don't know me." She said gently, but I heard the edge on her voice, as if she wanted to say something more. "It's nice to see you again, Y/n. I'll see you again soon." With that, I was left outside, the cold breeze passing right through me as I was left frozen in time. Oh gosh, oh gosh, did I offended her? Did I say something wrong- oh, maybe I delivered that in the most wrong way! 
I'm dead.
°^~°^~°^~°^~°^~°^~°^~°^~°^~°^~°^~°^~°^~°^
Natasha's POV:
"Maria, can you go to the penthouse and call the service to do a general cleaning. Restock everything, foods and all the necessities. Also, remember the room at the end of the hall, across mine? Order new furniture, clean especially that room." I demandedly rambled, signing every paper that was presented in front of me by Clint. I saw in my peripheral vision how she and Bucky looked at each other suspiciously, but I chose to ignore it, knowing that they wanted a further explanation.
"Also, uhhh, Bucky, can you take care of the delivery in Philadelphia and Brooklyn? I'll let Clint and Steve handle those ones in Europe." I continued before finally looking up at them.
They looked at me skeptically but nodded. "Good, we'll have a busy week ahead, make sure to give a heads up on everyone." I finished, just then Bucky started talking.
"You never told us what happened with the dinner you had with your parents." I stopped on my track, remembering what happened last the day before yesterday.
After that night, I immediately ordered Maria to book me a flight from Hawaii to New York. I don't know why, but my feet are itching to get as far away as possible from that land. I felt different, maybe it's because of the difference in the atmosphere between New York and Hawaii, maybe it's just my parents.
"There's nothing to be told." I opposed, continuing my work as my mind came running back to that small girl once again.
She's been plaguing my mind, waking me up all night with no resolution. I hated every second of it, I felt imprisoned by those... eyes. Her voice that sounded like a melody kept ringing in my head until I felt like my eardrums are shattering with how angelic it sounded.
She's grown... so much. I still remember as clearly as the blue sky and ocean how she looked back then. I still remember the first conversation I had with her, how I didn't get the chance to meet her again, how I kept something that must have been one of her prized possessions as a child.
Innocent child.
"... Nat? Did you hear me?" The sound of fingers snapping in front of my eyes, almost close to my face brought me back from whatever trance I was in. Looking up, I saw a frowning Maria with Bucky looking just as confused and worried as her.
I faltered for a moment, hiding my embarrassment with how absent minded I became while thinking about a complete random person. I cleared my throat as I shook my head, blinking vigorously as I avoided their gaze and focused on cleaning up my desk, I'm finished already anyway. "Sorry, what is it?" I asked, trying to mask up the raging storm inside my head while putting all the papers together.
"Buck asked if you're up for tonight's night out...? Stark will be there, I bet Maximoff too along with Strange and the others." She explained. I hummed quietly as I thought for a moment. After everything, I think that will be a very much needed thing. My kind of breath of fresh air.
"What time?"
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Tags: @transparentflapfarmsludge @dvrkhcld @esposadejoyhuerta @natsxwife @justspance @cheekysnake-blog @wandasreallover
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miranyx1337 · 8 months
Text
Alastor x Reader
,,FEATHER ’’
Tags: fluff (for now ) enemies to lovers, kissing, being protective, cuddles, sleeping problems, flirting, possesive reader is an angel, fem reader
so enjoy this angel y/n x Alastor fanfiction.
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The portal was just about to shout when I decided to pull my wrist away from my mother's gentle hand. The rush of my wings echoed through the abyss as I plummeted into the darkness. I closed my eyes. The desperate scream of my name immediately faded into nothingness as I came to hell just after lucifer daughter.
Dizziness enveloped me as I opened my eyes to a realm of strangers, their curious, disgusted, and unsettlingly smiling gazes fixed upon me. Only two faces seemed familiar, and a sinking realization of the dire situation I was in gripped my soul.
~☆~☆~☆~☆~☆~
Alastor anticipated the return of two birds from heaven. Little did he expect that they would bring an unexpected guest. The thought of joking about a change in hotel profession crossed his mind. But the gravity of the moment silenced any trivial remarks.
As the clear blue eyes peered at him above shiny white hair, a sensation of swallowing saliva overcame him.
A true guest from heaven," he mused, his emotions were a complex blend of deep admiration and an unspoken desire to shatter this celestial beauty. The finest trophy he could ever possess.
He extended his hand towards the luminous figure
~☆~☆~☆~☆~☆~
Y/N POV
I ignored a demonic hand reaching out to me. With one swift movement of my wings, I found myself at the other end of the room. As I stood on my feet and the momentary adrenaline faded, sharp pain get through me. I landed on my knees, slightly dazed.
"My wing is broken."
Since childhood, I couldn't help but admire my six wings, always well-groomed and shining, my trademark. Now, the upper ones drooped, broken in half. Snowy-white feathers, wincing in pain as more of them fell off.
I won't lick my wounds quickly, which means I won't return home anytime soon.
The exiled daughter ran up to me, and I leaned on her shoulder. She and the white-haired one were probably the only ones I could trust.
"Listen, I don't know if they will come for me, but you need to know something."
I directed my gaze at the nearby onlookers, demons staring at me as if I were a freak, and creature of sin. Red, smiling eyes pierced through me, and I couldn't look away. The demon looked at his outstretched hand, then withdrew it behind him, seemingly surprised. Smiling nonchalantly, he spoke, "Don't worry. You can trust everyone in this room."
"No. Please, let's go to another room." I looked desperately at her, squeezing the forearm with my pale hands.
"Alright, then," she nodded, gripping my arm tighter. "And you guys, prepare a bandage, something to drink, and... call my father."
As soon as the door closed behind us, I began searching the room when I felt clawed fingers on my shoulders, instantly turning me around.
"Can you trust me, please?"
"Fine."
"Okay, FIRST, why did you do that? Did they make you spy?"
"Listen, Charlie," I said, now I'm the one holding her shoulders. "You're right. There is an evidence that souls can be redeemed."
Disbelief was painted at her angelic-demonic face. She analysed my words and sincerity. "Adam. He wasn't originally in heaven. I don't know how he got a pass, but I have undeniable evidence that he originally ended up here."
Suddenly, everything made sense, and the girl connected the dots. Still, with wide eyes, she stared at me.
"So, that's why," she stuttered.
"Yes, it would be a disaster if it turned out the first redeemed soul didn't deserve it. He'll try to hide the truth in every way, even if it means bringing hell down …. and killing me.
Tears welled up in my eyes. How did I get involved in this? I should never have ended up here, let alone conspiring against heaven. I was no longer safe there.
Tiny arms with the smell of sulfur and angelic musk embraced me. Exhausted, I let tears flow down my cheeks. It's a shame I didn't notice the nosy egg tucked under the bed and the radio demon standing right behind the door holding a sinful kiss on a small shiny feather
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itsagrimm · 2 years
Text
He Who Comes From Under The Water
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Chapter 1 - The Promised Bride
Monster!König X she/her afab Reader
CN sexism & patriarchy, mentions of death, suicidal thoughts, accidental attempted drowning, arranged marriage, choking on water, mention of a human bodies decomposition
eventual smut.
Beta-read by @sandinthemachine and @queenquazar. Thank you both so much for supporting me with obsessing over fairy tales.
Masterlist
“So, you are a king without a queen?” The old man asked while throwing his rod back into the water. “I suppose you require a queen then, eh?”
The king, considering the old fisherman’s words, slowly nodded. “I suppose I do. But where does one get such a fine lady?” 
The water below the wooden landing was dark and dirty. Frogs croaked and fireflies danced over the green sludge and water lilies, lively and playful like the flecks of sunlight that reached the surface through the thick forest trees. A pretty scene on any other day.
Not this one.
Your tears had long stopped flowing into the water of the deep pond. Now, you sat there, your hand tangled in the water and your thoughts lost, dark and deep like the water below you.
A few days ago, your grandfather died. A kind old man who had spent the last years of his life close to the warm oven in winter and fishing in the pond in the summertime.
You remembered bedtime stories as a child with sweets sneaked into your hands. You remembered kind eyes who watched out for you as you grew from child to maiden. You remembered worry in those same eyes when your father died in the forest chopping wood, when your brothers perished in a tavern fire, your uncle and your mother succumbing to sickness, and - finally - your cousin breaking his neck after climbing a tree.
Yes, there was a lot of pain in your grandfathers’ eyes. But even more to worry.
The old man had been your last living relative, and most importantly your last male relative.
And now you as an unmarried village girl from a clearly cursed family, had no one who could inherit your family’s house and support you.
It was only time until the village would shun you and chase you away to get rid of all the bad around you.
That is if you were lucky.
You could try to make it into the city where you would live for a while as a beggar or, if you were hungry and deemed pretty enough, work as a whore.
In his last days, your grandfather tried to arrange for a husband, but no one wanted a cursed girl, and so his last words to you were to visit his favorite fishing spot.
You sighed.
Now, you sat on the same spot where your grandfather had sat, catching fish, and gazing over the water.
Maybe that’s what he had meant, you mused. It would be easier to end it all here and jump into the pond only to never return to the surface, drowning your sorrows and yourself with your grandfathers’ blessings. At least you would choose your fate with your chin proudly raised and your dignity untouched, floating into the abyss in your best billowing skirts from the funeral and no more tears left to cry.
As much as that was possible considering your situation.
“It’s a good place to leave this world,” you spoke out loud to taste how it felt on your tongue. It resonated, with the forest, the pond, with you.
“Indeed, it is.”
You twitched in surprise, heart jumping into your throat.
“Who is this?” you called over the water, glancing around for whoever lurked within the trees, hiding between the ferns.
A hand, big and wet, snatched yours from the water and pulled you in with one strong tug.
You wailed in surprise before crashing into the pond and swallowing the muddy green water, gurgling and gasping for air. Something seized you – strong and solid. Instinctually you kicked and punched it.
Was this it?
NO! 
Fighting for your life you thrashed around, struggling and trying to free yourself to get back up to the surface. But whoever had you in a hold only dragged you down, carrying you further into the dark.
Your panicked eyes widened, trying to see who attacked you, trying to see anything.
It was dark. Only the dark, green water around you.
No, no, no, no!
Your lungs heaved for air as your heart drummed painfully in your hurting chest.
A second hand twisted around your throat and over your face. Instinctually, you opened your mouth and bit down.
The hands jolted back with a howl reverberating in the water, releasing you from the deadly weight dragging you down. Hungry for air and with burning lungs you swam up with frenzied strokes, pushing through the surface. Gasping and coughing you breathed, feeding your body with much needed air.
Quickly, you glanced around. No one there. Was this someone from the village trying to get rid of you? Did you manage to drag your attacker down with you? Or was it an animal in the water?
Before you could move, something grabbed you again and lifted you a good length out above the water.
You screamed and kicked again only to have your legs and hands fixated in an iron grip.
“Hold still!” A voice commanded you, foreign and vibrating close. You struggled on, thrashing your body against the solid form behind your back, unwilling to take any chances and die here without a fight.
“I said, hold still!”  the grip around your limbs tightened, forcing you into stillness. “There, finally.”
Slowly, you turned your head. You were caught in the grip of a dark, green form, pressed against what must be its chest and stared at by sharp, watery eyes from a nearly obscured face from tangled wet hair and a beard.
Who is this? You thought to yourself, still heaving for air.
“Why are you fighting me?” the strange being said, “I’m here to take you in as my bride. Just like I have promised.”
You coughed again, a bit of swamp water and spit running down your chin, splashing onto the being’s arm.
“What?” you cried and with your head still spinning.
“What what?” The large figure snapped back, “The old man asked me to take you as my wife, yet you bite me? Is that how you want to treat your future husband? Do you want me to let you go? I have no need for an unwilling bride.”
 You blinked, your body slowing down and your mind starting to think clearly again.
“You nearly drowned me. Let me go!” you cried out as much as your abused lungs allowed.
The figure blinked and instantly dropped you.
With a loud splash you crashed back into the water.
Your body seized and your mind raced, struggling to comprehend and move your body up.
You made a few weak swimming strokes, but it wasn’t enough to move your still tired and abused body up. Water started filling your lungs again and you were about to dr-
Something grabbed you and lifted you. Again.
“Woman!” the strange being cried out in annoyance, “What are you doing?”
You coughed, swamp water from your hair dripping over your face, disorienting you further as you gasped for air.
“Wait, maiden, do you need to breathe?” the strange creature asked, “Make up your mind! I was just trying to take you home, but you don’t want that. So I did like you asked but then you started sinking like a stone back into my waters again, heaving for air!”
You shivered, “Of course I need to breathe! All humans need air, idiot! What kind of question is that?!”
The creature groaned and grumbled, “The old man forgot to mention you are a human. I thought you might be a nymph or a bigger frog lady. Well, that’s just bad luck.”
You snorted, “Oh, I am sorry that me needing air is inconvenient for you! I nearly died down there in those muddy waters!”
“Hey, those are mighty fine waters of mine, thank you very much. Besides, the second time was not my fault.”
“Your waters?” you managed.
“Who else’s waters?” the figure deadpanned as you’d asked the most obvious question, swayed, and started moving towards the landing before carefully putting you onto the planks instead of holding you like a cat holds its naughty young, “Stay. Let me take a better look at you.”
You huffed and collapsed onto the planks out of the wet arms. It wasn’t like you could run anyway with your body still shaky and weak from the near drownings. Instead, you lifted your head for a better look at the stranger as they studied you.
The strange being from the waters was built like a man, but huge and larger than the tallest man you had ever seen. And it had the face close to a man too under all that unkempt hair and beard. But its facial features were fine, much too fine for any man who could lurk in the waters, and slightly too angular and with eyes a bit too lively and sharp to belong to a human as they studied you.
“Pretty girl.” the man from the water finally grumbled, “A bit unruly but pretty. At least that the old man did not lie about it.”
You raised your eyebrows in surprise, “Thank you?”
The man shrugged, “Sorry for trying to drown you, apparently, I misunderstood your fragile physique.”
Fragile physique. He made it sound like an insult.
You took one final breath and summoned your strength to sit up to be on the same eye level as the large man from the water.
“Who are you?” you asked while trying to sort your wet skirts.
He snorted and waved slightly.
“I am König – king of all under the waters. Naturally. And you are the bride I was promised by the old fisherman a couple of days ago.”
Your eyes widened in surprise, “Do you mean my grandfather? He used to fish here.”
The man shrugged, causing little waves around his shoulders where he emerged from the pond, “Most humans all look and smell the same to me, honestly. He was old for a human, liked to share stories, and left me a bit of tobacco as offerings sometimes. Smelled of smoked fish.”
Memories of your grandfather flashed before your eyes where he sat on the bench in front of the house, smoking his pipe in the late hours of the day, watching the sun go down.
Your mouth went dry.
Had he? Did he really?
Did he, in all his misery and worry, promised your hand to a strange man from the pond – a huge and wet and cold and clearly dangerous monster.
You went stiff from the overwhelming thought of being given away like that to a stranger - to a monster.
“Well, you are a human but I’m not in the habit of breaking promises and I'm sure you would make a good enough queen,” König continued, “Unless you object of course. There is little as unhonourable as having an unwilling bride, not even the slimiest toad approves of that.”
König babbled on about waters and ponds and marriage but your head was spinning. Your grandfather arranged for you to marry an algae cover man from the pond who's idea of home nearly killed you. The painful absurdity of it made you consider jumping right back into the water.
The cold, dark and green water.
The buzzing of the summer insects and splashing of the little waves drowned everything else out, turning louder and louder and louder and-
“Maid?”
His hand touched your arm, slowly shaking you.
You jolted up only to fall back.
“Yes?” you managed while leaning back, away from the large, clawed hand.
König’s watery eyes shifted around you as if searching for the right words.
“Listen, I don’t know too much about you humans, “ König started, “but you look cold and miserable. Maybe let’s worry about that first and talk about our wedding later.”
You blinked as the realization in all its form settled in.
Marrying him?
He would drown you in this pond, your flesh rotting and being picked by the fishes until nothing but a pile of bones were left.
Your bones, your lovely bones.
No! You had felt your life slip out of your fingers, the precious air bubbles escaping your lungs bare moments ago. Your cold hands wandered around your pained body intuitively, cradling yourself and trying to protect you from the outside world. You weren’t ready to give up on this life - to give on your body - and you would keep yourself safe and alive. This was your skin, your hair and flesh and bones! Death would come to you one day but you would be damned if it came today at the bottom of a dark pond and by the hands of a man.
“Yes, you are right. I should get dry,” you managed, sensing a chance to escape.
With wobbly legs, you tried to get up only to sway and stumble down on your knees. You needed to leave this place.
König tilted his head, watching you.
You tried again; your muscles too weak to carry you.
“Dear,” König said with slight amusement in his voice, “Your will is admirable, pretty girl. But I doubt it will be enough to get you home.”
“So? Will you drag me back into the pond and finish your work?” you replied, considering the option to crawl home and far away from the water
“Why would I do that, bride?”, he chuckled before turning serious again, looking at you with those blue more than clear inhuman eyes, “I have heard it’s not customary but allow me to get you to your home before you hurt yourself. You humans take so long to heal and an injured bride during the wedding would be a nuisance.”
Fearful you tried to move again.
He watched, waiting for your answer.
You considered his words. Your home. And he clearly wanted you in one piece at least before the wedding.
“No pond?”, you asked with an oh so thin weak voice.
“No pond.” He reassured, “That’s clearly not your element, my little bride-to-be.”
Slowly, you nodded.
Carefully, as if not to spook you, he scooped you back into his arms once again and pressed you to his chest.
You felt yourself going stiff again from fear, but before you could cry out, König stepped out of the water and away from the dreaded pond.
“See, no pond,” König spoke soothingly, and you felt his voice vibrate in his chest as he moved and swayed to avoid branches while shielding you with his shoulders, “I’m keeping my promises, my little bride.”
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rush-the-stars · 8 months
Text
new tricks
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pairing: yandere abyss prince kaeya x gender neutral reader
cw: dark content, kidnapping/capture, the reader is treated physically well but is still captured/being held against their will, mentions of a punishment, strange and toxic dynamic, mildly suggestive.
wc: 2.1k
a/n: dividers by @/cafekitsune!
this is just a tiny drabble. don't squint at worldbuilding or plot lol. i had this idea prattling around my head and wanted it out. one day i will write the dark long fic of my dreams but today is not the day. thank you to @/lorelune for taking a peek beforehand and assuring me <33
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on the back of your neck, goosebumps ripple to life. a chill races down your spine. you know it well—as intimately as you know the brag of your own heart.
sensing him, you cast your eyes up in the reflection of your mirror to catch the shape of him behind you.
you didn’t even hear him enter your chambers. but you’d felt him somehow, known his presence. maybe known his gaze on you.
(it burns deep and vicious to know his gaze. to become accustomed and attuned to him.)
prince kaeya smiles knowingly.
the dark glint to his eye lets you know he’s in strange ways.
“you’re getting quite perceptive.” he muses. “if only you’d been so sharp when i first took you, maybe you wouldn’t be here.”
you were just a naive artist from mondstadt then. a child who knew the sound of the wind in the trees and the birdsong that rose into the sky early in the morning. you knew the golden hills and the valley and a sort of freedom that made you sing like those birds in the morning, too.
(in the dark, he asks you to sing. sing like you used to, he says. and when you open your mouth, you’re always terrified of what will come out.)
now you sit tucked away in the gilded cage he’s made for you in a land far from your home skies. in a castle where the eyes of gods cannot reach you.
“you’re lucky i wasn’t.” you reply sharply, trying to keep your bite around him.
it grows harder and harder to.
every day the edge you’ve tried so desperately to keep begins to whittle away. it’s hard to always be angry. it’s miserable to always be vicious.
(and he’s never harmed you. not physically—just in stranger, worse ways. emotionally. mentally. you wish he’d just break a bone or make a scar, so that when it heals, you know you’re okay again.
it’s worse that he spoils you. it’s worse that he cherishes you. it’s its own form of torment. he knows it.)
he smiles lazily, on the edges are amusement. fondness. he is endlessly entertained by your contempt.
he approaches where you sit in front of your ornate vanity. it’s too beautiful. it’s too grand.
he’s a dark shadow of blue behind you in the mirror. you watch his reflection carefully. he watches you back as he approaches.
something thrills inside you, wild and dark and sudden.
he reaches out, touches your cheek.
you watch his knuckle brush against your face in the mirror.
he’s testing you.
the last time you bit him.
the moment you turn your face towards his hand, it slips away, dancing out of your reach.
he smiles again knowingly.
it’s insufferable.
sensing your ire, he says, “let’s play our game.”
you breathe hard through your nose.
you turn to face him so you’re not caught in his endless reflection. you glare up at him with all the vitriol you can muster.
(it isn’t much anymore.)
“don’t you have more important things to do?”
“nothing so important as you, darling.”
your teeth grind together. but you get out;
“i’d try to escape from the balcony.”
he tsks.
“the guards would spot you.”
“i’d poison the guards.”
he laughs outright at this, “with what poison?”
you feel heat in your face, but you press on, “the hemlock i’ve been growing in the garden.”
he pauses at that. tilts his head.
“my, you’ve gotten good. i can’t tell if you’re lying.”
“go and check.” you dare.
“maybe later.” he agrees, “say i destroyed it. i froze it.”
“you’re not playing fair.” you accuse.
he laughs warmly, reaching out again to tousle your hair. you swat and push at him, but it only excites him, it only makes his hands catch your wrists and come down to your level. kneeling beside you. he holds your wrists tight, presses them down into your own lap. in another world, he could be a lover on his knees for you, his hands clasped over yours.
he fits himself between your legs. he presses himself too close.
but it isn’t another world. and his eye is like the endless night sky in this one. so dark, so terrifying.
“fine,” he agrees pleasantly, “the guards are poisoned. you slip out from the balcony. i’m a light sleeper—i hear you jump to the ground.”
“i try to run.” you breathe.
“where would you run?” he asks, nose nudging yours. you can feel the sharp cut of his foxish smile.
“past the fountain.”
“come now, you’re cleverer than that. i’d find you and drag you back.”
“i’d kick and scream. i’d make you bleed.”
“you’ve done that all before, it doesn’t stop me anymore.”
your nails bite into his shoulders as he lifts you from your place in front of the vanity. you hang around his neck like a child. instinctively, you wrap your legs around his waist.
you tuck your face into his shoulder so you don’t see the pleased look in his eye.
you know where he’ll take you.
“you need new tricks.” he hums as he sits on the edge of the bed with you in his lap.
“maybe i already have them—if it’s a good trick, you wouldn’t know.” you mumble into his shoulder. you hide there.
his hand creeps up to the back of your neck. goosebumps prickle. his fingers slip into your hair and then curl into a loose fist. he tugs gently to dislodge you from his shoulder, to pull you away so that he may see your face again.
he looks at you as if he’s trying to find the trick you speak of. perhaps it’s in your eyes or the set of your mouth.
“i always know.” he warns.
“let’s play again.” you say.
and this time, you use your weight to push him down onto the bed.
he goes down willingly, too easily.
you capture his wrists the way he did to you earlier. you pin them by his head. languidly, he stretches beneath you, amused with this show of sudden power or interest.
“okay, you begin.” he says and his smile is the curve of a laughing, crescent moon.
“i grow to trust you.”
he tilts his head, uncertain or intrigued, you can’t tell. but you can tell you’ve surprised him. his smile falters.
“i’m pleased—you know it’s all i want.” he says and though it’s softened, it’s guarded. you can feel the way he tenses beneath you, waiting, searching.
“and i grow to—to want you, too.” you say and your voice sounds strange to your own ears. far off. maybe too near. not your own, or else, horrifyingly, only yours.
perhaps there is truth there in a way you cannot even begin to untangle.
he’s silent. watching.
“what do you do?” you prompt, breath hitching, almost beg him to speak. “play the game. it’s your turn.”
you feel his wrists flex, the tendons and muscles moving, encircled in your fingers.
“i—cherish you. i foster your desires. i give you whatever you want.” his voice is bedroom soft. his lashes flutter.
“freedom?”
he releases a slow breath of frustration. you feel it against your cheek.
“a form of it.” he answers. and then, carefully, you feel the shifting of his hand beneath yours. his thumb sweeps over your wrist, into your palm. “more and more as i grow to trust you, too.”
you let your hand open up to his, feel it bloom to the touch.
“being alone in the garden.” you press, “i ask you one day to tend to it by myself, when i please.”
he laces his fingers with yours.
“in time.” he agrees, “and you can tend to your garden alone. you can walk on the grounds, wherever you please. you can take dinner in the atrium or the greenhouse or by the lake. it could all be yours.”
you squeeze his hand, “say i earn your trust—let’s finish the game.”
“i give you the world.” he breathes it and you feel it against your lips, feel it somewhere deep inside of you. on the other, soft side of your chest, where your heart thrums.
you know he is telling the truth.
but it rings discordant inside of you. just as softly, you murmur;
“and then i disappear with it. you wait for me to come in from the garden one day—and i never do.”
the tender hold of your hand turns vicious, biting.
you bare your teeth and hiss, “i steal your world and your trust and the love you gave me and i run and run and run. until you can’t find me—until you can’t catch me. i do it when you least expect it—when i love you too much.”
he pushes and twists you under him. he presses you down hard like he could keep you from disappearing, like you’re slipping from him already. but you press on;
“and you’ll see my face everywhere—in the windows of the atrium and the corners of the greenhouse. in the hemlock i grew in the garden and the wind that howls while you stand on the balcony. but i’ll be gone—“
“you’ll never earn my trust now.” he warns, “and you’ll never know the garden alone, or the world i could give you.”
“but i’ll know the one you took from me.”
his eye flashes dangerously, the flicker of frigid, dark waters beneath ice.
but then he’s gone. off of you. the warmth of him leaves you in a rush.
he grabs for a coat of his, throwing it over his shoulders in a flare of dark fabric.
“where are you going? i thought you wanted to play.” you sneer.
“and i thought you didn’t?” he heads for the door anyways, “i’m going to the garden. alone.”
“scared you’ll find hemlock?” you ask.
“are you scared i’ll find hemlock?” he retorts and then lowers his voice, almost to a caress, “i would punish you.”
“you’ve done that all before, it doesn’t stop me anymore.” you tilt your head, “maybe you need new tricks.”
the door slams behind him. you don’t even flinch.
and in a moment, you watch his figure, a dark smudge against the gray fog, trudge out towards the garden.
you watch from the balcony.
there is no hemlock in the garden.
and he is gentler again when he returns that night. but he locks the door to the balcony and he keeps the key tethered around his neck, pressed to you as he holds you; so close and yet so far.
you can feel it’s cool metal against your bare back. you can feel his skin to yours, the way he holds you like you’re going to slip away.
there is no hemlock in the garden, but there is nightshade.
“let’s play our game.” he whispers that night, pressing scattered kisses like falling stars along your shoulder, your jaw.
“i steal the key around your throat. i unlock the balcony door—“
“i hear you. i let you go, anyways.”
you go perfectly still.
“i—i climb down the balcony and i run—“
“past the fountain?”
you nod slowly. you feel your heart kick into an unsteady rhythm.
“i let you go. i let you get far.”
“you’d let me—“
your throat constricts; a ball of emotion wedged there suddenly. you feel your eyes prick with—with shock. is he really—?
something terrified stirs inside you at even the thought of your real freedom; of the thing you want most.
“and then i hunt you.”
he kisses beneath your ear, like a lover.
your blood goes cold.
“i chase you across the world i gave you and the one i took from you. and every time, i find you. i’d find you. and i’d drag you back.”
“i’d—i’d kick and scream. i’d make you bleed.” you manage to get out.
he props himself up, if only to catch your chin, to force you to look back at him.
he kisses you. slowly. sweetly.
“there’s no hemlock in the garden. you need new tricks.”
but the nightshade opens its flowers to the moon, just outside the locked door of your balcony, in the garden that you can’t tend to alone.
you melt into the kiss, open mouthed and tender. soft and deep like lovers.
when you pull away, you have the key dangling in your hand;
“and this isn’t the key to the balcony. so do you.”
when he kisses you again, brutal and dreadful, and with too much heat for someone so, so cold, you feel the sharp cut of his foxish smile.
and maybe even some sick curve of your own.
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her-penetrating-soul · 6 months
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🤍 ‿⚘Stroking the keys of my piano, losing into each note of my lyrics. Feeling the keys beneath the keys of my frailness, my feet underneath feeling the hymns beneath me. I am whirling deeply within my oceanic soul. Did you know that I started writing for you? I had put my pen down many years ago. Did you know I started writing lyrics for you? I hadn't written lyrics. Did you know I would sing to the top of my lungs for you? You became my muse. My inspiration. My sonnets. I hadn't played my piano in so long I didn't think I'd remember. Yet when you walked into my life. I felt a lightning strike my chest when our souls merged together as one. I felt liberated through all my passions I had left a long time ago. I began to pick up those things I had so long ago left that I'm the mist of times. I began to live in you. You woke me up from the numbness I had been feeling for more than decades. I was lost in her frailness of the light. I felt for so long like I was drowning. Till my inner light brought your stillness of darkness into my world. I saw before glimpses of who I was once. A singer, a poet, a dancer, a writer. My passions that I had left so long ago. These are the things I love with an enormous passion. They are my entire definition of my entire oceanic soul. That yes, at times I whirl, I am tormented at times by all that I'm feeling. You pierced yourself into my crevices. I never knew how dead I was till you caressed your darkly moonlight into my wilted light. I knew then I had to start singing again because my voice had to be heard. I am a singer of my own frails. I elope into my words that I feel when I gaze into one of my frails. It takes me into the notion that those frails are feeling. I picked up my pen to write once more for I was born to write, to be a poet of life, love light, darkness, vulnerability, passions, purity, impurity, of those hidden desires I have as a woman. I started dancing for music flows throughout my veins. "Music for my Soul," I became again. You showed me the way to come alive again with the gentleness of your dark soul. I realized you awoke my soul, which was faintly from my pains from long ago. Yes, I have loved & lost. They tainted my oceanic soul. Of being afraid of being seen. Yet you with your words that pierced my oceanic soul. Brought me back to life. Pouring out everything I have held for more then twenty three years. I am singing again, I am playing again, I am writing again.
Tis this I owe you for bringing me to my everlasting essences of beauty, art, & poetry. I will dive into my abyss. I will raise hell to the heavens gleam even if I am viewed differently. I don't care anymore because yes, I am. "Light yet I am Darkness to at the same time. I am not afraid to be heard, seen. If I am judged. All I can say is that if you haven't walked in my footprints, then keep your thoughts to yourself. I am a strong woman resilient. The trials in life made me this beautiful woman standing before you. Only I know my own tale. I have lived in love, light, sorrow, and vulnerability. I express muse through my writings, my music, life is beautiful. I may not be loved and adored by many. Yet I am not here to appease no one! I am here to please myself. My desires are from the innocence of live to the darkest desires. This is who I am. I can be painted in the light as well as her frailness of the moonlight. I am not bewildered anymore. This is me take it or leave it. I am distinctive. I will love fiercely. This is how I love. Take me as I am. Or leave me me be. I will love life the way I see fit. Whether those around don't see my inner beauty. I was born into the Light. I walk into the Light, I am Light. Yet I was also born into the darkness, I walked into the darkness, caressing her gentleness, and I was born into the darkness. I am a distinctive soul that roars to the beauty of the constallions. Light cab bever runs fast enough to see light. Light will always encounter the darkness. Two worlds apart, yet two souls subdued into one. I am a romantic at heart. I can pierce your soul with my words. Yet my words carry meaningful feelings. You'll never be loved like I can love you. No one knows, europhia untill you've caressed the depth of my oceanic soul. You'll never experience a love so pure yet impure like mime. I'm the absent colors of White & Black and all the colors that make the rainbow. I am firece into the storms into my oceanic roaring soul for you.
The shimmer of your darkly soul captivated mine. Not all the wines can drunken my soul. Not all the nicotine in the world can surpass all of what I'm feeling in the depth of my crevices. I feel more alive in her frailness. Even if it's a world that doesn't exist. I will make my own world of my light & darkness delights. I'll be echoed into the twilight delights. I will flourish in my own beauty. I a world full of sorrow. I am that raduate light that embarks your life's journey. I will disturb your darkness. I will raise hell. I will caress both heaven & hell. Blast this emotion I am feeling. Yes, you loom at yourself. I'm the mirror you captivated this heart of mine. I will make our own palace of endearing love. Take me as I am. For the heavens don't want me for I'd be a loud melody never heard before. Hell wouldn't want me since I'd be restricted, for I'd raise on earth just to get a glimpse of your shimmering moonlight bestowed upon me. I am fire, draped upon the firey dragons. I'm a cat gentle, mischievous, playful, and loving. I am embedded into all these emotions that roar from my inner depth. I'm not here for validation. I am here for my own bliss. My own paleness of the stillness of both the skies delights and the moonlight delights. Take me as I am for when I love. I live with an intensity. I am a hungry oceanic soul waiting to fed. To lose myself into you. Take ke as I am or leave be. I will not settle for crumbs. I tesrn for all of you. Or nothing at all. I will not be a red roses for someone who craves the attention of weeds. I solely will ge a ved of roses for the one who will only want, crave, yearn for me. Only me. If I'm not enough for your thirst, then leave me be. For the right one will hunger for only me. I will not settle for pieces of your shoes. I long to dive into your seas. Slash your seas upon the waves of my oceanic soul awaiting to he loved by you. I will wait in the mist. Till you choose me. Until then, I will rise, I will flourish, I will blossom into a mesmerizing masterpiece never heard or seen, and then, I'll be waiting for you! Ready to be loved unconditionally solely by ME!⚘⁀🤍
Written: April 6th, 2024
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chaninfused · 1 year
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Vivid | Lee Minho
◤“Those who were destined to die had no right to interfere with the affairs of those fated to live.”
A girl cursed to be reborn strikes an unlikely deal with the ambitious heir of Valorieve in order to fulfill her only wish. However, this strictly-businesslike partnership develops into something more as her unraveling secrets and his treasonous aspirations converge. Will they face the monster of her curse together, or will the threat of a greater enemy break them apart first?
◤Disclaimers: Female reader insert. Fake marriage au. Enemies/strangers to lovers. Fantasy au. Slow burn. Lots of angst with an adequate amount fluff. Heavy themes of death and suicide, please be very careful. Graphic descriptions of injury, blood, and violence. Sparse use of vulgar language. View the map here!
◤Word count: 62.7K
◤Note: This story is 100% mine and any case of similarity with someone else’s is purely coincidental. Events are pure fiction. Please do not take my content without my consent. Masterlist.
◤From the author: I’m back from the abyss to offer you a mental breakdown of colossal proportions. Happy reading!
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☙ Act 1.
•Scene 1•
“Marry me.”
There was a breath of silence after you had uttered those words in which the world seemed to still and halt on its axis. The masked figure above you only stared, taken aback for only the briefest of seconds before barking a vibrant laugh that ricocheted across the walls of your bedchambers, uncaring for who or what might overhear.
“What a peculiar thing to say right before one’s death!”
His knee was pressing against your stomach, sure to leave an ache after this ordeal ended, and he had gripped your wrists to restrain you while his other hand clutched a cruel blade. It shone in the sliver of moonlight creeping through your window, mimicking the twinkle of your assailant’s eyes through the dark swath of fabric.
He was not a trained assassin, but you could tell that he was familiar with taking lives for despite his brutish ways, he had successfully rendered you helpless.
But you were not one for theatrics.
“Lord Lee.”
The young man bristled at the mention of his identity. You did not grant him the luxury to react further, gritting out, “We are of the same mind. You and I both want to stop the Crown Prince’s plans.”
The pressure against your middle did not cease. He was unflustered.
“I want t-to make a deal with you,” you proposed, struggling to keep your voice steady. You were no stranger to pain, but you did not enjoy it either. The sooner this ended, the better.
Carefully, the masked man spoke, “What benefit would I gain from dealing with you?”
“Fifteen years—” you gasped. “I have been at his side for fifteen years. There is no hideout nor base I am unaware of.
“If you agree to marry me at tomorrow’s banquet, I will give you the locations of each of his secret military bases.”
Still, he did not falter, and you did not expect him to.
He muttered, voice taking on a dark tone, “Why should I believe you?”
“I swear it,” you coughed before adding, “You may kill me at any moment you doubt my sincerity.”
Very slowly, his knee lifted, though his skepticism remained. “And you? What do you gain from this deal?”
You took a deep breath, relishing the lightness you finally felt. When you answered him, you made sure to hold his smoldering gaze coolly. “I want an aide. Someone with the necessary resources and influence to defy the royal family.”
You saw the contemplation in his eyes. He was calculating, weighing the value of your offer against your price. If he needed a few moments to decide, then you would happily grant him the time, for you knew that the information you had dangled before him was too precious to forego. After all, you had been planning this for a very long time.  
“The locations for the promise of marriage…” he mused, a scoff dancing in the wake of his words, before suddenly releasing your wrists and easing himself off your bed. “Fine.”
You watched him, still lying right where he had rudely interrupted your sleep. The young man slipped the dagger into the sheath strapped to his chest then held out a hand, declaring, “We have a deal, Lady Y/n.”
You pushed yourself to sit, nightrobe and hair a mess, and took his grip. “We have a deal, Lord Lee.”
He might have smiled. You did not know, nor did you care.
He stopped after he had turned around to drop out of the window he had crept through, and glanced back. “I still do not understand.
“What is your end goal? It surely cannot be to become my wife.”
There was a dangerous glint in his eyes, the kind that could silence a hall of blubbering advisors at once. You had chosen him for a reason, the culmination of all your lifetimes in this world.
With your best courtly smile, you told him, “I only wish to rest, in peace.”
•Scene 2•
You were the cherished only daughter of the Count and Countess of the Lurmuse fiefdom. They were not the first parents you had had, but if you cared for any souls in this lifetime, it would be them.
Their fief was a vast, prosperous farming land that spanned across the southwestern border of the Kingdom, with a rich history and a loyal people. Being a border fief had granted them immense military power, yet despite their wealth, your parents lived a relatively humble life compared to their fellow nobles, and they raised you with such humility.
They were the reclusive type, which you were thankful for, preferring to stay at their fief than to reside at the crown city. This quiet life of theirs was only disturbed when you visited the King’s palace for the first time, in vain of all the tantrums you had tried to throw to stop them.
At five years old, the countdown to your death began.
Ever since, the King had insisted on you spending long stays at the palace. Sometimes, it was for classes in music, dance, embroidery, or whatever his whims inspired. Other times, it was merely to spend time with the young Crown Prince. To any onlookers, he was a warmhearted King who took a liking to a count’s daughter and wished to bring the two families closer.
You knew better.
Behind that façade of kindness, his eyes only saw you as a demon to be purged. This was his—and eventually his son’s—way of keeping you under surveillance until it was finally time to fulfill his so-called duty. As he had before, as his fathers and forefathers did, and as his son and descendants would.
You glanced at the Crown Prince now, standing at the dais of his princely seat, surrounded by his closest supporters. At once, he noticed and met your gaze, courtesy of those otherworldly instincts cursed upon him.
His name was one you could never recall. You could see the faces of every king before him within his features. It filled you with such an immense terror, but you dared not express it. All these years, you played nice with him.
Cautiously, you diverted your gaze to the revelry around you. The feasting had finished, and the nobility gathered in this hall were now sipping wine and gossiping the night away.
Looking at the attendees of the banquet was like gazing into a kaleidoscope. Each lord and lady was dressed exquisitely, every gown and suit more spectacular than the other—the kind of fashion worthy of a prince’s banquet.
You were standing next to your parents who were politely smiling and nodding along to some unriveting conversation. Count and Countess Lurmuse were older than many of the nobles around them, yet clad in your fiefdom’s pine green colors, they were the most elegant in the hall.
Watching your mother, you recalled the conversation you had some hours prior when you told both of your parents about your decision not to marry the Crown Prince.
The Countess was a frail woman. Sometimes it felt as though a gust of wind could sweep her away. So, you were reasonably worried that your news would affect her terribly.
But she had only smiled at you then, her words like a balm to your worries.
“I never wanted to disturb your relationship with the Prince, but I must admit, I am relieved.”
She did not believe that he was the right choice. That was what she had told you, and you wondered if she thought the same of the man you had chosen instead.
The ensemble that had been filling the hall with music suddenly quietened, and a curious hush fell over the attendees before the clink of a spoon against glass drew their attention to the dais.
This banquet was merely a formality. They all knew the true reason behind this gathering, for the Crown Prince was proposing to his childhood sweetheart on this evening.
There he stood, proud, wineglass raised in the air as he addressed the crowd, “My most honorable lords and ladies, may I have your attention, please?”
He needed not ask. They turned to him like moths to a flame, skirts and capes rustling. The Crown Prince smiled at them, smug, yet parading modesty.
“I gathered you all here to witness,” he paused for effect, then placed his free hand over his heart. At that moment, to all except yourself, he was the image of a gentle prince in love. His sincerity was only magnified by his next words. “Tonight, I will propose to my childhood love and only companion I wish to have in this life!”
The hall erupted in murmurs, each noble man and woman whispering excited, dubious, or envious guesses and remarks to one another. You already began to feel a few eyes on your back.
The Crown Prince smiled again, finding you in the masses with the likeness of an eagle spotting its prey.
His gaze made you feel sick.
“Lady Y/n!” he called out to you and his friends hooted and cheered.
The crowd around you parted, making you see him as he stepped down the dais. There was a slight slant to his saunter, one that you noted after observing him for so many years. He made his way toward you, cloaked in royal red and gold, unhindered by the nosy people surrounding you.
He stopped several feet away and raised his glass, the words falling from his lips as easily as a string of sweet nothings.
“Will you marry me?”
There was an anticipatory silence after his proposal, an enthusiastic jitter as everyone awaited your response, expecting nothing but a ‘yes’.
Your grip on your wineglass tightened. You had not bothered to find him during the banquet and were beginning to think that perhaps you should have.
Hoping your voice would not betray you, you uttered loud and clear.
“No.”
The silence turned deadly, and you heard glass shatter somewhere behind you.
You did not bother to gauge the reactions of the bumbling fools around you. Instead, you watched as the Crown Prince’s gentlemanly expression fell apart, melting into dark confusion.
“No?” he repeated your rejection, as though daring you to affirm what you had said.
You stared at him, schooling your expression into stillness.
This was it—the spurring action of your plan. You opened your mouth, preparing to answer, when a voice came from somewhere to your left, strong and challenging.
It belonged to a certain someone with whom you had made a deal the previous night.
“No, indeed!”
Lord Lee Minho, eldest son of the Count of Valorieve, stepped into the clearing like a sending from heaven, a crooked smirk adorning his lips.
He was a sight for sore eyes. In all your lifetimes, you had seen few as striking as he was. His dark hair fell in a graceful swoop over one eye, long and luscious enough to lose one’s fingers in. The edge in his gaze was at once captivating and cruel, made to render helpless at his mercy any it beheld. His build spoke of superior swordsmanship, subtleties of power in the breadth of his shoulders and flex of his thighs.
Not only was he physically appealing, but he carried with him an air of elysian glory, commanding the attention of foe and friend alike. He needed not declare his presence for it to be felt, a hush of reverence all but compulsory.
He was a prince in his own right.
The Crown Prince eyed him in poorly disguised disdain, questioning, “Lord Lee, what brings you here?”
The animosity between Valorieve’s nobles and the royal family was no secret. The two parties were distant rivals, after all, and had fought over the throne many centuries ago.
Minho’s eyes twinkled. If anything, it was clear that he enjoyed this ordeal. “Your Highness, I, too, am here to propose.”
