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I'm the Villain, But the Heroines Keep Choosing Me-Chapter 170: The Recall II
She sighed.
"Accurate accusations or paranoid speculation?"
"Little of both. Mostly paranoid." He sat down. "But we’re being recalled to the Imperial Capital anyway. All of us. Tomorrow."
Seria’s hands stilled. "More attacks?"
"Three kingdoms. Same pattern." He handed her the letter.
She read it quickly, her tactical mind already processing. "This is coordinated at a scale we haven’t seen. Someone’s orchestrating demon attacks empire-wide and has resources to execute simultaneously across multiple kingdoms."
"That’s what I said. Military leadership wasn’t convinced."
"Military leadership is afraid of you and defaulting to suspicion because that’s easier than admitting they don’t understand your magic." She set down the letter. "Where’s Elara?"
"Cathedral. Morning prayers."
"Go get her. We need to start preparing immediately if we’re leaving at dawn." She stood, already moving to their travel supplies. "This is bad, Damien. Not just the attacks themselves but the scale of coordination required. Someone’s building toward something and we’re walking into it with incomplete intelligence."
"I know."
"Do you? Because the Second Core makes you confident in ways that worry me sometimes. You’re stronger now but that doesn’t mean invincible."
"I know that too."
She looked at him, really looked, in that way she had of assessing his actual state underneath whatever confidence he was projecting. "Okay. You do know. Just needed to verify."
He found Elara in the cathedral, not praying but organizing medical supplies with several local healers. She saw him and immediately read his expression.
"Something happened."
"We’re being recalled to the capital. Tomorrow dawn. More demon attacks across the empire."
The healers looked at each other with the specific concern of people who were just starting to believe they might be safe.
Elara thanked them and excused herself, following Damien out into the courtyard.
"How bad?" she asked.
"Unknown. But coordinated enough that the Emperor wants us there immediately."
"And Lyristae’s military command doesn’t trust you."
"How did you—"
"I can feel it when you’re stressed. Anchor bond." She took his hand. "Are you okay?"
"Functionally."
"Not what I asked."
He considered. "I’m tired of being suspected. Tired of people looking at shadow magic and defaulting to demon collaboration. Tired of having to prove I’m not evil to people who’ve already decided I am."
"I know." She squeezed his hand. "For what it’s worth, anyone who actually pays attention knows you’re not evil. The rest are just scared and defaulting to familiar categories."
"Doesn’t make it less exhausting."
"No. It doesn’t." She turned toward their quarters. "Come on. We have preparations to make and about sixteen hours to do them in. Being tired will have to wait."
They spent the rest of the day preparing. Seria organized weapons and supplies with military precision. Elara coordinated with local church leadership about maintaining aid efforts in their absence. Damien reviewed intelligence reports and tried to identify patterns in the recent demon activity.
Lyristae sent a message around sunset – brief, apologetic, explaining she was trapped in council meetings and wouldn’t be able to see them before departure.
*Tomorrow. Eastern gates. Dawn. I’m sorry this is complicated. - L*
"She sounds stressed," Elara observed, reading over his shoulder.
"She’s managing a kingdom while being questioned about her judgment. Stressed is probably understating it."
"Should one of us go check on her?"
"She has an entire palace of advisors and attendants. If she needs help she can ask."
"That’s not the same as having people who care about her personally."
Damien looked at Elara. "You want me to go to her."
"I think she’s probably alone in her quarters trying to be professionally composed while internally panicking about tomorrow." Elara’s voice was gentle. "And I think you being there would help."
"Seria?"
Seria looked up from the travel pack she was organizing. "Go. We’re basically done here anyway. Just don’t spend all night – we actually need to leave at dawn this time."
"I’ll try, but never say never."
"I expected nothing less."
He made his way through the palace, quieter now in evening hours. Guards nodded as he passed – recognition without the earlier suspicion. They’d seen him fight, which apparently counted for more than their commanders’ concerns.
Lyristae’s quarters were in the royal wing, guarded but not excessively. He announced himself and was shown in without question.
She was at her desk, surrounded by papers, still in formal dress from the council meetings. She looked up when he entered, surprise followed immediately by relief.
"What are you doing here?"
"Elara thought you might need company."
"Elara’s perceptive." She set down the paper she’d been reading. "I’m drowning in provisional governance documents and contingency protocols. Fascinating stuff."
"Sounds it."
"It’s terrible. I’ve been reading legal language for four hours and I want to set it all on fire."
"That would solve the problem temporarily."
"Until my council reminded me that kingdoms require actual governance and burned documents don’t count." She stood, stretching, wincing slightly. "I’m so tired, Damien. Not physically. Just... tired of always being the person making decisions. Of having to justify everything to people who question my judgment because I’m young or a woman or involved with someone they don’t trust."
He crossed the room and pulled her into an embrace. She went rigid for half a second – queen’s reflex – then melted into it.
"Tomorrow will be complicated," she said into his shoulder.
"Today was complicated. Tomorrow is just more of the same."
"At least today I was in my own kingdom. Tomorrow I’m back at the Imperial Capital being scrutinized by everyone."
"You handled it before. You’ll handle it again."
"I handled it before by being professionally distant and politically perfect. That’s harder now."
"Because of me."
"Because I have something to lose beyond just my political position. That changes calculations." She pulled back enough to look at him. "I don’t hate it. Just acknowledging the complication."
"Fair."
They stood like that for a moment. Two people in a quiet room, stealing privacy before everything got complicated again.
"Stay?" Lyristae asked. "Just for a while. I don’t want to be alone with provisional governance protocols tonight."
"I can stay for a while."
She pulled him to the sofa, abandoning the desk entirely. They sat together in the kind of comfortable silence that only works between people who don’t need to fill every moment with words.
Eventually she fell asleep against his shoulder, exhausted from council meetings and political navigation and being queen for sixteen hours straight.
Damien let her sleep, watching the candles burn lower while the palace settled into night.