Swiftly, the young lord turned in your parents’ direction, serious and suddenly ardent as he presented his request, much to the surprise of all the attendees. “Your Excellencies, I humbly seek your permission to ask for your daughter’s hand in marriage.”
Whispers rose across the hall again, this time perturbed and appalled. Though none would dare to object to the unfolding of events, not when Minho was at the center of them.
You paid them no mind, meeting your father’s concerned gaze with a reassuring nod. You had asked your parents to accept during your earlier chat. To trust you. They always had, but you still prayed that they would not go back on their word now.
Your father hesitated for a moment before he gave in, raising a hand and planting it firmly on Minho’s shoulder. With the kindest of smiles, he announced, “We give you our blessing.”
Minho placed his hand over the Count’s, returning the smile gratefully. “Thank you.”
When he turned to walk toward you, clamor ensued.
‘How could this be happening?!’
‘How dare she?!’
You tuned it all out. Every facet of your attention was on Minho anyway. His easy gait, his mask of calm. The gold studded jacket effortlessly slung over his shoulders seemed heavier than even that of the Crown Prince, yet he never slumped.
You were reminded of an old saying—the Valorieve do whatever they want.
He came to kneel before you like a knight would, with a hand over his heart and the other stretched out toward you. He held your gaze, and very carefully, he asked, “Lady Y/n, would you honor me and give me your hand?”
The noise was almost deafening. They would speak of this for weeks to come, you knew.
You set your wineglass aside and with a step forward, took the young lord’s hand, upturning the hall. “Yes.”
The Crown Prince threw his drink to the pearly floor, shards of broken glass spreading like stars in blood as he shouted, “This is not right!”
“I am afraid this is right, Your Highness!” Minho proclaimed, standing up and drawing you closer. He held your hand like a trophy for all to admire. “So right, in fact, that we will be holding our wedding in three weeks’ time!”
“You—!” but whatever the Prince was trying to say drowned in the resulting commotion.
Minho leaned to your side, close enough that only you heard him when he spoke. He smelled faintly of roses and sandalwood. “This plan of yours has placed us in quite the scandal. I do hope you don’t mind the gossip?”
You breathed out. You cared not what any of those people thought.
Holding your head high, you whispered so only your fiancé would hear, “I do not.”
•Scene 3•
“You made quite the spectacle of yourself last night. What of our plan?”
The Count of Valorieve gave his back to his son as he watched the lively streets of the crown city from his window. News of Minho’s actions reached him almost immediately, through both informants and senseless gossip.
The young Lord stole the Crown Prince’s bride.
“Worry not, father,” Minho said. “We made a deal. Our plan will proceed even more smoothly now.”
To bring a person so closely affiliated with the Crown Prince into the estate was a risk even he would hesitate before taking, but the Count trusted his heir. If he had determined that this was an advantageous move, then so be it.
“And if the girl proves to be a problem?”
Minho did not spare a breath. “She will be eliminated.”
The Count said nothing more, satisfied with his answer. If the Lady of Lurmuse was indeed a spy sent by the royal family, then she could be of no use to them dead. Besides, he would easily be able to monitor her actions at the estate.
With a sigh, he turned around to look at his son. He was the heir of a fiefdom that spanned over a quarter of the kingdom’s land. A young man with a tremendous responsibility that could only be mellowed out by his greater ambitions.
The Count had raised him well, yet he could not stop his brows from furrowing in fatherly concern. “I know I was imploring you to get married, but this feels rather hasty.”
“I do not regret my decision,” Minho answered him, resolute in the square set of his shoulders.
“Besides, I saw an opportunity in this,” he confessed when his father remained quiet, “to quell your urging, expand our territory, and finally achieve our goal. Lady Lurmuse is the heir of the Lurmuse fiefdom, is she not?”
“Yes, she is,” the Count sighed. He was not surprised by his son’s attitude—tackling this marriage as though it were a business deal with no regard for his own fulfillment.
Most unions among nobles were social and economic propositions after all, as much as the Count wished his son would not fall into the same trap.
He turned back to the window, waving him off. There was no use changing Minho’s mind now. “Go on, then. You have a wedding to prepare for.”
•Scene 4•
Three weeks had passed since that momentous banquet, and you were now standing before a towering mirror, all but drowning in white. 
It was your mother’s gown, hastily yet expertly tailored to suit you. An intricate embroidery of pearls adorned the elegant neckline. The skirt shimmered and sparkled with the barest movement, billowing around you, heavier than any you had worn before. A cloud of winking stars.
It was a gown made to make its wearer feel special, but you felt nothing.
This day and this ceremony were only a Déjà vu. A repetition. You had worn numerous other wedding dresses before. Some were just as exquisite, some were far less beautiful, some you could not recall at all, in muddled lifetimes lost to your weary memory.  
But to your parents, this day was a first.
“My dear…” Countess Lurmuse wrapped you in her slender arms, careful not to ruin your veil with the tears glistening in her eyes. Her voice was charged with such emotion that it earned a sniffle from your father standing nearby.
You reciprocated the hug to the best of your ability, mindful of the delicate work your handmaidens had been doing all day.
Your poor mother had fussed over you ever since the announcement of your engagement. Three weeks was too little time for preparation, even with all the resources you had, and too sudden. You could only offer apologies for all the work your parents had to do.
When you parted, your mother cupped your cheeks, gazing so softly yet intently at your face as though to memorize it. “Oh, how lovely you are, my darling.”
“Now, now,” your father stepped forward and placed a pacifying hand on her shoulder. “Our daughter isn’t leaving us forever. You can see her anytime you wish, my love.”
He spoke as though he had not been discreetly patting his eyes over at the side a few moments ago. You smiled at the two of them. If you were to care about something on this day, it was their happiness.
“I think the ceremony is about to begin,” you told them once you caught the sound of the ensemble. “We must leave.”
“Yes, yes,” your mother sighed, finally letting go to usher you toward the magnificent oak doors that led to the hall. More than a hundred guests were waiting behind those doors. No doubt curious to see the union of the outrageous couple.
Your parents came to flank you, nervously staring at the dark, varnished wood. You heard your father ask, murmuring his concern one last time, “Dear…are you truly sure about this?”
The doors groaned open like an answer of their own, and you shot him your most dazzling grin. “I’m happy, father.”
It was no lie, though happiness was not the word you would use to describe the exhilarating emotion you were feeling. Rather, it was success, the taste of freedom.
Across the hall, another set of doors wailed open to reveal the groom in all his polished glory.
He, too, was dressed in white.
Minho’s pale suit was embroidered with and etched in gold. A dozen badges and medals embellished the right front of his jacket, while a cape of intense imperial blue draped over his left shoulder. From his hip hung a ceremonial sword, its sapphire studded hilt complementing his attire. His dark hair was parted to the side, left to sweep neatly above one eye.
In his gloved hands, he held a posy of thymes dotted with soft purple blossoms. It was a custom of your kingdom. They represented courage, strength, and fortitude.
In your grasp was the counterpart that symbolized love, peace, and fidelity—a bushy branch from the myrtle tree, white flowers stark against the darkness of its leaves.
You had witnessed the unity of those two halves time and time again, a metaphor for the promises shared between a loving couple. But in a wedding such as yours, these symbols were merely a formality. Neither were true to the kind of promises you had made to each other.
You stepped onto the path lined with white roses. To your left were the arrays of seats upon which your guests sat and stared in mute anticipation. To your right, a sprawling ensemble engrossed in playing the ceremonial procession.
You walked with your parents behind you, while Minho was followed by his father, his stepmother, and his younger brother. The meeting of families was a tradition particular to the western region of your kingdom, which you both hailed from. It was yet another representation of unity.
The two of you met halfway on a raised platform, where an officiant was waiting to perform the ceremony and validate your marriage. It was only up close did you notice the taut grip Minho had on his posy.
Right. This was a first for him too.
Regardless of the nature of your partnership, you decided that you owed him a smooth, joyous celebration, at least.
When your families finished greeting each other, you took Minho’s hand and turned toward the solemn-faced officiant. He was dressed in a suit the color of chestnut. Over his heart was a silver brooch depicting a leopard curled around a pen, the insignia of Valorieve’s Council of Records.
“Ladies and gentlemen!” he called out into the hall as the ensemble faded into silence. “We are gathered here today to witness and celebrate the union of two families and two hearts in matrimony. By the authority of His Excellency, the Count of Valorieve, under the righteous guidance of His Majesty, the King, I will oversee and recognize this momentous ceremony.”
The officiant then addressed the two of you, “Please begin to tie the knot on the matrimonial bouquet.”
Two ribbons were wrapped around the end of your myrtle branch, one blue, the other golden. Around Minho’s posy of thymes were fern green ribbons. They were the colors of your fiefdoms.
Minho worked wordlessly, wrapping the ribbons around your branch then letting you do the same with the ribbons you held. When you finished tying the knot, you had a single, complete bouquet, which you then placed on the velvet cushion presented before you.
“Now, place your hands over the knot,” the officiant instructed. You obliged, and Minho laid his hand over yours. Even through the fine fabric of his glove, his palm was warm, so much so that you suddenly felt a chill run down your spine.
“By this blessed union, Lord Lee Minho of Valorieve and Lady Y/n of Lurmuse, do you swear to be doting, dutiful, and devoted to one another?”
“I swear,” Minho vowed, and you repeated after him.
“I swear.”
“By this blessed union, do you swear to protect one another, never betray one another, and always hold one another in the highest regard?”
“I swear.”
“I swear.”
“Then, let us commence the exchange of rings,” the officiant said, carrying the velvet cushion along with the bouquet away as another, smaller pillow was brought to him by an attendant. On cue, the ensemble began playing a slow, gentle composition to accompany the nearing end of the ceremony.  
Two matching rings were snugly fit into the small cushion. Minho reached first and carefully pulled out one of them. You held your left hand out for him, and he placed the ring on your finger, his touch featherlike.
You spared a moment to admire the sophisticated artistry of the jewelry. The band was made of iridescent mother-of-pearl with a base of the purest silver. It thinned in the middle, where a small diamond was placed as if seated on a throne.
For a fleeting second, you wondered if the young Lord had chosen the rings himself. If there was any thoughtfulness in those beautiful creations.
When he finished, you reached for the remaining ring. It was akin to yours, the only difference being its lack of any diamond. Minho pulled off the glove on his left swiftly, letting you slip the ring through his finger with ease.
With that, the officiant cleared his throat, once again handing you the matrimonial bouquet. “Lord Lee Minho of Valorieve and Lady Y/n of Lurmuse.
“May this union bring you joy and tranquility, safety and fulfillment. May your happiness last long, and may your sorrows abate.”
He paused, before announcing loud and clear for all to hear, “I hereby pronounce you husband and wife. Blessed be your union!”
The hall erupted in applause as the ensemble rose to a crescendo. Hand in hand, you and Minho turned to face your guests. You recognized most of their faces, lords and ladies you often met at balls and banquets. Your parents were seated in the front alongside Minho’s family. In-laws now, you thought, looking over the faces of those who you would be seeing much more often.
The two of you were shortly whisked away to the carriage awaiting outside the ceremonial hall. It would take you across the city in a grand procession toward Valorieve Palace, where celebrations were taking place, and where you would reside thereafter.
You gazed outside the windows of your carriage. The city of Adorance was alive with festivities. The colors of Valorieve were hung from rooftop to rooftop, flags proudly fluttering in the wind. You could hear singing in the streets, faint music in the distance, and the sound of laughter dancing in the air. Your procession tossed rose petals, candy, and coins in its wake, while citizens were waving and cheering at your carriage. It seemed that they were truly happy, as though this wedding was theirs too to celebrate.
The inside of your carriage, however, was the very opposite of the merriment happening outside. Across from you, Minho sat quietly, staring outside with an unreadable expression on his face. It was a stifling silence that even you could not bear for too long.
So, you dared to speak. “Your city is beautiful.”
He snapped his head in your direction, blinking once as if unsure of what he heard. You could see him try to work out an answer.
“Yes,” he finally said, leaning his head back and returning his attention to the scenery outside. You thought you saw his lips lift in a vague smile. “It is.”
Nothing more was said for the rest of the ride, but the tension between you had dissipated with the celebrations unfolding around you.
• • •
Your first dance with Minho was the focus of all who were gathered at the ballroom that evening.
He was a talented dancer. There was skill in the precision and elegance of his steps, but also a certain passion that made it seem like he truly enjoyed what he was doing. He held you gingerly, a hand at your back while the other clasped yours, close enough so that the only thing you could look at was him, and the many stars reflected in his eyes.
You had danced with countless others before, in this lifetime and past lifetimes, yet none had made your mundane dance feel so spectacular. What you had practiced alone in frenzied preparation suddenly became a heart-stopping scene ripped right out of a play. As though you were spirited away to a different world in those few minutes.
When your dance ended, the revelry commenced officially. Wine, treats, and other refreshments were served around as your guests indulged in light conversation and dance. You knew that many of them were not ecstatic to be attending but could not afford to offend Count Valorieve with their absence. You hoped that the food and drinks would entertain them enough.
Seated next to you on the wedding couch, Minho watched the party unfold in disinterest. Guilt nagged at your heart at the sight. Asking him to marry you was a selfish request, and you were not so heartless as to deny that a regular person ought to enjoy such an event. Especially when he was at the center of it.
“Would you care to have the next dance?” you asked him as the ensemble reached the shrill end of their piece.
Minho’s wineglass stopped short of his lips and he stared at you incredulously. “Pardon?”
“The nature of our partnership is no reason for us not to enjoy the night, do you not think so?” you prodded. Though these experiences meant little to you, you still understood their ordinary significance.
So, when he remained silent, you stood, and your dress shimmered and swelled around you like a halo. With a glance back, you gave him a kind smile. You never intended to sully the lives of others with your indifference.
“Come, let us dance.”
•Scene 5•
The doors of the bedchambers closed behind you with a resounding boom like the lid of a coffin.
The room was scarcely lit, the little candlelight letting the moon illuminate the space through fluttering curtains instead. The enormous bed at the center of the chamber glared at you with its silken sheets and lavish pillows.
You paid the sultry atmosphere no mind, spotting the wooden trunk you had transported with you from Lurmuse. It contained all your most valuable belongings.
You stepped toward it, and Minho suddenly blurted, “Wait!”
You turned to face him, finding him gawking at you with wide, frantic eyes. His hair had disheveled ever so slightly from the evening’s celebrations, and although he did not drink enough to become fully intoxicated, there was a curious redness at the tip of his ears.
“Don’t worry,” you told him. “I only wish to fulfill my part of the deal. I will not ask you to lay with me.”
Not awaiting his response, you approached the sturdy trunk and opened it. With a little rummaging, you found the small chest you were searching for and spun toward Minho.
“Inside this chest, you will find maps indicating the locations of the military camps and detailed plans of each,” you said as you handed it to him before fishing out a small key from a pouch tied to your wrist.
Placing the key over the chest, you then added, “You will also find a list of all the nobles that are indebted to or being blackmailed by the Crown Prince and the information to use against them. I need not say, guard this carefully.”
Minho received the chest with furrowed brows. Sharp focus had returned to his eyes when he looked at you. “This is more than what we agreed on.”
You held his gaze, unwavering under his tremendous scrutiny. “Maps, records, correspondences—I will give you any and all information I am privy to.”
Your promise was resolute, and you meant it wholeheartedly. All he needed was to ask. “I only need for you to lend me your strength when the time comes.”
“And when will that be?” he breathed out.
“A little less than year from now,” you revealed, breaking eye contact with him to gaze at the full moon peeking through the window. “On the eve of my twenty-first, he will come knocking on my door.
“Other than that,” you gave him a smile as though to assure him, “I will never bother you with anything.”
☙ Act 2.
•Scene 1•
The room smelled of mold and stifling death. Dust had settled in thick layers over every surface and in every crease. It was only cleared by the shoeprints leading up to where the man knelt grimly.
The sheets lay flat on the bed before him, a resting place for all the floating particles of dust permeating the air.
“I let her slip out of my grasp,” he confessed through gritted teeth. Everything had been proceeding according to his plan. He was careful. He was watchful. How could she have come into contact with that bastard?
“But worry not, father,” he unfolded from his kneeling position. Whatever that puny girl had orchestrated will not succeed, and he was going to see that through. As his father did, and as his ancestors had done before him.
“The demon shall be purged.”  
A somber silence was the only answer he received.
The Crown Prince stepped out of the King’s chambers, not bothering to stop as he ordered the guards on duty, “The King wishes to rest. Do not let anyone disturb him.”
But that was a terrible lie, for the King had not wished anything for a very long time.
•Scene 2•
You did not recall your first death.
But those that came after, you remembered vividly.
The death of the heart, body, and soul—every instance your life had been taken away from you at its bare start. You knew the taste of dying better than you knew the backs of your own hands. It was a sensation that lurked between the shadows of night and slumber, never leaving you alone.
You were helpless in the face of death. Unable to move. Unable to save yourself. Unable to ignore it. It petrified you more than you could ever convey.
What was worse than the pain of dying, however, was the pain of being reborn in a life so entirely different from your past. The numbing heartbreak of being ripped away from the people you had grown to love, unable to tell them of your whereabouts and wellbeing. It was so unbearable that you began to vehemently avoid the people and places of your previous lives.
Soon enough, with the cloud of loss looming over your every interaction, you found it difficult to form relationships with others. There was no purpose in doing so when you knew that you were going to lose all of them shortly.
Yet, meeting and interacting with others was an inevitability of life. No matter how much you resented it, you still had to do it.
You were walking with Minho, heading towards the dining hall for your first family breakfast, when a voice sounded across the hallway. “Good morning, brother!”
A young man approached you, dressed smartly in a beige suit. He had hair the same dark shade as Minho’s, and a smattering of freckles across his cheeks. Doe-eyed, he reminded you of a kitten.
Your husband smiled at him. “Good morning to you too, Felix.”
Lee Felix was Minho’s half-brother, born from a different mother. He was your age, three years a junior to his older brother. You noted that they seemed to have a good relationship.
But that friendliness disappeared the moment Felix turned to address you with a stiff nod of his head. “Lady Y/n.”
He seemed not to like you very much, you also noted.
“Good morning, Lord Lee,” you nodded back at him. It did not matter to you what sentiments he harbored.
“It looks like I arrived just in time!” an unfamiliar voice came from the opposite side, sonorous and cheerful.
On impulse, you turned in the direction of the sound.
Your heart dropped into the depthless abyss.
You could distinguish those features on any face, anywhere and anytime. That telltale curve of the nose. That facial structure, regardless of how faint. His countenance seemed to twist right before you, morphing into the faces of your nightmares.
He was well built, broad shoulders proud in his simple tunic. His long hair was tied and tossed in front of his shoulder, gentle black curls bouncing as he jogged. He wore a radiant smile when he bowed to you. “Greetings, Lady Y/n.”
You gripped your dress so tightly it could have torn. He was neither the Prince nor the King. Who, by all stars, was this man?
“You are not of the Valorieve. Who are you?”
The stranger’s smile faded at your cold tone, and he recollected himself with a cough. “You have a very keen eye, my lady. I, indeed, am not of the Valorieve.”
Minho spoke up beside you, raising a hand to clasp the man’s shoulder. “This is Bang Chan. He was adopted and raised by our family.”
You might have heard of such a surname in town before, but it did not match his appearance. It was not the name a person of his birthright should carry.
That bright smile returned, paired with dimples, as he apologized bashfully, “My apologies for confusing you, my lady.”
Your voice was stuck in your throat. Only with great effort did you manage to squeeze out a proper response. You did not want to look at him any longer. “It’s all right. I, as well, apologize for my unseemly prior reaction.”
You spun around urgently, tugging once at Minho’s sleeve. “Let us head to the hall. We must not be late.”
Your heartbeat was a drum pounding in your ears.
This was not part of your plan. Whoever this Bang Chan character was, wherever he had come from, he was not a player you had accounted for.
•Scene 3•
The tea was warm and sweet on your tongue, with the smallest hint of floral bitterness. It was just the kind of earthy taste you enjoyed.
“Have you been well, my dear?” your mother asked, setting her teacup down after a careful sip. Her movements were always of the utmost elegance, making everyone else seem like a clumsy fool in contrast.
You smiled. “I have, mother. What of you? How has your stay been so far?”
One week had passed since your wedding, and your parents had been staying at Adorance as if to keep you company. They claimed not wanting to bother you and your husband, but you knew that they were simply reluctant to leave you behind and did not know how to express it.
Though, they were finally going to leave for Lurmuse tomorrow, and you were going to stay in Valorieve.
Alone to pull the strings of your plan.
“It has been nice. Adorance is such a large city, rather too lively and loud sometimes,” your mother remarked with a quirk of her lips. “I do miss the peacefulness of the estate.”
Life in the Lurmuse fiefdom was quiet and simple, free from the buzz and extravagance of big cities. It was no wonder that your mother felt out of place here.
“That is true. The city feels as though it would sweep one away if given the chance.” you took another sip of your tea. The conversation was going in no particular direction, and you appreciated that.
But it seemed that your mother had other ideas, ever the perceptive lady.
You looked up from your teacup to find her gazing at you with concern drawn all over her face. Brows furrowed, she seemed to hesitate before finally uttering, “Is he treating you well?”
The cup in your hand suddenly felt heavy. She did not beat around the bush, did she?
Your smile did not falter. “I am happy. Please, don’t worry about me, mother.”
“Silly girl, if I do not worry about you, then who will?” she sighed, eyes filling with warmth as she regarded you. Your mother’s care was steady and unrelenting, like a mighty mountain in the face of a storm. You were sure she would worry herself sleepless if you had expressed even the slightest unhappiness.
Her thin hand came to rest over yours from across the table, comforting as she murmured, “I heard that His Lordship is away.”
“Yes, he told me that he had urgent business matters to attend to,” the lie fell easily from your lips. 
The truth was that you had not seen Minho since the day after the wedding. He had simply left without a word. Though if you were to guess, he was probably scoping out a secret military base somewhere.
Not that his absence bothered you. 
“How unfortunate,” the Countess sighed again, her disapproval evident in her frown, and you hid your grimace. Sorry, Minho. 
Your mother was a meticulous woman. The last thing you needed was for her to pry. If you had to sacrifice your husband for the plan’s sake, then so be it.
Smiling sheepishly, you shrugged. “But so would fate have it.”
“Still, he must make time for you!” she picked up her teacup with a huff, making you chuckle. You could only hope to be as formidable a woman as her.
“I will let him know, mother.”
• • •
A month had passed since the wedding.
Life in Valorieve Palace was much calmer than you expected it to be. Although it was the main estate, the Count and his wife lived elsewhere at one of the family’s many other properties, only visiting occasionally. Minho was still away, alongside his brother and the mysterious person called Chan.
Slipping into a solitary, quiet routine was easy. Your time was mostly spent managing the estate affairs for which you were responsible as the new Lady Valorieve. You dared not disturb the palace staff in their work, avoiding their aid as much as you could.
It was not so difficult. In fact, it was the kind of life you were used to at your home in Lurmuse.
Your parents did not employ servants to open and shut doors for you, bathe and dress you, or tend to the most minuscule of your needs. But that was not the case in Valorieve Palace, where the servants were not quite convinced of your aptitude to carry a few books to your study.
It took some time, but eventually, you reached a mutual understanding with them.
Mostly.
You were overlooking the garden work when your butler approached you, carrying with him a small silver plate and a parasol under his arm. He was assigned to you by the head butler of the palace, and no matter how you tried to brush him off, he remained staunchly by your side, determined to serve.
“My lady, a letter has arrived for you,” he said after bowing lightly. He had hair the same shade as his inky black butler’s coat, and eyes the color of a cloudless sky at noon. Sharp features and polished manners, yet he could not have been much older than you.
“Thank you, Sycross.” you gave him a polite nod as you took the envelope he had presented on the plate. He then reached for the parasol he carried and you waved your hand at him dismissively. “There’s really no need—”
“Pardon me, my lady, but the sun is quite strong today. Please, allow me,” Sycross interrupted, opening the parasol regardless and stepping a respectful distance away.
Under the newfound shade, your shoulders slumped in defeat. There was no deterring him.
You turned your attention to the letter. There was no sender’s name on the envelope, but you knew who had sent it.
The Crown Prince had been sending you one letter after another throughout the past month. Sometimes he begged you, other times he questioned you and demanded answers. An outsider might think he was simply a heartbroken man beseeching his cruel-hearted former lover, but you knew better.
You knew that it was not his heartbreak speaking, but fury. The ink on those letters looked like blood to you. Every curve and dip of his script was a threat only you could see.
Resigned, you tore open the top of the envelope and pulled out the letter inside. You wondered what laughable pleas were scribbled on that piece of paper as you unfolded it.
His angry lettering screamed at you. Only one sentence stared back at you.
‘You cannot hide.’
A pure and honest threat. You wanted to laugh as much as you wanted to drop this letter in terror.
Instead, you did neither and neatly folded it back into the envelope, sure to maintain a composed demeanor.
You knew that you were being watched and reported back to Minho. It made sense, for you were a close companion of his enemy, after all. He would be a fool to let you roam around unsupervised, and the young Lord was no fool.
You would burn this letter as you had burned the rest, and make it known that you did not send any back.
You would give Minho no reason to terminate your partnership. Let the Prince send as many wrathful, useless letters as he wished.
•Scene 4•
“A letter?”
“Yes,” Felix confirmed his brother’s question. “Apparently, she has been receiving strange letters from an unnamed sender very frequently.”
Minho’s gaze roamed over the plan he was studying aimlessly, thoughts elsewhere. He was keenly aware of the fact that Felix did not trust you. And, although you had sworn it to him, he, too, could not help himself from doubting your honesty.
He had told himself that he did not need to understand your intentions. In a transaction, all that was necessary was the exchange of benefits. You had struck a deal with him and fulfilled it. There was no reason for him to pry further.
Yet, he was curious, and his curiosity made him uneasy. What if this was all some complicated ploy by the Crown Prince to bring him down? Surely you were not so stupid as to communicate with the enemy under his roof.
“You’re forgetting an important detail, Felix,” Chan spoke up from where he lounged on the ground, surrounded by rough cushions.
“And what will that be?” the mentioned young man crossed his arms, his deep voice taunting. “She’s receiving correspondences that are most likely from the enemy. What else could be important?”
Chan waved the report in the air. “It says here that Her Ladyship discarded all those letters and was never once seen sending any out.”
“That doesn’t change the fact that she is a threat to us!” Felix spun to where Minho sat, slamming his palms on the table before him. “You must rid of her, brother.”
“Oh, come, now!” Chan rolled his eyes, the papers in his hands rustling. “You cannot read this shallow report and come to such a drastic conclusion. How can you be so sure she’s colluding with him?”
“You—!”
“That will be enough from the both of you,” Minho interjected loudly, to which the younger Lord opened his mouth, ready to protest before giving in.
“Suit yourselves, then! Don’t say I didn’t warn you,” he scoffed and stalked out of the small tent they were in, an uncomfortable silence in his wake.
Minho sighed after he had left. His younger brother was usually an amicable person. Only when it came to matters that he was particularly passionate about did he become such a fiery force.
A spy possibly infiltrating their circle was one of those matters.
Chan pushed himself to his feet and walked over to where Minho sat, a display of maps and plans before him. He tossed the report on the table as he casually took a seat.
“I think you should read this,” he said.
Minho picked up the small stack of papers. They contained a detailed report of your actions inside the palace during his absence, compiled by his own men. He skimmed through it while telling himself not to jump to conclusions. Not to let his own doubts blind him.
But as he learned of your daily activities, that sense of dreadful curiosity filled him again. It felt like something was missing. No matter how he looked at your case, your behavior—there was something he could not place his finger on.
You had offered to give him priceless information, not for a fortune, not for a tangible price, but for marriage.
Then, you demanded nothing else from him.
It simply made no sense.
“To be honest with you, I never liked the idea,” Chan admitted with a sigh. “The taking of an innocent life for something like this…”
On that night two months ago, Minho’s task was to assassinate you, the Prince’s childhood sweetheart.
The plan was to pin the blame on the Crown Prince and turn Lurmuse against him completely. It was well known that the Count and Countess cherished their daughter more than anything else in this world. It was also known that despite not flaunting their power, the Lurmuse nobles held a considerably large influence on the common people of the kingdom. Additionally, their military competence as a border fief was not to be looked down upon. They were the perfect trigger to disturb.
If they could create profound animosity between Lurmuse and the royal family, then it would act as a catalyst to achieving Valorieve’s ultimate goal.
Unfortunately, you would have been victim to a plan you were never privy to.
Minho knew that Chan disliked the idea, even if he could do nothing to stop it at the time. So, when you proposed that deal, he found himself easily persuaded. The plan might not proceed as fast as they had intended, but he had earned an invaluable ally instead.
This marriage meant that Lurmuse would stand with Valorieve in the future, regardless of the circumstances.
“So, even if Felix disapproves, I think you did the right thing,” Chan remarked, leaning his head back to stare at the dimpled ceiling of their tent.
Chan was only a year older than him, but to Minho, his opinion carried the heaviest weight after his father’s. His distaste for the original plan was enough to make him heavy-hearted about executing it. His approval now should have made him feel better, but he could not dispel his sense of uncertainty.
“I…don’t know.” Minho dropped the papers and ran a hand through his dark hair, exasperated. “Something does not seem right to me here. I think that girl is smarter than to lie and do it so poorly.”
“I agree with you. No matter how I look at it, it makes little sense. Lady Lurmuse has more to her than she is letting on,” Chan concurred, adding, “Whatever it is, though, I do not think you should kill her. She seems innocent to me.”  
“How can you know that?”
“A feeling.”
Minho sniffed. “That’s not particularly convincing.”
“I keep thinking about it,” Chan’s voice took on a strange tone as if he were recalling a memory that haunted him. “That day we first met, she hid it well, but I noticed it. She looked…terrified.”
Minho’s brows furrowed. He remembered no such thing, yet there was Chan, staring blankly as he spoke, “I don’t know why, but the sight of me seemed to inspire such an intense terror in her, that, for the briefest moment there, I thought she was going to fall apart.”
“You speak of Y/n, correct?”
“Yes,” Chan spared him an incredulous glance before continuing, “My point is—I don’t think that Felix’s speculations are true. It seems to me that something else is troubling the Lady, far deeper than a play at power.”
“You are very observant of a person you have only met once,” Minho commented pointedly, to which Chan sighed. “Do not jest.”
There was a beat of silence before he muttered, adverting his gaze, “I just… She seemed like a very lonely person.
“It’s written all over those papers. You would be a lying halfwit to say you don’t see it. Reading them felt like reading the diaries of a shadow. Like she is actively trying to distance and exclude herself from the world.
“And you!” Chan suddenly snapped his head to look at a startled Minho, pointing an accusing finger. “I know this partnership is nothing more than a trade, but you married a person, not a business deal!
“You have to be more responsible,” he concluded solemnly before standing up. “Ponder over it. In the meantime, I am finding something to eat.”
With that, Minho found himself alone in the small tent, his only company the strewn maps and a myriad of conflicting thoughts.
•Scene 5•
You were surprised, to say the least, when you entered the breakfast hall to find your husband waiting for you there.
Minho stood upon your entry, immediately greeting you with a polite smile, “Good morning, Lady Y/n.”
It had been two months since you last saw him. Whatever he was doing out there had thinned him a little bit. The lines of his jaw had become slightly bolder, cheeks a tad hollower, but his eyes remained as sharp as you remembered them.
“Good morning to you too, Lord Minho,” you returned his greeting, hoping you sounded composed. “I was not told you had returned.”
“Ah, we arrived late in the night. I didn’t wish to disturb you, so I stayed in my old chsmbers,” he explained awkwardly as you took the seat opposite to his.
“I see,” you gave him a smile that did not quite reach your eyes. “I’m sorry I was not there to welcome you back home.”
Only when the servants left the hall could you finally relax. No longer needing to put up the couple act for them, the two of you began your meal in utter silence, occasionally interrupted by the soft clink of silverware.
“How have you been?”
There was your second surprise, and the day had barely begun.
You looked up from your plate to find Minho watching you, a vague look of hesitant expectancy in his eyes. There was no one around besides the two of you. You could not fathom a reason for him to talk to you other than his own desire to do so.
You patted your lips with a napkin. “I have been well. I trust that you have been well too?”
“Yes, I have,” he said, and you caught a slight grimace on his face. You thought it possibly a result of the stiffness of this conversation.
You expected him to stop there, but Minho had other ideas.
“How about the palace? Has living here been good…so far?”
“Your palace is an exquisite place. I have been just fine here.”
“That’s good to hear.”
In the recurring quiet, you thought of your parents. When they talked at the table, their conversations were never this stifling, and any silence that befell them was never so thick. But you and Minho were more strangers than acquaintances. All that you knew about him was well known to the public too, and vice versa.
Not nearly enough for you to carry a conversation that did not end in awkward silence.
“I heard that you didn’t invite any of your friends to the palace.” Minho cleared his throat, diverting his gaze when he added, “You are more than welcome to hold tea parties if you wish. I might not always be present to keep you company around here, after all.”
He spoke that last sentence so softly, you might have thought you imagined it if it had not made your stomach flip weirdly.
“You must have heard wrong.” you mustered a pleasant smile for him. A sense of dread had begun slowly seeping into your heart. “I invited my mother for tea last month.”
“That was all?” Minho seemed to be at a loss for words, mouth opening and closing once before he finally worked out a response. “Do you not have anyone else you would like to invite?”
“No,” you told him frankly, and the word seemed to hang in the air limply.
He said nothing for a moment, and you noticed that he had not touched his food since he started talking. Perhaps you should not have said so much, you realized. He must have been tired from travel, and you had just disturbed his breakfast.
“Well,” Minho started, breaking you out of your blameful thoughts, “A friend of mine invited us to a gathering happening at the end of the week. Let us attend.”
“Of course.” you smiled, glad for the change of topic.
You did not want to think about the guilt that loomed over his expression, dreary and wholly unsettling.
•Scene 6•
The gathering was small and informal. All who were attending seemed to be good friends, for they talked and drank easily with one another. You felt out of place among them, but you still stuck to Minho’s side, quietly nodding and smiling along with the conversation happening around you.
“Lord Lee!” a young man materialized out of the crowd and gripped Minho’s shoulder. His overly friendly manner perked your attention.
You recognized him immediately. He was the heir of Swann, the small fief neighboring Valorieve. He had a lopsided smirk painted on his lips, and in his free hand was a wineglass that sloshed dangerously, threatening to ruin the dress of the pretty lady on his arm.
Minho smiled at him politely as the small group that had surrounded you began to disperse. “Lord Swann, it is a pleasure to see you.”
“The pleasure is all mine!” the other man laughed. He seemed not to notice your presence at all.
Thankfully, you thought.
“How is business at the coast? I hear rumors of a deal with those western traders,” he asked and Minho humored him, “Yes, well, we still are working on the details...”
They conversed for a while after that, discussing expansions and the rise of prices in the market. The Swann nobles ran a very particular business in perfumery, utilizing their expanse of flowering meadows to produce the kingdom’s most sought-after fragrances. You knew countless ladies who wore their products. You had even tried some of them before.
On the other hand, Valorieve’s main field of business was foreign trade, among various other areas. Since a large portion of their land bordered the sea, they were at the forefront of exporting and importing goods. As a result, Adorance became known as the kingdom’s hub of trade—the City of Exchange.
You took a sip from your drink, gaze traveling across the hall when you heard Lord Swann say, “You must join us after the party.”
He leaned closer to Minho as if to share a secret. “Hyunjae had just informed me of some riveting entertainment he found close by.”
You felt Minho’s arm stiffen in your grip. There was a gap of silence before he responded flatly, “I’m afraid I will have to reject your offer.”
“Oh?” Lord Swann appeared genuinely perplexed, backing away slightly before he finally noticed you.
“Oh…” His expression turned into one of mischief. “I had not noticed that the Lady was with you. Greetings.”
You returned his discourtesy with a disinterested nod. “Lord Swann.”
He was unfazed, or perhaps your presence mattered little to him. With a knowing smirk, he patted Minho’s shoulder. “Well, then. I will leave you two to enjoy yourselves.”
When he left, Minho let out a breath like he had finally gotten rid of an annoyance. You could not blame him. The young Lord Swann was rather obnoxious at times.
Taking another sip of your drink, you muttered, “You did not have to reject his offer.”
You felt his muscles tense up again, ever so faintly. His answer came simple, matter of fact. “I am a married man now, Lady Y/n.”
You did not like the way that statement made you feel.
“Do not let me ruin your fun.” you shrugged. “We are only married in name. You can fool around as much as you want.”
The last thing you wanted was for him to dedicate his being to you. Not when you knew that this life of yours was fleeting.
“I am not so irresponsible a man.”
Minho’s fierce tone slammed into you like a wall of ice, making you freeze and stare at him mutely.
He glared at you with the intensity of a hundred suns. Even though you could not decipher his solemn expression, you were suddenly acutely aware of your hand holding his arm and the closeness of your bodies.
It made you want to break free and run away, sickened and perturbed.
You tore your gaze away instead, scoffing weakly, “Suit yourself.”
•Scene 7•
Minho’s behavior after that day was strange.
When he was in the palace, he made sure to join you for breakfast every morning. You did not see him often throughout the day, and he usually stayed up late working, but when you awakened, you would find him sleeping soundly next to you.
On the days he was away, he would send letters asking about your well-being and updating you on his journey. It was as though he had not disappeared without a trace or word for two months before.
As much as you tried to distance yourself from him, he was unrelenting with his small acts of care. It troubled you. Something had changed in him. You did not know what, or why, but you hoped it would stop soon.
For his own sake and yours.
You sighed, lazily dragging your gaze over the scenery passing you by. You had decided to take a carriage ride around the city to see and interact with its people. Your mother had often said that a Lady’s work was not confined to the management of the residence, but also included improving the lives of the land’s citizens.
In order to do that, you had to see what their lives were like for yourself.
So far, the city had looked the same to you. Beautiful buildings, lively streets, happy, busy people. Adorance was the envy of all, and you could see why.
But you knew that in every prosperous city, there lived some who were not as fortunate. Their misfortune was the result of incompetence on behalf of the lord of the land. As such, it was your duty as a noble, as the new Lady Valorieve, to fix those shortcomings.
Adorance had no slums. The current Count and those that came before him had worked hard on eradicating them completely. Instead, orphans and poor families lived in government-funded complexes. But those buildings could only house so many, and most of those who were in need found themselves sleeping in dark alleys or chased to the outskirts of the city as a result.
You passed by a humble building, featureless, with only one window and a door that a number of kids swarmed out of. They were dressed in rags that drooped over their gaunt figures, and they carried small wooden boards in their hands.
“Stop the carriage,” you spoke to the coachman through the tiny, sliding window. The ride came to a stop promptly and you stepped out of the carriage and onto the street.
Your personal knight was by your side immediately, eyes scanning the area for any potential threats. His name was Kim Seungmin, and he was part of the small retinue that traveled with you from Lurmuse. Despite his gentle features and soft voice, he was a formidable fighter, ruthless and shrewd with his actions.
At the sight of your carriage, the children fled and hid away, some running back into the building they came out of. There was no helping their reaction, even if you only had good intentions.
You walked toward the building just as a young woman stepped through the entrance. She appeared close to your age, and she was wearing a simple dress stained with charcoal and chalk. Her long dark hair was neatly braided, framing her pretty face.
With a gasp, she dropped into a clumsy curtesy before you could stop her, “Y-Your Ladyship!”
“Please be at ease.” you tried to calm her with a smile that felt more like a grimace. Slowly, she straightened to stare at you nervously. Little children held onto her skirt, gawking at you like one would a strange bug.
“What is your name?” you asked, and she hesitated before answering, “Lee Chaeryeong, my Lady.”
You smiled at her. “A pleasure to meet you, miss Chaeryeong.”
“No, my lady, the pleasure is all mine!” she offered another awkward bow.
“Miss Chaeryeong, do you run a school here?” you glanced at the building and children behind her and she blanched, sputtering, “Y-yes, my lady.”
“Don’t worry,” you assured her, smiling as kindly as you could. “You are not in any trouble. I only wish to learn more about your school and any similar establishments around here.”
Though, you supposed Seungmin’s armored presence beside you was not at all helping your case.
Chaeryeong tried to smile. “I-I would be happy to tell you, my lady.”
So, you spent the rest of your day learning about the small school, its sole teacher, and her many students. Chaeryeong was a poor scholar’s daughter who took on the task of teaching the city’s scattered orphans how to read, write, and do basic mathematics. Skills that could help them in finding small jobs around town.
In the few hours you spent with them, you saw how dearly the children loved her, and how she loved teaching them in turn.
When you returned to the palace that evening, a plan had already begun forming in your head. There was a lot of work to be done if you wanted to pave the way for people like Chaeryeong and her students.
•Scene 8•
“Here come the newlyweds!” a voice announced excitedly as you and Minho entered the banquet hall, becoming embarrassed at the sudden attention. The man responsible made his way through the light crowd, opening his arms with a welcoming grin. “Minho, my dear nephew!”
Minho’s smile was half amused, half embarrassed as he sighed. “Uncle, must you embarrass me like this every time?”
“Don’t be silly, boy! Let me look at you,” the Viscount laughed and clapped both hands on his shoulders, gazing at him with the warmth of a father.
You had met him during the wedding. He was a middle-aged man, with grey streaking his black hair and deep laugh lines etched into his cheeks. His kind nature was evident in the way he held himself.
“And the lovely Lady Y/n!” he spun toward you. “It is great to see you again.”
“I hope you have been well, uncle.” you curtsied, returning his bright smile with one of your own.
“I have, I have.” he turned around, ushering both of you along. “Come, now, you two. I want you to see her.”
This banquet was held to celebrate the birth of his daughter, Minho’s newest cousin. You made your way through a crowd of members and friends of the Lee family, greeting them as you went until you found the Viscountess.
“My dear, Minho and Y/n are here,” Minho’s uncle said as he gently placed his hand on her shoulder.
His wife turned her head to look at you, and her face lit up, dazzling. “Oh, what a wonderful surprise!”
“Congratulations, aunt. I hope you have been well,” Minho beamed, and you mimicked him. “Congratulations, aunt.”
“Oh, the both of you are just too sweet,” she crooned, stepping closer. In her arms, she held the newborn girl, swathed in light purple cloth. She was sound asleep, despite the lively atmosphere around her.
Minho’s aunt noticed you looking and offered with a slight tilt of her head, “Would you like to hold our little Eli?”
You were not going to be rude, so you accepted. “I would love to.”
You had held many children in your many lifetimes, newborns and older. They were always so light, as though the barest movement would send them tumbling away. So small for the magnanimous world.
The baby in your arms was no different, as delicate as a feather. You smiled at her parents. “You have chosen such a pretty name for her.”
“Indeed,” Minho agreed, leaning closer to take a look at her. Like an old reflex, you shifted your hold, slightly raising the newborn so he could have a clearer look.
A soft chuckle sounded in front of you. “What a lovely image the two of you make.”
The remark caught you off-guard and you gaped at your in-laws, wide-eyed as Minho mirrored you.
“You are right!” Minho’s uncle guffawed, his delight clear as he regarded his nephew. “Minho, when will I be able to hold a great niece or nephew?”
Your husband straightened, ears reddening in embarrassment as he glared at him. “Uncle…”
“It has been three months since the wedding! Have you no good news to share?”
You maintained an awkward smile. Next to you, Minho looked as though he were going to fizzle out of existence if this conversation proceeded any further.
“Don’t badger the kids, darling!” the Viscountess jokingly scolded her husband before waving a dismissive hand in the air. “Do not mind him, my dears.”
You found Minho’s poorly hidden exasperation amusing. It seemed to scream ‘She was the one who said the remark in the first place!’
•Scene 9•
“You are proposing improvements for the register of those in need?” Minho skimmed through the small stack of papers you had handed him.
“Yes,” you affirmed, explaining, “In short, it would follow a system similar to the one implemented in Lurmuse. Instead of simply distributing donations, those registered would be treated as employees of the Count. They would be paid in exchange for civil and public services. The details of such services are written in the plan I handed to you.
“There is a small school that I think would work well for a trial of the new register, especially the section concerning the children’s allowance scheme. Its details are also in the plan.”
“I see,” Minho murmured, deep in thought. He was well aware of the shortcomings of their current system, and he was not at all surprised that you had noticed them too. Your fief was well known for achieving a high quality of life and making it the standard amongst its citizens. There was no poverty in Lurmuse. The people may not have been ostentatiously rich, but they never found themselves in need.
It was something Minho wanted to achieve in Valorieve as well.
He also knew that you had been working on this proposal for a little more than two weeks now. It was a rough draft, in no way perfect, but he was more than willing to adopt such a strategy devised by a Lurmuse noble. This was one of your family’s areas of expertise, after all.
“I will see to it,” he determined after a few moments, looking up at you from where he sat at his desk. “We may need your assistance for further developments in the future.”
“I will be glad to help. Thank you for your time.” you gave him a firm nod—always short with your words—and promptly turned to leave his study.
You were not one to linger, nor one to blather, Minho had noticed that about you in the past four months he spent observing you. You kept to yourself, only speaking when necessary and doing it quickly before quietly retreating to your corner of the palace.
Despite this being a mere partnership, you upheld a Lady’s duties to the estate with ease and efficiency. You worked quietly, without leaving a trace, overseeing everything from the palace’s garden work and maintenance to its finances and supplies.
You were so different from the current Countess Valorieve, whose presence was as overbearing as her endless pride—a flaw that he acknowledged, despite the love and respect he had for her.
Never once did he hear a complaint about you from the staff. They had instead gotten used to your shadow-like presence—comfortable, even. They liked you. That much was evident with your butler, Sycross, who, when asked, vehemently attested to your considerate and dependable character.
But all these observations did was confound Minho further. Something was still missing in the narrative he had constructed around you. Something so significant, it would shatter the mysterious whole.
He was determined to uncover the truth.
☙ Act 3.
•Scene 1•
There was a knock at the door of the study, to which the Crown Prince growled, “Leave.”
“But, Your Highness—” a muffled protest from whoever was unfortunate enough to be delivering his dinner tonight.
“I said leave! Do not bother me!” he shouted, slamming his fists on his desk. The ink pot he had uncapped tumbled sideways by the force, spilling jet black over his scribble-riddled papers.
He could hear a whimper and the shuffling of feet on the other side, but he cared not. He did not want to see or be seen by anyone.
The Crown Prince was agitated.
It had been four months, and she was still out there. Still out of his grasp.
He had thought her broken—she was broken. There should have been no will in her to fight.
Yet his letters and threats were of no use. Were all those years spent placating her, trapping her, gone in vain? Where had she gotten the gall to try to escape him like this?
No, the Crown Prince refused to be the one to fail. She was going to fall at his hands, there was simply no other option.
A figure materialized out of the shadows, robed in a red so dark it almost appeared black. Withered hands inked with circular shapes raised in solemn greeting as they spoke, “The Blessed Flame greets you, Your Highness.”
A man’s voice. The Crown Prince spun to face him, thoughtlessly blurting out, “What are you doing here?”
He had been trying to hide the fact that she escaped, had been trying to right things on his own, but it was only a matter of time until they found out and came to admonish him for his mishap.
The Renocault Order. An ancient society of mages and cultists that had been prospering in the shadows of Rowonne. The royal family were longtime patrons of the order, having aided them in secret for over four hundred years. Every king in the history of the lands had deeply revered the order. The reason was one of the first things the Prince was ever taught—the royal family’s best-kept secret.
The High Mage dropped his hand, clearly displeased by the way his greeting was ignored. He rasped, face hidden under a generous hood, “I am here by revelation. You lost the demon, and the day is dawning upon us.”
Dawning upon us. The Prince wanted to scoff. He still had the better of seven months to capture her. The ‘day’ was still very far.
“Your Highness, need I remind you of the severe responsibility upon your shoulders? Do not forget that without the Order, the royal family would—”
“I have not forgotten, High Mage,” the Prince cut him off, scowling.
“Then why have you sat idle so far?”
“I have not been idle! This situation is not as easy as it seems. I cannot simply do as I wish!”
His outburst was granted, for he could not openly act against her. Not in a way that would implicate the royal name. He could not afford to involve Valorieve in this.
There was no one bold enough, loyal enough, who could perform the task for him.
“Shall we bring it here for you?” as if reading his mind, the High Mage offered cautiously, and the Prince stiffened. He was in urgent need of aid, and the Order was going to grasp that opportunity to shackle him further. They were not fools.
He was playing into their hands, and he knew it, but the Crown Prince also knew that he had run out of options. It would do him well to accept their help. Ask for it. Beg for it, even.
He squared his shoulders, trying to don the façade of authority as he demanded, “How long do you expect it would take you?”
“A fortnight, no more,” the High Mage answered assuredly, and the Prince did not doubt him. For all their mysterious, perturbing ways, the Order worked quickly and efficiently.
“Fine, then. I want her within these walls in a fortnight’s time.”
“Yes, yes,” the mage waved a dismissive hand then fell silent. Even though his face was obscured, the Crown Prince knew that he was eyeing the unkempt state of his person and his study.
He could almost hear the lecturing words before they were spoken, “In the meantime, you should take better care of yourself, Your Highness. This is unbefitting the Blood of the First.”
Disgruntled, the royal muttered, biting back a retort filled with snark, “I will be sure to.”
But when he blinked, the High Mage was already gone, melting into the darkness as though he had never been there.
•Scene 2•
It was in one of your earlier lives when you decided to speak of your curse for the first time.
You opened your eyes to unfamiliar surroundings and unfamiliar, excited faces hovering over yours. The world around you seemed so daunting in its size, so foreign. You could not speak. When you opened your mouth, all you heard was the sharp wailing of an infant.
That scene was one you had become familiar with.
It took years until you could properly communicate with your new family, and when you turned thirteen, you decided to tell the village’s sage about your strange experiences. You had hoped she would find an explanation for them. Perhaps even cure you of them.
You had been too naïve.
You still remembered the way her eyes darkened, the way she yelled as she frantically kicked you out of her abode. Utterly frightened, you ran away, never to look back at the ancient woman.
It was the last time you had ever dared to speak of your curse.
That night was starless and lonely. You were sleeping soundly when a mob of superstitious villagers raided your home, intent on killing you. They slaughtered your family with their pitchforks and axes and set your house ablaze with their ravenous torches. You could not escape them and the towering ghost of death in their midst.
Their weapons had impaled your feeble body, and you learned that you could never die at the hands of the common folk.
“Demon!” they had screamed as your flesh melded together, healing and restoring itself. The pain was blinding, yet you were alive. Your heart beat as though it had not been punctured with steel. Skin smooth as though it had not been scorched by their flames.
It took only a few days until they arrived at your village. Dressed in red the shade of blood long dried, they had come to collect their powerless prey.
The memory was so old it ought to have been muddled and forgotten, but you recalled it with harrowing clarity. That life had introduced you to your enemies. That life had slammed into you the bitter reality of your existence.
You were alone. Wholly and completely.
You saw the consequences of trust time and time again, life after life again. There was no one that could help you, and no one that would.
Whatever curse was ailing you was your problem to shoulder alone, listlessly drifting through endless lifetimes.
It might have been a pitiful fate, but you no longer cared to lament it.
Your mind was brimming with thoughts as you prepared to leave Valorieve Palace for the day. It had been a while since you received one of the Crown Prince’s sorry letters and it was not something to be glad for. You knew that it only meant that he was running out of patience.
If he was like his predecessors, then it was only a matter of time until he attempted something dangerous.
“Sycross,” you called for your butler, who appeared at your side mere moments later, prim and proper as ever.
“Yes, my lady?”
You hated to ask things of him, but you had to prepare for what was a sure event to come.
“Please deliver the afternoon meal to the school two hours after my departure,” you instructed carefully, to which he bowed. “I will see to it. Is there anything else I may help you with?”
You turned to face him, hoping your request did not sound too peculiar. “I need you to deliver it personally, Sycross. And please have a small retinue of guards accompany you, the streets tend to be dangerous at times.”
“Of course, my lady. You need not worry.” his smile was polite yet sincere, and already you had begun to feel guilt creeping up your heart.
“Thank you,” you said, turning away and shutting out that feeling. A few paces away, your knight stood, casually leaning against the doorframe of your study. You nodded to him, ready to leave the palace. Your own plans aside, you still had the responsibility of seeing the new register come to life.
“Let us depart.”
• • •
“Oh. Good afternoon, my lady,” Chaeryeong smiled when you stepped into her little school. She had become more adept at curtseying, you noticed as she dipped somewhat gracefully.
There was a class in session. Children sat in small groups on the floor, wooden boards and charcoal pieces in hand as they gawked at their visitor. Their curious fear was not something you could change in a day, for they were taught to be wary of nobles from a very young age.
“Please, proceed with your lesson. Do not let me disrupt you,” you returned her smile, drifting to a secluded corner to observe them quietly.
It had taken long discussions to convince Chaeryeong to test the new register you were working on. She was reasonably hesitant. What you were proposing was a magnificent change that demanded long-term commitment. The scheme would not bear fruit in mere days. It would take months, years, even.
But, to your relief and utmost gratitude, she eventually accepted.
You planned to observe the school today, noting how Chaeryeong taught and the conditions these children learned in. The building you were in was shabby. Poor ventilation had made it a stuffy place. There were a few chairs and some small tables, but they were both not enough and in a terrible state. The makeshift chalkboard at the front of the room was faded, clearly worn by use.
There were many renovations to be done if you wanted to transform this school into the ideal learning environment this community deserved.
You also noticed that there were more students than you remembered—nearly forty kids of different ages crammed in the humble space. Chaeryeong handled them well, but you knew that if they kept increasing like this, she would soon find herself overwhelmed.
You also had to arrange a crew to assist her, you determined.
When the lesson ended and the kids dispersed, you made your way to Chaeryeong, who was dusting her powdered hands on her skirts.
“That was an excellent lesson,” you complimented and she grinned sheepishly, a slight blush coloring her cheeks. “You flatter me, my lady.”
“Not at all,” you shook your head, glancing around before changing the topic, “From what I have observed today, it is increasingly apparent to me that this building does not suffice in its current state.”
“Yes, well…we are lacking many resources.”
“Indeed.” your brows furrowed as you revealed to her your plan, “As such, I intend to renovate this building.”
“What?” she blurted, eyes widening when she realized her discourteous tone. You smiled, speaking before she could sputter out an apology. “Yes, I plan to renovate this building and make it a more suitable space for you and your students.
“But, until that project is done,” you fished a folded piece of paper out of the pouch tied at your wrist, “you will have to relocate.”
Chaeryeong received the paper and unfolded it to reveal a map. It marked the temporary place you had arranged for them to stay, an idle storehouse some blocks away. It was not the ideal dwelling, but it was well-maintained and suitable to be repurposed as a school.
It was also safer. You did not want to entangle Chaeryeong and her innocent students in the Crown Prince’s intrigues.
“How long will renovations take?” the young woman wondered, her voice thickened by hesitancy.
“A year, I presume,” you guessed and she sucked in a silent breath. This change was going to rattle her, you had expected as much.
“I understand this may feel rather sudden and difficult, but worry not,” you tried to reassure her. “You will have help along the way. I will be sure to find other teachers to assist you as part of the education scheme.”
She did not respond, seemingly lost in thought, and a sense of doubt began to ring in your head. Was she going to back out?
“Do you not wish to proceed with the arrangement?” you prodded gently.
“No!” she raised her shoulders defensively, snapping out of her daze. There was ambition in her eyes when her grip on the map tightened. “Thank you, my lady. I will work harder to see this plan succeed.”
It was the fire in her kind eyes that made you choose her for this trial. She had the passion necessary for the success of such a magnanimous project. You placed a hand on your heart, relieved. “I am glad to hear that.”
You discussed renovations and other ideas further. When you finished and decided to return to the palace, the sky was beginning to flaunt purple and pink hues.
Seungmin held out a hand to help you into your carriage and you took it gingerly, stopping before you could enter. “Seungmin?”
“Yes, my lady?”
You looked around you briefly. The street was empty, save for the few wary passersby. If a tragedy were to occur, it would take too much time for the news of it to reach the palace.
“Would you kindly see to it that more guards are placed to patrol this area during the renovations?” you asked.
“As you wish,” his response was solemn and unquestioning. In the eyes of a normal person, there was valid reasoning behind your request. The construction around this building would also make it vulnerable to robberies and vandalism. It would only be a wise decision to have it guarded.
But the truth was much grimmer.
You stepped into your velvet-cushioned carriage. The modest school building peeked at you through the gilded windows.
A week, you estimated.
A week at most, and they will be sure to find you.
• • •
It had been a little more than a week, and the renovations were progressing smoothly.
Chaeryeong and her students had successfully relocated to the repurposed storehouse, leaving you to freely oversee the work on the old school.
You spent a generous portion of your time at the site, accompanied by the head builder with whom you finalized your renovation plans. You wanted to fix the entrance, make it wide and welcoming, as well as add more windows and a small garden. The walls would also be freshly painted to give the school a pleasant and sophisticated appearance.
As to the interior, you planned to install a proper chalkboard and rows of seats for the students. You had also ordered other materials to be brought in; books and writing tools to replace the wooden boards and charcoal.
In a year’s time or so, this building would become unrecognizable, completely new. You hoped that the changes would serve Chaeryeong well.
You were on your way toward the renovation site again today, watching as the city passed you by. You had gotten used to the colors and shapes of Adorance, yet you still felt like an outsider here. This city would never be your true home, much like any other, for you were not going to stay for long anyway.  
You entered the neighborhood where the school was located, continuing to watch the scenery in disinterest. The streets were void of people, doors and windows closed as though this were a ghost town. No birds soared in the sky. No strays roamed the ground.
You noticed a figure slumped at the mouth of a dark alleyway. As if pushed by an invisible hand, it fell to the side of the road. The glassy eyes of a guard bored into yours, lifeless.
Dread hailed over you like a violent storm.
Something was terribly wrong.
“Turn back!”
But your command came too late.
The carriage rocked haphazardly as something slammed into it, and you watched in horror as the shadow of your coachman disappeared from the small window. Dead.
Chaos sprung before you could scream.
“Ambush! Do not leave the carriage!” Seungmin shouted from outside, voice almost lost amid the panicked neighing of horses and the piercing clanging of steel.
Your thoughts ran uncontrollably in your mind, frenzied and deafening. They were here.
You had expected this. You had planned for it. Yet, you could not fight the terror that imprisoned your heart.
The Renocault Order was here to collect their helpless prey.
You did not want to think about what they had done to secure this insignificant part of the city. Two lives had already been lost, and you knew that there were more. There were always more.
Your carriage jolted suddenly, breaking into a mad dash. Dark red robes appeared in the small window, and your heart caved in on itself.
They were taking you away while Seungmin was distracted by the fight.
You had not yet given him your orders.
You had to get out. Now.
Scrambling to your feet, you reached for the handle of the carriage door with shaky hands and swung it open. It slammed into the carriage’s body as its speed threatened to tip you over. The road whizzed below you. The fall would hurt, unimaginably so, but you could not afford to waste time.
Before the man in dark robes could realize what you were planning, you drew a weak breath and leaped out.
Your body hit the ground with a gruesome crack, tumbling across the road in a mess of heavy skirts. Your ribs ached, a myriad of scratches marred your skin, and you were sure that your neck had broken from the impact. The pain made it impossible to think, but it was all right. Your bones would right themselves in mere moments, erasing the pain as though it had never been.
You lay in a heap on the rough ground, and they were upon you in an instant. Faces obscured, hands inked with circles, they grappled with your limp body. Part of you wanted to scream, to cry, to beg them to let you go, but you knew that such pleas would only be futile. A mere waste of breath.
A flash of steel cut down the robed man before you, and Seungmin stepped into your blurry vision, his armor shining like a brocade of stars despite the splatters of grime and blood on it. He moved swiftly, a deadly arrow of silver and green, taking down your assailants and pushing them back.
He stood in front of your crumpled body like a shield, not taking his eyes off the enemy as he ground out, “My lady, are you all right?”
The men in red dragged themselves to their feet then lunged at him as though their injuries were naught. Seungmin met them with skill and ferocity, blades clashing ruthlessly. But he was only one man against a band of twenty or more trained killers, and he was severely outnumbered.
If he kept fighting this way, he was going to meet his end at their hands.
A measly gathering of strength returned to you and you pushed yourself to sit. Your voice wavered as you cried over the clamor, “You need to go and call for help!”
“I cannot leave you here!” he shouted in response, parrying then slashing his opponent’s chest. “If I leave then we leave together!”
No! you wanted to scream. There was no we. The Order would not stop until they had captured you, and Seungmin would not let them. Not as long as he drew breath.
A dagger sunk between the blades of his armor, and blood began oozing out freely. His blood. But he kept moving, slamming the hilt of his sword into the skull of the man responsible.
An image you knew too well flashed in your memory. He was going to die right before your eyes if you did nothing.
Intending to create a distraction, you crawled away, dragging your legs behind you. Seungmin whirled around, noticing your actions, but the brutish pair of arms hoisting you up were faster.
“Don’t move!” the man restraining you demanded, holding a blade to your exposed neck as his other arm circled your middle tightly.
You knew, and they did too, that it was an empty threat. That blade could not kill you. But Seungmin did not. Your knight glared, a blend of frustration and fury darkening his expression as he studied the dire situation.
For what it was worth, you thought, he had given them a good fight. Enough for them to regard him as an obstacle. A threat.
A few seconds passed where everyone stilled, the street that was once rowdy falling into impenetrable silence. The man holding you began to inch away, one cautious step after another, dagger still pressed against your neck.
You dared to shout, “Go! Get help—”
A calloused hand clapped over your mouth, and in that split second, Seungmin sprung forward, sword flashing. Stubborn. Uncaring. Reckless. It became clear to you that he would never heed your command.
Somewhere in the ensuing chaos, a damp cloth replaced the hand covering your mouth. The sharply sweet scent invaded your nose, and you could only watch the fight around you continue, powerless as your consciousness was forcefully torn away.
It felt like drowning. The words never sounded regardless of how much you screamed them in your mind. Stop it! Get away from here! Leave me!
He was going to die.
Seungmin was going to die.
How did your plan go so wrong?
•Scene 3•
There was a commotion up ahead as Sycross rode with an entourage toward the renovation site, delivering your afternoon meal for the day.
Citizens scurried out of the way as something barreled through them, wild and uncontrollable. Shouts rung in the air, lost in them was the pounding of hooves.
Sycross squinted at the cloud of dust approaching them. Whoever, or whatever, it was, he would not allow them to impede his way.
Then, a horse broke out of the crowd, majestic in its powerful gallop. It headed straight toward them with no sign of stopping, and no one seemed to be chasing it.
It was both strange and alarming, and Sycross quickly ordered the knights accompanying him. “Intercept this wild animal!”
One of the knights rode forward, waving one arm and calling out, “Whoa! Whoa!”
The frenzied horse faltered for a moment at the signal, rearing and neighing loudly before stomping at the ground as though angry at being stopped. It took a few moments of placating until the knight was able to grab the reins and guide the horse toward the group. It obeyed, though clearly displeased as it jerked its head around.
Only when the discord ceased did Sycross realize the appearance of the animal. An inky black coat that glistened in the light and an impressive mane of the same depthless shade. It was a breed native and exclusive to the plains of Lurmuse.
His gut twisted in dread. He recognized that stallion.
“Is that not Sir Kim’s steed?” he heard someone say and he stepped down from his seat at the front of the carriage.
It was indeed your knight’s horse.
That it was without its rider was no promising omen.
Sycross approached the agitated animal, not caring for the possible danger of his actions. A voice in his head whispered that something had gone terribly wrong, and a feeling in his heart told him that he would find the answer with this horse.
True to his instincts, he found a pouch hastily tied to the empty saddle. He did not bother to untie it, instead ripping it open with a short blade and pulling out a scrap of paper and a torn piece of maroon cloth.
He recognized the piece in a harrowing heartbeat.
It was taken from the dress you had worn before leaving the palace mere hours earlier.
So quickly it could have ripped, Sycross unfolded the small paper, taking in the message written in messy script and splattered with blood.
‘We were ambushed on our way to the site. Her ladyship was taken away. Send aid.’
Ice ran cold in his veins and he turned around, barking orders at the curious knights, “There has been an ambush up ahead! Head to their aid as fast as you can!”
They sprung into motion immediately, hooves thundering as they rode hard toward the site, unquestioning and flowing with determination.
Sycross turned to the grim-faced coachman, schooling his emotions into perfect calm before speaking—ever the professional, “Quick. We must inform His Lordship.”
• • •
Your eyes snapped open to be greeted by the damp wall of a dungeon, senses awakened to the dull ache across your body.
You were disoriented for the briefest moment before the events of the prior hours slammed into you. You had been ambushed and taken away. Your knight had gotten injured.
Seungmin. Did he leave as you had told him? That honor-drunk fool was probably scouring their trial right now.
If he was not already dead.
You closed your eyes and breathed, once, twice. The bruising along your torso made it a painful feat. There was no use dwelling over the unknown.
What you did know, however, was that it could not have been more than a few hours since the ambush. The knights should have been alerted by now. Not too long, and they would find and rescue you.
Just as you had planned.
You lay on your side, hands and feet bound with rough rope. The scratches across your skin stung. Since they were not fatal injuries, they had not healed with your broken bones.
If you were to, then you would guess that this was one of the Order’s hideouts. Judging from the time that had passed, it was still within Valorieve, perhaps an hour away from Adorance.
You looked around you. The dungeon you were in was dim and narrow, more a rat’s hole in the ground than a built prison. It reeked of mold, and the air was unpleasantly muggy. It inspired a wave of nauseating memories that you chose to ignore with difficulty.
It was quiet. You didn’t care to wonder what had the Order so busy as to leave you unguarded. Or maybe they had left you here for him to collect you.
Twisting your hands, you tested the tightness of your constraints. The Order was not one to take risks. When your skin burned against the coarse rope, it was clear that you would not be able to wiggle your hands out.
With your limited abilities, you clumsily pushed yourself to sit. They had taken your coat, your pouch, your hat, and your shoes—all necessary precautions that you had accounted for.
You reached for the buttoned front of your dress and carefully undid it. With shaky hands and a breath that was teetering toward raggedness, you pulled at the thin chain you had tucked underneath your clothes. A small vial fell on your lap and drowned in your skirts.
A hidden blade was an old trick, one that you could not fool the Order with anymore.
This, however, was something completely different.
It was a highly corrosive toxin, secretly bought from a wandering alchemist.
You fumbled around in the dark, trying to expose your feet and the rope tying them, before gripping the precious vial and pulling the stopper out with your teeth. It was no elegant work, but you cared not.
Hunching forward, you felt around the rope, trying to determine the best place to sever it. You decided that the most efficient thing would be to work on the part coiled around your foot. That way, you would be able to free both sides.
Clutching the intended piece with one hand, you tilted your fingers in the other and spilled half the vial.
It felt as though your skin was on fire. The corrosive burned through the rope and stung the tips of your fingers, spreading to surrounding areas. It hurt so immensely, but you bit your lip and swallowed any noise threatening to escape.
It being a toxin meant that any injuries you obtained would be healed due to their deadliness. All you had to do was endure it for the few moments it would take.
Once your legs were freed, you soldiered on to work on unbounding your hands. The remains of the substance dripped messily over the rope. A sickeningly sweet smell had filled the dungeon, but it began to fade as your injuries healed.
You threw the vial away as soon as you were done and tried to stand up. For all their caution, the Order were fools for tying your hands in the front and leaving you unguarded.
Wobbling, you stepped toward the barrier between you and escape—a door of rotting wood. If you pushed it hard enough, it would be sure to give away, but that method would attract unwanted attention.
You slumped back on the filthy ground. You were in no hurry anyway. Help should be arriving very soon.
But the minutes seemed to meld into hours, and you were still trapped, unable to ascertain for sure if your judgment was correct. You tried to close your eyes, clear your mind, but the harder you tried, the more the memories trickled in.
Haunting recollections that you thought were lost to time. Darkness and a suffocating space. Pain that never ceased. Blood on your hands. Blood on the walls. Blood in those dark robes.
A lifetime spent in agony.
Pleas that had turned into a prayer on your lips echoed again like a forgotten instinct, Save me. Save me. Someone save me.
Just as it had been back then, your desperate calls went unanswered. Of course, there would be no one to save you, for in truth, you were alone.
You would always be.
Perhaps you were mistaken. Perhaps you placed too much faith in your plans.
You would stay there, imprisoned. Forever at the mercy of those inked hands—the mercy of the Blood of the First.
A depthless pit of despair, and your mind seemed to fall deeper and deeper until you could not see the light of the surface anymore. Help me. Help me. Someone help me.
There was a ruckus, but you could not discern it from the one in your head. Was that light you had imagined? The baying of hounds?
“…Y/n! My…lady!”
Muffled voices wrought with concern. Were they calling you?
Had someone finally heard and answered your pleas?
Who could it have been?
A shadow fell over you and you lifted your head from your hands, daring to look—wanting so desperately to see who your savior was.
That gold embellished jacket. That imperial shade of blue. That intelligent gaze. His lips were moving, but you could not hear him over the noise.
“It’s you,” you wanted to say, suddenly overcome with an emotion you could not identify, but no sound came out of your mouth. Your throat was dry and sore, as though you had been speaking for too long.
Exhaustion weighed down your limbs, and you found yourself gathered in strong arms, wrapped in his heavy jacket. His warmth lingered on the fabric, encasing you, a shield from the horrors that chased you.
The scent of him lulled you to sleep, roses and sandalwood and a dream brimming with brilliant hope.
• • •
“You could not find them?”
Minho’s question settled into the air with a chill, more a challenge than an inquiry. Before him were three of his most skilled knights, knelt in reverence. Their silence was enough of an answer.
“You have not tried your hardest, then.” his outward calm was in complete contrast to the flurry of emotions bubbling inside, threading to spill over.
“But, my lord, none of the citizens we have interviewed recalled anything of the incident. We have no leads to follow—”
“I don’t care what it is you have to do. I need to know who was brazen enough to abduct my wife,” he snapped.
That scene had kept him awake for the past few days. Your hunched figure inside that cold, rotting dungeon. Your haunted gaze as you stared at him. Empty, absent, as though you were looking through him, past him at something that was not there.
He still remembered the way your lips had moved insistently, whispering ‘save me’ over and over again like a desperate mantra. The way you felt weak and broken in his arms was so gut-wrenching that for a moment there, he had forgotten all about his suspicions of you.
He knew little of your character. You did not talk much, did not ask for much. You were still a mystery to him, but underneath all the curiosity, you had been kind. The type of plain, fleeting kindness that wore no guise.
The sight of you then reduced into terror and despair filled him with such an unbridled fury that he did not know what to do with it. Who had dared to do this to you, to one of his own? Why?
A frantic knock interrupted the thick quiet and one of the prison guards stepped in, bowing, “My lord, I apologize for the sudden intrusion, but I have urgent news.”
“Has the prisoner said anything?”
When he rode to the site of the ambush, Minho had found your knight, barely breathing through his injuries, and a man in dark red robes unconscious beside him.
The stranger was brought back in hopes of gathering information from him.
“Yes, my lord, but…” the guard trailed off, glancing around before swooping into a solemn bow. “Forgive me, my lord, but the man is dead.”
Minho thought he ought to rip his hair out. Why was it that his staff had suddenly become so incompetent?
He did not try to swallow the bite in his words. “How could this have happened?”
“I-I do not know, my lord,” the guard sputtered. “The guards had only turned their back to him once, and only for a few seconds.”
Minho dropped into his leather cushioned chair, rubbing circles on his right temple to ease his frustration. There were no tangible leads, and now, their main source of evidence was rendered useless.
He sighed after a while. There was no point in wasting time over a dead man. “Fine. What did he tell you?”
“He called us sinners, my lord.”
“Pardon?”
The guard straightened and cleared his throat. “He only spoke once during the interrogation where he said ‘All of you are sinners’. Word for word. He seemed agitated for reasons other than being captured.”
Sinners. Minho’s brows furrowed as he tried to make sense of the statement. He recalled the man’s unique garb and strange tattoos. Was he part of some religious society?
Could you be involved in something like that?
No. He quickly discarded the idea. Lurmuse, much like Valorieve, was not aligned with any spiritual communities. It would be unthinkable for a noble of the land to defy its customs.
Then, who could this person be working for? Who would want to carry out an attack on you?
Minho tried to rack his brain for possible suspects. Being the solitary character you were, you had no particular animosities with anyone he could recall. Only one person was close enough to you to fill the criteria.
The Crown Prince.
Minho froze.
It made complete sense in his mind. The Prince was upset that his childhood sweetheart rejected him and married another man—an utter betrayal. In his eyes, the two of you would be nothing more than sinners. Perhaps this was his idea of revenge.
And if that were the case, then all of his doubts about you would be quashed.
The young Lord stood with a start and leaned forward on his desk, frowning at the three knights as he gave out an order, “I need you all to investigate whether or not the Crown Prince is related to this incident. Be very discreet about it.”
“Yes, my lord,” they said in unison, thumping their breastplates with gloved fists before unfolding from their kneeling positions. He gave them his back as they left, already forming a couple of theories in his head about the case when a rise of clamor caught his attention.
“Your Lordship!” a familiar voice called out and Minho turned around, raising a brow at the sight of the intruder.
Seungmin had shoved his way through the guards and dropped to one knee, head bent low. “My lord, please allow me to partake in investigating the incident.”
The Lurmusian knight was without his proud armor. Bandages were peeking out of his linen shirt, and his left arm was limp in a sling that hung from his shoulder. By all logic, he should be doing nothing more than lying still in bed. Yet, there he was, humbling himself before him.
Minho threw a dismissive look at the confused guards and they stepped out, closing the door behind them.
Alone, he regarded your knight, who had fought tooth and nail in a situation that was disadvantageous for him from the start. Severely outnumbered, but he managed to deliver a message and secure one of the assailants.
However, he still allowed them to take you. Such a failure was unforgivable.
Minho’s tone was unfeeling. “No.”
The knight’s head seemed to drop into a deeper bow as he began to plead, “Please—”
“Your place is at Her Ladyship’s side as her knight,” Minho cut him off. He knew that his words would hurt, but he was not going to entertain any unwise ideas. “Are you going to leave her again?”
Seungmin bristled at the accusation, drawing his shoulders up before gritting out—eyes still obscured, “No.”
“Good,” Minho responded, the finality of his words landing like a hammer. “A failure such as this will not be tolerated again.”
•Scene 4•
It took a lot of convincing until your handmaidens allowed you to bring a few documents to your bed, and even more to let you leave to your study. Even then, you were not left alone once.
A few things had changed since the kidnapping incident.
First, your entourage had more than doubled in size. Five knights were assigned to you, in addition to a special personal attendant. Her name was Ryujin, and she was an expert at handling a blade, among several other deadly arts. Minho had her disguised as your lady-in-waiting so that she would remain at your side more closely than the knights.
That was the second thing. Minho. If you had thought that his attention was unnerving beforehand, then it had magnified beyond your control now. His appearance at the dungeon was not part of your plan. You did not intend for him to see you so vulnerable.
But the truth remained that he had saved you. It was an undeniable fact that made a tide of conflicting emotions crash over you, and you did not appreciate the way it made you feel.
This was a partnership built on the exchange of material benefits, your information for his power. That could not change, not if your plan were to pass as desired.
You strode toward his office now, flanked by a persistent body of guards. In your hands was a confidential document which you were sure Minho would make good use of.  
Once you reached your destination, one of the stationed guards opened the door of the study for you and you thanked him, ashamed that you could not stop him and do it yourself.
When you stepped through, your guards moved after you, and you spun around to face them, slightly exasperated. “Please, I would like to speak with His Lordship alone.”
They seemed to hesitate for a moment, indecisive, before giving in. You could hardly wait for Seungmin to finish recuperating and become their captain. Perhaps then you would not have to be worried by their unrelenting attentiveness.
You shut the door behind you and sighed. That incident had created more trouble than you anticipated.
“Should you not be resting, Lady Y/n?”
Minho was staring at you with clear concern marring his handsome face, the papers before him and the pen in his grip forgotten. You avoided his gaze. It was difficult to look at him when he appeared to you like a beacon of light. That incident had truly created more trouble than you wished for.
You coughed. “I have rested quite enough.”
Before he could pursue the topic further, you laid down the envelope of documents on his paper-riddled desk. “I came to deliver this as thanks for saving me. I hope that you will find it helpful.”
His attention fell on the envelope, but he did not touch it. The expression he wore was indecipherable, and when he said nothing, you turned swiftly to take your leave. “That is all. I will leave you to your work. My apologies for the intrusion—”
“Is it only right for me to help you at a price?”
Minho’s question hung in the air, blunt and accusing. But in it, you caught a glimpse of helplessness. Guilt. As though he were extending a hand to a drowning person who was refusing to take it.
You looked back at him, trying to smile. The words tasted acrid on your tongue.
“What other reason would you have?”
• • •
A passerby would not recognize the storehouse as one with all the children running about, laughing and shouting as they chased a patchwork ball.
The official trial of the children’s education scheme under the new register was to commence today. As the head of the operation, you arrived early in the morning to oversee preparations and provide help if needed. Everything had been proceeding as planned, even with your week of absence, so there was nothing to be worried about.
Chaeryeong walked up to where you stood with your guards, her face bright with excitement when she asked, “My lady, the classroom has been set up. Would you like to see it?”
“Of course.” you smiled at her, and she led you inside the building into the large space repurposed into a classroom.
Your gaze was immediately drawn to the dark chalkboard at the front, a dull shine to it. Rows upon rows of seats paired with long tables lined both sides of the room, leaving a modest pathway in between. Shelves were nailed to the walls, some carried books and models, and others were free to be used by the students.
Sunlight poured into the space generously, and a soft breeze blew through the open windows. You could already imagine the students seated with their books and pens, concentrated on their teacher as she strolled about the classroom.
You truly hoped that this step would bring them a brighter future.
As you were listening to Chaeryeong’s enthusiastic explanation of her teaching plans for the day, you picked out the sound of hooves outside the building. Strange, you were not expecting any visitors.
One of your guards appeared shortly after, announcing, “I am sorry to interrupt, my lady, but His Lordship has arrived.”
Minho? Why would he be here?
It was no secret that today was the official start of the trial period, but you did not ask him to attend the first class with you. You had already assumed that he would have more urgent matters on his hands for the day.
The heir of Valorieve was stepping through the door before you could go out to greet him. While Chaeryeong dropped into a surprised curtesy, you made your way toward him with poorly masked haste.
“Lord Minho,” you spoke under your breath once you were close enough. “You did not have to take the time out of your day.”
He took your gloved hand and brought it to his lips, only murmuring, “I didn’t see you at breakfast today, Lady Y/n.”
His show of reverence and affection startled you, and it took all of your willpower not to pull away, face heating up. Chaeryeong and the guards were still watching you. A show was exactly what you needed.
That’s right. All of this is an act. You reminded yourself, unsettled by the jumble of conflicting emotions in your heart.
Still holding your hand, Minho turned to Chaeryeong, who folded into another curtesy. “Greetings to you, my lord.”
“At ease,” he told her. “You have my gratitude for agreeing to partake in this project. His Excellency will know of your valuable contributions.”
“Thank you, my lord.” she beamed.
You expected him to leave after that, but he stayed to observe the first class with you. Being the exemplary vision of a noble that he was, he inquired about the progress and discussed plans with the team of scholars you had assembled. The suggestions he gave were riveting and insightful, and it felt as though his presence had lifted the morale of all those present.
Your visit finally ended at an hour past noon, and as you were headed back to the palace in your carriage, Minho blurted a question, “Would you like to visit the mountains?”
“Why do you ask?” you regarded him curiously and he shrugged. “You have worked hard, should you not enjoy a vacation?”
You would hardly consider being stuck in bed for a week to be hard work. “That would not be necessary—”
“The staff at the villa have already been informed,” he interjected softly, crossing his legs as he turned his gaze toward the passing scenery. “We will be leaving in a week’s time so make sure to be prepared. It does get quite cold up there.”
You held back any protests. His insistence could only mean one thing in your mind. He wanted information.
•Scene 5•
The villa in the mountains was an impressive display of architecture. Standing in a clearing surrounded by a dizzying forest, it was like a gleaming pearl in the heart of an oyster.
Tall windows accentuated by sweeping arches adorned its pale exterior and four small turrets protruded from the building’s edges. An unfurling staircase led to the main entrance, shadowed by a grand balcony on the floor above. Valorieve’s flag fluttered atop the structure’s peaks, gold, imperial blue, and the emblem of a prowling leopard.
You and Minho were ushered in to rest upon your arrival while the staff handled your luggage. The head butler of the villa served you tea and light snacks, a necessary refreshment after a day’s worth of travel.
Bringing the porcelain teacup to your lips, you looked at the scenery outside the giant windows. There was a shimmering lake behind the villa, which you did not know of. A few birds poked at its edges, and the surface rippled occasionally with the fish swimming underneath.
The trees and grass surrounding the lake were untended, left to grow to their natural will. It was no fine garden like that of the palace, but its wild beauty did not pale in comparison.
“We should take a stroll outside when you have rested enough,” Minho suggested from where he sat across the small table. You tried to discern a hidden meaning to his words, but you found none.
It bothered you. Surely there was something that required your help. You set your teacup down, responding, “All right.”
A slight chill tickled your nose when you stepped out into the open. Side by side, you walked with Minho, taking in the stunning scenery around you. You saw the surrounding mountains more clearly now, white peaks hiding among the clouds. The lake was a mirror to the vast sky, tempting you to disrupt the tranquil image with a dip of your hand.
The silence that settled between you was pleasant, and it unnerved you. Minho was not saying anything, instead, he seemed almost content.
This is not right, you thought. If he wanted something, then why was he taking so long to ask for it? This was only a waste of time. You hated beating around the bush the most.
Stopping short in your tracks, you prompted cautiously, puncturing the silence, “Do you have business in the mountains? Is that why we are here?”
Minho’s steps faltered, and, body half-turned, he regarded you with a slight raise of his brow. “I simply wished to spend some time with my wife away in the mountains. Is that too much to ask for?”
The cool breeze bit at your cheeks as your heart lurched in a sickening motion. You stared at him blankly, and his steady gaze broke with the sigh that puffed out of his lips, self-pitying. “I knew that you wouldn’t believe me.”
Minho did not await an answer, quickly admitting, “I am investigating something important. That’s why we have to be away from the palace.”
An investigation? you clenched your fists, trying to hide your earlier discomposure. “Is it something I can help with?”
“Of course,” he said, turning around and resuming his walk. “All you have to do is act freely.”
That did not answer the question.
You caught up to him, muttering loud enough for him to hear, “That is rather unhelpful.”
The corner of his lips quirked in mischief, completely ignoring your complaint. “Say, would you care for a dip in the lake?”
“That would be improper,” you sniffed. The image of your dress soaked in water and dragging about was not pretty. “Besides, it’s cold.”
“There is no one here but us, Lady Y/n.” he waved a hand at the sprawling forest and distant mountains, his tone lighthearted. “You can afford to forgo some propriety.”
“No.”
“You’re no fun.” he shook his head, feigning disappointment, to which you calmly lifted a shoulder.
“I never claimed to be.”
Minho laughed.
It was a soft, breathy sound that tickled your ears and danced in the breeze. A glimpse of joy that had you entranced, and you did not realize that it was over until he teased, “Touché.”
• • •
“My lady.” one of your handmaidens hurried to you after you reentered the villa, eyes filling with remorse as she spoke, “It appears that one of the carriages faced some trouble on the road and will not be arriving tonight.”
“Is that so?” your brows furrowed in confusion and you assured her, “There’s no need for you to be worried about that.”
She shook her head frantically. “No, my lady. That carriage was transporting the trunk that has all of your sleeping furs.”
“Oh.”
That was indeed cause for worry.
“Don’t fret. You can have mine,” Minho offered, having overheard the news when he walked in.
“No. I can manage.” you shook your head and turned to your handmaiden, to reassure her. “Do not concern yourself with this, please. Tend to your tasks as normal.”
“If you say so, my lady,” she gave in, and with a practiced bow, scurried off, leaving you to contemplate your predicament.
Judging by the coolness of the day, you would only expect the night to be much colder. Without heavy robes and thick furs, you could all but freeze. You hoped that snuggling into the blankets would suffice for the night.
When the sky darkened and stars began to mottle its depthless blue, you were met with the harsh truth.
The shiver that rattled your body was so violent, it seemed to ignore the dense blankets weighing down on you and the crackling fireplace. The frigidness of the air made it impossible to relax enough to sleep, and your eyes remained wide open, hands cupped over your mouth in an attempt to warm them up.
You felt a weight shift on the other side of the bed followed by Minho’s hushed voice as he sat up. “You’re shivering so much. Come closer.”
When you said nothing, he sighed, and shortly after, something heavy dropped over you. You shot up, flinging the mass of dark fur and wool off as you exclaimed at him, “You’ll freeze!”
“Likewise, do you think you’re invulnerable to the cold?”
His hair was slightly tousled from lying down, and a sliver of moonlight slid down his cheekbones in the dark. Even like this, he managed to remind you of that day two weeks ago.
You shied away from his attention, clutching the woven garment spread between the two of you. You were not so foolish as to lie to yourself. It was cold and curling up in the warmth of those sleeping furs sounded like the best thing imaginable.
But you would not allow Minho to suffer for your sake. What if he were to get sick? Many were relying on him to do his job as the heir, you could not have him catch a cold or develop a fever.
His utterance prodded at the silence that befell you, gentle, not at all demanding. “For the life of me, I never seem to fathom your mind.”
You were not able to leash your surprise at his confession. Sudden as it came, it carried with it a semblance of dejection, and you found yourself speechless in its wake.
“So, until you decide to indulge me yourself, I surrender,” he exhaled. “But please, accept my help this once—if for nothing other than my own self-righteousness. I would like to sleep with my conscience untroubled.”
You realized his attempts immediately. He was giving you a reason to act selfishly. A reason that made him seem like a benefitting party. You were not so stuck in your own reservations to allow it.
“We could…share.”
Your suggestion was so softly spoken that even you thought you had imagined saying it. It was the only solution you could think of, as much as it inexplicably embarrassed you.
Minho’s brows arched, taken aback, and he hesitated before clearing his throat. “You don’t mind?”
“I don’t.”
“Truly?”
“Truly.”
A lie. Your heart seemed to mind a lot, but you ignored it as he drew you close, draping the sleeping furs and covers over your bodies. Despite the cold and the hammering in your chest, your slumber was peaceful that night, warmly nestled in your husband’s arms. Tucked away from the frigid horrors of your world.
•Scene 6•
Felix could sense a change in the air between Minho and you after your return from the mountains. That awkwardness that seemed to linger in your interactions was almost gone. Instead, you seemed to have grown closer—a tad bit, but it was still alarming enough to him.
He knew that his brother should not have gone on that trip.
You could not be trusted, and the fact that Chan and Minho were willing to entertain such a possibility was infuriating to him. If they could not see that you were still a threat, then Felix was going to prove it to them.
He slipped into your study while everyone else was busy with breakfast, shutting the door behind him carefully. The room was neat and spacious. Books lined the wall on his left, while paintings hung on the opposite side. A couple of green couches faced each other, a wide desk of dark oak heading them.
A small stack of envelopes and ledgers was placed on its surface, awaiting you. He reached for them first, rummaging through sender addresses and subjects. To his disappointment, they were all useless reports about the schooling project you were working on.
He maneuvered around the desk and pulled open the topmost drawer. Financial statements, progress reports, tea party invitations, household ledgers—letter after letter, document after document, drawer after drawer, he fished them out but found nothing incriminating.
But if you were able to fool Minho, then you had to be exceptionally crafty. The kind of evidence Felix was trying to find would surely be hidden more illusively. He only had to try harder.
He bent down to look through the last drawer, which was curiously empty save for the single letter within.
It carried no name, no address. A folded piece of paper fell out of the already-opened envelope, and Felix’s eyes widened as he took in its contents.
My darling… love of my life… the moon cowers before your grace—
“Lord Felix?”
Felix’s head snapped up to see you standing at the entrance of the study, shadowed by an entourage of guards and your butler, Sycross.
“Lady Y/n.” he raised his nose in the air, scornful, not ashamed for having been caught. He had found what he was looking for after all.
Then, Minho appeared beside you, dismissing the guards, and Felix faltered. “Brother? What are you doing here?”
“I have business with Lady Y/n,” Minho answered simply, not at all amused by the scene before him. “The real question is—what are you doing here?”
Felix huffed, “If I had not been here, you would never have known about this traitor’s vile actions!”
He slammed the letter on the desk, “Lady Y/n? Would you care to explain this love letter hidden in your drawer?”
He expected you to express shock and fury at his discovery, but you remained undisturbed, not a ripple of emotion in your mask of calm as you told him, “Lord Felix, I urge you to read the rest of the letter and its back.”
He obliged after your firm gaze refused to fracture at his glare. The letter’s contents were sappy beyond belief, almost bile-worthy, but a particular phrase caught his attention.
My dear Cynthia…
Cynthia? He frowned, flipping the page to see the Crown Prince’s name scribbled in the same handwriting.
“This is indeed a love letter, but it does not belong to me, as I am sure you could tell,” you explained, and Felix felt as though he had been slapped in the face. “I had intended to hand this over to be used as blackmail.”
“Blackmail?” he repeated dumbly.
“Yes,” letting out an exasperated breath, Minho stalked up to him and snatched the letter from his weakening grip. “I asked her to procure such a letter for me.”
Felix could only stand there, shame suddenly crashing into him with the force of a boulder. His suspicions had blinded him, made him jump to conclusions that were so far from the truth, and yet, he could not accept you.
He could not trust you.
This might have turned out to be a false lead, but that did not mean that you were in the clear.
“Your distrust is understandable.”
Your voice pulled him out of his thoughts as you began picking up the papers he had thoughtlessly strewn over the desk. He had not even heard you approach.
“I will not try to dissuade you, but I will tell you the same thing I told your brother.” your hands stopped moving and you stared at him evenly. “We are of the same mind.”
You did not comment on the mess he had made of your study, nor his disrespect of you by invading your privacy. That lack of reaction bothered him. Were his actions so trivial to you or did you truly have nothing to hide?
“Are you not going to demand an apology from me?” he spoke through gritted teeth, to which you shrugged.
“Not really. I would only ask that you don’t undo Sycross’ hard work like this the next time you decide to investigate me.”
So you were annoyed by the untidiness, but not for yourself.
“Fine,” he let out a sardonic chuckle before marching his way out of the study. It was that selfless, detached nature of yours that threw him off. It was unlike the noble ladies he knew, and for that reason, your character appeared dubious to him.
You had to be hiding something, of that he was confident. One day, he was going to reveal your secret and make his brother realize his grave error.
But before Felix could leave, Minho grabbed his arm, stopping him with a steely grip as he muttered, “I have my own investigations going on. Don’t stand in my way.”
He let him go, and Felix drifted out of the study listlessly. He could barely process what had been said to him. He knew that his actions would earn the disapproval of his brother, but he had not expected it to sting this much.
That was a warning, plain and promising.
•Scene 7•
You had been preparing your afternoon tea with Ryujin when the tearoom’s door burst open, revealing a frantic Minho, who seemed to relax upon seeing you. “There you are!”
“Is something the matter?” you regarded his curious state with creased brows. It appeared as though he had been running around the palace for the past few minutes, and you could not begin to imagine why.
“Yes.” his expression was grim as he strode toward you, his tone void of any humor. “I need your help.”
You saw Ryujin move toward the door from your peripheral and a hundred possibilities flashed in your mind. Was there an issue with the reports? Did they encounter a problem in their investigations? Had the Crown Prince intercepted them?
You set down your teaspoon and faced him fully, shoulders squared in determination. “What do you want me to do?”
“Hide me.”
You failed to contain your surprise. “Pardon?”
He glanced at the door suspiciously before lowering his voice into a whisper, “My aunts have decided to pay a spontaneous visit.”
“Oh.” all the grave scenarios that you had speculated were instantly flushed out by his underwhelming revelation. “We should greet them, then.”
“No. We can’t do that!”
“Why not?”
The tips of his ears began to redden when you continued to stare at him. As far as you could tell, there was no valid reason to relinquish proper manners and offend your in-laws.
Minho surrendered after a few seconds, mumbling as he looked away, “They will not let me go until I have promised them a great nephew.”
Oh. This was a serious matter after all.
You recalled his cousin’s birthday banquet with an inward cringe. You, too, would not wish to be subjected to that conversation again.
“I am sure he went this way!” the voice of a woman came muffled through the door and warning bells rung in your head. It’s them.
A large closet with one of its doors ajar caught your attention. It was used for hanging aprons and towels, and before you could think much of it, you pulled Minho inside with you and shut the door to the best of your ability.
A mere split second later, the tearoom’s door was opened. Three pairs of heels clacked on the marbled floor, accompanied by the rustling of heavy skirts.
“Strange. I could have sworn I saw him fleeing this way,” one of the ladies mused, and you held your breath.
The closet was barely fit for the two of your bodies even as you were pressed so closely to one another. Your dress, light as it was for the day, was still taking up much space. Any little movement and your cover would instantly be blown.
What an incredibly stupid idea. You could not believe that you had willingly placed yourself in such a compromising position.
Why were you even doing this? All you knew was that Minho had wanted to hide, and you obliged. It seemed like the only logical thing to do.
Still gripping the front of his jacket, you felt him smile against your cheek, and you were suddenly all too aware of his proximity. A whisper of breath fanned your ear.
“One would think that we’re having an affair, Lady Y/n.”
He was too close, and you were sure that your heart was going to leap out of your chest in turn. Had you not been trying to be discreet, you would have knocked some sense into his seemingly senseless mind.
Flustered, you hissed, “Shush—���
“Did you hear that?”
You tensed up at the question, falling deathly quiet.
A single second passed so slowly you could have mistaken it for a lifetime.
“Hear what?” one of the women repeated, to which a new, higher-pitched voice sighed. “It was likely nothing. There is no one here.”
“You there. Might you happen to know where Lord Minho is?” someone asked.
“Your Ladyships, I believe he is occupied with the Lady at the moment,” came Ryujin’s composed response, and your face heated up at how scandalous it sounded. What kind of ridiculous image would the High Ladies have of you now?
“Is that so?” a chittering of giggles, then the first Lady declared, “We shall resume our search, then.”
You waited, patient and unmoving until utter silence befell the tearoom and you heard your lady-in-waiting announce, “They have left, my lady.”
You did not spare a moment, pushing your way out and ditching Minho.
Never again would you do something like that, you resolved as you patted down your skirts. It was enough shame to last you several lifetimes and then spare some more.
Minho stepped out after you, adjusting his jacket nonchalantly as though this was all in his day’s work. When he caught you glancing at him, a sly smile drew itself on his lips. “You know, I initially planned on ducking under the table, but I suppose your idea worked just fine in the end.”
“You asked me to hide you, and I did,” you pointed, deflecting his mischief. You would not allow him the pleasure of throwing you off guard twice in a day.
“That is true,” he hummed. “I must thank you, then.”
You had seen enough lifetimes not to be flustered by his actions, yet he still managed to disorient you. Like an unforeseen storm cloud, it filled you with unease.
Had he always been like this, or were you only noticing it now?
•Scene 8•
“The Countess asks about you often. Have you been well?” Lord Seo Changbin, the heir of Slaede, asked after you settled under the generous shade of the gazebo.
“I have. Please send her my warm regards, Lord Seo.” you offered him a polite smile as your butler placed filled teacups before the two of you.
Slaede and Lurmuse were neighbors, the friendship between their nobles ancient yet eternally strong. Being fellow border forces had also made your fiefdoms the perfect strategic partners, befitting the long history of peace shared between you.
If there was anyone in this lifetime you would consider a friend, it would be Changbin. You had known him nearly all your life, having had to see him often due to the closeness of your families. Your parents liked to organize play dates and study sessions for the two of you as children, and as you matured, you would attend banquets and balls together—on the rare occasion the Crown Prince was not hoarding you all to himself.
Changbin was one of the candidates you had considered for the execution of your plan. He had the status, reputation, and military power to stand against the royal family if he wished. He would have made a perfect aide, if not for the one fault that deterred you from choosing him.
You had seen enough lifetimes to recognize an infatuation upon sight, and even though you could not pinpoint when he started to, you knew that Changbin liked you. That sentiment was a double-edged sword. It would provide enough reason for Changbin to lend you his power, but it would then prevent you from achieving the resolution you desired.
You would not allow yourself to hurt him as such.
The partner you had sought had to have no prior attachments to you or reason to develop any. It was the only way you could succeed.
“To be honest with you, we could hardly believe the wedding invitation that had reached us,” Changbin remarked lightly, reaching for the milk jug to pour some into his tea. “It was a surprise. I can only regrettably imagine how the Prince’s banquet unfolded.”
“He had been upset,” you recalled dully, and he chuckled at your tone.
“Understandably so. I don’t presume he had expected a rejection, let alone the hundred guests present.”
You shrugged, a shadow of a smile on your lips. There was no denying that rejecting the Crown Prince had brought you an inexplicable sense of pleasure. “That is more so his fault than mine.”
“You aren’t mistaken,” he agreed.
Though he tried to hide it, you still caught the hint of regret and apprehension in his voice. A fleeting bitterness. He had been at the border when the banquet was held, overseeing the forces that helped protect the kingdom, and could not attend as a result.
Your deal with Minho had consequently shattered his hopes of ever asking for your hand. There was no rectifying that truth. As cruel as it was, pretending that you were still unaware of his feelings was the best you could do for his sake.
“What of you?” you prompted after a sip of your tea. “I hear that Her Excellency has set her eyes on the eldest Lady Gaele.”
“Ah, well,” he laughed, awkwardly stirring his drink. “I have not yet discussed anything with her.”
You had met said Lady Gaele once before, and she was a lovely, sophisticated young woman. You were sure that your friend would direct his affections toward her in due time. All he needed was a push.
“Perhaps you should, lest your youth be wasted at the border.”
That seemed to cheer him up a little, and he joked, “Worry not. I will not rot away in the garrisons.”
You and Changbin indulged in light conversation as the hour passed, catching up on everything that you had missed in each other’s lives. He talked to you about his station at the heart of Slaede’s forces, and the increasing bandit problem plaguing the border towns. You listened to him thoughtfully, having little to add on your own.
Sooner than you anticipated, your tea and pastries were finished, and Changbin was preparing to end his spontaneous visit. Receiving his coat from your butler, he said, “It was truly a delight to speak to you again—”
“I had not been aware we had guests today,” a familiar voice sounded a short distance behind you, and Changbin straightened, his countenance losing all animation as your husband approached.
“Lord Lee, I must apologize for intruding into your home uninvited.”
“Not at all,” Minho waved a dismissive hand, glancing at you. He was not displeased, but a glint of curiosity shone in his keen eyes.
You stepped closer to his side, remarking cordially, “Lord Seo was delivering the Countess’ regards. As you know, our families share an extensive history of camaraderie.”
“Is that so?” Minho’s smile was illusive, drifting between politely faux and intrigued. “Do extend my invitation, then. Our palace would be more than honored to host Their Excellencies one day.”
“I will be sure to. Likewise, the Palace of Slaede opens its doors to you any time,” Changbin responded. The formality of their exchange was so wearingly dull yet neither ceased it.
He fixed his coat, which was the rich burgundy shade of his fiefdom’s flag. “If you may pardon me for cutting short our pleasantries. I have other matters to see to.”
Entrusting Sycross to see him on his way, you watched as Changbin left after that, not looking back once.
“You needn’t worry about him,” you told Minho once he had gotten far enough. “Lord Seo will be engaged in the summer.”
“I never said that I was worried,” he tilted his head to look at you, a puzzling mix of relief and amusement illuminating his ethereal features, “If anything, I’m glad to know that my wife is not the social recluse she once claimed to be.”
You were rudely reminded of the time you had told him plainly, over breakfast, that you had no friends. You wondered, mortified, if he had been thinking about that ever since.
You cleared your throat, electing to change the topic. Why was he even out in the garden in the first place? “Were you looking for me?”
“Yes, I was,” Minho affirmed, hands clasped behind his back. He started to walk in the direction of the palace, and you accompanied him, attentive to what he might say.
“Why?”
“I will be leaving in two days’ time.”
The news struck you with the force of a thunderclap. Sudden, leaving in its wake a grim silence in your mind. A maelstrom of distress.
“I predict that the journey will last no longer than a month,” he continued to explain. “But I’m afraid that I will not be able to send correspondences often due to the sensitive nature of our whereabouts.”
“Is that so?” your voice felt distant, detached from yourself. In the month since the kidnapping incident, Minho had stayed at the palace, been at your side where you could easily find him. The idea of him leaving stirred a myriad of undesirable emotions in your core. Disappointment. Fear. Loss.
All dangerous feelings to be harboring.
You snapped out of your spell of gloom. Why did you care so much? Minho was merely a player in your meticulous game, whose purpose you had carefully decided. For the buds of your efforts to blossom, you needed to remind yourself of your end goal.
Nothing in this lifetime was permanent or secure, after all.
Perhaps, a break from Minho was necessary for you to right your mind and regain focus on the plan.
You gathered the pieces of your composure and spoke more clearly, “I wish you luck on your journey, then.”
“Thank you,” he muttered through a sigh. “But that’s not what is important.”
He stopped in his tracks and spun to face you. A gentle wind decided to blow right then, ruffling the ends of his hair playfully, carrying his concerned words effortlessly.
“You have to be careful. We still don’t know why you were targeted, so make sure to never compromise on your safety. Have Ryujin by your side at all times when Seungmin cannot be. Do not push them away.”
The sincerity in his tone rendered you speechless.
He had not simply said that for the sake of an act, but out of true worry for your wellbeing. The more you thought about that notion and what lay unexplored underneath it, the more it unsettled you.
With a faint shiver and a weak smile, you met his unwavering gaze. “Don’t worry about me. I will be all right.”
☙ Act 4.
•Scene 1•
The Count of Sitean was a simple man with simple desires. He craved the luxuries of a wealthy life—the servants, the wine, the women. He viewed himself an honest man, while his peers lauded themselves on pretentious righteousness and empty achievements, each a liar worse than the other.
He downed the glass in his grip, the drink sweet and velvety as it ran down his throat. A fine wine to accompany his fine evening.
In a loosely drawn nightrobe, he leaned against the windowsill, watching with disdain the filthy city below him. Behind him, sleeping soundly on the bed, was the young woman that had been his escort for the night.
All of life’s pleasures as defined by him had been abundant at his fingertips. There was simply nothing in this world that could ruin his merriment.
A flicker of motion in his peripheral caught his attention. He thought it to be his escort, but before he could turn around, a hand clapped roughly over his mouth. He struggled against brawny arms, his own body clumsy and ungraceful. 
“Easy, now. You would not want to wake the lady.”
A voice, dark and ominous, warned as a figure emerged from the shadows of the room. The scarce light outlined the stranger’s cloak but did nothing to reveal his face, which was shrouded in the shadows of a generous hood.
The Count’s gaze flickered in panic toward the door, only to find that a third intruder had stood guard before it, quashing all hopes of an easy escape.
Heedless to the man’s words, he attempted a muffled shout.
“Your guards have been momentarily dispatched. You would only do yourself a disservice by shouting, Count Sitean.”
He froze. The hooded stranger knew who he was.
How could that be? He had been very careful, very thorough all these years. No one breathing should be aware of his whereabouts. 
“Good,” the same man hummed. “The sooner you cooperate with us, the sooner this unpleasant ordeal ends.”
By some cryptic cue, the hand covering the Count’s mouth lifted, and he did not spare a moment to spit out, “Who are you?”
“That is of no concern to you,” came the stranger’s dismissive response, “and I have no interest in engaging in pointless pleasantries with you, so I shall be direct.”
The Count’s hands clammed up. He spoke like a nobleman, cleverly masked insults and elegant diction. Who could he be?
Regardless of their identities, whatever those intruders demanded, he was confident he could satisfy. High-born or ruffians, they were all simple men in the end. Their wants and needs were as transparent as his. 
“I need you to withdraw your support for Rowonne’s faction.”
“How presumptuous!” he sputtered. This was not at all the kind of demand he had expected, neither was it something he could simply do. “What makes you think I would agree to such a thing? That I would not report you miscreants to the authorities promptly, as I ought to do?”
“I do not merely think that, Count Sitean. I know,” a scoff, and the man stepped forward.
A stack of letters was pulled out of his cloak and slammed distastefully on the table, a half-emptied wine bottle wobbling there, forgotten. The Count recognized the stamp on the otherwise featureless envelopes—two crescents pressed back-to-back, printed in jet.
His secret insignia.  
“If you’re able to procure any proof that we were ever here, know that I have damning proof of your being here.” the stranger shrugged an arm toward the bed and the sleeping woman wrapped in its sheets as he added, “I cannot sincerely say that Countess Sitean would be particularly pleased with this knowledge.”
Blanching, the Count tasted acrid wine at the back of his throat. This unknown person before him could only be a devil amongst men. How else could he have acquired all his carefully concealed secrets? Was this retribution for his crimes?
Desperation began to gnaw at him, and he tried to plead with his captors, “Listen, I can give you anything you want—”
“With all due respect, you are in no position to negotiate with us, Count Sitean.” the man held out a paper lined with elegant script, taunting, “Would you care to read this curious item?”
Squinting his beady eyes, the Count made out portions of writing that made his heart drop. My dear Cynthia…
He recognized this hand, and it was not that of his son-in-law.
“It seems that infidelity runs in the family,” a huff, dripping with such disgust that it made the Count seethe with anger.
“How dare you insult a count!” he hissed. “I care not where from you got your foul hands on this letter, you will leave my daughter out of this!”
“Poor Lord Iriese. Who do you think would receive the brunt of his fury if I were to drop this evidence at his doorstep—the Crown Prince or his adulterous wife?”
No. The Count needed Iriese’s funding. Their fickle partnership was only held by his daughter’s marriage to their third son. Were this scandal to ever come to light, he would lose the decadent lifestyle he had worked so hard to obtain.
It seemed that he no longer held the upper ground.
“Please…” he begged. “I will do whatever you want. I will give you anything—”
“If I were to be frank, Count Sitean, you repulse me. I’ve no taste for your offerings,” the stranger spat. “I want nothing of you besides the withdrawal of your support. Do you not presume you could meet that?”
“I-I cannot do that—”
“I take it you are fine, then, with the release of these letters?”
“This is blackmail! You will not get away with this!” he argued, but the stranger was unfazed.
“Is that so? I appreciate the warning.”
There was no avail in trying to negotiate. The only option left for the Count was to escape their clutches and alert the Crown Prince of tonight’s incident. Surely, he would be able to deal with them easily.
He eyed the small table where he had thoughtlessly left his bejeweled dagger, the tip of its handle poking out from under the stack of letters. It was mainly decorative, but it was still a weapon. He could use it to deter them.
“Do you wish to see which is quicker, my blade or your butter knife?”
As though he had read his mind, the stranger’s question was a promise of demise. Still, the Count did not falter. They were demanding he betray the Crown Prince, a feat he would never dare. Too much was at stake. He could not succumb.
For the continued fulfillment of his simple desires.
With a gulp, the Count of Sitean steadied his pounding heart and lunged toward the dagger.
•Scene 2•
As you had predicted, not seeing Minho did indeed clear your mind of its troubled thoughts.
The sole reason you were in Valorieve was to shield yourself. You married Minho to escape the Crown Prince and the fate of doom he guaranteed. Everything you had done so far was to further your plans, that fact had not changed.
It cannot change.
Minho’s absence was a much-needed blessing, for it reminded you of how things ought to be. Him minding his own duties, and you minding yours. Neither intervening in each other’s lives or bothering the other. You did not need him by your side to disquiet your emotions and confuse you.
Solitude was what you handled best.
You were toiling away in your study, taking advantage of the peace of the past three weeks to further develop your plan for the new register. The team of advisors Minho had assigned to this project had been more than pleased with its progress so far. Chaeryeong’s trial school was running smoothly, attracting the public’s increasing attention with each day. The results you had initially expected were turning out to be better than anticipated.
You were signing off a letter to Valorieve’s Minister of Education, inquiring about the training of teaching personnel, when a terrible crash startled you.
Something whizzed past your ear, dark and round, missing your head by mere inches, before it hit the carpeted floor with a heavy thud. It rolled across until it finally lost momentum and rested at the center of your study.
Heartbeat drumming in your ears and your letter now ruined, you stood slowly and let your gaze latch immediately onto the damage to the window behind you. There was a glaring hole in the crystalline glass, and it was nothing short of a miracle that your head had not been bashed in.
What, by all gods, just happened?
“My lady are you all right?” Seungmin’s voice sounded from behind the door, but you were too distracted to respond to him, stepping toward the suspicious object that flew into your room.
It was a jagged rock the size of an open hand and a folded piece of paper was tied around it, dirtied by blooms of gruesome brown. You made the unwise decision to pick it up, unravel the twine, and unfold the paper, morbidly curious.
That paper was acting as a pouch for another unknown object, which fell to the floor when you opened it. It made no significant noise when it dropped, but you stumbled backward, stifling a shriek.
A severed finger was lying at your feet, coated in old blood.
Bold, angry letters screamed at you from their place hastily inked on the paper.
‘I WILL TAKE EVERYTHING FROM YOU.’
Your mind went blank and your voice rose in a shout before you could realize it.
“Guards!”
Your knights burst into the room, alarm distressing their faces. At their forefront was Seungmin, whose eyes filled with grim understanding as they scanned the scene.
He knelt promptly, frustration with himself simmering dark and dangerous under his breath. “Forgive us for our incompetence, my lady.”
“Rid of this thing. Discard it post-haste,” you tried to uphold your calm as you ordered, and your knights obliged without a moment’s delay.
This was not the first time you had received a threat. Yet, you had never been rattled this much.
I will take everything from you.
You knew the meaning behind that macabre message. This was not a threat directed at you alone—he had begun to threaten the people around you.
He had already harmed one.
Who could it be? Who did the finger belong to? The notion made you sick beyond belief, but you could not stop your mind from wandering.
It could not belong to either of your parents. The Count and Countess were constantly protected by a stringent body of Lurmuse’s best knights. For the Crown Prince to attack them and succeed was unthinkable.
Likewise, it could not have belonged to Changbin, for he was too far and too good with a sword. It was not Chaeryeong’s either. You had seen her earlier in the day and the finger was too old to have been hers. Besides, targeting either of them made little sense.
Seungmin, Ryujin, Sycross, and the rest of your staff were obviously exempted. They accompanied you tirelessly throughout the day. If something were wrong, you would be the first to know about it.
So, that only left—
Minho.
The ground seemed to give out underneath your feet.
He was the only person whose whereabouts you did not know. He was the only person against whom the Crown Prince may hold a true grudge.
The journey had taken him far where he was unable to write to you. A mission that could be brimming with peril, and you would never hear about it until it was too late. What if he had been attacked? Ambushed or raided along the way?
What if he had been killed?
The thought brought with it mind-numbing terror.
No. Minho could not die. You would not allow it. He was your partner, your aide, your vivid light in a realm of endless despair. He cannot be taken away from you. You would wring the Crown Prince’s neck with your bare hands if he ever dared, and that realization only worsened your panic.
You tried to force the idea away. Minho was not helpless. He would take command of Valorieve’s forces in a few years, surely he was skilled enough not to let himself be killed.
That is right, you inhaled deeply, attempting to steady yourself. Your husband was not an average man, you did not need to worry about him so much. He would return to you in a week’s time, safe and sound, and you would forget that such a threat ever happened.
Until then, you had to stop thinking about it.
•Scene 3•
That anxiety never left you for the duration of the week.
There was no use in lying to yourself about it—you were so worried it almost made you ill. Any commotion outside the palace had you starting, the first thought to cross your mind being whether Minho had finally returned.
You justified your concern as nothing more than guilt for having involved him in your troubles. It was the only sensible reason you could think of, and you refused to delve into other possibilities.
You were attempting to distract yourself by reading through ledgers in your temporary study when you caught the faintest noise outside the window. The thumping of hooves. Shouts from the entrance guards.
You were out of your seat before you could process what was happening, whirling toward the window to spot the unit of riders. Heart hammering, you knew without a doubt that it was him.
Finally.
You marched out of the study, making your way purposefully through your confused knights. They fell in stride behind you, but you could not care for their questions, you could not even hear them, mind only on the ever-stretching hallways of the palace.
You did not realize that you had begun running until your breath wheezed through your lips, its instability not unlike the chaos inside your head. You were unable to discern the state of the riders’ well-being from the window. What if he had been injured? What if he was barely grasping the thread of life?
What would you do then?
The grand entrance swung open for you and you stood atop a sprawling flight of marble stairs, gaze instantly drawn to him as if by some unseen force. A step followed by two, and you were rushing down the stairs, skipping steps and wishing the ground were closer. How you did not trip and fall was a true wonder.
Minho’s cape of imperial blue fluttered in the wind, graceful and proud as he dismounted from his steed. Even after a month of absence, he seemed brilliant to you, like a star plucked out of the canopy of night.
“Make way!” someone shouted as you wove through the crowd of weary travelers and busy staff. The disturbance caught his attention and he turned around, catching your gaze in a fleeting moment.
It was as though the world had stopped turning, and the two of you were caught in its trance.
Minho moved in your direction, but you reached out to him first, hands finding his and grasping them tightly. Gloved, yet their warmth was familiar and it caused a tingle to run along your skin.
His hands were intact. He missed none of his limbs.
The Prince had not targeted him after all.
Head bent under the tremendous weight of your relief, you brought his hands to your temple, breathlessly murmuring, “Thank goodness.”
“Lady Y/n.”
Minho’s voice dragged you out of your thoughts and you snapped your head up to look at him. Fatigue had sullied his elegant features so slightly, but other than that, he seemed wholly fine.
His eyes twinkled with a curious fondness when he spoke, gentle, not at all teasing, “Had I known that you would welcome me so warmly, I would have hastened my return to you.”
Your heart flipped weirdly, and you were suddenly aware of the tens of people around you, watching you. Embarrassment bloomed hot on your cheeks. It seemed that you had been too caught up in your concern.
“I-I was only…” whatever excuse you were trying to make trailed away when he turned his hand over and touched his lips to your knuckles. A movement so easy and tender you could have mistaken it for sincere emotion.
Gaze solely on you, Minho appeared not to mind the audience. The rare smile that found home on his lips was kind, its beauty unlike anything you had ever seen before.
“I’m happy to see you too.”
• • •
Minho shut the door of the bedchambers softly so as to not disturb you. As much as he wanted to plop onto the silky sheets and let slumber carry him away from his responsibilities, he still had important matters to attend to first.
The mission was a success. He had managed to chip away at the Crown Prince’s support circle from the shadows. Although, the Count of Sitean had proven to be quite troublesome to deal with.
Now, Minho had to make preparations to take advantage of the impending shift in the dynamics of the court.
He was making his way to his study when Seungmin intercepted his path, a vague sense of urgency in his tone as he bowed. “Pardon me, my lord, but there is something I must speak to you about in private.”
He eyed him questioningly, and the knight quietly divulged, “It concerns the Lady.”
At that, Minho’s interest spiked and he gave him a firm nod. “Follow me to my study.”
He had expected nothing of his return to the palace. Days of tireless travel had worn him out of his mind, and his body felt heavy as stone with exhaustion. But all of that was forgotten at the sight of you, running toward him like nothing else in the world had mattered.
You had clutched his hands so tightly, as though unsure of his being there, afraid he would simply dissipate before you. Concern, and then crushing relief. The reverence by which you held him had sparked in his heart a foreign emotion, the warmth of it all-encompassing. Soothing. Right.
In that moment, Minho thought that he would not mind returning home to you like this for the rest of his life.
He walked into his study with Seungmin following him, not sparing a second with his demand after the door was closed behind them, “What is it?”
Your knight presented an envelope he had in his grasp, the set of his brows wrinkling in a grave frown. “This message was delivered to Her Ladyship three weeks after your departure.”
Minho received it from him, opening the envelope and pulling out the letter within as he continued, “It was attached to a rock that was thrown at the window of her study. Fortunately, she was not injured.”
The paper was deeply stained with old blood, the ink messy and barely discernable, but Minho still made out the scribbled threat.
‘I WILL TAKE EVERYTHING FROM YOU.’
“However, it gave her a terrible scare. There was a severed finger with the message, but we do not know who it had come from.”
Frost pumped through his veins, the sound of his heartbeat suddenly too loud.
You had been threatened in his absence. Within the walls of his palace. Someone had dared to target you again.
How was he only hearing about this now? You seemed completely fine earlier. An incident of such severity should’ve been mentioned to him immediately upon his arrival.
“Her Ladyship asked us to destroy the letter. I acknowledge that my actions defy her orders, but I believe that this is something you had to see, my lord. I’ve served her for four years now, and I know the kind of person she is. News of this incident would never reach you otherwise.”
A realization rammed violently into him. Was this why you had rushed out to meet him? That gut-wrenching worry, that undisguised relief—how long had you been grappling with that fear?
The thought of it nearly numbed him with unspoken fury. Any ideas he had of resting vanished, replaced by the overwhelming urge to upturn the city in search of the bastards responsible.
But all Minho could do right now was clench his fist around the bloodied letter, muttering lest his volatile emotions slip out of his grasp, “I appreciate it, Sir Kim. You may return to your post.”
“Thank you, my lord.”
Seungmin turned to leave, but when he opened the door, he found someone blocking his way. Minho’s mood soured even further when he recognized the figure.
“First it was trespassing, and now you’re eavesdropping, Felix?”
His younger brother stalked into the study, completely disregarding the insulting remark. He wore an unreadable expression as he stopped before him and stretched out his hand. “Let me see the letter.”
Minho had not forgotten the way Felix rummaged through your study many weeks ago, attempting to expose the danger he insisted that you posed. He did not have the composure to deal with him now.
“Let me see the letter,” Felix repeated, his persistence odd. He appeared almost desperate.
Minho contemplated obliging. Perhaps this would finally clear his brother’s suspicions of you. If he were to see the extent of the threats you were receiving, maybe he would become more sympathetic toward you.
He handed the paper to him after making up his mind, wordless. It would be unreasonable for Felix to uphold his doubts after seeing its contents anyway.
Minho watched his brother’s eyes widen as they took in the scribbled message. As if he had chanced upon a horrible truth, he drew in a shaky breath. “What is the meaning of this, brother?”
“It means that Lady Y/n is innocent,” a new voice sounded with the click of the door, and Minho sighed.
“Are you in the habit of eavesdropping as well, Chan?”
“I’m simply here to let it be known that I was right.” he shot a blameful look toward Felix, stepping forward and plucking the letter out of his hands.
Minho scowled. “This is not a matter to be gloating about.”
“Indeed.” Chan shook his head, having finished reading the letter. “It seems to me that this incident is linked to the abduction of two months ago.”
“I think so, too,” Minho agreed. Having his brothers with him seemed to calm his earlier anger. From a raging wildfire to a brilliant torch that guided him toward clear, decisive thought.
“But…who could be behind this?” Felix’s deep voice rang hollow, visibly unsettled by the news.
Lips pressed into a grim line, Minho met both of their troubled gazes. “I believe I have an idea as to who it might be.”
•Scene 4•
The Crown Prince was on the verge of losing his sanity.
The threat he had sent was perfect. It should have terrified her beyond reason. It should have made her beg for mercy. Why, then, had he received nothing in return?
Why had she not surrendered herself yet?
Was his threat ignored?
The thought made him seethe with an anger so immense it could have suffocated him. He was the Prince. He was the Blood of the First. The ground that he stepped upon was sacred.
He was not one to be ignored, especially not by a lowly demon.
It was all wrong. That banquet, that wedding, that abduction. She should have never escaped his clutches. He made sure of that all those years he had her with him. She had been accepting of her fate. Not once did she act against him. Never.
Until that banquet. Until that troublesome count’s son stepped into the picture and took her away.
That bastard. Everything that went wrong was his fault. She would have been secured in the castle had he not meddled. The Prince would have been spared this infuriating helplessness had he not stood in his way.
Instead, she was tucked away beyond his reach, and he was trying so desperately to bring her back as though he were a wretched dog.
Those two had reduced him to such a pathetic state.
Everything was their fault.
If only he could remove that annoying pest, stamp him out like the stubborn insect he was. Nothing would then hinder his way. His plans would succeed, the demon eradicated and his duty fulfilled.
He eyed a letter neglected on his desk, an invitation to Valorieve’s Banquet of Valor, and an idea flashed in his mind.
The Crown Prince burst through the door of his study, determination hastening his pace. His advisor sputtered after him, “Your Highness! Where are you going?”
“I’m leaving,” he answered flatly.
“B-But—you must not! There is still much work that requires your attention—”
How annoying. The Prince paused and spun sharply to face his advisor, leveling him with a glare so cold it may have frozen the man. “You can see to it yourself.”
Disbelief caused his mouth to gape. “Wait, Your Highness—!”
But the Prince did not wait. He could no longer sit in his castle and wait. If he wanted to see his plan through, then he had to take matters into his own hands.
The Festival of Valor was but a month away. He would take his chance then.
To hell with protecting the royal name.
•Scene 5•
The Banquet of Valor was an annual event hosted by the Count and Countess of Valorieve and attended by many of the kingdom’s nobility. It was a day-long affair that started in the afternoon with an elaborate tea party and ended late in the evening with a grand feast. It preceded the Festival of Valor, which was celebrated all throughout Valorieve.
Historically, the first banquet was held to commemorate Valorieve’s victory in the Northern States War—a conflict that occurred between it, Rowonne, and the nation bordering them both. It was this war, nearly half a millennium ago, that spurred the formation of the kingdom.
Valorieve was expected to rule, for they had the support of the majority. Yet, by some mysterious turn of events, it was Rowonne that ended up on the throne. The nation that lost the war.
You had seen the kingdom in its infant years, and you knew the reason behind Valorieve’s shocking loss of the throne very well. It was an integral part of your own history, after all.
Sycross’ voice followed a knock on your door. “My lady, are you prepared to leave for the banquet?”
Your handmaiden tugged at your dress one last time, making sure that the blue silk draped perfectly before stepping away. You thanked her for her lovely work and turned toward the door, finding your butler and your knight waiting for you when you opened it.
“I’m ready,” you told them, and the three of you began moving toward the garden for the first part of the event.
Two separate tea parties were being held. One hosted by the Count for his fellow noblemen and the other hosted by the Countess for the noblewomen. As such, Minho could not escort you, and you guessed that he was already in the garden, greeting guests with his father.
Ever since his return from that month-long journey, he had become more attentive to you. It was as if something changed in him yet again. His conversations with you lasted a little longer, and he developed a new habit of bringing you small delicacies whenever he had the time.
Concerned, you tried to limit your interactions with him, but Minho seemed impervious to your stiff responses and aloof tactics. Even Felix, who you thought had a particular distaste for you, had started to behave more amicably around you.
The two of them were starting to become serious threats to your hopes of resuming a solitary lifestyle.
“My lady,” Sycross spoke up suddenly as you began to near the entrance to the palace gardens. He sounded rather disconcerted, “You must be cautious during the tea party.”
Your brows creased in confusion as your pace slowed down. “Is something the matter?”
He was quiet for a beat, gaze sweeping across your surroundings before he determined it was safe enough to speak. Icy eyes downcast, he let out a dignified sigh. “As truly as it dismays me to say, there are some who disapprove of your marriage and will surely use this opportunity to express their unpleasant sentiments.”
You hummed in understanding, remembering the shock and disgust of the guests at the Prince’s fateful banquet many months ago.  
“There is one in particular,” Sycross added, low enough so that only you heard him, “Lady Hitalon. It is well known that she has been besotted with His Lordship ever since she made her debut into elite society four years ago.”
It did not come as a surprise to you that a man like Minho had admirers, let alone ones who had been staunchly obsessing over him for years. You glanced at your left hand, and your wedding ring winked back at you. Those ladies would be pesky at most, nothing that you could not handle.
Besides, what did you care if they had opinions to voice? The two of you were sworn to one another, the nature of the deal between you not something an outsider could simply meddle in.
You raised your chin and squared your shoulders, staring straight ahead as you assured Sycross, “You needn’t worry.”
“As you say, my lady.”
He stopped before a large set of glass doors revealing the exquisite greenery of the palace garden. Holding them open, he mentioned in hushed tones as you walked out, “Ryujin and I will be nearby. If you find yourself faced with trouble, simply signal to one of us and we will take care of it.”
“Thank you,” you gave him a small smile for his troubles and made your way toward the party.
The Countess of Valorieve was overlooking the busy staff when you approached her, greeting her with a deep curtsey, “Good afternoon, Your Excellency.”
“Yes, good afternoon,” she hummed as she regarded you, austere, but not scornful. Her scrutiny reminded you of a hawk, sharp and dangerous. You could clearly tell where Felix had gotten his signature glare from.
The party commenced shortly, and the bulk of it passed without a hitch. The ladies that shared your table were charming and affable, and riveting, insightful conversation flowed easily amongst you. Coincidentally, the eldest Lady Gaele was seated with you, and you did not hesitate to grasp the opportunity and learn more about Changbin’s fiancée-to-be.
But just as you thought that Sycross’ caution would be unwarranted, a honeyed voice encroached on your peace, “Is that Lady Y/n?”
The infamous Lady Hitalon was approaching your table, her dress an opulent cloud of violet. Flanking her were two younger ladies whom you could not recognize. You supposed they were the daughters of viscounts, judging by the way they seemed to follow her around like ducklings.
“My, it really is. What an honor.” her pretentious smile urged you to roll your eyes, but you refrained for the sake of propriety.
She eyed Lady Gaele when she stopped by your table, and you wondered why she cared to fake kindness when the opposite was so glaringly obvious to everyone present. “I had been hoping to enjoy some tea with Lady Y/n. You don’t suppose you could spare a place, could you?”
“Is that so?” Lady Gaele patted her lips elegantly with a napkin before rising from her seat, perhaps having the sound foresight to avoid the noblewoman.
The apology in her voice was sincere when she excused herself, “Please pardon me, then. I’ve truly enjoyed conversing with you, and I hope to see you again during the banquet, Lady Valorieve.”
“Likewise, Lady Gaele.” you gave her a small smile, standing up to regrettably watch her leave. It seemed that the other ladies sharing your table were also quite wary of Lady Hitalon, for they each stood to leave with sheepish apologies.
You could not fault them.
Before you could mention for him, Sycross was placing new teacups on the table and refilling the tiered stand with fresh pastries. He snuck a glance toward you, signaling a question for help, and you gave him an imperceptible shake of your head.
You could handle Lady Hitalon and her ducklings just fine on your own.
“I hope that your afternoon has been splendid so far, Lady Hitalon,” you remarked as you poured tea for them and then for yourself.
“It has,” she responded dismissively, not bothering to introduce her company as they sat down.
Countless lifetimes had honed your patience to perfection. You were indifferent to her concealed hostility, electing to stir sugar into your tea instead.
“Since we are all women here, I am sure you wouldn’t shy away from humoring me, Lady Y/n.” she crossed her arms, the slight smirk on her rouged lips smug. Her casual usage of your name irked you. You had never spoken to her before, so why was she addressing you as though you two were close?
“Of course,” you hummed, taking a sip of your tea, and Lady Hitalon chuckled. “I knew it.
“To be honest with you, I have always dreamt of residing at this palace,” she let out a tragic sigh. “Tell me, is it as spectacular as they say?”
“I suppose.”
“Oh, you are as dull with your words as the rumors claim,” another overly friendly laugh as she joked, but you did not miss the edge in her words, “It appears that Lord Minho’s tastes are quite unique.”
You did not reply to that, finding that the floral taste of your tea was more worthy of your attention. Your quietness did not deter Lady Hitalon, however, for she continued to spout her faux innocent comments, “Speaking of which, I wonder what made him propose to you during the Crown Prince’s banquet. It must be an exhilarating love story.”
“It is nothing of the sort,” you stated with a shake of your head. “We simply found mutual benefit in this arrangement.”
“Oh,” her brows shot up before a knowing smirk drew itself on her lips. “Well, I suppose that makes sense. Why else would a man as wonderful as Lord Minho marry someone he had never expressed interest in before?”
Her two friends tittered at that, and you wished to sigh. They behaved more immaturely than schoolchildren.
Yet, perplexingly, those childish words annoyed you. The way she spoke of Minho, the way she spoke of you—it was as though a bothersome bee was buzzing in your ears.
“Seduction is an art in of itself, after all. Who knew that you would be so proficient at it, Lady Y/n?” Lady Hitalon hid her smile behind a bejeweled hand, her true colors beginning to seep through like a spillage of ink on linen.
You had begun to tire of this conversation. Glancing away, you caught the Countess’ gaze. She was seated at a nearby table, eyeing your situation passively before turning back to her tea as though nothing was the matter. A clear sign that you had to deal with this alone.
“I simply find it interesting. Even though you are married, surely you understand that you wouldn’t be able to keep Lord Minho all to yourself for too long.”
Did she not know how to stop talking, or did she love the sound of her own voice that much? You clenched your jaw, biting back a noise of displeasure. An outsider like her knew nothing. You could not fathom the source of her confidence to say such nonsense.
Even though your relationship strayed from the ordinary, you were content with your marriage to Minho. He was your partner, and he acknowledged you as his. That faithfulness was enough, and you had seen proof of it in his behavior.
What Lady Hitalon insinuated was an insult to his character, and it sparked a sense of protectiveness in your heart. What right had she to speak of him like that?
“After all, a farmland noble should know their place and leave the bustling city to those who belong to it. Do you not think so too?”
That’s it.
You set your teacup down a little too roughly, the diamond on your finger catching light. “I’m afraid that the one who should know her place here is you, Lady Hitalon.”
“Oh, please, I was merely teasing. You needn’t become so riled—” she tried to brush it off, but you interrupted her sternly. Despite it being unreasonable, you could not help your irritation.
“Moreover, the man you speak of so intimately is my husband.”
• • •
Minho did not intend to overhear you. Truly.
He had been entertaining guests when Felix alerted him of an alarming matter—Count Hitalon and his sons were present, which meant that, without a doubt, Lady Hitalon was also attending.
He was not blind to her affections. She had been making persistent advances toward him for a long time, and out of politeness, he indulged her sometimes. But all of that was before the incident that stirred quite the controversy in the court—his marriage.
He was suddenly overwhelmed by unease. There were still many who disapproved of your marriage, and knowing Lady Hitalon’s headstrong character, she was sure to hurl some spiteful remarks at you for it.
Hoping that his worries were unfounded, Minho excused himself and rushed toward the ladies’ tea party. It was nearing its end, so he was not breaking any rules of etiquette. The rest of his side would be joining him soon, anyway. He was only taking a head start.
He spotted Sycross first, who acknowledged his presence with a telling look.
It seemed that Lady Hitalon had beaten him to you.
Her veiled insult was carried by the light breeze despite the noise of the party.
“After all, a farmland noble should know their place and leave the bustling city to those who belong to it. Do you not think so too?”
A messy combination of dread and displeasure twisted his gut, and he was going to step into the garden when your words sliced through the air, unflustered, yet every bit dangerous.
“I’m afraid that the one who should know her place here is you, Lady Hitalon.”
A laugh threatened to escape his lips, born from relief and unexpected pride. He should have known that you would be able to handle it yourself, and beautifully at that. You might have been difficult to read, but you were not one to mince your words. Ever so classy, they always landed with the lethality and precision of a master’s arrow.
You did not need his help.
It was what you said next, however, that caught him entirely off guard.
“Moreover, the man you speak of so intimately is my husband.”
Perhaps it was the protectiveness of those words, or the subtle ferocity lining your tone, but Minho found himself stunned by the light flutter in his heart, the warmth that pooled in his chest like honey.
What a glorious feeling it was.
It made him happier than it should have to hear you defend him so vehemently, to hear you defend your rightful place so firmly. He discovered that he was not ashamed to admit—it was cute. Precious in a sense that swelled his pride, made him want nothing more than to walk up to you and capture that smart mouth of yours in a kiss.
Though, he had a sinking suspicion that you would clobber him if he ever dared to voice the thought.
Still, he cherished the feeling it brought him, did not reject it at all as it settled deep into the twisting crannies of his heart.
He felt their gazes swiveling toward him, paired with gasps and whispers, but Minho paid them no mind as he made his short way to your table. Lady Hitalon and her friends noticed him first, their eyes widening so much they started to resemble full moons.
The smile he mustered for them was dry. All his muscles really wanted to do was scowl. “Do pardon my interruption, ladies.”
You looked up at him when he stopped beside you, surprise and confusion distressing your brows ever so softly. “Lord Minho, what brings you here?”
The handmaidens that dressed you had done an exquisite job, for you looked like an iris in full, breathtaking bloom. A wreath of violet posies crowned the back of your head, and a smattering of pearls was woven through your hair. Your gown puffed around you, a cascade of deep blue silk. Two silver brooches were pinned over your heart, gleaming in the sunlight. Valorieve’s leopard and Lurmuse’s owl.
Minho noted, very carefully, how the colors of his fief were sublime on you.
“The tea party is ending,” he answered, his smile mellowing out as he extended a helping hand toward you. “I wished to greet Their Excellencies with you.”
You did not question him further. Taking his hand and rising from your seat, you excused yourself, “Pardon me, then, Lady Hitalon. It has been a pleasure meeting you.”
You spoke the lie so easily he might have mistaken it for truth had he not witnessed the exchange that transpired between you. It was nothing to call a pleasure.
You turned away, and he was about to lead you toward the Countess’ table when a high voice exclaimed, “L-Lord Minho—!”
Lady Hitalon was standing now, flustered, clutching her hands in front of her like a plea. There was hope in her tone, a certain type of happiness that he suddenly found himself wanting to crush. He had not forgotten her previous affronts.
Minho’s smile disappeared, and he gripped your hand closer to himself when he said, “If there is something you wish to say to Lady Valorieve or me, you may have a butler convey the message or write it in letter.”
He did not linger to watch her blubbering reaction, quickly ushering you away as the Count and the rest of the men’s party entered the garden. You were silent, your gaze vacant as you stared ahead. Lady Hitalon’s comments must have still been upsetting you, he determined when your possessive hold on his arm did not ease.
Minho chose his words carefully, uttering them tentatively, “What she said was not true. You don’t have to go anywhere.”
You froze then spun to face him so rapidly, horror and embarrassment inseparable on your face. Your question was more a statement as you stepped back once. “You heard?”
“It was nothing particularly outrageous,” he teased. “I am your husband.”
You looked at him, dumbfounded for a prolonged second before snapping your gaze away and mumbling under your breath, “I had not been thinking when I said that.”
“Is that so?” he mused playfully as the two of you approached a cluster of nobles. “I suppose I prefer you when you’re not thinking, then.”
You did not retort, did not even spare him a sour glare, seeming to drown in a sea of your own fluster instead. For the second time that afternoon, Minho found himself tucking away a reckless thought.
How cute.
•Scene 6•
The city of Adorance was like a bride on her wedding day.
You saw blue and gold everywhere you looked, lining the streets, draping from the buildings, fluttering in the sky. The sounds of joy filled the air. Music, and the laughter of the young and the old melded into one beautiful song. The voices of vendors and the softer tones of passersby a harmonious background.
You happened upon a different form of entertainment at every corner. Singers and dancers, who brought life to the festivities. Illusionists and contortionists, who left awed the crowds surrounding them. Jesters and animal trainers, who elected laughs and applause from their audience. A play was unfolding on a small stage in the midst of town, its actors portraying the victory of Valorieve’s knights in the Northern States War.
A group of children ran past you, weaving their way through the throngs of people as they chased one another in a game of tag. Their little faces were hidden behind masks that carried the likeness of leopards. Snarling snouts and spotted yellow fur.
Since it was customary for the Count’s family to attend the first day of festivities, you accompanied Minho as he wandered around the city, greeting citizens and sharing in their joy. His reputation among them seemed to be impeccable, for they reciprocated his greetings with wide grins and well wishes of their own.
You were surprised at the number of people that approached you too, thanking you for your work on the new register scheme. They handed you little gifts of freshly baked treats and handcrafted trinkets, which you could not accept without pressing coin into their laboring palms.
Occasionally, you would spot some nobility within the fray. Members from the families of Valorieve’s viscounts and barons invited Minho and you to watch certain intriguing performances or try unique foods.
You were standing at the back of the audience of a comedic play, a steamy sugar roll in hand, when a pair of little girls approached Minho cautiously. They carried between them a handwoven basket piled with flowers the shade of a depthless ocean.  
“Milord!” one of them shouted over the noise, her speech adorably clumsy.
Minho motioned for the retinue of guards surrounding you to let them in, and you watched as the man who was nearly unapproachable in court knelt before the two girls. He answered them with a warm, lighthearted smile. “Yes, little ladies?”
The girl that spoke first plunged a free hand into the basket and pulled out a beautiful flower crown. Her question was earnest as she held it out to him. “Would you like a Warrior’s Halo, milord?”
“Thank you very much. I would.” he received the crown with emphasized gratitude, to which the girl squared her shoulders. “You’re welcome kindly, milord!”
You could not help the small smile that quirked your lips at her darling antics.
As the two girls scampered away to hand out more flower crowns, Minho rose to his feet and turned to face you. “Lady Y/n.”
You regarded him curiously as he stepped closer, and before you could process his actions, he was reaching up and placing the flower crown delicately over your head.
“This is called a Warrior’s Halo,” he said softly, brushing back a stray strand of hair to secure the crown in place.
His proximity made your stomach flip, suddenly swarmed by what felt like a kaleidoscope of restless butterflies. He was close enough that all you could see without turning your head was him, and it was almost as though he were taunting you.
You had not forgotten what happened during the tea party. The fact that he had heard you say something so utterly silly made you want nothing more than to lose yourself in a forest and never be found again.
Alas, that was not doable, and you were stuck with him and his teasing quips for the rest of the day.
So far, your tactic for dealing with the cacophony of feelings he spurred in you was to ignore said feelings. Let them pass over you like a balmy summer breeze, for you were sure that they were nothing but confusion and embarrassment.
They had to be.
“They say that when the soldiers returned home, their loved ones wove these flowers together and crowned them in celebration.” Minho stepped back to admire his work with a tender tilt of his head. There was an uproar in the distance, which you guessed was the cheering of an excited crowd.
“T-That’s lovely,” you managed to comment as you touched the flowers carefully. Their petals were velvet under your fingertips. “Thank you.”
What you had thought was the sound of cheers became louder and more frenzied, almost as though the source of it was approaching you. Your guards seemed to notice it too, for they began to look around them with concerned frowns.
It was common for something to go awry in a gathering as large as this. That was why ample guards and watchmen were employed to keep order. A disturbance this loud was not a good omen.
Seungmin stepped closer to the two of you, as though to usher you away. “My lord, my lady, I believe it would be safer if we moved—”  
Screaming.
Panicked and uncontrollable. A hoard of people was storming wildly your way, shouts of fear and confusion ringing among them. Your guards moved in a blur, mere seconds before your world tipped into chaos.
“Protect His Lordship! Protect Her Ladyship!”
You felt as though your body was getting crushed. Quite much, it was. The crowd that was peaceful but a few moments earlier had sprung into a frenzy around you. Confused yet alarmed by the distress of the masses, they ran and pushed one another, clambering to escape an unknown threat.
They seemed to swallow you within them, their movement unstoppable and unpredictable. Cries of distress from those being trampled rose in the air. Wails of scared children separated from their parents. Shouts of guards attempting to calm the panic. You thought you heard your name amongst the tumult.
It was in a blink. Minho and your guards, they had been within your reach, and then gone. You were left to drift in the crush of bodies, trying and failing to draw yourself up. A lone leaf in the savage thralls of a mighty river. Your breaths came short in a death-like panic.
Someone gripped your elbow from behind, and you were suddenly and forcefully dragged through the crowd. Your Warrior’s Halo was lost, ripped to pieces under the footfalls of the hysteric masses. You struggled to keep with the pace of your savior, who you supposed was one of your knights, nearly tripping over your dress which was lighter for the occasion, but not at all fit for desperately running for your life.
You burst out of the crowd into an empty alleyway, and only then could you take a full breath. But even that luxury was taken away when you finally looked at your supposed knight.
A stranger in a blood-red cloak.
No—not a stranger. Something inside of you stirred, a wisp of another entity recognizing your captor. Like two halves bound by fate, to seek and to be found.
Terror knifed through your heart. Oh, how fate liked to play you for a fool.
“Unhand me this instant!” you screamed as though you had never found your voice before, twisting and flinging yourself sideways in an attempt to wrest your arm free from his grip.
You could not think of a single reason why he was in Adorance. In the flesh. Running before you without reserve. Perhaps, more than anything, you refused to believe that it was him.
Your efforts were futile, but you did not stop, shouting, “You will not take me with you—!”
You were shoved violently into the wall of a building, white stars and bursts of black rupturing your vision upon the impact. Your captor’s hold on your neck was suffocating. The rasp that left his lips made you shudder.
“You will be quiet.”
There was a flash of motion in the corner of your dying vision. A blur cutting between your bodies roughly. A pale hand outstretched to catch your captor’s face and slam him into the ground.
A heave of breath, and a voice that was vaguely familiar. “You must be aware that the assault and abduction of a count’s heir are crimes punishable by death.”
Freed, you slid against the wall, crumpling behind the broad figure of your savior and his dark cloak. You could hear the Crown Prince curse then spit at the ground. “You would get out of my way if you knew what’s best for you.”
“I’m sure I do.”
It was Chan, the Count’s secretly adopted son. You had only met him once, and the sight of him had unsettled you so deeply that your mind had simply chosen to forget about him.
There he was now, shielding you, and you could not help the doubts that flooded your head. Why was he here? How did he even find you? What if he was working with the Prince?
Maybe he was not your savior either.
You knew that you had to run, but your head was ringing with pain not yet healed. So, all you could do was inch away as the Prince lunged in your direction, only to be immediately tackled by Chan.
Their brawl was messy, their cloaks a swirl of dark red and black as they dodged and jabbed and sidestepped. A flash of steel indicated that they had pulled out daggers, too. If he knew, then Chan seemed to give no scruple about the fact that he was facing the heir to the throne.
You took advantage of their distraction from you to make a frustratingly slow escape. Using the building wall as support, you dragged your feet forward, blinking against the pounding in your head. You had checked for blood, and thankfully, there was none. It would have made explanations very cumbersome, and possibly damning otherwise.
“No!”
What you could only describe as a feral shout ricocheted across the alley as the Prince ripped himself from the fight, and you made the mistake of glancing back at him.
His hood had fallen, and his eyes were bulging wickedly through his mask as he sprung in your direction like some sort of unhinged beast.
You stumbled forward in alarm, but Chan was quicker, not missing a beat as he pulled him back and threw him against the opposite wall. So effortlessly, as though he was not a fully grown man but instead a sack of cotton. You were almost horrified. What kind of monstrous physical prowess did Chan have?
“Your fight is with me, not with the Lady,” he deadpanned as the Prince tried to pick himself off the ground, seething with such heated anger that it froze you in place. The Blood of the First blessed him with certain gifts, and his disorientation would dissipate in a matter of seconds as a result.
As if he knew not to wait, Chan pulled him up and shoved him hard against the wall, both hands fisted in the front of his red cloak. There was a grunt of pain, and the Prince’s head lolled slightly, but he was not yet unconscious as he struggled against his hold, flailing his blade around.
Freeing one hand, Chan caught his wrist and twisted it. His features were unmoving, his gaze so chillingly calm. The dagger fell to the ground with a blunt thud and he kicked it out of reach, cruel attention on the Crown Prince.
“I truly wonder…” he mused drily, grasping the mask that covered the Prince’s face. The royal fought, shaking his head, kicking furiously, trying to force his hands off, but Chan was unflinching.
The scene had you transfixed, both in trepidation and anticipation. You had not told anyone of the truth behind the kidnapping attempts, of who was truly orchestrating them, and you could imagine a hundred different ways it would unfold. Many of them were not in your favor.
Fear suddenly urged you to stop him—perhaps this was a stone better left unturned, but then you found that you were at peace with the revelation. Perhaps, it was instead long, long overdue.
With bated breath, you watched as Chan pulled his mask down. In defiance of the Prince’s objections, in spite of his efforts.
His wretched face had never left your nightmares.
There was a thin trail of red running down his nose, and his eyes were frantic as he barked, “You will hang for touching a prince!”
A laugh, loud and almost disbelieving. Sadistic.
“Oh, this is rich,” Chan sighed, then, in a flash of motion so brutal, he slammed him against the brick wall again. “And how, pray tell, will you do that, Your Highness?”
Your heart dropped. Some wicked part of you was glad to see the Crown Prince suffer, yet the repercussions of Chan’s behavior were deafening in your mind.
This was treason, a path only headed for execution.
“Threats, physical assault, abductions. I’m certain that the Count of Lurmuse will not be pleased to know of your attacks on his daughter and heir,” he let him fall to the ground, pinning him up with his boot before he could slump, “I would like to see you try.”
“So, it was you, after all.”
Your eyes widened and you stifled a gasp, abruptly snapping your head around which caused a wave of blinding pain to wash over you.
Minho walked into the alleyway, his strides long and purposeful. The sword he liked to carry was unsheathed, winking in the light like a depraved killer. His expression was cloudy with the darkest emotion, and you were suddenly reminded of how truly dangerous this man was.
There was a reason he was the exalted heir of Valorieve, unchallenged and unquestioned by his peers. Behind courtly smiles and a gentlemanly act, he was merciless. A mind that was always leagues ahead, a weapon that never dulled. That was why you had chosen him, for the success of your plan demanded a decisive aide like him.
He stopped, and your knees threatened to buckle under the sheer weight of his gaze. He took you in piece by piece—your ruined dress, your trembling hands, your disheveled hair. The wince in your eyes. The redness around your neck. With each, his expression grew impossibly darker. A forbidding trance that seemed to consume him whole until he no longer felt familiar to you.
It seemed that with great effort, he tore his gaze from you to aim a piercing glare at the Prince. His tone alone could have cleaved stone. “I have the mind to kill you where you lie.”
Chan lifted his foot and backed away as if to make way for his brother. The two towered over the hunched royal, who bared his teeth as though they were fangs. “You would not dare.”
He did not hesitate to test that claim, suddenly springing forth with his arms outstretched toward you. His otherworldly gifts enabled him to stand despite the battering he had received, but they were no use against Chan and Minho banding against him.
“You wretch!” he cursed at you as they grappled with him, managing to restrain him against the grime of the ground. “You’ve tricked me all these years!”
Minho’s sword flashed, a quick, deadly motion as he stabbed it a mere hair away from the Prince’s nose. He all but spat the words, “You mistake me for a man who jests, Your Highness.”
Snarling, the Crown Prince tried to fight off Chan’s constraining grip on him, “You wouldn't dare, Lord Lee.”
The young Lord stood, then his gold-heeled boot rammed into the Prince’s shoulder, eliciting from him a pathetic cry of pain.
“You have no liberty to decide what I dare and dare not do,” Minho almost laughed as he dug his heel further down. “Whoever would find you if you were left to die here?”
Lost in some kind of vicious delirium, he touched the tip of his long blade to the Prince’s neck and muttered, “I really ought to rid the throne of vermin such as yourself.”
He raised his weapon, and you were hurtling toward him before you realized it, grabbing his arm with all the power you could muster. “Stop!”
Minho stilled, sword glinting upright in the sun, and his eyes drifted to fix on you. Surprised. Void. Betrayed.
You did not cower, even though your head still hurt. “This is treason! You will be executed for it. P-Please��please, stop.”
That seemed to snap him out of his fury-induced daze, for he lowered his weapon carefully and stepped away, turning a bleak stare toward the crumpled form of the prince.
What you asked of him may have been difficult, but the last thing you wanted was for Minho to be charged with such a ruinous crime. He still had a long, brilliant future to live.
“Leave,” he finally ground out. “Get lost before I have a change of heart. If I do not hear of your arrival at the castle in a week’s time, I will tear apart this kingdom to hunt you down.
“And I will only say this once,” his grip tightened noticeably on the hilt of his sword, and the utterance that followed dripped like venom from his lips.
“If I so much as glimpse you near my wife again, I will kill you.”
His words were resolute, carved from ice. A promise and a threat. You were ashamed to acknowledge the delicious chill that trailed down your spine as a result. Was this how it felt to be truly protected?
You saw the Crown prince Push himself to stand, and to your shocked relief, he staggered in the opposite direction. Not once did he look back at you. Not once did he hurl an insult.
Defeated.
Or perhaps surrendering in the meantime. You did not care. All that mattered to you was the fact that he was leaving.
Pulling down the mask that covered the lower half of his face, Chan shook his head at his brother. “It was just as you predicted.”
You blanched, suddenly letting go of Minho’s arm as you echoed, “Predicted? You knew that this would happen?”
“I did not know,” he responded, indignant, refusing to face you. “I only had a suspicion that he would show himself if we were to lure him out, and he did.”
Lure him out? You felt nauseous. Had he been investigating the kidnapping incident of three months ago ever since?
With the excellent poise of a swordsman, Minho sheathed his blade and stepped away. Slowly, he turned around, and with his head bowed, he inclined his body forward.
You were startled at his actions, waving your arms in the air as though to right him. A lord only bowed to his betters. “Lord Minho! W-What are you—”
“I’m sorry.”
The guilt gnawing at his voice, raw and heartbreaking, made you pause.
“I failed to predict the extremity of the means he would employ. I did not intend to implicate you or cause you any distress in the process. Forgive me.”
What were you supposed to say to that? Your mouth opened and closed in search of an answer—any answer. But you only felt helpless when he was bowing before you so solemnly.
“Please, look at me.”
He did not rise, and you plead again, “Lord Minho, please.”
He gave in to your urging and straightened his body. What was earlier a wildfire of wrath had died out, leaving ashes of sorrow and regret on his delicate features. They seemed to flicker and smolder as he regarded you.
You tried to smile, but it felt like a lie. “It’s all right. I’m fine.”
Minho’s shoulders dropped, and his entire expression seemed to droop in defeat with them. He breathed the word like it were an anchor, a truth so blatant, he seemed to be in disbelief for even saying it. “No.”
You were not. Your body felt like a mismatch of rags held together only by the thinnest of threads. Your head felt like it was floating, yet your mind was underwater, drowning. You were terrified. You were relieved.
You were not at all fine.
“I’m sure I am.”
Minho looked as though he wanted to reject your statements further, but Chan spoke up faster, “My lady, I think we must seek medical attention for you as soon as possible.”
You did not argue that. Even though the damage to your skull was healing itself, there were still bruises and scratches across your body that needed worldly remedies.
“I think so too,” you agreed, to which Chan gave a firm nod, glancing at Minho and pulling up his mask.
“I will return on my own, then.”
“No.” you surprised both men with your vehement refusal, and they stared at you. One saddened but curious, the other simply confused.
The resemblance between Chan and the Prince, and his ancestors, was too striking. The events that had unfolded had only left you troubled. Who was he, really?
You donned a guise of confidence when you told him, “I have questions to ask of you.”
A strange look passed between the two of them, in which Minho seemed to grant him permission, and Chan obliged easily. “As you wish, my lady.”
You made your way out with Minho’s help, then waited at the mouth of the alleyway for your carriage to arrive. Judging by your surroundings, it appeared that the earlier chaos had quieted, and the festival was resuming as normal.
Chan, who had left to summon your carriage, returned shortly. At his side was a familiar face.
“Brother, Lady Y/n!” Felix blurted his concern upon seeing you, “Are you all right?”
“We are,” Minho assured him plainly.
He seemed unconvinced but did not press further, changing the topic instead. His seriousness seemed to deepen his voice. “The mass panic ceased, and we’ve seized the culprit.”
“Good,” his older brother commended before ordering, “Watch them closely. Under no circumstances are they allowed to die.”
The clopping of hooves alerted you of your carriage’s arrival as Felix muttered resolutely, “Of course.”
• • •
“How did you find me?” you asked once the carriage began moving.
Sitting across from you, Chan did not hesitate to answer, “I was asked to tail you during the festival in anticipation of any attacks. Reassurance in case the knights required assistance, which they did.”
Next to you, Minho listened wordlessly. He had orchestrated everything, without your knowledge, and it seemed that his brothers were also privy to it. That fact worried you. Why were any of them involved in the first place?
Had Chan not stepped in, you would have been on your way out of Adorance by now. Your being with them, still, was an indirect courtesy of Minho’s meticulous planning, and you would not deny your gratefulness for that.
It was as though he were protecting you from the shadows. A dependable aide. The thought made your heart warm and flutter, but you carefully chose to ignore it.
A matter more important pressed on your mind.
You sighed. “Will you tell me the truth?”
Chan’s brows furrowed. “That is the truth—”
“Who are you?”
Your question hung in the narrow space of the carriage, overbearing in its magnitude. Despite your gratitude for his help, your speculations about his origins remained staunch. Trust was impossible to build on a base of doubts, and you needed to determine whether he was qualified for your trust.
“I’ve asked you once, and you admitted to not being of the Valorieve. I now ask you for the full truth,” you added in the stretch of his hesitation, almost demanding. His ruthlessness with the Prince was fueled by something other than protectiveness, and you were not so presumptuous as to not recognize it.
The carriage shook slightly as it passed over little bumps in the road. Outside, you could hear the faint sounds of the festival, lively, as though your world had not been upturned a measly while prior.
Again, Chan seemed to seek Minho’s permission with a furtive look. An unsaid exchange passed between them, and he drew in a long, silent breath. As if to prepare himself.
“My name is Bang Chan,” he finally said, his dimpled smile bitter. You held your breath for his next words, unsure, for a fleeting moment, if the revelation would give you the closure you needed or throw your thoughts into upheaval.
“I take my mother’s surname, for my father is the King, and I am his illegitimate son.”
The truth.
Like an endless echo in the chambers of your own mind. You had known, deep down, and all you had needed was a confirmation of those speculations.
It was no wonder, then. His likeness to the Crown Prince and the royal line. His distaste for and lack of fear of him. They were half-brothers, after all.
You found yourself welcoming of this new information. Now that you were sure of who he was and what his lineage was, you could think more rationally. He could not have inherited the Blood of the First if it was already with the Crown Prince. Therefore, he should pose no real harm to your plan.
Still, that did not explain why he was taken under the Count’s wing.
As if he had heard your silent questions, Chan began to recount his story, “My mother—bless her memory—was murdered by the King’s men after he learned of my existence. I was only six years of age at the time. That was when His Excellency found me and, upon discovering my parentage, adopted me.”
Though it did not surprise you, it appalled you, nonetheless. The King was a man no better than a pig. You hated him for the innumerable atrocities he had committed against you in two lifetimes, almost forgetting that there were others who had their own grievances with him.
He rested his head back on the wall of the carriage, gazing up at its embellished ceiling in melancholy. “The Count gave me a reason to keep living, and I owe this life in its entirety to him.”
You dared to venture, whispering, “What would that reason be?”
His plush lips stretched into a grim smile.
“I want to see the King and his family destroyed.”
He said it so simply, so resolutely, as though it were but a measly feat.
You knew, then, that the cheerful image he had tried to portray in your first meeting was nothing more than an elaborate façade. Instead, his true self was that unforgiving, unrelenting person you met in the alleyway.
The dark glint in his eyes told you as much.
You did not know the intricacies of Valorieve’s plans, but there was a fundamental flaw in Chan’s aspirations that you could not ignore.
“You can’t do that,” you pointed, frowning.
“Yes, by law, but I don’t care for the laws of a tyrant.”
You shook your head. Their plans were treasonous, but that did not concern you. “No, I meant that it is impossible in a literal sense. You cannot destroy the King.”
“Why would that be?” Chan seemed perturbed, and you felt Minho’s curious gaze settle heavily on you.
There was no way for them to know, it had been hidden quite well. But you did. It was the last piece of information you had gathered before escaping the royal clutches.
Closing your eyes, you let the Crown Prince’s greatest guarded secret fall from your lips in a murmur.
“The King is dead.”
The silence that followed was not one born of respect or sorrow, but shock. The kind that warranted a disbelieving laugh.
Minho spoke for the first time since entering the carriage, softly as though his voice could break reality, “What?”
“He passed more than half a year ago,” you divulged, and Chan questioned strongly, not trying to conceal his incredulity as he leaned forward, “He is not bedridden with illness, then? How does no one know of this?”
A shrug. You could not tell them about the workings of the Renocault Order and what they had done for the throne. “The Crown Prince has his ways.”
“Why would he do such a thing?”
“It only makes sense,” Minho muttered, figuring it out himself. “How else will he ensure an easy ascension to the throne?”
The laws that were set four centuries ago required that the heir be at least thirty years of age before succeeding the previous ruler. If this condition was not met, and the throne lacked a sitter, then the leaders of the remaining fifteen fiefs may withhold the crown and elect a fitting ruler among them. As such, the Crown Prince’s title was only presumptive.
It was not unprecedented for the Rowonnese royals to delay the announcement of the King’s death for that very reason. You had seen it happen several times during your lifetimes. But, with the aid of the Order, not a single soul in the kingdom ever knew of it.
Well, save for your husband and his brother now.
“The Crown Prince has a little more than half a year left to become eligible. I suspect that a statement will be made then,” you affirmed his conclusion with your own predictions, based on your bothersome years observing the royals.
Chan reclined in his seat, an expression of strange wonder and concern on his countenance as he stared at you. It was as though he were seeing you in a new light. “My lady, just…how much do you know?”
You did not miss the warning glare Minho threw his way, chuckling with a faint shake of your head. How you found it in you to be lighthearted, you did not know. But your shoulders were feeling lighter, your heart calmer.
It was nice to share some of your burden with someone else.
“Too much, and perhaps too little.”
•Scene 7•
Much like the last time, your attendants refused you your right of doing-anything-useful while you recovered. Nonetheless, you could only feel thankful for their care. It was not their doing that found you injured and bruised, after all.
The physician that saw to your treatment had declared that you suffered a light concussion and were to rest for no less than a week. So, you were not allowed to leave your chambers by your handmaidens, who seemed to be fiercer than knights in their determination.
You lounged on one of the couches in your sitting room, a half-finished embroidery canvas in your hands. Needlework was one of the many skills your mother had taught you, for it was one of her favored hobbies. Since it was not a ledger, nor did it require you to move around, your attendants allowed you to embroider to pass the time.
The repetitive movement of the needle was calming. In and out, through and through in intricate patterns. You could understand why your mother loved it so.
But, the pastime was not enough to distract you from the world around you. The festival was on its last day, and you were cooped up inside. Though you delegated most of your work to Sycross, ever so dependable, there was yet much to be done. Estate management, trial operations, and there was the pesky issue of the Crown prince.
Minho did not tell you much about the investigations he was carrying out, but you knew that they had captured one of the Prince’s subordinates. A member of the Order, you suspected. Under Felix’s competent eye, they kept him alive. For what reason, you were unsure, but you supposed he would prove useful in Valorieve’s plans to take down the Prince.
Speaking of which, your husband was a rare sight to spot during the past week. He was swamped with so much work that you supposed it made sense. The aftermath of the incident at the festival was discreet yet extensive. Fortunately, there were no casualties, but there were other losses that demanded his attention. For such an event to even occur was wounding to the guard body of Adorance, an oversight that could not be permitted to repeat itself.
But you were not stupid. Minho had developed a habit of only entering your shared rooms deep into the night and leaving much before you awakened. He finished his meals as though in a rush to be elsewhere, and barely met your gaze when you found the chance to speak to him.
He was avoiding you, and it was as clear as the neat stitches on your canvas. It made you uneasy.
The canary you were embroidering stared at you, half-feathered and bead-eyed as you appraised your job. It felt as though it were mocking you with its empty gaze for feeling the way you did. Minho was finally distancing himself from you, should you not have been glad? Was this not what you wanted from the start?
A knock sounded at the door, soft enough that it did not startle you. 
“Come in,” you answered, a twinge of hope pitching your voice high as Ryujin hurried to open the door.
You were ashamed of the secret disappointment that tightened your chest when your butler stepped through. The hope that it would be Minho was foolish, anyway.
“I have brought your tea, my lady,” Sycross announced. A silver tray that held a precious tea set expertly balanced on his hand as he maneuvered through the spacious room. It was his newly acquired routine to bring you teas and nag at you to not overexert yourself at random intervals of the day. Your mother may have been far away in Lurmuse, but it seemed that Sycross was there to act like one in her stead.
“Thank you.” the smile you managed was but a mask, empty and false. But it seemed not to fool Sycross, whose eyebrows furrowed in sympathy as he set the tray on the nearby tea table. He too must have noticed the shift in Minho’s behavior after the incident, for he served you closely.
Perhaps attempting to lift your spirits, he remarked while handing you a steaming cup of herbal tea, “My lady, have you seen the flowers that were sent by His Lordship this morning? They’re beautiful.”
“I have,” you murmured, stealing a glance at the invaluable porcelain vase situated atop your tea table like a prize. Cheery sunflowers, shy peonies, and roses so plump seemed to swell through the mouth of the vase, soft yellows and pinks cascading down like a flowery waterfall. Smaller blossoms dotted the bouquet, white as miniature stars. “They are indeed lovely.”
There was a different bouquet every day, as though Minho were apologizing to you again and again by sending them. A note would be stuck between the blossoms, embraced by their dewy petals, and scribed on it with the familiar elegance of his penmanship were a few words asking you to rest well.
You could not understand him. Surely it was easier to speak such wishes to you directly rather than write them in a letter?
“I heard that His Lordship spent a great deal of effort in picking them,” Sycross shared, to which you hummed, watching the leaves that swam in your tea, “Is that so?”
What was he thinking? You did not want flowers if they meant his distance from you—
You halted.
What were you thinking? His silence should not be bothering you as such. In fact, you should not care in the least. After all, he was but a player in your game, a pawn in your plan. His usefulness to you would soon end, and you would no longer need him by your side.
That was merely the truth. It seemed that you had been forgetting it as of late.
You took a sip of your tea, letting the earthy drink fill your chest with its warmth when a chilling idea crossed your mind.
What if this was him rethinking his deal with you?
• • •
The young Lord’s study was a reflection of his dedication to his duties. Shelves upon shelves of neatly lined books scaled one wall, the titles etched on their spines indicating topics such as history, politics, and law, among many others. A map of the kingdom and its neighbors was painted on the opposing wall, its details intricate and vast. The flag of Valorieve draped from a golden pole that was situated beside a large window that welcomed sunlight into the generous space.
There was an air of mystery to the place, as though it held secrets that could upturn the fate of the kingdom entirely.
You knew that it did.
Taking a seat on one of the couches situated before the desk, you inhaled deeply to steady the anxiety rampaging in your head. You had been to Minho’s study many times before to discuss plans for the register or exchange information about the Crown Prince. Yet, you now felt as though you were committing a grave sin by being there alone.
But what choice did he leave you? The plan which you so carefully devised was at risk and you had staked everything upon him as its central figure. He could not be having second thoughts about your deal.
So, you decided that if Minho was not going to approach you himself, you were going to find him and plead with him instead.
The rare leather of the couch warmed from your body heat as you waited, repeatedly revising and rehearsing your speech in your head. You would set aside your dignity if you had to, hurl it away and bow your head to the ground if need be. Minho could not be allowed to renege on his promise to you.
After what felt like a lifetime of repeating the same words in your mind and imagining the hundred different scenarios that could unfold like a tragic play, a click finally sounded at the door and you snapped your head in its direction. Hope and dread formed an ugly twist in your heart.
Minho stepped into the study like a vision from a magical mirror, distant and unreal. His gaze landed on you immediately, and he seemed to blanch. “Lady Y/n?”
You did not miss the way he glanced behind him, as if to leave, nor did you overlook the hoop of blue flowers—a Warrior’s Halo, you recalled—that hung from his arm like a terribly oversized bracelet.
“What brings you here? Should you not be resting?” he cleared his throat as he asked, not walking any farther into the room, eyes seeming to wander everywhere as to avoid you.
It irked you.
“That may be true,” you stood from your seat, gripping your hands in front of you, a picture of composure, “but it has been increasingly difficult to speak to you as of late, Lord Minho.”
At that, he grimaced, his hand rising to rub the nape of his neck awkwardly. “Ah, well…”
Never had you seen him so uncomfortable, and it made your heart clench. Your speculations must be true then. There could be no other explanation for his discomfort around you.
He had finally realized how troublesome your situation was and no longer wished to resume this partnership.
No, you could not let that happen. Never.
Your hands dropped to your skirts, and you clutched the fabric as though to pull strength from the velvety silk.  
If you were going to appeal to him, this was your only chance.
Gaze fixated on the streaked marble of the floor, you took in a fateful breath before blurting out the words you so diligently practiced.
“Please allow me to stay—!”
“I’m sorry—”
What…?
Eyes wide, you dared to look up at Minho, who seemed to be equally taken aback by the coincidence of you interrupting one another.
But more than that, you were confused. Was he apologizing? Why ever would he need to?
“Oh no,” you heard him mumble to himself, almost chastising. Something akin to heartbreak creased his brows and caused his shoulders to slump—as though he were breaking apart before your eyes. “It seems I’ve let my foolishness hurt you again.”
“What do you mean?” you breathed the question, and your confusion gave out to bewilderment as he walked toward you, taking out the flower crown that hooped around his arm and holding it gently. Like that day in the festival, he stood before you and reached up, placing the Warrior’s Halo like a precious crown over your head.
Except this time, his hands lingered as though he were anchoring himself. When he spoke, he diverted his gaze to the side. “I was…in town earlier and I remembered that yours was lost in the fray.”
You blinked at him, and it seemed that your speechlessness founded some courage in him to meet your gaze. Minho smiled then, the small, dejected kind of smile that did not at all suit his brilliance, and said, “I’m sorry, Lady Y/n.
“After the incident at the festival, I…did not know how to face you,” he admitted, and you could hardly hear him over the pounding of your heart. Just what did he mean by ‘facing you’?
All the explanations you could surmise were unfavorable, and you suddenly found yourself unwilling to hear him say more. Though, you could not muster the words to stop him.
“I suppose I was ashamed,” he continued, standing so close, with his hands still on the flowers and his head bowed a measly fraction as if he were repenting. “Despite your honesty and despite remaining true to our agreement, I harbored many suspicions toward you. I doubted you. For so long, I thought you were a spy sent to deceive me. And even when that was proven false, I could not—”
He paused, trying to find the right words or maybe taking a breather from the rush of confessions that left you dazed.
“I could not fathom your motives or your purposes for doing any of this,” he managed. “I did not understand, so there was always distrust in the back of my mind. I thought that if I had gotten closer to you, then maybe I would, finally. I approached you with that ulterior motive. Part of it was guilt and worry, for you always seemed to be in danger because of something, but…
“I know that deep down, the true source of it all was unease. Fear that I was making a mistake—that I was being blinded. Even though, time and time again, the evidence was there for me to see and quash these insistent doubts myself.”
Although it was clear that he spoke those words with difficulty, Minho’s voice was steady. He did not shy away while laying bare all his thoughts, which made you want to stop him yet again.
You did not fault him for doubting you. In fact, you had fully expected him to distrust you for the many secrets you held. So why was he needlessly condemning himself like this?
You opened your mouth to say something, but he beat you to it. “As it appears, however, I was blinded.
“I had deluded myself into believing that the things I was doing were for your safety—that I was acting from a place of concern. As a result, I’ve put you in grave danger. I’ve created the opportunity for him to come find you, thinking that I would be able to protect you regardless. It was my pride speaking, nothing more.
“That day made me realize how wrong I had been. How terribly, foolishly wrong. When I was faced with my own selfish distrust, I thought to myself—how could I dare to talk to you after letting such an ugly thing live in my heart for so long?
“I’m ashamed of myself, and I…don’t know how to fix it.”
“You needn’t be,” you finally found the voice to say and it did not surprise him. Minho looked at you like he had that day a week ago. When you insisted that you were okay while you so obviously were not.
That same defeated smile. “I’m afraid you’re mistaken, Lady Y/n, and the proof of that stands before me. While I soothed my own wounds, I’ve made you feel unwanted. So much that you had to personally seek me out and ask to stay.”
Oh.
You could only stare at him.
It seemed that you were wrong.
And Minho was taking the brunt of that error.
“I must have disappointed you so greatly that you would think me shameless enough to desert you,” he sighed, looking as though he committed a travesty that could never be remedied. “I’m sorry.”
You gulped, avoiding his gaze, wishing to erase that expression off his face as quickly as possible. You did not like it in the least. “If it is my forgiveness you seek, then you have it.”
A self-pitying chuckle. “I don’t believe I’ve earned it.”
“That isn’t true,” you countered, perhaps too vehemently. You could understand the source of his anguish, but the last thing you wanted was for him to dwell on it like this. You owed him a lot. It was a debt that could possibly never be repaid. One that you could never confess to him as he so courageously confessed to you.
“Is that so?” there was a murmur from him, and then a stretch of tense silence that had you fidgeting with your dress. Had he accepted your statement? Or was he thinking of other ways to express his apology?
“Y/n.”
So softly, so tenderly. Your name fell from his lips like a snowflake that would melt with a mere touch. It surprised you, made a stampede of conflicting emotions run amok in your heart.
Stripped of titles, there was something so intimate about the way he said your name. So personal. Without intending so, your face warmed at the seriousness in the sharp set of his eyes, fixed on you as though you were the axis of this world and its skies.
“I will become better,” he stated like it were a sacred oath. “I may not know why it is you chose to trust me, but I will be worthy of that trust. From now and onwards.”
It was as though your thoughts were playful dandelions, easily evading your attempts to catch them while they floated merrily with the wind. The sincerity in his tone should have made you grimace, but you could not bring yourself to do so.
“I…” what were you supposed to say? What could you say when all your heart seemed to do was buzz and flutter?
‘You don’t need to. You shouldn’t.’
Those were the words you should have told him. Instead, the response that left your lips was an uncharacteristic mutter, “Thank…you.”
The smile that drew itself on Minho’s lips was gentle, its kindness forgiving of your awkwardness. His hands finally dropped, and when he stepped back, you subconsciously reached to touch the wreath of blue blossoms crowning your head. Strangely, you felt cold.
“I hope you would pardon my craftsmanship. Unfortunately, it is still lacking,” he remarked lightly, and you shook your head. “No, it’s quite lovely. I…noticed it when you walked in.”
You wanted to facepalm at your own ramblings. When exactly were you reduced to a flustered mess?
Before you, Minho breathed a chuckle. “I’m glad you’re pleased.”
Perhaps you should have smiled with him, but even that you could not bring yourself to do. Stuck in a confusing place, you could not let yourself be distracted by his words. Feelings were but a fleeting thing, paling when faced with the kind of hardship you were fated for.
You would only bring him sorrow in the end.  
“Well, then, I should escort you back—”
“No—!” you blurted as though all your earlier inner turmoil was naught.
Curiosity widened Minho’s eyes ever so slightly and you cleared your throat. You really did not think this through.
“You…seem worn out.”
It was true. Fatigue was lining his eyes, slight, but you noticed it, nonetheless. Not unexpected, considering the recent increase in his workload, but for some reason, it bothered you to let him go on with his day like that.
“Perhaps you should rest a little,” you suggested, sitting back down on the leather couch as though inviting him to join you.
His eyes softened with apology. “I would, but I’ve places to be—”
“I’ll wake you.”
You did not understand why you interjected so strongly, or why it embarrassed you so. In truth, you were not sure if you fully comprehended any of what had transpired a few moments ago. Fidgeting with your hands, you mumbled, “So…just for a short while…you should rest.”
It took a beat, and then you felt a dip of weight as Minho came to sit next to you on the couch. Was that a smile you heard between his words? “Thank you, then, Lady Y/n.”
He fell silent after that and you thought to yourself—what now?
Reaching up, you took the Warrior’s Halo off and brought it down to rest in your lap. It was a delicate piece of work, stems of big, blue blossoms braided together with a golden ribbon that seemed more valuable than to be used in a mere flower crown. You could only imagine Minho carefully twining flowers and ribbon into a crown while traveling to and fro the palace, and it made the creation in your hands suddenly seem all the more precious.
You stopped admiring the flowers to look at your husband instead. Closed eyes and steady breaths, he must have been truly exhausted to have fallen asleep so quickly. The sight was not new to you, but you could not help your stare.
He was so different awake than he was asleep.
Eyes that seemed to enchant and impose with their whimsical shine. Lips that seemed to entrance the beholder with their smile. He seemed to carry the world on his shoulders.
What a huge burden that was.
Ever so gently, you touched his face, bringing his head to rest on your shoulder. Part of you expected him to rouse from his sleep as a result, but you were surprised when he remained still and quiet.
Silly man, you chided him in your head. Why would you push yourself like this?
The silence of his calm breathing was all the response you got from him, and you brought your gaze back to the Warrior’s Halo.
What a shame it was that its flowers would soon wilt.
•Scene 8•
Your life seemed to shift to mundaneness after the events of the festival. The month that followed was slow and uneventful, with you resuming your work on the new register scheme untroubled by the Prince or his lackeys. It appeared that Minho’s threats worked miracles.
You only had to prepare for the final act of your plan—three months far.
On this afternoon, you were visiting Chaeryeong’s temporary school as you often did to run your evaluations and collect data about the students’ progress. Your visits were met with excitement from the children, who were beginning to warm up to you, and the teaching staff, who were eager to show off their work—with Chaeryeong usually at their forefront.
She took pride in her work, that much was clear as she told you of the week’s schedule. There were lesson plans, student projects, and more that she was developing alongside the two other teachers you had assigned. You were pleased, so far, with the results you were seeing.
And the public seemed to share your opinion.
“My lady.”
Seungmin walked up to you once you stepped out of the school, bowing as he informed, “There is a man that wishes to speak with you. Should I bring him in?”
“Please do,” you answered him kindly. It had become a regular occurrence for the city folk to approach you during your visits and express their gratitude or share their grievances in hopes of you fixing them or bringing them to Minho’s attention.
You appreciated their trust in you, for you knew how difficult their lives were. After all, this was one of the few, rare lifetimes in which you were reborn a privileged citizen. If there was one thing you wanted to leave behind, it would be to better the lives of those who populated your cities and villages.
You were conversing with Chaeryeong when a middle-aged man’s gravelly voice sounded somewhere behind you.
“My humblest greetings to you, Lady Valorieve.”
You turned around to be met with the owner of the voice, folded in a deep bow and flanked by two of your guards. At once, you returned his greeting, “And to you as well. Please, rise.”
He did.
And you nearly staggered backward.
“Thank you, my lady,” he said, gripping in his hands a washed-out cap and a scroll of paper.
He would have been twice your current age. Worn by age and hardship, yet you could still recognize his familiar face. Roughness had lined his sharp features and scratched his voice. His hair, which you remembered to be as soft as spun silk and as dark as a moonless night, had become heavily streaked with silver. Though, he still wore it as he had always done—tied at the base of his neck and long enough to make the ladies in town envious.
Your thoughts were a riot.
What was he doing here?
“My name is Yang Jeongin, and I hail from a small town by the southern border of Valorieve,” he introduced himself as though it was information you did not know.
What could have brought him all the way to the capital?
You had taken great care in avoiding the places of your past, so why was he here to meet you specifically?
“What is it that made you seek me, Mister Yang?” you managed a polite smile. Your voice felt as though it were coming from somewhere distant.
“There is word around town that your ladyship grants an audience to us common folk, so I have come here in hopes that you would listen to my story and seek justice for us,” he said, tightening his clutch on his cap. His shoulders were squared with determination, while all your body wanted to do was retreat.
“Is that so?” you tried to steady yourself by grasping the folds of your dress, praying that your discomfort was not visible. Lightheaded, it felt like your head was floating. “You may speak your mind, then.”
“My lady, there are those, in the smaller villages of Valorieve, who terrorize the citizens through senseless acts of murder and remain uncaught by the mayors’ offices. Too frequently have we seen such cases. I have dedicated my entire life to advocating for tighter law enforcement, yet nothing seems to be changing. No suspects are being brought forth, and justice remains undelivered to many,” he said, his ardent words fortified by a fiery tone.
You had no response to his speech other than a lame repetition. “I-Is that so?”
“My lady, I ask you to seek justice for us. Please, have someone investigate these reoccurring cases! One innocent person after the other has been lost to these monsters who still roam free.” he presented the scroll he was carrying with him, and in it, you gleaned a long list of names. You could not tell if it was madness or anguish that glossed over his eyes when he explained, “In this paper is a list of suspects I have been compiling and investigating for the past two decades.
“My lady, I beseech you again. Please, take this information and bring these killers to justice!” he had dropped into another bow and your guards began to exchange dubious glances, sensing possible danger in his erratic behavior.
The man before you was not the same person you remembered, one who was gentle and soft-spoken. He had been the type too tender to hurt an insect, too forgiving to those who bumped into him in the streets. What happened to make him like this?
Despite the onslaught of memories that threatened to overwhelm you, you cleared your throat, gesturing for your guards to ease themselves. “This matter…seems to be deeply personal to you, Mister Yang.”
“I’m afraid it is so, my lady,” he admitted while righting himself, his gaze haunted. “The truth is that I have only begun my investigations out of a desire for vengeance. You see, my lady, I had lost my beloved to such murders twenty years ago.
“We…were to be engaged when, on the night before her twenty-first birthday, she was murdered in cold blood.”
You were suddenly nauseous, so much so that each word you mustered tasted acrid. “My condolences…to you.”
“Thank you, my lady,” he said in a low voice, gritting his teeth as he stared at the ground in frustration. “I understand that finding her killer may be nearly impossible by now but—I think I will be doing her justice if I could help protect others from reaching the same horrific fate. That is why I must ask Your Ladyship to seek justice for us.”
Unstable.
Your breaths were coming too quickly.
“That…is truly h-honorable.”
Was it?
You could no longer think clearly, for every thought in your head seemed to scream at you.
Why did he come here?
What happened to him?
Was this truly the same Jeongin you had known once upon a time?
Your mouth was moving, but you were not sure if what left it was intelligible speech.
“What…was your beloved’s name?”
There was a response so muffled you thought it was spoken underwater. Or maybe you were the one underwater.
“Her name was—”
But you could not catch the rest before your world tipped over and you were engulfed in the darkness of the past and its ghosts.
• • •
“Y/n.”
There was a gentle wind that stretched its playful fingers to tousle your hair. It sang as it did the same to the young man standing before you, making the long strands of his hair dance ever so gracefully in the air.
His eyes, which were always so kind, shone with determination, excitement, anxiety. It was all to your dismay, for you knew what he was about to utter into the universe.
“I love you. I’m in love with you and have been ever since we met under this apple tree all those years ago.”
How truly miserable.
You had tried your best to deter him, and yet here he was, confessing such reckless feelings. That soft demeanor of his was an excellent guise for his stubbornness.
“That cannot be, Jeongin,” you told him. “How could it be that you love me?”
He smiled, and it made little stars twinkle in his fox-like eyes. “I knew you would doubt me so, but I swear it, Y/n. I swear it on every star in the sky, on every god that would hear me.”
“How can you swear on the stars when you cannot see them all?” you shook your head, which elicited a musical chuckle from him.
“Your wits have always bested mine. But I am serious, and I don’t think I was ever this serious about anything else.”
“Still…” you sighed, “I’m afraid father would not approve.”
A weak excuse that did so little to scratch his will. He only declared, “Then I will earn his approval.”
You knew that it would be an easy feat for him. He might have only been a painter’s apprentice, but he was beloved by all in your village. Principled, kind, diligent. He was a good man. Your father’s approval would even precede his question.
It was pointless, all of it.
Whether or not he gained the approval he sought, your time was limited. What was left was not worth his efforts or his hopes. His so-called love was only a detriment to himself.
You did not want it. You did not want to hurt him.
But you could not tell him that. You could never.
Instead, you offered him a small smile, hating, with every fiber of your being, the happiness that illuminated his face right then. “I shall wait, then.”
Your smile was a cruelty and so were your deceptive words. With your ever-growing guilt, you could only wonder if those words would haunt him in a future that was too near.
• • •
The familiar sensation of silken sheets flooded your mind as you were roused from a slumber you did not recall falling into.
It was quiet.
You turned your head to the side, weary gaze settling on the man sitting near your bedside. Your movement was immediately noticed by him, and his head snapped up from the papers he was reading through.
An exhale of the purest relief.
“You’re awake.”
Wordlessly, you tried to push yourself to sit, and Minho stood to help you, a tender hand at your back while the other clasped yours gingerly. Someone had changed you into sleeping robes, you noticed. It most likely was your handmaidens.
You also noted the dryness of your throat, as though you had gone an entire day without a sip of water.
Perhaps reading your mind, Minho carefully filled a glass of water from the pitcher on your nightstand and handed it to you. “Here, have some water.”
“Thank you,” you murmured as you accepted the glass. Something was wrong. You should not have been sleeping in your bedchambers at this hour.
What happened to you?
Memories of visiting the temporary school washed over you like an icy wave. You were talking with the children, talking with the teachers, talking with your guards. Talking with a phantom from your past.
You gasped, choking on the bit of water that was in your mouth and making Minho panic at your side.
That was right.
You met Jeongin again. In another lifetime.
“How—How long was I asleep?” you asked through your coughs, to which Minho furrowed his eyebrows, deeply concerned. “Three hours. Are you all right? I should send for the physician.”
Three hours? Your coughing fit was beginning to die down and you shook your head. “No, there is no need. I’m all right.”
“Fainting for any reason is not ‘all right’,” he pointed.
“I’m fine,” you insisted, bringing a hand to massage your temple. “I simply…saw a ghost.”
There was a beat of silence, and then Minho breathed in more concern, “Are you seeing hallucinations, Y/n?”
The seriousness that overtook him was amusing in its ridiculousness. You could only shoot him an incredulous look. “It’s nothing of the sort.”
“Then what happened out there?”
“There was…a man.”
“Yes, he has just been released after being questioned by the knights,” Minho shared, sitting back on the chair that was placed by your bedside. His voice seemed to take on a venomous tone when he inquired, “Did he do something to you?”
You quickly shook your head. “No. He was only asking for help. He was telling me…about the murder of his beloved. He was seeking justice for her…”
“I see,” Minho hummed. “The story must have distressed you.”
“It…had.”
For some reason, you were struggling to find your words.
Guilt was the worst emotion of them all. It gnawed at your soul and haunted you endlessly, ready to sink its blameful teeth into your conscience the moment you let your guard down. And if there was something you never failed to carry through your lifetimes, it was guilt.
The insatiable monster of guilt.
You debated telling Minho. After all, you had granted Jeongin an audience. It was only fair that you relayed his pleas to the heir of the land. He would know what to do.
Perhaps then this soul-crushing feeling would cease.
A half-truth would suffice.
You drew in a shaky breath. “The only proof I have of this is my own word.”
Minho perked up, curious, and you continued, gripping the glass of water with both hands like it were a lifeline, “But you must believe me. You must give me your word, Lord Minho.”
“You have my word,” he did not hesitate, solemn as he promised. “You can tell me.”
When had he become so trusting? You did not ponder over it for too long lest you lost the meager courage you had. Your heartbeat seemed to accelerate with each word you spoke. “I know who is responsible for the murder the man spoke of.”
Another terribly unstable breath.
“There is a ritual—there is a ritual that has been performed by the royal family for centuries.”
You stopped to gauge Minho’s reaction. You knew that he would greatly benefit from any information he could use against the Rowonnese royals, but the story you were about to divulge was one without any feasible proof.
Your being there was the only proof, but you were not planning on exposing your curse to him any time soon.
To your surprise, or maybe it was to your relief, he was showing no signs of skepticism. Instead, Minho wore the expression he always had when you discussed new information with him. Thoughtful. Businesslike.
It was as though he were nudging you forward.
“Every two decades, a young lady, who…has certain qualities, must be sacrificed. I-It is a superstition of some sort. They believe that it must be done to maintain the throne.”
You omitted the part about the Renocault Order and the curse that made them chase you every lifetime. No matter how vehement he had been, you knew that those were details Minho would not believe.
You sighed, fumbling with your words, “I-I know this because he told me. The Crown Prince…I mean. That girl…she was killed twenty years ago at the hands of the former King. I have no evidence but I am sure that if we were to investigate, the truth would come to light.
“I know this—I was told this because—” your voice became a pebble lodged in your throat. You were unable to say more.
These were half-truths, yet you still felt so vulnerable, images of harrowing rejection crossing your mind. You could not tell him more. You could not risk it.
There was sudden warmth over your wrists, drawing you out of your all-consuming thoughts. Minho’s hand was soothingly placed over yours, and his voice was so kind beside you, “That’s enough. You don’t have to say more. I believe you.”
You snapped your head up to stare at him, almost gaping. “Do you truly? But I—”
“How could I not when this had clearly been so difficult on you?” he tilted his head to the side, and you chose to ignore the semblance of affection lying beneath his gaze. “We’ll investigate this ritual you speak of. You needn’t worry.”
Well, then. This was the most you could do for Jeongin.
You hoped that he would soon forgo his grief, for you did not deserve it. The ‘you’ that he had known was dead, and you did not wish to upturn the dirt of her buried past. He, too, was a fragment of that dead past. A specter of another life, bringing forth memories you preferred not to relive.
Your guilt and your anguish were too overwhelming, accumulating over lifetimes. There was too much you were sorry for. Too many people you had wronged by your passing. If only you had not been part of their lives, then you could have left without leaving a trace.
As you ought to do.
After all, those who were destined to die had no right to interfere with the affairs of those fated to live.
Your response was short, for you did not have the will to discuss this topic any longer. “Thank you.”
You busied yourself with your thoughts, sipping water from your glass slowly. So, you had fainted and been asleep for three hours since. The sun must have already set, then. You had to start preparing for tomorrow’s meetings—
Wait.
“Shouldn’t you be on your way to meet Viscount Atlasse?” wide-eyed, you questioned Minho, who had returned to his papers.
He did not look up when he nonchalantly answered, “I postponed our departure until further notice.”
“Why?” you blinked, dumbfounded for this was a meeting of high importance that had been weeks in planning. Fickleness was not particularly one of Minho’s traits. At that, he raised a surprised brow, a mirror to your bewilderment. “You, of course. How could I leave after receiving news of your sudden fainting?”
Oh.
“Still…” you diverted your gaze. He really had taken ‘becoming better’ seriously. “You should go. I’m all right.”
A shrug. “I’m sure the Viscount will understand.”
You did not like this turn of events. Abandoning his commitments like this would only do his reputation needless harm. You were sure that he knew that too, but he did not seem to care.
“I appreciate it. I truly do,” you started, trying to find the right words, “But I’m fine now, so you should depart soon. You would not want the Viscount to feel unimportant, would you?”
He scoffed in amusement. “I can’t honestly say that he ranks high in my list of priorities.”
“I’m sorry to say, but your personal priorities are of no concern. It is your reputation you must look after,” you told him with furrowed brows, which made him laugh. A short, light sound. “Always so pragmatic, aren’t you?”
“Fine,” he stood with a sigh and reached for your hand. You let him take it, watching as he pressed a chaste kiss against your knuckles. “I shall leave later tonight, as you wish.”
Gently releasing your hand, Minho stepped back and turned toward the door. With the ghost of a smile on his lips, he added, “I will call for the physician to check on you. Please rest well.”
“I will. Thank you.”
The door closed behind him with a faint click, and you exhaled, long and uneasy.
Today’s encounter and the memories that visited you in your unconsciousness were like an unpleasant omen. You needed to keep Minho at a distance for your remaining time here, lest that budding affection haunt him in the future.
•Scene 9•
When did it all start?
Minho could not pinpoint a specific moment in the past ten months. When did his suspicion turn into curiosity, and then concern?
When did all that become something more?
He did not think too much of it on the night he accepted your proposal, swathed in black and intent on killing. This deal was simply a more favorable arrangement. It furthered both his family’s political goals and his own, without bloodshed. In fact, this marriage had tied the neutral fief of Lurmuse to Valorieve’s faction by relation, thus securing their vast influence.
Your motives had been unclear at first, but he eventually gleaned a truth about the matter. The Crown Prince was a dangerous man, and you were trying to escape him. The journey to reaching that conclusion was arduous and confusing, and he still had many questions about it, but he was content with the assurance he had obtained.
Perhaps the source of it all was the air of mystery that you seemed to wear around you like a magnificent cape. What began as a means of investigating you soon morphed into genuine curiosity. Minho found himself wanting to know what you were so desperately trying to hide beneath that mysterious cape. He wanted to learn what it was that made you smile and frown, prod your precious mind to know what thoughts lived there.
In a way, you were like a breath of fresh air. Someone so different, so unexpected. You were blunt, yet polite. Forthcoming, yet reserved. Aloof, yet so kind and considerate to everyone around you. A peculiar combination, but then again, no one person’s character was ever so simple.
Sometimes, he felt as though the words that left your lips were born of the wisdom of countless years. You never said more than was necessary, each word a delicate and careful choice. Each utterance exactly what needed to be heard.
It was a pleasant change.
At first, it was protectiveness that he felt toward you, one that was the sole product of his pride. You had become one of his people, an attack on you was an attack on him. He could not let any soul on this earth disrespect him as such.
But that changed when he came to acknowledge the person you were as more than a business partner. Ever since he made that promise after the festival and confronted his conflicting emotions, he began to cherish you as an equal and a trustworthy aide.
Long had Minho felt alone in the world. His burdens as the heir of Valorieve were many, and he shouldered them with nary a complaint. This was the life he was born for, after all. But sometimes, he found himself a lone warrior in a deserted field, and that deeper solitude wore him out. His brothers were born for different roles, and he was sure that the people who would enter his life would be like that too.
To those who did not fear him, he would remain an untouchable image of nobility. A shallow imitation of the intricate person he truly was.
But then you slipped into his life like a spontaneous wind, upturning a few leaves and settling in nicely. You did not cower before his blade, nor swoon at his words. It was that same stone-carved picture of nobility—like a reflection of himself.
You seemed to think like he did. You seemed to truly acknowledge him. You did not turn a blind eye to the cold and cruel, and likewise, you did not glorify his noble side. Around you, Minho had grown comfortable to be himself, speak his mind, and know that you would not misperceive him. Know that he did not have to don a façade.
So abruptly, he found himself a lone warrior no longer.
These precious feelings became something he never wanted to lose, locked in his heart, hidden away from an unfriendly world. Feelings he wished to whisper to you one day like a secret shared only between the two of you.
Minho’s eyes spotted you easily from where he now stood conversing with a small group of viscounts. There was a smile on your lips, small, but it was one he had learned was genuine, while listening to what Lady Gaele was saying. He wished to join you, hear what it was that amused you so, but he could already hear your chastising in his head. That would be improper. Many guests here are clambering to speak to you as is.
He willed his eyes to return to the men prattling around him, wearing his polite smile with such fluid ease.  
It was all right. There was no need for haste.
He had the entirety of his lifetime to make you return his gaze.
•Scene 10•
“My most sincere apologies, but the King is unable to see you at this time.”
Felix was not surprised, for it was just as Minho predicted would happen. The royal butler would not let him meet the King.
They were standing before the doors to the King’s chambers, a group of Valorieve’s knights with him in their midst. Their goal was simple—ascertain the state of the bedridden King.
“I came here with the authority of His Excellency, the Count of Valorieve,” Felix announced with scorn in his deep voice. “You would stand in my way?”
The old butler only bowed, his words coming out smooth, “I am afraid those are the orders of His Highness, the Crown Prince, Lord Valorieve.”
Felix wanted to roll his eyes. Of course the Crown Prince had a hand in this. But there was no need for worry. He was prepared.
“Let me meet His Highness, then.”
“That would be difficult, Lord Valorieve. His Highness is presently away on business.”
What?
This was not what his intelligence had reported. The Crown Prince should have been in the castle, managing affairs in his father’s incapacitation. Unease settled deep into Felix’s heart. Something felt awfully wrong. He would have to report this back to Minho as soon as possible.
Why would the Prince leave the castle so suddenly?
Still, Felix was careful not to show his surprise as he reached into his embellished overcoat, sighing, “You leave me no choice, then.”
He pulled out a small scroll of golden paper which his father had signed and given to him before his departure from Valorieve. With a flourish, he revealed the few sentences of elegant scripture and the elaborate stamp that were contained in the scroll.
“I carry with me the Lion Permit, personally signed by His Excellency,” he declared, turning the paper from side to side for all to witness before raising his brows at the stubborn butler. “You know what this means, I presume? You must grant the carrier of this permit audience with His Majesty as per the sacred agreement signed between our fiefdoms at the founding of this kingdom.”
“Lord Valorieve…must you employ such drastic measures?” the butler scowled, failing to hide his displeasure, and Felix shrugged. “I would not need to had you granted my simple request to see His Majesty.”
A hissing chorus rose around them as the royal guards unsheathed their swords and pointed them in his direction. Their sudden hostility was met with the like from Felix’s own knights, who drew their swords unflinchingly, tightening their formation like a protective barrier.
The young Lord wanted to scoff. “You would draw your swords against a count’s son?”
“I must ask you to please leave, Lord Valorieve,” the butler said, grim-faced and defiant.
Oh, but Felix could not do that.
This was the final play of their plan, and Minho had given him the honor of revealing the truth about the bedridden King to the entirety of the kingdom. He was not one to cower in the face of a butler and a few royal guards.
“And with what authority do you dismiss the Lion Permit? Do you insinuate that the House of Rowonne would disregard an agreement that has stood for four centuries?” warnings disguised as questions. Felix was prepared to fight his way through if the need arose.
There was a beat of silence, and he tucked the permit back into his overcoat. It seemed that he would have to fight his way through, indeed.
The butler glanced at the royal guards, the wordless exchange like a cue for them to close in as he turned away.
The chaos that ensued was a blur.
Felix’s sword was drawn like a flash of lightning as he lunged forward, his knights following. Steel screeched against steel, shouts rising in the air while they fought, brilliant blue in a swarm of red.
Felix weaved his way through them with ease, his blade swinging unceasingly in a show of deadly skill. He slashed and jabbed and kicked, and his knights fought in pace with him, clearing the path and shielding him like an impenetrable wall.
With little difficulty, they reached the doors to the King’s chambers and rammed them open as more royal guards joined the fray. Felix ran through the grandiose rooms, heading straight for the bedroom where the supposed bedridden King was resting in disregard for the guards chasing him.
“Halt!” he heard someone shout, but he cared not to oblige, pushing the door to the intended room open and striding in.
It felt as though the room had not seen life in many, many months. The air was stiff and old, permeated by the smell of dust and age. Layers of the former coated the marbled floor and the antique furniture, a clear sign that no one had used this place in a long time.
In the center of the room the bed was sprawled, wide, extravagant, and utterly empty.
A laugh bubbled up Felix’s chest as he spun around to face the stunned crowd that had spilled in after him. His blue cape billowed around him triumphantly when he shouted, “Where is your king?”
No soul could answer him, for they were all standing witness to a harrowing, inexplicable truth. The King was nowhere to be found.
A truth that would be hidden no longer.
Felix sheathed his blade, his work complete, when a figure materialized out of the dark corners of the room. Their voice was like the scratch of nails on stone. “What a shocking discovery. You all must be proud.”
His grip flew to the hilt of his sword immediately, and Felix demanded with a growl, “Reveal yourself!”
His instincts never failed him. There should have been no one in the King’s rooms, so who was this suspicious person?
“It is unfortunate,” they drawled, stepping out of the shadows so calmly as though there was nothing odd about their presence. A terrible chill trailed down Felix’s spine, and he unsheathed his sword with sudden urgency.
The figure that had emerged was draped in a red cloak the dark shade of blood, their ancient hands exhibiting those cryptic circular markings he had seen only once before.
“For this discovery will stay here with your corpses.”
It was a single heartbeat of total stillness, and the cloaked figure lunged with inhuman speed, aiming straight for a discomposed Felix.
•Scene 11•
It was nearly time.
The plan that you had spent your childhood perfecting, with the accumulation of many lifetimes’ lessons as your guide, was finally reaching its climax. Tomorrow, the curtains would rise, and all your players would come together for the final act.
This was what you had waited for so patiently.
The end to your endless woes.
Why was it, then, that your heart felt heavy?
Everything had been going smoothly. You had all your pieces where you needed them to be. You thought that you had treated every prospect with the utmost fairness. You had been a dutiful daughter to your parents, and an honest heir to Lurmuse. Kind to your allies and acquaintances and helpers. Helpful to your partner and his people. You were sure that you had done enough to pass easily and pleasantly through their lives without letting them into yours.
Because that was not where they belonged—characters from a world that you had long been estranged from.
There had been times when you were confused by their kindness, but your mind was soon cleared of the fog. This was how things ought to be. How they were always going to end. You understood that. You internalized that truth.
You had done your best.
Right?
Right?
So lost in your own thoughts, you did not think to knock on the shut door of your bedchambers before barging in. The same grim thoughts that distracted you so blinked out of existence at the sight that greeted your eyes.
Minho stood near his side of the bed, mild surprise drawn over his handsome features. It seemed that he was dressing for the night, and you had interrupted him. A billowing silk shirt was half draped over his shoulders, revealing smooth skin defined by muscle, an old scar that ran messily across one shoulder blade, and—oh no.
You were staring.
A gasp.
“Pardon me!” you spun away so quickly, shutting the door behind you with an awkward cough. “Please clothe yourself.”
There was a sudden and overwhelming desire in you to simply evaporate and evade the situation you had placed yourself in. You strode away from the door, aimlessly pacing around the empty sitting room as you tried and failed to regain your composure.
How embarrassing, you could only chastise yourself. How could you forget to knock before entering?
You did not bother to gauge the time that had passed before the door opened with a soft click, followed by Minho’s seemingly amused voice, “You may come in, Y/n.”
“Ah— R-Right,” you sputtered, your embarrassment worsening infinitely when you stepped into the room. You had forgotten your initial purpose of going there in the first place.
Minho seemed unbothered, fixing his cuffs as he sat on the edge of the bed. Nevertheless, your conscience did not allow you to overlook the mishap.
“That was improper of me. I’m sorry.” you cleared your throat, to which Minho raised a brow, surprised. “Oh? It’s quite all right.”
You could not bring yourself to say more, turning toward your dresser and busying yourself with searching your drawers. That was right. You had wanted to grab your hairbrush and essential oils to prepare for the night.
“You know… I don’t mind.”
Minho’s unexpected words cut through the awkwardness of your silence, and you stilled, looking back at him.
“What?”
With his back to you, Minho titled his head enough to meet your curious gaze, elaborating, “You looking at me. I don’t find any cause for apology there, Y/n.”
“Don’t be foolish,” you quickly retorted. Somehow, your hands refused to resume their movement. “Of course there is.”
There was a sigh, not the frustrated kind, and a whisper of silk.
“That’s not what I mean.”
A chill settled into your heart like a buried seedling, ready to sprout its dreadful leaves at any moment. The atmosphere in your bedchambers was suddenly tense and oddly familiar.
A feeling that was reminiscent of past lifetimes.
“I mean to say that I wouldn’t mind it if were you,” Minho confessed softly, and you refused to turn and face him. That ominous chill stretched its thorny branches down your spine and through your body, all the way to the tips of your toes.
Though you stood still, your heart was beating as if it were physically strained. Your mind was blanking out.
This could not be happening.  
“I admit, there is much about you that I am yet to understand, but…” you knew the tone he was speaking with like an ancient adversary. Vulnerable and unsure yet gentle and determined. You could never defeat it.
No. This could not be happening.
Everything had been just fine. You did not need this, nor did he. You did not want to hear another word of confession fall from his lips.
“Despite that, Y/n, I think that I—”
“Stop this.”
So coldly, so cruelly, you cut him off, each word you uttered like the hurling of a dagger. “I will hear none of it.”
“What—”
“Lord Minho,” you snapped, trying to maintain your panic. You did not want to see the hurt that had surely soured his expression, though, you could easily envision it in your mind. It was an expression familiar to you, after all. So familiar.
He could not go on spewing those senseless, imagined feelings of his and if hurting him was the solution, then you would do it. Whatever the means—you had to stop this.
In the suffocating silence, you twisted your metaphorical knife one last time. “I don’t wish to see you right now. Leave.”
It was unbearable. A cord of tension that only wounded tighter and tighter as the seconds passed yet refused to snap. Even when Minho finally muttered, “I see. Goodnight.”
You heard him move around the room, and then you heard the door’s quiet click as it shut behind him. No more words were spoken. No more mistaken confessions.
You did not notice the trembling of your hands until he left, and you found yourself crumbling to the floor.
How could this have happened? After everything you had done. All of your planning and care. Everything had been going well, and now it seemed like your world was falling apart before your very eyes.
As though the heaviness in your heart was not enough, now you had dread to accompany it.
How could this have happened, and only a day away from the fated night?
☙ The Final Act.
•Scene 1•
The sleep that you had managed to get that night was a bare wink.
After your panic had ceased, you realized just how reckless your actions had been. Fighting with Minho was not the move to make, not if you wanted your plan to proceed smoothly.
Now that it had come to this, you should have prioritized your success over the possible aftermath. That was what the rational part of your brain suggested.
But instead, you had acted out of guilt. Fear for him. Deep down, you did not want Minho to be hurt like Jeongin had been. It was the same for everyone you had met in this lifetime, but Minho was slightly different. Almost special.
He was your beacon of light, after all. His brilliance was a treasure you wished to never be lost.
Regardless, you had to make amends somehow. Tonight was the most important night of your life, and it had to pass exactly as you envisioned. That demanded Minho’s cooperation.
You took in your reflection in the tall mirror blankly. The dress your handmaidens had fitted you in was a magnificent puff of a very dark blue. A twisting embroidery of flowers adorned the neckline and dotted the sheer sleeves, which were snug around your arms. Emeralds encrusted your ears, paired with the large gem resting against the base of your neck and the intricate accessory crowning your head. They had taken special care to prepare you for tonight’s banquet, for it was in celebration of your birthday.
It was a party that would last until midnight on the eve of your birthday, as was the tradition in your kingdom. It worked perfectly with your plans. The Crown Prince would not dare attack in the midst of all the attendees.
The gown you were wearing was meant to make you feel special on this night, but instead, it felt like you were dressed for battle. The soft knock that sounded on the door just then was the battle drum, signaling the beginning of your fateful fight.
“Come in,” you answered, almost sure of who stood behind that door. Your chance to make amends was here.
When Minho stepped in, a hush settled among your previously buzzing handmaidens. The tension between the two of you was not missed on them, it seemed. Unsurprisingly, for as formal as the two of you might have been, you had always been amicable.
This was a first.
“I’ve come to escort you. Are you ready?” his question sounded emotionless, which made you turn and smile kindly at your handmaidens. “Thank you all. You are dismissed.”
Released from the awkward atmosphere, they scurried out of the room, and you were left to face Minho alone.
His attire for the evening seemed to match yours. A sharp suit of dark blue, lacking his usual shoulder cape, with an embroidery of miniature flowers sewn into the cuffs and lapels. The emerald on his necktie was like a mirror to the one on your neck, glittering and precious.
Dressed like this, the two of you looked like the ideal noble couple, but the unresolved tensions from last night stood between you like a forbidding wall. A barrier that you had constructed yourself, yet it was one that you had to demolish by your own hands.
“Lord Minho,” you began with a deep inhale, drawing his dejected attention with the formality of your words. It may have been close to a year since the two of you married, but this verbal distance was something you needed to maintain on your behalf. Like a constant reminder. Though, it was not unprecedented for noble couples to address one another with their titles.
“I apologize for my unseemly outburst last night. I…do hope you would find it in your heart to forgive me,” you said. “It saddens me to celebrate tonight with such unsavory tension between us.”
Your words were true, and you meant them from the deepest crevices of your heart, even though they played perfectly into your plans. You realized that you did not like the idea of ending things on a bitter note and hurting Minho, despite thinking you were content with the notion beforehand.  
With a faint shake of his head, Minho’s shoulders dropped, his response surprising, “No, it is I who should be apologizing to you.
“I realize that I might have sprung my feelings on you at an inappropriate time. Today is the day you had been dreading all along, after all. I should have been more considerate of that fact.”
“N-No really…” there it was again. You never knew how to respond to him when he spoke like this. Magnanimous understanding, a kindness that was never blameful, never shallow. Even now, on a night when you knew so well you could no longer relish in these feelings, your heart warmed.
Who could have thought that the cruel and calculating man you had chosen to be your aide was capable of such sensitivity? You were in the wrong too and yet—
“I still should not have been so harsh,” you managed, your voice small after all your earlier bravado seemed to betray you. You had no qualms about apologizing to someone before, when had it become such an awkward feat?
“Perhaps the blame falls on us both,” Minho conceded, a light small finding home on his lips before he held his hand out like a peace offering. “Let us agree to forgive one another. I, too, would hate for your party to pass like this.”
You took his hand without a moment’s hesitation, mimicking his smile. “I agree, let us do that.”
And so, the tension that was wound so tightly around you was eased and the two of you began to make your way toward the banquet hall.
“I stationed the guards as we have discussed previously,” Minho told you as you walked with him through the grand hallways of the palace. “No soul will be able to enter or leave without our knowledge, and should there be intruders, we would be alerted immediately.”
You hummed in acknowledgment, carefully taking in the information. This banquet was no mere celebration. It was your shield from the Crown Prince. As long as you remained amidst the guests, protected by the guarded walls of the palace, you would be safe. Once the clock struck midnight, he would pose no danger to you anymore. And then…
“Are you sure he’ll show?” Minho’s tone was tense and wrought with concern when he asked, and you shrugged. You knew the Prince enough to know he would not take his defeat lying down.
“He will try, at the very least.”
Minho was silent for a moment before muttering, “He should be in Rowonne as of now…”
Right. Your intelligence networks last reported that the Prince was still in his castle, tending after his supposedly ill father. No movement was detected from him, yet.
You found his quietness to be highly suspicious.
Though, you knew that Minho’s worry was not only caused by the royal’s uncertain whereabouts. Word was yet to reach you from Felix, who had left with a delegation from Valorieve to demand an audience with the King some three weeks ago.
By now, he should have been on the road back to his homeland, carrying with him news of the King’s death.
Instead, you had heard nothing from him since his arrival in Rowonne.
The lack of correspondence must be plaguing Minho’s mind, you determined. This was a period of importance for his own plans, and his brother’s life may as well be in terrible danger.
“Don’t worry,” you could only offer weak reassurance. “I’m sure that Lord Felix is safe, and that you’ll hear from him soon enough. And…we’ve prepared well for tonight, so it will hopefully pass without trouble.”
“You’re right. He is not a helpless boy,” Minho sighed, though his words seemed to convince him very little. He shifted his gaze to settle on you, grave in its seriousness. “As for the banquet, I think it best if you remained by my side for its duration.”
“Of course.” you looked away, feeling slightly embarrassed by the earnestness in his tone. You had intended to stick to him throughout the banquet anyway. “I was not planning on doing otherwise.”
Before you realized it, the two of you reached the grand doors of the banquet hall. A couple of guards, who stood vigilant by the entrance, pushed the doors open for the two of you, and you heard the head butler on the other side declare your names to the hall of attendees.
“Right. Before we go in...” Minho paused and turned his head toward you. There was a twinkle in his cunning eyes, playful yet every bit sincere when he remarked, “You look beautiful, Y/n.”
Without sparing you a beat to process his words, he stepped into the dazzling lights of the banquet hall. You could only trail after him, speechless at the start of the most important night of your life.
• • •
You could taste sorrow in every sip of your wine. Has the drink always been so bitter or was this a new concoction specially made for your fateful banquet?
Everywhere you looked you saw the faces of family and friends. Kind, joyful faces that looked upon you with love and pride, gentle gazes not at all aware of the rampant discord in your heart.
It was a crushing sense of melancholy. A ruthless blade that seemed to cut more of your composure as the night passed. Every person in that banquet hall and everything in it was a stark reminder of what was to come—what you were to lose.
A hurtful notion, it wriggled deep and deeper into your mind like an unwelcome guest with every faux smile and empty remark you mustered.
You had thought that lifetimes of losing the same things would have prepared you better for this. Perhaps desensitized you to the pain of an impending farewell. Foolishly, you had survived the day thinking you could make it through the night without this terrible pain.
But it was always there.
Every lifetime.
When the critical hour inched closer, every emotion you had long buried arose, benevolent like a tide in a dark night’s ocean. Fear, unease, and worst of all, grief so vast you could only cower before it.
Tonight was no exception.
The tenth hour chimed, and it became almost difficult to breathe. Such a suffocating sentiment. Had you not boasted better than this?
You gave Minho’s sleeve a furtive tug, and when he leaned ever so slightly to your side, you muttered a question into your glass, “Could we move to the gardens?”
Perhaps noticing your silent distress, Minho’s whispered agreement came swiftly, “Of course.”
He turned casually to regard the nobles around you, and a charming smile quirked his lips as he brought up the suggestion to them, “My friends and honored guests, would you care to join us under the light of the stars for a change of scenery? The gardens were earlier prepared for us to enjoy.”
He needed not charm them so, for they had always been eager to take his suggestions, happy to crowd him wherever he went. When the murmurs of approval rose among them, you dared to glance up at Minho and the ever-glowing halo that surrounded him.
Oh, he was the worst reminder of them all.
A person you had deliberately chosen after years of meticulous planning, he had unknowingly barged into your heart one day and claimed part of it for himself. And you were almost helpless in the face of his sudden conquest. No matter how many times you attempted to drive him out, he remained stubbornly there, until you had raised your white flags in surrender.
You let this uncanny affection linger and grow as you tried to pay it no mind. As though it were not an attachment born of your heart’s truest hopes and deepest wishes.
Someone—anyone who could save you.
A star so glorious it could diminish the night.
How heavy a shame it was that you would have to lose sight of that star very soon.
You were at the forefront of the crowd of guests streaming into the palace gardens, all easy smiles and flattering words, when a breeze so gentle in its coldness caressed your cheeks, welcoming you outside.
You filled your chest with the crisp night air and willed yourself to forget, bade your heart to quieten. You had no taste for melancholy tonight. As the faces around you changed and you exchanged pleasantries with more guests, you forced yourself to accept that fact.
For the plan’s sake, you could not afford more than anxiety to keep your thoughts busy.
“Lady Valorieve,” a familiar voice called out, and you turned in its direction, spotting your friend approaching with a lovely smile on her tinted lips.
“Lady Geale,” you mirrored her to the best of your ability, trying to hide your agitation behind the sincerity you truly did hold toward her, “I had been awaiting your company. Please, join us—!”
There was a snap of a bow and a scream of air. Then, there was burning pain.
Your thoughts were thrown into upheaval as were your surroundings. You could hear the shouting of your guests intermingled with that of your guards. Glass shattering. Ears ringing.
A hand clasped your shoulder roughly and brought you into an embrace as though to shield you. “Y/n! Are you all right? Gods—you’re bleeding!”
You could make out Minho’s frantic words in the midst of it all and you tried to right yourself against him. It was merely a scratch, you did not need to cushion your head against his chest for it. “I’m fine. It missed me.”
Miraculously so.
The arrow that shot at you came from somewhere deep within the garden’s greenery and was a hair’s breadth away from impaling your shoulder. It seemed that only a miracle found it instead buried in one of the rose bushes circling the clearing. Fortunately, it collected no other victims as it made its way there.
“Still, you must be tended to immediately,” Minho argued, gaze roaming everywhere, taking in the movements of all his guards and guests. Gone was the merry host of a few moments ago. Now, a grave seriousness had settled between his dark brows and voided his voice of any humor when he added, “It’s too dangerous for you to remain here. We must return to the palace.”
It was indeed dangerous. That arrow could not have been a mistake and it would not have been difficult for the Renocault Order to infiltrate the palace grounds. The realization thumped inside your heart wildly—your enemies were here.
Minho began moving, his strides long and purposeful, and you had no choice but to follow. He held you as if he would be your shelter and shield under a hail of arrows, not once bothered by the smear of your blood on his priceless suit.
From the corner of your eye, you saw a flurry of guards run into the depths of the garden, chasing the culprit, furtive flickers of silver armor against the light of their blazing torches. Their success was uncertain, unlikely, even. Your would-be assassin had probably escaped by now, set on a fresh plan to get to you, and for all your bolstered defenses, you knew that they would eventually find you.
It was a certainty you felt in your chest, as sure and true as the breath puffing out of it.
When you and Minho made it back into the banquet hall, Ryujin materialized before you, a slight expression of concern on her stoic countenance. “My lady, what—”
“Her ladyship has been injured,” Minho interjected hastily, not sparing a breath before giving his orders, “You are to take her away and tend to her wound. The knights will protect you.”
Understanding dawned on her and she squared her shoulders, furrowing her brows when she said, “Please follow me, then, my lady.”
“Go,” Minho murmured as he loosened his protective hold on you. “I will be with you shortly.”
He was trying to maintain his calm, but you could see the agitation so softly twitching in his jaw. This was not an unexpected turn of events. You had presented the possibility of a remote attack during the many meetings you held in preparation for tonight. However, it was a possibility you deemed outrageous. It was far too risky for the Crown Prince. For him to pull such an audacious attack meant only that he was more than simply desperate. He was far gone.
The Prince had likely lost his wits.
Surely, they could not have predicted that you would step out in the open during the banquet. It must be then that their initial plan was to shatter the windows of the banquet hall and shoot indiscriminately, attacking your guests alongside yourself. If so, how long had they been camping out there, slipping under the nose of the palace guard?
Minho seemed to have arrived at the same grim conclusions. Your safety was not the only one under threat anymore. Every soul in this hall was.
And it fell upon his shoulders to end this chaos before it fully ensued.
With a last glance of farewell, you parted with Minho and fell in hurried step behind Ryujin. The graze from the arrow stung on your shoulder, exposed to the elements, but you could not feel it over the numbness that engulfed your mind.
It was happening. It was finally happening.
This was the hour you had anticipated with your heart lodged in your throat. You were unsure if you were thankful for its arrival, or if you missed the ignorance of a mere minutes ago, when all you could do was wait and imagine all the ways this could unfold. All the ways your plan could go awry.
Your guards joined you once you left the hall, led by an unquestioning Seungmin. He was briefed on tonight’s special protocol, but it seemed that the commotion inside had not reached them yet, contained by the extravagant walls of the banquet hall. You supposed you were thankful for that. The peace made it easier to spot any intruders.
You reached your destination without trouble and slipped into your guarded chambers, leaving Seungmin and his squad to join the rest of the knights at your door. Ryujin ushered you to rest on one of the plump couches in your sitting room, and it took only a few moments of patience until a physician entered your chamber, carrying with him a trusty medical kit.
Your wound was a little deeper than a scratch, but harmless, nonetheless. Whoever made the shot must have been overly hasty to miss the target so terribly, you thought, grimacing lightly as your injury was disinfected. You supposed you should be thankful for their incompetence.
After your shoulder was bandaged, the physician left, and Ryujin turned to the matter of your ruined dress. As she rummaged through your dressing room, you found yourself wandering in the dark maze of your thoughts.
It was quiet. And it unsettled you.
That attack was sudden and it was followed by silence. Was the Crown Prince acting alone? Who was your foe for tonight and where was his army?
Being separated from Minho seemed to bother you as well. Did he not declare that he would be with you shortly? Where was he now? Did he manage to apprehend the assassin, or did harm befall him while you escaped?
It was quiet. And it plagued your mind with questions.
“My lady.” Ryujin stepped out of the dressing room, announcing, “I have selected a few dresses for you to look at.”
“Thank you,” you sighed. Perhaps busying yourself with a trivial task such as this would ease your distress until your husband arrived.
But when you stood up to make your way to the dressing room, something crashed through the doors of the balcony, sending shards of glass into the air like a crystalline rain.
Something that was much larger and heavier than an arrow, and infinitely, infinitely worse.
You stared at the face of your darkest nightmares, and he laughed.
“There you are!”
•Scene 2•
You screamed, and it felt like the sound ripped your lungs apart.
“Guards!”
Stumbling, falling, you barely evaded the head of an axe falling down on you like a hammer as you crawled, tangled in your own skirts.
The heavy blade embedded itself into the floor when it missed your skull, shattering the marble, and its wielder dislodged it with ease. Eyes like fire, empty and ablaze, he regarded you like one would a measly, pesky roach.
The man who encroached on your safety was not the same Crown Prince you had known for fifteen years. His clothes were ragged, and so was his appearance. His gaze was hollow, and so were his proud cheeks. He seemed to care not if his face was recognized. Whatever happened to him since your last meeting had visibly taken a toll on him. He had become a man deranged. As though something wild had overtaken his body.
But it was still him. That idle thing inside of you stirred in recognition of the being fatefully intertwined with it. To seek and to be found.
Your knights barged in, and Seungmin’s voice rose in the air like a thunderclap, “Intruder! Protect Her Ladyship!”
At the same moment, Ryujin swooped in beside you, pulling you to your feet and shouting over the clanking of armor, “We must get out of here, my lady!”
But you could hear none of them over the thrashing in your chest, deafening you to all but the Prince’s presence. You were frozen in place when he lunged at you, chained by the memories of twenty other lifetimes, and the deaths that always followed.
At the hands of the Blood of the First. Always by his hand.
To seek and to be found.
He was met with your knights, a formidable shield that overwhelmed him easily with its numbers. They granted you the clearance to escape, and Ryujin snatched it, nearly dragging your limp body toward the door.
“Keep this with you!” she shoved a dagger into your hand as she continued her laboring trek, leaving the knights to their duty behind you. You barely registered her words, focused on the Prince’s cursing and snarling as he tried and failed to break through them.
He was stuck, you noted with near relief.
As long as he stayed there, you could escape. You could hide. Your plan could succeed.
How naïve.
You gasped, and your surroundings suddenly came into sharp focus. Every sound and movement pierced your consciousness as though you had emerged out of dark water.
You turned around and shoved Ryujin with the most strength you could muster, narrowly missing the inked hands that reached for her throat.
The Renocault Order was here.
Materializing out of nothingness, your foe’s army.
“Where are you going, demon?” the red-cloaked mage sneered, and you could almost feel the curse swelling in his ancient hands. Hands which he was stretching out toward you. “You must stay put—”
Your arm moved unthinkingly, swiping the dagger Ryujin gave you at him and backing away. With a wavering voice, you shouted, “Don’t you touch me!”
Curses were rare and extremely dangerous. Being touched by those hands would mean immediate doom for you and your plan.
The Renocault Order was comprised of heretics and dark mages who used these curses at the cost of their own souls. Communicating with otherworldly beings and giving away their mortality as the price for tampering with the forbidden. Hence, curses were only used sparingly and on special occasions.
Tonight was special, indeed.
With the mage blocking your exit, you tried to find another, but everywhere you looked around you, you saw members of the Order in their telltale cloaks. They broke apart your circle of knights, scattered silver among red.
“Do not falter! This enemy does not relent so do not waste your time defending!” you could hear Seungmin command, having gained wisdom from his last encounter with the Order. “They must be killed!”
The small group of knights heeded his word and charged at the mages. Your sitting room was in no way spacious enough for a fight, but they managed, swords and knives flashing.
Meanwhile, Ryujin had recovered from your push and procured a small blade to fight with. She did not look back at you when she urged, “Hide! I’ll deal with him.”
“But—”
He’s dangerous, you wanted to say, but the words disappeared on your tongue when you saw the way she stood up to him. They were all dangerous, but Ryujin and your knights did not cower, did not shrink before their greater adversary.
You could not act foolishly now. Not when they were laying down their lives for your protection.
So, instead, you picked up your skirts and hurled a warning at her, “Do not let him touch you!”
She gave you a smile, the first you had seen from her. It seemed to assure you and say, ‘Do not worry—trust me’.
So, you chose to trust her and all your valiant knights.
The fight that unfolded in your chambers was almost uncontrollable. Mages lurched from one place to another, engaging your guards in brutish brawls, while the knights tried their best to contain the disorder and maintain their formation. Though undoubtedly chaotic, the fight allowed you to move almost unnoticeably while the enemy was distracted.
You sneaked behind them as quickly as you could, making your way toward the bedchambers. You thought that if you could get inside and bar the door, you might be able to buy yourself enough time to form a new plan of escape.
You caught Seungmin’s eyes, and he seemed to understand your intentions immediately, but you also caught another’s less desirable attention.
The Prince turned away from his opponent, as though he had forgotten he was even there and suddenly remembered his purpose, and leaped in your direction, swinging his axe wildly. Seungmin intercepted him in a heartbeat, grunting as he tried to push him back, “My lady, go!”
And you did, quickening your pace into a run as fear grappled for control of your mind. You would not let it. You could not.
The Prince was angry, and as though responding to his anger, the mages grew more aggressive. Shouts of effort and groans of pain became louder as you hastened toward the double doors of your bedchambers. You could not afford to look back at the knights and worry over them.
You trusted them.
You had chosen to trust them, and that trust would have to be enough.
Despite the guards in his way, the Crown Prince managed to remain close by, a mere few steps behind. He did not care who or what he was cutting down with his axe, for he waved it about like it were a harmless fan. It made him an unpredictable, difficult opponent. A deadly whirlwind of blades.
When you reached the doors, you pushed one open without sparing a breath and nearly jumped into the familiar safety of your bedchambers. Whirling around, you met the Prince’s frantic, crazed gaze for only the fraction of a second it took until you gathered all your strength and slammed the door shut in his face.
He had been too close. Had you waited even a beat later, he would have stuck his arm through and forced his way in, and you would have been too weak to stop him.
You heard him shout his frustration outside as you locked the door, and while you took around the moonlit room, pushing the few chairs and settees and piling them against the door, a full fight seemed to unfold behind it. You tried to pay them no mind. Trust, trust, trust—you had chosen trust and you had to stick to it.
Once you barred the door sufficiently enough, you paced around the room, trying to construct a plan from the very few options before you.
The only other exit in this room was through the balcony, and when you looked out its glass doors, you determined that the fall would be too risky. You were not so invincible on this night, after all. That was what made it so special.
The eve of your twenty-first birthday was the only day in which you could be killed, and on this day, your life lay in the hands of the Blood of the First and your own. If you died before the twelfth hour, you would be reborn into another body, another life.
And you always died on this day. That was your curse.
At least that was what you could deduce from your curse after decades of repeating the same pattern of death and rebirth.
Since your usual near-death stunts were out of the question, you discarded the idea of escaping through the balcony. The dagger Ryujin had given you was still in your possession—perhaps you could find a nook and hide in it until help arrived?
You did not have the leisure of contemplating that plan, for a terrible crashing noise boomed in your ears.
The doors. You turned around with a shrill gasp.
The doors were being broken down.
The sound, like the grave strikes of a pendulum, washed a wave of terror over you. It seemed that the Prince was hacking at the wood with his axe, relentlessly, madly, and you could hear your knights trying to stop him without avail.
You had a few minutes at most.
Any semblance of a plan would have to suffice.
With your breath caught in your throat, you ran to your dresser and pushed the heavy piece of furniture with newfound force, perfumes and oils clinking then shattering on the floor. This way you had some sort of shield to duck behind. Your chairs were all stacked up against the door, but perhaps you could use them later, hurl them in his way if need be.
You had to survive.
You had to survive tonight.
You dropped to your knees behind the shifted dresser, gripping your only weapon like a lifeline, and waited. Your heartbeat was one with the falls of the axe, counting each second like it were a curse.
When you glimpsed light peeking through the wood, you knew that your momentary safety was gone. The haven that you had retreated to every night of this tumultuous year was finally breached.
You stopped watching as the hole grew bigger, choosing to duck and ease your erratic breath. Escape was not an option yet. You had to hold out until Minho arrived. He would save you, then, as he had done several times before. As you knew he would.
So just wait, you told yourself. Just wait.
The last crash was followed by an uproar, and you bit your tongue to stifle any noise. From the sound of it, the Prince seemed to struggle very little with the barricade of chairs, landing on the ground with a reckless thud soon enough. A few knights must have followed him through the narrow opening, for you heard them shouting at one another to stop him.
There was a short scuffle between them and the Prince, which was abruptly stopped when you heard Seungmin warn, “Red cloaks!”  
Mages.
They must have joined to keep the knights off the Prince’s back, but you could not discern more from hearing alone. Instead, you strained your eyes to study the shadows on the floor. Muddled and frenzied, you could not tell friend from foe through them.
But you could see one shadow behaving differently, moving closer.
Heavy breathing, and the scraping of metal against marble.
Your gaze was drawn up as if by some otherworldly force—perhaps the fate that found you meeting like this over and over again—and locked eyes with your mad Prince.
Again, his lips stretched in the most wicked of smiles.
“There you are!”
His axe winked in the scarce light, and you rolled out of its range as it fell down in one deadly swoop, halving your precious dresser.
You gathered what you could of your dress and stumbled away, willing your legs into a dash. The knights were occupied with the mages, and there was nowhere to run to but around the vast chamber.
So you ran. You were not foolish enough to believe you could evade the Prince for long. He was faster and bigger than you were. Unlike Ryujin or Seungmin or Minho, you were no fighter, but you thought you could make this chase a little more difficult for him.
You pushed the small tea table and let it crash and roll on the floor, not stopping once to witness the damage it caused. You then scrambled onto the bed, narrowly missing a swing of the axe, and half ran, half jumped across it to land ungracefully on the other side.
This dress was making it difficult to move, even though it was the lightest you could choose.
The Prince caught up to you in a beat, and you felt him grab a fistful of your skirt, pulling you back toward him.
No! The thought boomed in your head so forcefully.
You spun around and slashed his hand with your dagger, freeing yourself with a desperation you had grown all too familiar with. It blinded you, made you unable to hear even your own thoughts. The only thing that mattered was that oppressive urge to survive. It fueled you like oil to a flame.
You ran and crouched and tumbled to the floor when you had to, uncaring what bruises or scratches may have resulted from your actions. All to keep your neck free from the Prince’s blade.
But it seemed that your efforts began to anger him. He shouted when you hefted one of the chairs in the makeshift barricade and used it to block one of his attacks, “Stay still, damn it!”
You did not care, even though it terrified you. He could let his anger consume him all he wanted. He knew nothing of true anger anyway. Your own frustration had been simmering for many, many years in contrast. It was the reason you were trying so hard, fighting so hopelessly.
His fury could never compare to the depth of the torment he and his ancestors had caused you.
You scurried away, continuing your desperate evasion when your trance was shattered by the harsh noise of wood being smashed. Instinctively, you turned your head in the direction of the sound and glimpsed a flood of silver-armored knights against the light.
Though, that was an unwise decision on your behalf.
A jarring laugh came from behind you, and too late did you glimpse the glint of the axe as it rose menacingly in the air.
Stupid. Stupid. Stupid.
You had become paralyzed before him and his smile of cruel victory.
“Goodbye, demon!”
You should move. You had to move. But all you could do was stare, wide-eyed, off-guard.
And in those last moments, in a bout of sudden clarity, a memory emerged in your mind. That entity hidden deep within you seemed to breathe for the first time.
A name forgotten. One you could never recall.
Reval.
• • •
The axe should have fallen.
It should have landed and stolen your breath.
But in that blur of a moment, a body tackled the Prince, driving him to the floor and diverting his aim.
“I told you, haven’t I?”
Over the mayhem, his familiar voice resounded.
“If I see you here again, I will kill you!”
“Lord Lee,” there was a growl in response from the Prince, who pushed himself to his feet. “What uncanny timing you have.”
Your panic, your desperation, it all ceased at the sight of Minho. As though you had not laid eyes upon him in a lifetime, and he was the balm to your every concern.
He had brought with him a retinue of knights who had broken down the door to your chambers and barged in to help their comrades with the mages. Light streamed into the room due to their efforts, and you could see more clearly now the fight that had unfolded around you.
“Y/n.” Minho did not take his eyes off the enemy when he asked, “Can you stand?”
“Y-Yes,” your voice wavered involuntarily, suddenly wrought with so much emotion. What took him so long? “Yes, I can.”
“Good,” he said, pointing his sword to the ground beside him, poised for attack. “Run, then—”
The Prince did not give him the luxury to finish speaking, springing at him as though to catch him by surprise. His attempt was futile, however, for Minho met him with utmost readiness, steel gnashing against wood as he blocked his offense.
You were entranced by their fight. Transfixed by fear or perhaps it was worry that trapped you. An axe and a sword were not the most compatible of weapons, but that conflict did not deter Minho, who pushed the Prince back, demanding, “All this for a rejected proposal?!”
Your heart seemed to drop at his assumption. You had nearly forgotten that in Minho’s eyes, this was a conflict born out of the Prince’s possessiveness. A heartbreak that bubbled over into madness.
At that, the Royal guffawed, mocking, “Proposal? Why ever would I wish to marry a demon?”
You bristled at his remark and he caught it, sneering like a depraved killer. “Oh, what’s this? Have you not told your beloved husband, little demon?”
“Vile bastard,” Minho gritted his teeth. “You’ve lost your mind, haven’t you?”
The Prince ignored him, shouting over to you, “What’s wrong, Y/n? Why won’t you tell him?”
You knew the answer, and so did he.
It was because you were afraid. You were scared of losing your family, your friends, your life, all at the cost of your secret. Because the timeless truth was that they would either shun you for it or die from it.
There was no escaping that miserable fate.
“Don’t answer him, Y/n,” Minho interjected, standing in front of you protectively. His words were not an order, but an assurance that you needed not humor the Prince.
“Tell him, Lady Lurmuse!” the Prince insisted again, “Lest my patience runs dry, tell him!”
“Ignore his insane ramblings—”
The Prince lunged at him, cutting him off as he swiped his axe across the air in a deadly arc. “Listen, heir of Valorieve!”
No, no! Your heart began to hammer in your chest, scream in its chamber of flesh while your voice had utterly faded. He was going to tell him. He was going to tell him everything and still, you could say nothing to stop him.
“Your precious wife is no human at all—she’s cursed!” he laughed as he pressed Minho and found himself pushed back yet again. His words were wreaking havoc on everything you had worked for, destroying it right before your eyes. He knew it. And you knew that he greatly enjoyed it.  
But your mouth was running dry and you could not conjure the words to defend yourself. Anything—you had to say something before Minho turned his back—
A single, halting thought flickered in your mind like a budding flame.
Would he really turn his back on you?
After everything you had experienced with him over the past eleven months. After all his unending kindness, would he truly abandon you if he discovered the truth?
You found the answer in a heart that suddenly beat steady and sure.
“Did you know, or did she not tell you?” the Prince taunted, his weapon swinging about relentlessly. His attacks seemed focused on Minho now, as though intent on taking him down first. “Cursed to live and die again and again at my hands! So, you would be wise to step away, Lord Lee.”
His remarks stoked the flame into a blazing fire.
No. The answer to your question was as obvious as a moon in a depthless night and as glorious as its light. Your husband would not turn his back on you.
He had proven that to you over and over again, even if you pretended not to see it.
It was time you trusted him fully, too.
Minho snarled as he parried a blow from the Prince, “I will have none of your madness—”
“It’s true!”
There was your voice.
You did not need that damned Prince to divulge your secrets for you. You could tell Minho yourself just fine.
The two men stopped to look at you, one morbidly gleeful while the other was concerned.
“I-I’m sorry.” you kept your gaze locked with Minho’s, anchoring yourself with it lest your anxiety sent you adrift. It had been so long since you uttered something like this aloud. Your every limb was trembling, and the dagger in your grip was almost too slippery to keep hold of.
Was this weakness or was it courage?
“It is as he says. I am cursed to be reborn,” you mustered the words with difficulty and sought the change in Minho’s countenance. You waited for his expression to shift, to darken, to reject you.
But he remained unreadable, and you dared to venture, breath hitching, “That is why—that is why he means to kill me. Because, Lord Minho, I am a living curse…and he seeks the power of my curse.”
There it was.
The truth as you knew it and as the Rowonnese royals had so graciously informed you. You were the embodiment of a curse that they had once sought, four centuries past, for the attainment of the kingdom’s coveted throne.
Your death was the necessary sacrifice that had to be honored on this day, in every lifetime, forever, for the sake of that throne.
“See!” the Prince’s delight was savage, and he turned his attention toward a still-quiet Minho. “Now, you will step aside, or you will help me capture this demon.”
The silence that followed was sickening, and you thought that you were going to collapse had Minho not finally spoken.
“This changes nothing.”
Three words that he spoke so resolutely, so sternly, and it triggered a riot in your head. Even though you could not decipher his expression, you felt it. Relief so immense in its weight that it made you shiver. Emotion that warmed your eyes and nearly blurred your vision.
Minho, ever so brilliant, ever so lovely, pointed his sword at the Prince and declared then, “I swore many months ago to kill you for your transgressions, and I shall.”
“Ha! Surely you cannot mean what you say?” the royal scoffed. “Are you not revolted by the foulness of this creature—?”
The wind was knocked out of his lungs before he could finish.
“You mistake me again for a man who jests, Your Highness,” Minho all but spat the words at him, having knocked him down in a blur of motion. “I will have no more of you insulting my wife.”
“You will regret this,” the Prince grunted as he regained his footing, his tone darkening, and without missing a beat, he charged. The chamber had emptied by then. The knights had overwhelmed and defeated the mages, and only you three remained.
Their weapons were not equals, and neither were the wielders.
When it came to skill, the Prince paled in comparison to many you knew. He relied too much on his otherworldly gifts of strength and stamina, thinking them enough to stand against talent and martial discipline.
But an axe was too cumbersome a weapon and far less elegant than a sword that pierced the air with lethal precision. When it came to skill, Minho was the better of them.
You watched him move through the fight, every step and swing and dodge of his as fluid as crystal water and just as sharp. He did not falter, did not pause once to think about his next step, and yet, his blows were calculated and always landed true.
You watched with a heart that followed him like a shadow.
You watched, and you saw the Prince’s desperation grow.
He tried to change his target, to break away from the hopeless duel and attack you instead, but Minho did not spare him a breath of space. He truly did intend to kill. That much was evident in every pointed slash of his sword.
But as much as killing the Prince would ease your worries and aid your plan, you could not permit it. It seemed that none of Valorieve’s sons understood the repercussions of such a crime.
Or perhaps they cared not.
It did not matter to you which of the two it was, the Prince must not be killed in this struggle.
Then, by a very predictable turn of events, the Prince found himself defenseless on the ground, clutching a wound in his stomach, with Minho’s sword arcing toward his neck.
He would be dead in a matter of seconds.
“Don’t kill him!” the call left your lips before you could stop it, and, reminiscent of that day in the festival, Minho’s weapon stilled in the air. A testament to the sheer control he possessed.
He whirled around, disbelieving, exclaiming, “He was swinging an axe at you—!”
“You’ll be executed!”
You did not intend to sound so desperate, but your voice betrayed you again. At once, Minho’s formidable expression broke down, softened, and you were almost pleading with him, “Please…”
You could not allow him to die for the downfall of someone so trivial, so unimportant. He had to live, long and happy and prosperous, as he was destined to.
After a beat of quiet that was only interrupted by the Prince’s groaning, Minho conceded, so gently it seemed out of place for the night’s events. “As you wish.”
He turned to look down at the royal, who was only now sitting upright and pathetically clutching his fallen axe, and told him, “I granted you this mercy only at her behest. Remember that.”
“You—”
And then, with a motion so quick and so brutal it startled you, he flipped his sword and rammed its hilt against the back of the Prince’s head.
The latter toppled to the ground, the words dying on his tongue as his eyes rolled back. Only when he went utterly still did the strength leave your body, and you found yourself crumpling on the floor like a broken marionette.
It was done.
“Y/n!”
You heard Minho frantically call your name, and then the pounding of boots as a new group of knights entered the wrecked chambers.
“My lord, are you all right?”
It was done.
“I’m fine. Apprehend this man here and fetch a physician for Her Ladyship post-haste,” he gave them his orders hurriedly then rushed over to kneel before you, discarding his sword to the side.
It was done.
His hands cradled your cheeks, warm, always so warm as he lifted your head and murmured, “Y/n, look at me.”
And at his gentle coaxing, you did, ignoring the strange feelings of hollowness and wariness that floated aimlessly in your heart. You took him in and the disheveled state of his hair, the wrinkle of concern in his brows, the slight exertion in his breath. You let your gaze melt in his, for that was all you had the strength for.
“You’re hurt,” he commented, and there was frustration lurking beneath those words. Perhaps at himself, or perhaps at fate for bringing you to this point.
You wanted to tell him that it was all right. That he should not fault himself for tonight’s events. You wanted to reach out and touch his face as he did yours to assure him yourself. It will be all right. You will be all right.
But before you found the energy to utter those words, the twelfth hour struck, its bells resonating throughout the palace.
It was done.
Your consciousness slipped from your grasp to the cadence of the chimes. A drum that signaled the end of your fateful battle.
•Scene 3•
“Have you found him yet?”
Your eyes snapped open to be met with a gaze of depthless blue, an entity most otherworldly.
‘What—who are you?’
No sound left your throat when you asked on impulse, but the ethereal being that looked down on you smiled, their voice a cacophony of sweet melodies, “I recall the humans calling me Renée. I am the essence of rebirth and sustenance, but you may better know me as the demon of rebirth and sustenance.”
They had your head resting in their lap, one delicate hand caressing your hair with something akin to motherly affection. They seemed to hear your inaudible voice when you echoed, ‘Demon?’
“That seems to be the popular name,” the demon—Renée—mused and explained so tenderly, “We are beings that manifest from the world’s phenomena. Sights such as love and grief, war and wisdom—we are born from their reoccurrence. Humans have chosen to call us demons. Though, we are not forces of evil, but representations of nature.”
Demon. You had heard that word thrown at you countless times. It was an insult. It was a curse. It was a terrible, horrible thing.
Yet, this being was a demon?
Renée…they seemed to be made out of snow and starlight.
Their unmarred skin was a blue so pale it almost glowed, peeking out of flowing, luminescent robes that pooled around the two of you. A cascade of hair like woven ivory disappeared within the light of those robes, long and very precious.
It was their eyes that enchanted you the most. Wide and dark and infinite, they seemed to be ripped out of the very fabric of this dreamlike space you had awoken to. You feared they might swallow you whole if you stared for too long. Downturned, they seemed to hold such an immense sadness, yet their gaze was vast, and vastly kind.
They had the form of a human, but no mortal could compare to them. Such a delicate, yet powerful presence.
Renée was beautiful, so much so that it felt almost monstrous.
You did not feel the urge to move, lying still where you could gaze up at them. Comforted, for some reason. As though you had reunited with an old friend.
‘Are you… Are you the one who cursed me?’
“Cursed you?” Renée chuckled and it was a sound that came from everywhere and nowhere at once. “No, never.”
‘Oh,’ somehow you felt disheartened, like you had lost your only lead. ‘Then…’
Then why were you here?
The radiant demon smiled, sympathetic, almost melancholy. “I suppose you would not remember.”
‘Remember what?’
“Your first life.”
You felt a pang in your chest. Your first life. The life that must have started it all. You did not remember it, even though you recalled a certain, first death.
Still stroking your hair, Renée sighed softly. “Let me tell you a story, then.
“Once upon a time, four hundred and twenty-one years ago, a demon was called forth by greedy humans to become a sacrifice in their forbidden ritual. They sought to slaughter it and acquire its essence to secure a throne for a hungry yet lacking king.”
‘The Renocault Order,’ you provided, almost wonderstruck, ‘and the House of Rowonne.’
“Yes, indeed. It was them,” Renée nodded their approval, continuing, “Knowing their wicked intentions, the demon did not wish to die. So, before the ritual was completed, they escaped into the vast human world.
“A war had been ravaging the land, and a plague had spread amongst the people, killing them when swords and spears had spared them. The demon walked amid the suffering humans in search of shelter or a friend,” Renée paused, then with the gentlest of smiles, added, “That was when I met you.
“You thought me a walking god when you saw me. Sickness had brought you to the shores of death, and in your delirium, you clutched the hems of my robes and pleaded for help.
“You told me that you could not die yet. You told me that you needed to live for you could not leave your beloved behind. He needed your help, you said. The plague had found him too and he needed someone to tend to him. Those were the words you had so desperately cried to me,” Renée recounted like it were a mournful memory. “I was moved by your pleas and the tremendous love behind them, so I thought to lend you my power and give you life when yours was waning.
“However, unbeknownst to myself, those malicious humans had sent someone after me to complete the ritual. You know him as the First. He was the man who had partaken in the ritual in order to sit on the throne. The man whose descendants have hunted you in every lifetime.
“I lent you my essence and power, and in that moment of exchange, the First pierced an arrow through my heart and yours.”
You could only listen to the tale Renée told, speechless, enthralled, shaken to your very core. This was a history you had no knowledge and no recollection of. This was the story of a ‘you’ you did not know. The answer to your timeless misery.
“That was supposed to be the end of it,” Renée shook their head, the movement so utterly graceful, “The two of us were dead by the hands of the would-be-king, thus completing the ritual and securing the essence of rebirth and sustenance to keep the throne in Rowonne.
“But, you refused our death.
“I would instantly be reborn after my death, for that was my phenomenon, but you held on to me. It was not fair, you said. You had to return. You had to live.” there was a twinkle of amusement in Renée’s eyes as they further revealed, “So you kept my essence and buried it deep within your heart. And then, you were reborn.
“This merge between us meant that the ritual’s effect was brief, lasting only to the day our exchange was first made. The one day my essence diverged from your soul and could be usurped by the Blood of the First. Those humans knew that and sought you in your second lifetime for that cause.
“Though, this lifetime, I am sure you remember.”
Renée patted your head softly, resuming their story like it were a nursery rhyme, and you listened like a child in their parent’s loving embrace. “You were killed again by that evil human, and again, you refused your death. It was not fair, you argued. You needed to return. You needed to live. And so, once more, you were reborn.
“Again, and again. The relentless cycle of death and rebirth repeated itself without fail. You held on to me even when you were no longer aware of it yourself. Even as you grew miserable from it. Even when your very soul forgot why it insisted on living.
“I never cursed you, my friend,” Renée finally concluded, their sorrowful smile like a consolation. “It was you who refused to rest and release me.”
Oh.
You had nothing to say. What could you say at a revelation of this weight anyway?
This so-called curse that tortured you for decades and centuries, this pain and this emptiness, was all your own doing? Why? You did not even remember the person Renée claimed was your beloved. So why—
‘You must resent me for keeping you so long,’ was all you could mumble, diverting your gaze to the endless blue around you and feeling the sting of shame in your heart.
As though you needed more guilt to torment you. After all these years, it seemed that everything you had been through was pointless. Needless suffering. Needless grief. You could have prevented it all had you not been so stubborn and just—died.
“Why ever would I resent you?” Renée did not frown or exclaim their disapproval. Their smile was unchanging. Kind, kind, and kinder, even though it twisted your heart mercilessly. Why were they not mirroring the anger you so ruthlessly aimed at yourself?
“You have taught me so much,” they crooned, fingers still running soothingly through your hair. “You showed me your happiness and your love, your anger and your grief. In every lifetime, I learned more and found myself humbled by your experiences.
“I could never resent you, my friend. It is your nature to want to survive, and your humanity has been endearing from the very first time we met. I can only be grateful to you.”
Once again, you were at a loss for words. This was not the sentiment you expected, and it surprised you. Almost embarrassed you.
Renée, however, seemed content with your flustered silence. “So, I ask you again. Have you found him?”
‘Found who?’ you frowned. They had asked you the same question earlier, and it still confounded you. Had you been searching for someone?
“Why, your beloved, of course.”
‘I…’
Renée laughed at your nervous hesitation, a sound that felt like a thousand songs and a thousand curses. With a sigh, they cupped your face in their gentle hands and murmured, “I know.”
You stared at them, confused, but they did not elaborate any further, closing their eyes and bowing their head.
“You should let me go now, dear.”
Let go?
So soon?
Parting with an entity that had been intertwined with your soul for so long felt wrong. It was a freedom you were not yet prepared for. Who were you without your curse?
You had wanted to rid of it—this was what you wanted—and yet…
You did not feel free. That strange hollowness remained in your heart.
‘Wait—’
But Renée was shimmering and fading before your eyes. Their touch, ancient in its familiarity, was slipping away, and you could not move. You could not chase it.
You hated the sudden selfishness that unfurled within you. You did not want to leave just yet. Just a little more time. Please…
Their last whisper was like thunder in your ears, “Let me go, and live.”
Live?
Your own awareness was dissipating like smoke in the wind. A forbidden confession lost to the awakening of your body.
‘But I don’t—’
•Scene 4•
Minho’s heart beat uneasy as he paced across the hallway.
All the guests had been sent to their homes. All the intruders had been apprehended. You were safely tucked into the bed of his old chambers. Everything was back in order.
It should have been, but Minho was still perturbed. The past four hours had been too much to process, even for him.
First, there was the attack in the garden that caught him entirely off guard. After he had sent you off with Ryujin, he rushed over to manage the commotion among the attendees of the banquet. They had been frightened, and rightfully so, but he tried to assure them of their safety.
Once that was done, he joined the knights, letting them know of his commands and overseeing a little bit of their progress. It was then that an unexpected visitor shoved his way between the knights and delivered the worst news possible.
“Brother! He’s here!”
Felix, bedraggled from rough travel, had appeared in the palace after being missing for two weeks and announced that the Crown Prince was not in Rowonne anymore.
In fact, he had not been there for a while.
What followed was almost a blur. He, and a sizable body of knights, stormed their way into your shared chambers and immediately found themselves in the midst of chaos. Knights were engaging cloaked strangers in messy scuffles, each trying to keep the other from escaping, and the sight made Minho’s heart drop to the bottomless abyss.
The presence of those red cloaks only meant one thing.
The Crown Prince was already there.
Minho fought his way through as though he had forgone all sense. He slashed his sword at all that was red before him and broke the cluster of mages with his knights at his back. It felt like only a heartbeat passed until he found himself standing before the destroyed doors of your bedchambers.
The mere thought of what might have happened if he were only a second late made every drop of his blood go frigid with ice.
He had practically launched himself at the Prince, and then that bastard began spewing nonsense about you, and about demons and strange curses.
And then you, wounded and trembling, confessed the same things as his unhinged drivel.
If Minho were to be honest, he would have believed none of it had he not known you. Had he not been by your side for the better half of the year and witnessed the reality of your terror, of your lingering anguish.
How could he not believe you, when each word seemed to hack mercilessly at your ever so flawless composure?
Nevertheless, he had questions—none of which the Prince answered when he regained consciousness and flew into an uncontrollable rage in the dungeons—but he was sure you would eventually tell him about this curse.
For now, Minho tried to piece together the information already in his grasp.
Cursed to be reborn, that was what you said. And the prince had aimed to kill you for the power your curse contained.
He could not fathom the reason behind the royal’s sinister ambitions, but he could glean that the two of you had a long, ancient history.
“Again and again,” the Prince had taunted. Cursed to live and die at his hands.
Did he mean to say that you had died before? Was death at the hands of the royals something familiar to you?
Minho recalled an incident a few months ago when you had told him of a forbidden ritual performed by the royal family. Back then, you had struggled to say why you knew of this ritual. Now, a harrowing conclusion drew itself in his mind.
If your curse was to be reborn, then you must have been the sacrifice in that dreadful ritual. Those murdered girls you spoke of—had they all been you in different lives?
Suddenly, all your actions throughout the past year made new sense to him. How you sometimes spoke like you had the wisdom of centuries, yet were reluctant to lower your walls for anyone. How you always seemed to try to distance yourself from the rest of the world, yet never spared it from your kindness. It was the missing piece he had been searching for, now finally in his hands despite being only speculation.
Minho found it horrific to even imagine what it felt like. Dying and being reborn, only to die and be reborn once more. Over and over. You must have suffered, he thought with a pang that violently pierced his heart. You must have been in so much pain all this time.
Then, as he wallowed in his thoughts, an old memory resurfaced of the night he first met you. A ruffled nightgown, an indecipherable smile, and those unassuming words.
“I simply wish to rest, in peace.”
The realization that struck him had the weight of the sky itself, crushing his measly soul into thousands of trifling pieces.
No.
It could not be.
His legs were moving before he willed them to, breaking into a mindless dash toward his old bedchambers. Toward where you were supposed to be peacefully recuperating.
He must be mistaken. He had to be.
That could not be your true purpose in all this.
Please…
The imposing doors of his chambers were not nearly close enough when he reached for them and all but crashed through, numb to the feel of the solid wood as it bruised his shoulder.
•Scene 5•
“Y/n!”
The doors to the room burst open and you flinched, letting the slow, disbelieving intake of breath wash uncomfortably over you.
“This was your plan all along?”
He seemed to have a knack for rude interruptions, you observed, bitterly recalling your first encounter. The night that enabled you to come this far. Uncanny timing, indeed.
“This cannot be it. Y/n, please...”
“No, you are mistaken,” you interjected his pleas, gaze fixed on the pristine dagger in your grasp—Ryujin’s dagger. So softly, like the words were not entirely yours, you told him, “This is what I’ve always wanted.”
That was right.
You had long wished for silence and a tranquil rest.
You felt it within your own heartbeat. With Renée gone, with your curse lost, you were mortal once again. Your life was in anyone’s hands now, and the wish you had so desperately sought for decades was no longer an impossible dream.
This was the true finale you had been planning for from the very moment you opened your eyes to a new world. A hope to fade. To be at peace, not again awakened.
This was all you wanted.
And you hoped he would not be too hurt by the truth. This world was his to delight in, after all. You were only an inconsequential passerby.
“How—” was that emotion that stifled his words? “How can you expect me to believe you when your hands tremble so?”
Tremble? No, that could not be true.
You blinked at the silver blade you held so close to your neck and found that he had not lied. Your hands were shaking.
So defiantly, too.
Was this not what you had planned for all along? Everything you had done, you did for this very ending. To kill the cycle once and for all. To rid yourself of your unending grief, your measureless guilt.
To be freed.
Was that wish not your own?
“Please…” he did not dare step closer, as though any movement from him could shatter the world and its heavens. “Talk to me.”
But what could you say?
This was what you wanted, no?
And yet, your body shook with such adamant refusal, your own thoughts revolting against you. Your death had been an easy notion all this time, but now it rattled you, tipped your mind so that you could no longer discern what you truly desired.
Was it not slumber, so long and quiet and free?
Your eyes stung as though set ablaze.
That hollowness you felt in your heart was like a chamber in which your emotions echoed, howling with no one to answer. They cried for the truth that made you tremble so much. They cried for an impudent desire.
You did not have to listen to know—that emptiness you felt was not the absence of a curse. When the twelfth hour neared and a chasm yawned in your heart, it was not the product of freedom that you were unprepared for.
It was a realization.
More than that, it was fear from a realization that stripped you of your lifelong purpose. It was terror and tremoring uncertainty, for what were you to become without a goal?
Everything that you had done so far would be worthless. All your careful planning and all your cautious scheming, it would be as your past lifetimes. Useless. Needless.
What were you supposed to do before a realization of this magnitude except cower and tremble? What were you supposed to do when your heart rebelled at the sound of his voice and the thought of his pain?
The one you could only ever liken to a star. Bright, and brighter than any.
And you found yourself wondering if you reached your hand out to him, would he embrace you with his light? Would he hide you in it so that you may never again see the darkness of night?
A demon’s voice sighed like wind in your ears.
Let me go and—
The blade you had clung to clattered against the marble, and you whirled around to finally face him.
“Minho…”
Like a promise, like a secret, the words tore their way out of your chest, liberated from the chasm in your heart.
“I don’t want to die.”
And it felt like a betrayal. A betrayal to yourself and everything you had gone through. Yet, you had never been truer to yourself than at that moment.
It was a stride, then another, and Minho had you in his arms, dropping weakly, helplessly with you to the floor. And for the first time in lifetimes, you cried, unraveling in the refuge of his embrace.
There, huddled on the cold marble, you cried and told him of the nightmares that never left you. Of a demon, and a curse, and a plan so grim. A wish so dark. You cried as you spoke of your lives. Of death that was unsparing. Of pain that was unceasing. Of the grief that wracked your soul from every time your weak heart loved and always lost.
You cried, and once you started, you could not stop.
Tears mangled with words when you told him of guilt so heavy it crushed you. Of wicked eyes that always found you. Of lurking shadows. Of fear, of fear, of constant fear.
You were breathless when you told him of everything you felt and everything you thought and everything you had been through. Minho listened to it all, even when your voice grew faint and your silent sobs persisted.
But no matter how much you told him, it was not enough. It would never be enough to tell him of the unfathomable feeling that writhed and burned within your heart, threatening to destroy you with it.
You did not know how long you had been in nestled in Minho’s arms, ruining his fine blouse with the unfaltering of your tears. Perhaps a lifetime. Perhaps a heartbeat. It was only when your breathing steadied did he pull away, barely, to settle his somber gaze on you. Eyes glistening with unshed tears, he touched a gentle hand to your face and carefully ran his thumb across your cheek as though to erase the traces of your pain.
So lovingly, so sadly. His murmur enveloped you.
“You must have been so lonely.”
Lonely.
You stared at him.
Yes.
That was it.
You had been lonely. So, terribly, tragically lonely.
As you died and were reborn, this world no longer felt like your own. You had become a ghost. A passerby. Your place was fleeting, ever-changing. No one truly knew you, your history, your suffering. No one knew the ‘you’ who had lived and died twenty grueling times.
No one could really see you, but there Minho was, reaching through the tangle of your heart, capturing that feeling you could not name. That vast loneliness. That solitude your curse forced upon you.
It was the reason that your change of heart frightened you so, for how could you wish to live in a world that did not belong to you?
The answer was known to you then as it was now.
Your place in this world was here, basking in the vivid brilliance of your star.
“Yes,” you finally mumbled, smiling through overflowing tears. “I suppose I was.”
•Scene 6•
Your eyes cracked open to a world you knew.
Familiar air. Familiar warmth.
When you pushed yourself to sit, the result of last night’s exertions rammed into you in the form of a violent cramp. Your body clearly was not designed for the chase you had put it through.
Still, it was your body. Mortal, un-cursed. The palms that you looked down at were ones that you had grown familiar with. Your breath, your heartbeat—this familiarity in itself was new to you.
You were still you, and for the very first time, you were twenty-one.
Not a day-old infant among strangers, but yourself.
You relished in that curious feeling as your feet met the cold floor. In this room that was not yours, your eyes were drawn to the tall window inviting generous sunlight, and you drifted toward it, gazing at a familiar, ever-stretching blue sky, and a bustling city that you had grown to love.
“Y/n?”
Minho’s troubled voice followed the soft click of the door, and you turned your head to watch as he strode into the room. He seemed to have noticed the empty bed first, prompting a beat of momentary panic that ceased once he saw you by the window.
Carefully, he set down the tray of light breakfast that he had carried with him on a nearby table. Then, with a sigh so heartbroken, he noted aloud, “You’re crying again.”
“Oh.”
You touched a hand to your cheek and were surprised to feel the fresh trail of tears. As though the well had not yet dried, it seemed that waking up today had moved you immensely.
Breathing a broken laugh, you wiped your eyes with the back of your hand, “I’m sorry.”
You did not notice Minho walking up to you then, yet his touch did not startle you when it came. His hand enclosed yours, unbothered by the wetness of tears on your skin as he assumed the task of drying your cheeks with his other.
“You needn’t be,” his murmured statement was resolute yet tender. He seemed to study every minuscule detail of your face before he finally asked, “How do you feel?”
At that, a myriad of colorful emotions burst out in your heart, each one louder than the other. You were grateful, and you were in disbelief, as if this were merely a dream that you might awaken from at any moment.
You felt different.
You felt like yourself.
But you were also anxious about what was to come, and beneath all of that, you were hurt. The pain you had been carrying for lifetimes would not be easy to forget, and healing from it would take a while. So, for now…
“I’m all right,” you said, and you meant it. You were all right, because you had a lifetime to heal your soul’s wounds, and because—
“I love you.”
You might have imagined blurting out those three magnificent little words had Minho not stilled, those darling eyes of his widening ever so slightly before a beautiful laugh danced off his lips.
“But how can that be?” he rested his forehead against yours with a smile so endearing you thought it could melt the sun, “I think I love you more.”
Oh, no.
He had only dried your eyes and now it seemed that you were going to cry again, silly tears of such overwhelming elation.
“Y/n,” the way Minho said your name was like a prayer, his palm placed against your cheek yearningly, reverently. His whispered words were a sacred vow for your ears alone, “What I want is a life with you. Let us start over. We’ll do it right this time.”
You leaned into his touch as though it were the sole thing your body knew to do, the answer fluttering at the tip of your tongue before taking flight like a fledgling, hesitant yet so full of hope.
“Yes, let us do that.”
•Scene 7•
The assembly room was buzzing with curious, speculative murmurs when the Count of Valorieve barged in with his entourage of knights trailing him.
“Unhand me this instant!” the captive they were leading shouted and struggled against his captors, but it was all in vain, for the knights of Valorieve were firm and unmoving as mountains.
At the shocking sight, the gathered nobles balked and erupted into outrage.
“What is the meaning of this, Count Valorieve?” the Count of Kirale demanded as he slammed his palms against the meeting table. “How dare you parade His Highness in here like a prisoner!”  
“At ease, gentlemen, ladies,” Count Valorieve raised a pacifying hand into the air, coming to stand at the head of the table teeming with appalled and disconcerted nobility. They could protest his actions all they wanted inside this hall, for he knew that none of them could really stand to offend him beyond those walls.
He waved a hand at the Prince in the knights’ captivity when he declared, “His Highness is not here in his capacity as the Crown Prince but as a criminal apprehended by my authority.”
“Preposterous!” exclaimed the former count, ever so loyal to his prince. “Cease this nonsense at once!”
“Indeed!” the Prince snarled, “Release me lest you be considered a traitor to the crown!”
Count Valorieve paid their demands no mind and instead directed his attention to the rest of his fellow leaders. “Your Excellencies must surely be startled by this situation. Believe me when I confess, I was too.
“One week ago, Crown Prince Reval the Eleventh of the House of Rowonne was apprehended for burglary and attempted murder within the grounds of Valorieve Palace.”
A hush of shock befell the assembly room. Even the Prince bit his tongue. Every count and countess listened dubiously as he continued, “He was witnessed infiltrating the palace with the intent of killing none other than Lady Y/n, my own daughter-in-law, twice Lady of Lurmuse and Valorieve.”
“Yes. The Countess and I were there to witness the cruel state of our daughter on that tragic night,” Count Lurmuse interjected, angry and distressed. He had been scowling since he caught sight of the Prince at the beginning of the meeting, and now he jabbed an accusing finger his way. “We demand that justice be delivered for this heinous crime!”
“I heartedly echo your sentiment, Count Lurmuse. There must be retribution for such a grave offense,” Count Valorieve asserted. His son’s in-laws had been alerted of the incident when it occurred, and their assistance had greatly benefitted their investigation. Besides, a family of their influence would surely help his case today.
“Pardon me, Your Excellencies,” the Countess of Narin spoke up. She was new to the assembly table, having only recently inherited her late father’s title. “Could this conflict not have waited until His Majesty recovered his health and dealt with his heir privately? I see no reason to have us all gathered here.”
Her reasoning was valid, and it resulted in a series of agreeing whispers among the attendees. The Prince seemed encouraged by her to argue as well, “Exactly! You must allow me to return to Rowonne and await His Majesty’s recovery post-haste.”
The Count of Valorieve shook his head in a show of disappointment. “I have gathered you all here for this very reason.
“As we were investigating this incident, we happened upon a terrible truth that I assure you is of utmost interest to all of Your Excellencies,” he paused, capturing their attention once more before revealing the secret that could upturn the kingdom in its entirety, “We have discovered that for the duration of the past year, the Crown Prince had conspired to conceal the news of the His Majesty’s passing in order to secure his ascension to the throne!”
An uproar of disbelief and confusion exploded in the meeting hall, muddled questions, exclamations, and objections indistinguishable amid the noise.
“How can that be?”
“Impossible…”
“Is the King not bedridden?”
“How can His Majesty be dead?”
“You cannot hurl such ghastly accusations without proof, Count Valorieve!” the young Count of Core gasped. He was yet another new face at the table.
“Worry not,” Count Valorieve assured him. “My proof is in my second son’s visit to Rowonne only a few weeks ago. I had sent him with a Lion’s Permit to seek an audience with the King, only for him to be denied by the butler and then attacked by the palace guard.”
The commotion only amplified at his words.
“How dare they!”
“Have we become so insignificant to the House of Rowonne?”
“This is a sacred agreement!”
“My son soon discovered that the King was nowhere to be found,” Count Valorieve turned to gesture harshly at the dumbfounded prince, playing into the dramatics of the crowd, “and that the Crown Prince had either silenced the palace staff or tricked them into his scheme!”
“Unbelievable…”
“Does he think us pitiful fools?!”
As the assembly hall slowly turned against him, the Prince remained silent. Perhaps he sought to feign ignorance or deny the accusations with his silence. It mattered not to the Count. The truth of his crimes would be revealed sooner or later with this little push.
“If what you say is true, then this is a plot to undermine our positions as Counts and Countesses,” the Countess of Soloris proclaimed, her stern brows furrowing.
“Indeed! This is an offense that threatens the very foundation of our kingdom,” the neighboring Count of Falia’s fierce agreement caused a ripple of revolt among the attendees. “We cannot let this pass without judgment.”
“Then a trial must be held and the Crown Prince’s title must be revoked until its conclusion,” determined Count Gaele, easily of the same mind as the other members of his faction.
“With what authority do you seek to strip me of my title? I am royalty!” the Prince protested with a furious yet futile jerk at his restrainers’ grip. His words seemed to offend the Countess of Soloris, who raised her chin in the air scornfully and scoffed, “With the authority that was granted to us, the leaders of our kingdom’s sixteen fiefdoms, four centuries ago by the agreement of our forefathers. We have the right to renounce the heir in the absence of the King by popular vote.”
“Does he mean to dismiss our rights as counts? Unbelievable!”
“It seems that the Prince is unfit for the crown…”
“Why, I would rather he never sits on the throne!”
Angry, offended remarks, and among them, a voice rose reluctantly, “But if His Majesty is truly deceased, and the Crown Prince is stripped of his inheritance, then the House of Rowonne is left without heir…”
“You heard him! You cannot mean to leave our House without a leader!”
At the Prince’s outburst, the Count of Valorieve huffed a triumphant smile. “You admit to the King’s passing then?”
“I…” the royal blanched and fumbled with his words as gasps of shock and shouts of disbelief shook the hall.
“This is unacceptable!”
“Utterly disgraceful!”
“Has he no speck of shame?!”
Pleased with the outcry from prideful nobles, the Count returned his focus to the concerned Head of the House of Core. “Count Core, you must rest assured that is not at all my intention. I would never wish unrest on our glorious kingdom’s people.”
He then turned to bellow at the door, “Please, come in!”
The assembly hall faltered into perplexed silence as the doors groaned open and revealed an unfamiliar young man. He was dressed elegantly, with his dark curls tied neatly at the nape of his neck. Their suspicious gazes followed him as he walked in, long, confident strides that took him to stand next to the Count at the head of the table.
“Ladies and gentlemen,” the Count of Valorieve placed a firm hand on the young man’s shoulder as he announced, “before you stands His Majesty’s sole remaining heir.”
A wave of weary whispers spread across the table, clearly dubious of this information yet curious enough to listen as the stranger introduced himself, “I am called Bang Chan. It is an honor to be in the presence of all Your Excellencies.”
“You—!” the Prince’s eyes bulged, enraged. “He is a fraud! I am my father’s only son!”
“Worry not,” Count Valorieve calmly assured, “I have ascertained his lineage for myself and found it true. This young man right here is also a son of His Late Majesty.”
“I do indeed spot the resemblance in his countenance,” Count Swann mused, squinting his eyes to observe Chan as though he were a peculiar ornament.
“You must be taking this lightly, Count Swann. This matter is not alike your perfumes and jewelry,” the old Count of Iriese commented in mocking. “A lookalike is easy to come by. Appearance alone proves nothing of this man’s suspicious parentage.”
“I understand Your Excellencies’ reservations,” Chan spoke up before a fight could unfold among the two counts, and it seemed to silence the hall for a bare moment. Careful words and practiced demeanor, this was what he had been preparing for all his life. “That is why I aim to provide my utmost assistance in your investigations into the legitimacy of my claim.”
“Yes, and you have the support of the House of Valorieve in your endeavor,” Count Valorieve nodded at his secretly adopted son. His approval of Chan would draw in the support of his faction, and eventually, the rest of the kingdom would follow. It may take years for him to gain the trust of his people, but this was for the betterment of their kingdom.
The current royal family had been nothing but a hindrance to them all. They had to be replaced.
“Have you all lost your minds? You cannot decide such matters amongst yourselves! I am your crown prince!” the Prince shouted, and his statements fell upon deaf ears. Even those within his faction seemed reluctant to defend him. Not when his actions demeaned their rights as counts and leaders.
His gaze flitted rapidly from one face to another, desperately searching for an aide when he noticed a figure who had been awfully quiet since the beginning of the meeting. A frivolous man who owed him.
“Count Sitean!” he called out, making the mentioned Count jolt in his seat. “Say something and stop these madmen!”
“I…” Count Sitean trailed away when he caught the eyes of the Count of Valorieve. Knowing, challenging eyes. He seemed to be warning him, and he fearfully recalled those masked men and the blackmail they had dangled before him.
He swallowed and averted his gaze. “I…am deeply sorry Your Highness, but perhaps it would be wise to await the trial and—”
“You too?” the Prince gaped at him then whirled within his restraints at the rest of the gathered nobility. “All of you are committing treason!”
“Treason?” Countess Soloris questioned darkly, her tone dripping with venom. She had always been an intense force to meddle with. “The only treasonous action here was the one performed by you, Prince Reval, when you concealed from us the death of our king.”
“I say we have the Prince escorted out of this hall,” Count Gaele prompted, sighing. “I tire of this continuous disregard of our authority.”
“I second His Excellency. This discussion has grown exceedingly wearisome,” agreed Count Falia, and a rumble of supporting murmurs followed. Soon enough, the Prince was led outside as he continuously demanded to be released, and a hush draped over the attendees heavily.
What a tumultuous meeting it had been.
The Count of Hitalon was the one to disrupt the quiet, speaking for the first time on this eventful evening, “Now that His Majesty has been pronounced dead, should we not begin preparations for the election of a new king among us?”
“You speak the truth, Your Excellency,” Count Falia concurred. “The current heir is not of eligible age and does not seem to be of eligible mind either.”
“But why must we elect a new king?”
Count Valorieve’s unexpected question invited a dumbfounded silence from the nobles, who looked at him as though they might have misheard him.
“Why, this is the protocol, Your Excellency,” Count Core coughed awkwardly.
“No, Your Excellencies,” the Count of Valorieve shook his head in a grave motion, “We used to be the Kings and Queens of our nations before we were reduced to being Counts and Countesses. Why must we select one man to head us when we had always been leaders in our own right?”
He did not expect an answer, placing his palms against the table as he continued his long-awaited speech, “What has the royal family done besides fail us so far? The late King had done nothing but lounge on his throne and drain us of our riches in the name of a so-called tax.
“We were the ones who set the laws of our lands and enforced them. We were the ones who managed our affairs and protected our borders. What use is a king who only serves as a warmer for a coveted seat? Tell me, is this the kind of rule we were destined for?”
They were silent, but their eyes told stories of reluctance and rebellion. Count Valorieve knew that his words were blasphemous, treasonous, even, but he saw the agreement shining in their hungry eyes.
Everyone wanted power. Nobody in this hall wanted to become inferior to another. Subject to another.
He fed into that hunger, for he was of the same mind.
“This kingdom has long cried for its dismantlement,” the Count added, his deep voice resonating across the room. “We do not need a king at our forefront when we are more than capable of becoming our own governors. Our people deserve better than to be subject to such a stifling law.”
“Count Valorieve,” Countess Soloris ventured cautiously, her tone one of warning, “Do you mean to annul the agreement that has united our land for centuries?”
“Not at all,” the Count quickly amended, “No, the alliance of our nations is not subject to the condition of a single ruler. It may stand and it shall continue to stand. We can have free travel and free trade, but we can also have independence. No longer should we be tied down by the corruption of kings and princes.”
He came to a stop, taking in the expressions of uncertainty, of apprehension, of ambition that illuminated the faces of his fellow leaders. This was what he and his sons had been working for. This was his greatest desire.
Some might have called it rebellion. He thought of it as liberation.
This slumbering kingdom had to be awakened, and this was the call it needed.
“So, I ask Your Excellencies again,” the Count of Valorieve leaned forward, he could almost feel the wind of change on his face, “why must we elect a new king?”
☙ Epilogue.
“My lady, the delegation from Count Isek’s estate has just arrived.”
“Is that so? Let us hurry and greet them, then.”
It had been a particularly windy afternoon, which made an outdoor event such as this one rather troublesome. Nevertheless, you made your way alongside Ryujin to your awaiting guests, breathing in the faint scent of the sea being carried by the breeze.
A lot had changed in the past year and a half.
Valorieve’s efforts to overthrow the status of the king had proven to be successful. The sixteen states that comprised the alliance finally gained autonomy over their governments, and all had recovered their ancient titles of independent nations. Though, the shift was gradual and had busied the representative Houses greatly.
Valorieve was one the first states to elevate itself from the status of a fiefdom into that of a dukedom, as it was once known four centuries past. The declaration made little difference in the workings of the land and its government—perhaps the alterations in the ranks of nobility were the most significant of changes. After all, Valorieve, like the rest of the former fiefdoms, had been entirely self-sustaining under the incompetent rule of the royal family.
It was, however, a boost of morale for the people of Valorieve. To return to their former glory, to once more become the land of the benevolent warriors sung about in their folktales.
As for you, you did not think that much had changed.
“Is that not the Marquis?”
Someone, somewhere nearby, wondered aloud, and you halted in your steps, looking around you hopefully, unabashedly.
“My, it really is!”  
There, in the midst of a growing cluster of excited nobility, you glimpsed a cape of imperial blue. Such a familiar, lovely color.
Perhaps etiquette would demand that you greeted your guests first, but you determined that the delegates could afford a short wait as you diverted your route, heading towards the crowd with a special lightness in your steps.
You could allow yourself a sliver of selfish indulgence every once in a while.
“Make way for the Marquise! Make way!” Seungmin, and the other knights in your entourage, called out, making the circle of nobles fracture and disperse to reveal a clear path to the man at the center of it all.
It had only been three days since you last saw him, but the sight of him still sent a stampede of emotions through your heart as though you had been apart for lifetimes. And he noticed you instantly, breaking away from his conversation to reach to you.
It took every ounce of your propriety not to run up to him right then and there.
“Your Lordship,” you breathed, beaming with such an exhilarating feeling. “Welcome back.”
“You will not cease addressing me so formally, will you, Lady Y/n?” Minho grumbled jokingly as he pulled you into an embrace, and you laughed. You could not help but laugh out your boundless joy at seeing him again.
“I thought you were returning late at night.”
“And miss the inauguration of your new school? Unthinkable,” he pulled away only slightly, and there was that enchanting smile he had seemed to reserve for your eyes alone. His hand found yours and so reverently, he brought it to his lips, his fond murmur tickling your skin, “I hurried back to you the moment my business was finished.”
Oh, you had missed him. You had missed him so greatly you thought it would be the death of you.
“Thank you for hurrying back.” you closed your hand over his, wanting nothing but to nestle into his arms and simply melt away. “The palace was lonesome without you.”
“Forgive me, my heart,” he hummed, busy pressing another kiss to the top of your forehead before he chuckled, “We should turn to your guests. I fear they might disintegrate us with their gazes.”
You had not forgotten about the tens of people that surrounded you, but their presence seemed to pale in comparison to Minho’s. Merely a speck in the back of your mind. Nevertheless, you had your moment of self-indulgence, and now your responsibilities beseeched you to return to them. Unfortunately.
The rest of the afternoon passed with ease. You opened the doors of the new school with Minho by your side and celebrated in the attendance of investors and members of the project’s team. You spoke with Chaeryeong, who had been appointed as the head of the teaching staff, and watched as the would-be students explored their new school for the first time. It was a gratifying afternoon that ended almost too quickly, and you found yourself returning to the palace by the early beginnings of evening.
When your carriage rattled into motion, you felt a weight plop on your shoulder followed by a tired mumble, “Lend me your shoulder for a little while.”
All that hurrying must have worn him out, you thought with a silent chuckle. This seemed to be a specialty of Minho’s.
The truth was that a lot had changed for you. The night you freed yourself of your curse had frightened you, for it brought with it a sudden, daunting realization that tipped your world over. To want—to dare to live had been such an inconceivable notion. It deified all you had planned for and left you lost. Suddenly without purpose or drive.
Finding your place and learning to settle in the world of those fated to live had been difficult. You had carried with you centuries of pain, oceans of grief, and they were not so easily forgettable. Broken memories still lurked in the nooks of your mind, recollections of distant lifetimes, of a different you.
And that difference was because you had changed. Little by little, step by step. Until one day, you looked into the face of your nightmares and found nothing there but your own echo. An echo that sometimes reminded you of your unforgotten torment, and sometimes cheered you on as you ventured out into the world. As you made mistakes and loved and grew.
As you lived.
“Rest, then,” you pressed a tender kiss to the crown of Minho’s head, your words and your fingers lost in the wispy waves of his hair. The path toward healing might have been long and arduous, but you were a lone wanderer no longer.
“I’ll wake you.”
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Hello! Thank you for reading this far! Writing this story was so much fun and I hope that you enjoyed reading it just as much. It would mean a lot if you could give it a reblog and tell me your thoughts! I hope you have a wonderful day! ♡
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calliesmemes · 7 months
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A SANCTUARY FOR EVERY SENTIMENT
ASSORTED QUOTES PULLED FROM TUMBLR POSTS, PINTEREST POSTS, AND SONGS.
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CHANGE gendered words and in-universe phrases as needed.
SPECIFY muse for multimuses.
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“   Fill your mind with knowledge — it is the only kind of power that no one can take away from you. ”
“   I was born knowing you. ”
“   Even if you know what’s coming, you’re never prepared for how it feels. ”
“   Where have I seen you before? ”
“   You are half my soul. ”
“   I thought we hated each other. ”
“   All my life, I have been restless. ”
“   There's a darkness inside your mind. ”
“   I am going to be good this time. ”
“   I forced myself to know you. ”
“   The question you should be asking is not why I push you away, but why you stay. ”
“   To me, you’re sunshine in human form. ”
“   Some wounds never vanish. ”
“   I refuse to let the past find me here. ”
“   The grief is still heavy within me. ”
“   It's like you're so afraid of feeling that you're already dead. ”
“   I want to learn how to be soft again. ”
“   Pride isn’t sinful; it is confidence in yourself. ”
“   I don’t think that there is any truth. There are only points of view. ”
“   Everyone is a monster to someone. ”
“   Some days, I feel everything at once. Other days, I feel nothing at all. ”
“   Without violence, how do I understand my life as meaningful? ”
“   A friend today could be an enemy tomorrow. ”
“   It's always the wrong bits of the past that people want back. ”
“   I must kill memory once and for all. ”
“   A man with nothing left to lose is a very dangerous man. ”
“   I burn for what’s no longer mine. ”
“   Anyone who takes the time to be kind is beautiful. ”
“   It’s better to have a guarded heart than a bleeding one. ”
“   Everyone should love and be loved. ”
“   You’re the reason I know why storms are named after people. ”
“   What have we done to each other? ”
“   Perhaps you were like a candle: created to light up the darkness for an unfairly short amount of time. ”
“   I don’t know what’s wrong with me. ”
“   You were my home. I had no home but you. ”
“   How could you recognize me after all these years? ”
“   I’m always soft for you, that’s the problem. ”
“   Does my sweetness lie so deep within me you need to cut me to find it? ”
“   I want to trust my own joy like that. ”
“   When I bled, I thought I deserved it. ”
“   Do I have to forgive in order to love? ”
“   I will try to disappoint you better than anyone else ever has. ”
“   I’m hell-bent on loving you. ”
“   There are ways of dying that don’t end in funerals. ”
“   I have been fighting since I was very small. ”
“   Love doesn’t conquer everything. Whoever thinks it does is a fool. ”
“   We all have one foot in a fairytale, and the other in an abyss. ”
“   There’s nowhere to run. ”
“   Darkness, once gazed upon, can never be lost. ”
“   I like figuring you out. You are so human and puzzling. ”
“   If I am to be saved it is because your love redeems me. ”
“   Having a soft heart in a cruel world is courage, not weakness. ”
“   I have longed for people before, I have loved people before. Not like this. It was not this. ”
“   The difference between failure and love is where you draw the incision. ”
“   You never think that the last time is the last time. You think there will be more. You think that you will have forever, but you don’t. ”
“   We tend to talk too much because it’s rare that we are listened to. ”
“   I promise that I shall never give up. ”
“   They may not have loved you, but they did change you. They taught you. They grew you. ”
“   I feel like a part of my soul has loved you since the beginning of everything. ”
“   You didn't deserve what they did to you, how they treated you. It wasn't a lesson. It wasn't meant to happen, and it was never your fault. ”
“   I have always loved everything about you. Even what I don’t understand. ”
“   What’s done is done, but in the future, do better. ”
“   It's a lot easier to be angry at someone than it is to tell them that you’re hurt. ”
“   You don’t have that fire in your eyes anymore and you know it. ”
“   If you are so committed to being perfectly lawful that you cannot see the value of breaking a law to defend yourself or others, you're not good, you're obedient. ”
“   I have survived everything, but I fear that I cannot survive myself. ”
“   No one warns you about the amount of mourning in growth. ”
“   I was looked at, but I wasn’t seen. ”
“   Who's the real you? The person who did something awful, or the one who was horrified by the awful thing that you did? ”
“   I never would have expected you to become my deepest scar yet. ”
“   I fight. I resist. It doesn't even matter what I resist; there is simply something in me that tends to resist things as they are. ”
“   You are not weak just because your heart feels so heavy. ”
“   I want to be with you. It is as simple, and as complicated, as that. ”
“   Why must you push away those who care for you? ”
“   You were treated horribly. You came out on the other end. You were always you. ”
“   I know what it’s like to love what ruins you. ”
“   In three words, I can sum up everything I’ve learned about life: it goes on. ”
“   I am the centre of an atrocity. ”
“   You’re my family, and I love you. But you’re terrible. You’re all terrible. ”
“   Desire can be partner to violence. ”
“   It’s been a long time since I’ve been me. ”
“   There is so much love in friendship. People forget that. ”
“   Nothing you become will disappoint me. I have no desire to foresee you, only to discover you. ”
“   What is more unfair than having to choose between being a monster or being a hero? ”
“   Stop being so afraid of everything. ”
“   We must be our own before we can be another’s. ”
“   I’ve found that growing up means being honest. About what I want. What I need. What I feel. Who I am. ”
“   If you’ve been hated, you’ve also been loved. ”
“   Even when I detach, I care. You can be separate from a thing and still care about it. ”
“   Study me as much as you like; you will never know me. ”
“   See how our wants horrify us. ”
“   I feel so lonely, like childhood again. ”
“   Never in my entire childhood did I feel like a child. I felt like a person all along — the same person that I am today. ”
“   You see loving you as such a mortifying ordeal, you feel you owe to anyone who could find the will inside themselves to do it to reciprocate. ”
“   I wish they would only take me as I am. ”
“   We’ll pretend any ending is gentle. ”
“   If I am a sunflower, would you be my sun? ”
“   Being must be felt. It can’t be thought. ”
“   I’m not much, but I’m all I have. ”
“   I think that hell is something you carry around with you, not somewhere you go. ”
“   I want to be wanted more than anything else in the world. ”
“   Don't look away. Look straight at everything. Look it all in the eye, good and bad. ”
“   There must be a point where you’re allowed to be defined by something other than what he did to you. ”
“   There is no safe investment. To love at all is to be vulnerable. ”
“   I would rather break the world than lose you. ”
“   What goes too long unchanged destroys itself. ”
“   We are so accustomed to disguising ourselves to others that, in the end, we become disguised to ourselves. ”
“   Beauty is terror. Whatever they call beauty, we quiver before it. ”
“   Is one part of you allowed to forgive the other? ”
“   No one could ever replace you. You were there at the start; I’ll be there at the end. ”
“   It's a most distressing affliction to have a sentimental heart and a skeptical mind. ”
“   "You're so calm and quiet. But there are things inside you. I see them sometimes, hiding in your eyes. ”
“   Is it foolish to speak of little joys that occur in the middle of tragedy? ”
“   I imagine that one of the reasons people cling to their hates so stubbornly is because they sense, once hate is gone, that they will be forced to deal with pain. ”
“   Take life as it comes. Take what you can while you still have the desire to take. ”
“   If the moon smiled, she would resemble you. You leave the same impression of something beautiful, but annihilating. ”
“   We’ve been through so much together. I’ve seen you grow into someone you thought you’d never be. I’ve seen you endure challenges most will never see. ”
“   You don't tell a story only to yourself. There's always someone else. Even when there is no one. ”
“   I know that my life is meaningful because I love my friends, and I care about them, and I think I make them happy. ”
“   There is so much stubborn hope in the human heart. ”
“   To live is to suffer; to survive is to find meaning in the suffering. ”
“   It isn’t your life that’s a prison; it’s yourself. ”
“   You are allowed to be both a masterpiece and a work in progress, simultaneously. ”
“   You knew what you were doing and you knew that it would hurt me, but somehow, that didn’t stop you. ”
“   They would’ve kept lying if you didn’t find out. ”
“   You broke my heart in every way that a heart could be broken. ”
“   Just because I let you go doesn’t mean that I wanted to. ”
“   There is no intensity of love or feeling that does not involve the risk of crippling hurt. It is a duty to take this risk, to love and feel without defense or reserve. ”
“   I’m enjoying my hatred so much more than I ever enjoyed love. ”
“   Become the voice you’ve always needed to hear. ”
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cookierunauprompts · 7 months
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I just finished watching King Kong (2005) and this idea hit me like a truck: Shadow Milk Cookie as King Kong and Y/N Cookie as Ann Darrow!
i have never seen king kong but i sorta understand like... the tiniest bit about it.... So uh, Reader's getting kidnapped for this one as that's pretty much the only thing i know from King Kong.
Requested Prompts #44 - 💓
" White Lily Cookie! Don't! It's a trap!" You try to scream out, but no matter what you say nothing can reach White Lily's ears as she was trapped within your captor's maze. You watched as the flurry of the new guardian's magic went towards the fake tree, reviving it almost instantly to the shock of the eerily real-seeming fake Shadow Milk Cookie. You were the only one to have realized that it was fake, so he'd given the group a question that he knew they'd get wrong no matter what. Thus he'd taken you prisoner back in the 'real' world, one that looked a lot like the world within the Maze of Deceit except the key difference was that there was a lot more goopy, abyssal shadows littered with blue eyes staring at everything. You silence yourself with a yelp as one of the beast's fingers press into your head, because yes he does have actual hands apparently. " Ah ah ah!" You heard him tut, " I don't believe that this play needs any input from the audience, does it now?" Shadow Milk hummed, bringing you up to his face so you could look into his calculating gaze. " Besides, they can't hear you anymore anyways, so why even bother?" You hesitate, he was right and you knew it. You almost instantly deflated, your prior determination to escape filtering out of you like air from a balloon with a hole in it. " Aw, you look so cute when you're all hopeless like that! It's almost making me reconsider your position as prisoner!" He cooed, poking at your face with his claw(not the tip of it though). " I doubt that there's anything worse than being a prisoner to you." You groan, leaning away from his touch. A shriek is pulled from your throat as Shadow Milk grabs onto the sliver tree, or at least what remains of it. He spins around it like those character in musicals sometimes do with poles before hoisting himself up to sit between the branches as if they were a throne. " I' wouldn't be too sure about that~!" He teased, holding you up in front of his face. You doubted that, and it showed on your face. " No offense, but I doubt that there is." You said rather un-enthusiastically. " You really think so?" The beast grinned in an almost wild manner, you got the feeling you said something you really shouldn't have. " Because i can think of a lot of things! Of course, I won't be listing all of them for the sake of our family friendly audience. But there are much worse fates than being a prisoner to me!" " Like... like what?" You asked hesitantly. " Hmm..." He leaned in close, eyes shining brightly as he stared down at you. Some kind of deranged hunger slipping into his expression as he did so. " Like being a little snack." You froze up, the pause between that and his next statement being far too long for your liking. " Oh I'm only joking! There's no need to fret, I don't intend to cannibalize you... yet." You squeaked with fear, leaning away as much as you could as he threw his head back into a maniacal laugh. " Oh you're just so gullible- it's adorable!" He mused, a grin that was still far too wide plastered on his face. " I think I might have to keep you, even if Silly-Lily tries to seal me back up in the tree for real!" Well, at least now you know that unless the others save you you're probably screwed. Yippee.
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aquilapolariz · 1 year
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shame of the sea (portgas d. ace x reader)
Summary: You-and the stars and the ocean- bear witness to Ace’s secrets.
Notes/ Warnings: SPOILERS for Ace's background, follows canon, Ace flirts to cope and reader is nosy, there are probably some astronomy inaccuracies
Word Count: 2.2k | Read below the cut or on Ao3
Ace was on the edge of the deck, staring out at the night sky, the glittering stars gazing back at him. Behind him, Marco, Thatch, and you looked at him pensively, wondering whether or not he would accept the position of Second Division Commander. “He deserves it,” you whispered. “More than anyone here, he deserves it.”
Thatch and Marco nodded, their eyes not leaving the Whitebeard emblem on Ace’s back. But you, however, saw Ace’s fist clench and his shoulders tense. “Normally he’s filled with certainty, but I wonder what’s got him hesitating…” you trailed off, thinking out loud. You stared at his unclothed back. His broad shoulders, usually strong and poised as if only an earthquake could shake him, had fallen in defeat, his back hunched over in uncertainty. 
“Who knows?” Thatched mused.
“Whether or not he takes it, he’s our only option. A damn good one at that. Who can say no to such an offer?” Marco added.
You fired back a reply mentally- Only someone who’s scared of the duties of the position. Someone who doesn’t think they’re worthy. Someone who doesn’t believe they deserve it. Under his loyal, reckless, and confident persona, what did he keep concealed? 
Marco yawned, “Think I’m going to bed.” He raised his voice, “Ace! You got the night watch?”
Ace turned around, suddenly pulled out of his private conversation with the stars and back onto the wooden floorboards of the Moby Dick. “Yessir,” he said, flashing a relaxed smile. 
“Think about it a little more,” Thatch said to Ace while turning to follow Marco into the crew’s quarters. 
“Good night,” you said to the two of them. You slowly walked next to Ace, joining him on the railing of the deck. “You always seem sad when you think no one’s looking at you,” you said, an observation that you’ve taken notice of ever since Ace joined the Whitebeard crew. Despite that, every time since then, whenever his gaze would meet yours, his lips would curl into a smile. This time was no exception.
“Can’t take your eyes off me, can you?”
You ignored him, unfazed by his flirtatious remark. “Tell me- what are you thinking about, Fire Fist?” you asked sincerely. 
“Just-” he scrunched his face. “I’m not sure about this whole second division commander thing.” 
You hummed. “Well, if there are any concerns…you know you could talk to Pops about it.” Ace was never afraid to speak his mind to Whitebeard, both before and after he joined the crew. You wondered what was so heavy on his heart that he’d be afraid to speak to the man he called father.
“Yeah, I’ve been trying to work up the courage for that all night,” he said, smiling sheepishly.
“You could talk to me too, y’know. What’s on your mind, Ace?” you asked earnestly.
“You,” he said without missing a beat.
You rolled your eyes at his deflection. “You have way more important things to be thinking about.”
Ace grinned, shrugging. But he wasn’t lying. He always thought about you- what you’d think if he told you about the shame he carries with him, what you’d say, what you’d feel. In his heart he knew that you’d never look at him any differently, but did he even deserve your grace? Did he deserve to live a life where you were okay, even happy, with his existence? Being offered the position of Second Division Commander dug up fears he thought he forgot, fears he never knew he would have. Did he deserve to lead, to have lives in the palm of his hand? What would Whitebeard think once he found out he was working so closely with his rival’s son? The questions ran on and on in his mind. He would look to anything for an answer: the sun, the moon, the ocean, the stars, anything but his own crew. 
Below you, you watched the black abyss of the nighttime ocean, searching for your own answers, for anything to say to Ace. 
“What happened to living with no regrets?” you said quietly.
Ace’s eyes widened. “(Y/N)...”
You turned to look at him, your eyes boring holes into his own. “Whatever is holding you back, will it be stronger than your regret?”
He swallowed. No, nothing would be stronger than his regret- he wouldn’t let it. Placing his hand over yours, he held it and squeezed, seemingly transferring his warmth to you. “I think…you just gave me the courage to talk to Pops.” 
A mutual exchange, it seemed.
You sighed a breath of relief. “That’s grea-”
“Do you mind taking the night watch for a couple of minutes while I talk to him?”
“Wait, like, right now?” 
Ace nodded excitedly. How could you deny him?
“Okay,” you told him as your eyes softened.
“Thank you. Thank you so much, (Y/N). For everything.” He let go of his hand from yours, taking his warmth with it- a sobering observation of what life without Ace would be like. 
“No problem, Fire Fist.” Ace was already walking away. 
He headed towards the Captain’s Cabin on the deck, opening and entering the doorway to where Pops resided. You stared above you at the night sky, waiting patiently for the sound of the door to open, remembering that just moments ago that Ace was in your spot, having a silent discussion with the constellations above. You could make out a constellation in the North: Hercules, the shape of a man kneeling. Was he attacking an enemy? Was he kneeling from exhaustion? From shame? Still, as the minutes pass, the thoughts drift to Ace.
What made Ace doubt himself? There were so many possibilities. He is the Fire Fist Ace, a seemingly divine hero to many- what unknown burdens could a man like him hold? 
Tearing your eyes away from the constellation, you came to realize that the stars only raise more questions, rather than answering them. It’s no wonder Ace had stared at them so aimlessly, in the same way you did. You would only find your answers- and so much more- in him, not anywhere else.
“(Y/N)! Thanks for standing in,” Ace said from behind you, causing you to flinch a little. You turned around, leaning back on the port side of the ship. 
“Had a good father-son talk?”
“A great one.” Ace put both of his hands on your shoulders. “(Y/N)...don’t tell anyone else yet- I want it to be a surprise. I’m officially gonna be the Second Division Commander!”
You mirrored Ace, smiling brightly, relieved and proud. “Ace, this is huge!” Pulling him into a hug, he reciprocated instantly, wrapping his arms around you, carrying you and spinning you around. In the silence of the night, it felt like you two were the only ones on the ship, the stars looking down fondly and waves applauding you. A burden seemed to be lifted from his shoulders and into the night sky. 
Ace set you down, his smile never breaking. “Congrats, Fire Fist. You deserve it. More than anyone, you deserve it,” you told him, repeating what you had said to Marco and Thatch. 
His jaw dropped slightly, but he quickly recovered. “Thanks Firefly. You should probably head to bed now,” Ace said kindly, knowing that you’re never assigned to lookout. “I have the night watch.”
“I should,” you bit your lip, “but I think we should celebrate your new position. A little pre-party before the actual party with the whole crew. Plus, I can’t leave you alone- it’s not often I’m on the deck at night.” You scanned around the usually bustling ship. “It’s peaceful.”
Doubt flashed through Ace’s eyes. It didn’t go unnoticed by you. “I told you already. You deserve it. Now, let me grab some rum!” You quickly turned to head down to the galley, quietly walking through the lower deck. You grabbed two bottles and headed back up, not wanting to leave Ace alone with his thoughts for too long.
“Here you go,” you handed Ace the larger bottle as he thanked you. “Here’s to Fire Fist Ace, the Whitebeard Crew’s Second Division Commander!”
You clinked your bottles together, a sound both of you knew too well. Drinking together, with just the two of you, felt more intimate, more sacred. The moon softly lit the side of Ace’s face, his smile looking even brighter in the dark. 
“Why do you keep getting put on night watch? Doesn’t everyone know you’ll fall asleep in the middle of it?” you laughed.
“Good thing you’re here to keep me awake this time around.”
“You’re welcome, but don’t get used to it.”
“C’mon, you should join me on lookout from here on out,” Ace said as he pushed his shoulder against yours.
“Look at you, already spouting out orders as a division commander,” you replied as you pushed back. 
“That means you can’t say no.”
“I wasn’t planning to.”
Sitting on the wooden floor of the deck, shoulder to shoulder, between laughter and eye rolls, the two of you talked endlessly. 
“Now, what did Whitebeard say to make you take the job?” you asked, liquid courage fueling your curiosity. 
“Something like ‘we’re all children of the sea,’” Ace gave his best Whitebeard impression. 
“Please, never do that again,” you took a sip of rum. “What made him say that?” 
With every sip of rum, Ace’s lips were getting looser. “I told him something I never tell anyone.”
“And that is?”
Ace paused. Would you hate him if he told you the truth? Would you never speak to him again? But his thoughts stopped there, feeling guilty for thinking that you’d do something terrible to him. You disarmed him, but the alcohol made him feel even more exposed with nothing left to hide. He felt vulnerable, yet safe. 
And so he decided to surrender himself to you.
He took a deep breath. “I told Pops that-”
“You don’t have to tell me,” you said, truly meaning it.
Your words struck a chord within him, confirming that you could truly do no wrong, only further enticing him to share all his woes with you. He admitted absolute defeat, the words spilling out of his mouth before he could stop it. “I want to. (Y/N), I am Gol D. Roger’s son.”
You noticed that, despite shedding his inhibitions, he still had the sense to choose those words carefully; it was I’m Gol D. Roger’s son rather than my father is Gol D. Roger. 
You tried your best to hide your surprise, but it showed as soon as you let your jaw drop. “Portgas D. Ace?” you said questioningly, his name slowly forming on your tongue. 
“My mom’s name. It was Portgas D. Rouge.”
You looked at him, silently urging him to continue. And so he did. Memories of being treated like the devil’s offspring, of being raised by a navy admiral were spoken into words, received by your nods, beckoning him to go on and on. “I don’t wanna regret anything. I just wanna live life the way I want and to feel like I deserve to live that way.”
Whitebeard’s cabin was only a couple feet away from the two of you. You silently thanked your captain. “It’s like Pops said, we’re all children of the sea. The ocean is… this great equalizer. You are you and…I like that, Roger’s son or not. M’glad Pops knocked some sense into you. Not only do you deserve the position, but you deserve to be here.” 
“Heh, figured you’d say that,” Ace said.
You shook your head. “But you don’t believe me.”
“Can’t get anything past you.”
“Yeah, so there’s no use trying to.”
Ace took the final sip of his drink, only drops of amber coming from the rim of the bottle. “Thank you,” he looked at you, his gaze forcing you to hold your own on him, “for understanding me.” 
Ace, the shame of the sea and burden of the brine, wanted to believe the silver-laced affirmations of yours; he wished the bullets of your words would penetrate his thickheaded skull and make him think he was truly worthy.
But they didn’t. And to him, that didn’t matter. He was just glad that you could be the one to justify his existence when he couldn’t bring himself to. He couldn’t complain. 
“If only you saw yourself through my eyes,” you yawned. 
Ace fell silent, reluctant to even look at you. 
You let your head rest on the uncomfortable wooden deck and stared at the stars that seemed to shine brighter than they did before. Taking one last look at the constellation of Hercules, it was clear to you now that he was kneeling in exhaustion. Maybe tomorrow he would kneel fearlessly over his enemies, triumphant and sure. But for now, he only looked down upon the seas with shame. 
“What did the stars tell you earlier?” you asked.
“I guess,” he tilted his neck up to see the Herculean pattern of stars, “they told me that I’m the one who decides what I’m gonna be.”
With no words to fill the void, you closed your eyes, the waves of alcohol and the ocean rocking you to sleep.
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wxnheart · 1 year
Text
𝙰𝚙𝚎𝚡 𝙿𝚛𝚎𝚍𝚊𝚝𝚘𝚛 - 𝐏𝐫𝐢𝐦𝐚𝐫𝐜𝐡 𝐱 𝐑𝐞𝐚𝐝𝐞𝐫 (𝟏/𝟑)
He is radiant, exuding charisma, a beatific smile adorning his face. He serves faithfully, every world made a means to an end. For the glory of mankind. Just as he serves faithfully, so, too, do you, cheerfully beholden to His ethereal visage. You never see his smile lessen as time goes by, as he fails to capture your ador. You never see the cracks in his smile until it's too late and by then it speaks of death and destruction. He beckons you near for you would bear witness to His salvation.
Horus Lupercal
An enigma adorned with a sword and shield. That is his nature, culling the weak and the unwanted and eliminating foes. Underneath lurks a beast, waiting for its next target, waiting to strike again. Waiting to lay claim. You'd heard tales of the beast in the wilderness but when you laid eyes upon him, a monster made a man, cloaked in knightly splendor, did the stories ring true. It was a gaze that spoke words he never did, a gaze you tried to avoid to no avail. Hunting. Yes... he was hunting, adorned with a sword and shield. The beast in the wilderness, the monster made man, had found its next target and it was you.
Lion El'Jonson
He finds his muse amidst swirls of purple and reds. He finds his muse, perfection embodied, and he's never felt so complete before. Finally, someone who sees his pursuits for what they truly are. He goes to claim you, his beautiful muse, the one who will continue to inspire him and push his sons to achieve excellence and beyond. He comes to claim you... and you escape his grasp without remorse. Never has he felt so slighted before. How dare you.
Fulgrim
A light shining in the putrid darkness. That's how he sees you. Purity wading through a sea of filth. Pathetic. The night bears witness to his atrocity and the monster lurks closer with every kill. Every kill that is done in your name. He does not understand this pull towards you; he does not seek to understand it. All he knows (and sees) is untaintedness and he would rather the people burn than to see you corrupted. He looks down upon you from the smog, your guardian daemon, and in time, when the filth has been purged, will he make his presence known. In time, you will no longer fear the terror of death.
Konrad Curze
They all close ranks, surrounding you, never letting you get far. Nary a movement goes unnoticed, and you look into the abyss to find hundreds of eyes looking back. It is stifling this prison. Every man is made an enemy; you never know who is who. Are they free still or are they made in the image of their father, the master of subterfuge? Are their gazes theirs or his? It stifles you, this prison. Their eyes scare you. You stare in the mirror with fear and wonder if it's him you're seeing staring back.
Alpharius Omegon
Degradation is all he knows and all he sees. It was all that he was taught as the stench of filth filled his nostrils and clouded his vision. His breath labors on the precipice of death and rebirth and its rattle shakes you to your core. You held no love for the monster's beliefs, held no love for those who profess to follow him but he was undeterred as always. He would never submit so why did you? In time, he reasons, you will see the error of your ways. To become beholden to that rot—pathetic! In time you will see the degradation and uselessness of it all. The rattle of death will seek you out and refusal be damned, he will make you see as he does. You will reap what he has sown.
Mortarion
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linda-ravstar · 3 months
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Warm rays of sun (Trina talks to Mohg and Sir Ansbach)
Incomplete musings about an AU scenario in which Trina fights Miquella and wins. The divine power that Miquella acquired allowed her, after winning the battle, to slowly heal the broken world. And one of the things that she did was to make amends and restore a betrayed soul. Completely self indulgent.
“Ansbach tells me that I should be grateful to you,” Mohg noted. He seemed tense. Restless. She didn't doubt it. Guiding a lost soul to the world was no easy feat. It must have been disconcerting, like waking up from a deep sleep that had not been anticipated. “I don't feel gratitude right now.”
“And I'm not looking for it either,” she replied. Her gaze remained fixed on the horizon, where the faint rays of sunlight illuminated the land. A land that was beginning to heal.
“I wonder if I wouldn't do better to challenge you right now.” Mohg's growl was filled with something that was clearly something other than rage. It was fear. It was sadness. It was betrayal.
Trina looked at the Lord of Blood. In her lap remained the sword that had kept her company all the way. Stained with his blood and her tears. It would be so easy. It would be so easy to wield it again and get lost in an ocean of poison and violence again, no matter the outcome. But that would be an absurd selfishness and she could not allow herself to succumb to it.
“If you wish to strike me down, Lord Mohg, you are welcome. I won’t fight you.” The demigod suddenly wanted to speak, but Trina interrupted him, without looking at him. “If slaying me will do you justice, you go ahead. But know this: you cannot kill a dead god.”
“Lady Trina,” Ansbach suddenly pointed out, advancing towards his lord with an urgent but respectful tone. “I thank you with all my heart for the service you have performed. Returning my Lord's soul from the abyss in which he was discarded into, will be something that I will never be able to fully repay. I couldn't even begin to conceive of how to thank you. I know that these are not the circumstances in which we were supposed to meet and, if I am honest, my heart remains restless due to your presence. I understand my lord’s desire because I feel it myself. You represent a great danger being the one who could kill a god. But I also know that… that if there is anyone in this world who is more tormented by what happened, it is you.”
Trina's eyes filled with tears, but she did not look up at the knight.
“I appreciate your words, Sir Ansbach. I’ll answer your honesty in kind, and I’ll say that I don't think anyone will ever understand what it means for me to be here when...” The words seemed to shatter in her chest. “…When he is no longer here. What it meant for me to finish the task that no one else could accomplish.”
“Miquella betrayed you,” Mohg said, and his tone has changed. It was no longer that restrained wrath. It was just sorrow. Just resignation. “Just as he betrayed me and maybe how many others.”
“He didn't betray me,” she whispered. “He lost his way. I couldn't save him. I was the one who failed him.”
“You did save him, Lady Trina. In the end, I am sure he could see that.”
“... My pain is my own, Sir Ansbach.”
It seemed like the end of the conversation. Lord and knight did not say another word to her and started to walk away from her. Suddenly, the Goddess raised her voice again and looked directly at Mohg, which looked back at her.
“Lord Mohg, son of Marika, servant of the Mother of Truth, Lord of a Dinasty of Blood. I know you don't want to hear this and maybe it's just selfishness that guides me. But I'll say it anyway because you deserve to hear it”.
Ansbach, by instinct, changed his position, ready for the unexpected, but relaxed when he saw that the Goddess did not move.
“I am sorry.”
Mohg was silent, but Trina could see the tremble in the hand that held his trident. The huge dark wings peeked out from behind, proud and beautiful.
“I am sorry we treated you this way and we did no better than the rest of the world who shunned you. We never approved of your vision or your methods, and probably never will, but your life and soul are yours and no one should have robbed you of that. I can only hope that you will now find the rest and peace that were denied to you before.”
“Do you seek my forgiveness?” asked the demigod, in a voice that was also a whisper.
"No. It is not my sin, although now I bear it. The one who could receive your forgiveness died in my arms. Your sorrow, your anger, and your future are yours alone, Lord Mohg. Forgiveness is your decision.” She was silent for a moment. “It is neither a consolation nor an excuse, but… if it is of any soothe to your heart, the deception and death that you suffered haunted Miquella until the very end. He could never forget it. Neither will I.”
Mohg did not respond. He only nodded.
It was enough.
“Lady Trina, will you remain here?” asked Ansbach, when the silence threatened to consume them all.
“I will.”
“… can I ask you why?”
“Because this was his dream,” she said and her voice broke in a hundred different pieces. “This world, slowly recovering from its wounds, slowly healing from its ills, slowly flourishing. A better world. A gentler world. A world that accepted them all. That was his dream, forever and always. And if there is nothing left of him but me to see it, to see the warm sun of this new era, so be it. I will stay here to see the world that should have been his, I will stay so that something of his soul can rest in this world that he wanted to save and that he could not see." Tears fell freely down the Goddess's face. “Because if I am all that is left of Miquella, I want him to see through me the world that he helped create, even if the darkness consumed him whole during his path.”
“And were we a part of that world?” asked Mohg, suddenly.
The Goddess of Slumber and Death smiled. The first smile in a very long time.
“You were. That was the vision, impressed on all hearts. A new world where all things would flourish, whatever graceful or malign. No living creature denied. Mercy for all”. She closed her eyes, her smile still in her face. “Go in peace, Lord Mohg. May this new young world be kinder to you”.
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