The Dragon's Heart: Unspoken Passion-Chapter 138: A Mirror For The Rot

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Chapter 138: A Mirror For The Rot

The wind drifted across the terrace once more, its edge turning contemplative, shedding the biting frost of the Noctharian winter for a stillness that felt far more ancient.

For a long, hollow moment, the voice withdrew into the shadows of her mind. Then, it returned, sliding through her thoughts like a fingertip trailing across fine glass.

"How interesting."

Ilaria’s breath hitched, the sound vanishing into the vastness of the night.

"You were trembling a moment ago," the whisper observed lazily. It was a layered sound like a thousand voices buried beneath a single, silken thread. "Your fingers... they have not stopped shaking since the lantern died."

Instinctively, her hand tightened over her wrist, her pulse thrumming against the glove as if trying to leap out. The wind shifted, brushing along the silk of her sleeve with a phantom-like curiosity.

"And yet, you are still here. You did not scream. You did not run." The iron chains of the lantern creaked overhead, a lonely, rhythmic sound. "Most have the sense to flee a closing trap."

The memory of Lysander’s warnings flickered in her mind, of the madness that trailed in the wake of the Blithe, of the men who had been hollowed out by a single word from the dark. He too, had said the same, exact words to her before.

Her throat felt tight, but she anchored herself to the stone railing, letting the freezing masonry remind her that she was still a creature of flesh and bone as the whisper circled her like a predator pacing an invisible cage.

​"You even sought us out... after we grew bored of you." There was a jagged edge of amusement there now, a sound like dry leaves dragged across cold marble.

"It is a rare creature that hunts the very thing that would consume it. Do you lack a survival instinct, or do you simply enjoy the chill of the void?" The voice hummed, a vibration that resonated in the base of her skull.

​"Are you a fool who mistakes a cliff for a path? Or are you merely so stubborn that you would demand an audience with the storm?" A pause followed, the silence heavy and expectant, before the whisper softened into something stranger.

"...Or are you truly so curious that you would offer your throat to the knife just to see the blade?"

Ilaria did not move. She could not. The wind coiled around her shoulders, lifting a loose strand of hair from her temple with the gentleness of a lover and the coldness of a corpse. When the voice returned, the mockery had vanished, replaced by a weight that felt like an echo of centuries-old grief.

"We are accustomed to the architecture of ruin," the voice drifted closer, the words sounding less like speech and more like the slow settling of dust in a tomb.

"The ones who find their way to us are usually already half-hollowed. They carry the heavy, familiar scent of rot, the jagged remains of a pride long since broken, or a rage that has burnt itself to ash. Those spirits are porous; we do not need to knock when the walls are already falling."

Something brushed against the periphery of her consciousness, not quite a touch, but a sudden thickening of the air that made her feel as though she were standing at the bottom of a deep, still lake.

"But you..." The voice trailed off, turning reflective, possessing a haunting softness that vibrated in the marrow of her teeth. "...there is no decay in you for us to cling to. You are a solid thing in a world of ghosts. It makes the silence between us feel... unfinished."

The stillness on the terrace fractured. She should have run back inside; every instinct told her to run back inside and return to the safety warmth of her husband’s arms. But even then, she remained where she was.

"How very persistent you are," the whisper drawled, the amusement in it now sharp enough to draw blood upon noticing her stubbornness. "A little bird beating its wings against a cage of its own making, desperate for the shadow to look back."

The golden flame in the lantern above suddenly flared into a jagged, unnatural crown, casting distorted shadows that seemed to pace the terrace floor like restless wolves, causing her to flinch back at the abruptness.

"Very well, daughter of light. Since you have offered up your own peace just to hear the sound of the void, I shall indulge you."

Ilaria’s fingers dug into her wrist until the chill burned. The fear was there, like a cold knot in her stomach, but it was being rapidly overtaken by a flare of the same fierce sincerity that had defended Lady Stormlow earlier.

"Why are you here?" she whispered, her voice trembling but refusing to break. "Why are you doing this to us?"

The golden light in the lantern pulsed once, like a slow, glowing eye. "You speak as if we are the wind," the voice mused. "Always looking for a direction. Always needing a why."

"People are dying!" Ilaria hissed, a sharp contrast to the velvet silence of the terrace. "The villages... the sickness... mothers are weeping for children who will never wake up. You have left them to rot in the cold, hollowing out their lives until there is nothing left but shadows. If you are so powerful, if you are so ancient, why choose to be a plague?"

The silence that followed was heavy, suffocating. Then, the laughter returned.

"You look at a forest fire and weep for the scorched bark. You do not see the soil beneath, finally breathing because the canopy has been cleared."

The wind whipped around her, smelling of copper and ancient dust.

"Why does the winter come for the summer rose? Why does the sea swallow the shore? You demand a motive from the tide." The whisper grew closer, the golden light casting a distorted, elongated shadow of Ilaria against the stone.

"We did not ’choose’ the rot. We simply arrived, and your world was found brittle. We are not the hand that strikes the spark, we are the hunger that follows the heat."

Ilaria shook her head, her violet eyes shimmering with tears of frustration. "That isn’t an answer. You are a thief. You take everything and leave only silence."

"Silence is a mercy your kind rarely appreciates," it purred, the menacing edge returning. "You cry out for meaning in a universe that offers only echoes. We are the echo, princess. We are the mirror. If you do not like the ’rot’ you see, perhaps you should stop providing such fertile soil."

Ilaria swallowed hard, the sound dry and brittle in the sudden vacuum of the terrace. She felt small, not the regal, composed Princess she had been in the ballroom, but a girl standing at the edge of a cliff she could not see.

The Blithe’s words about choosing the rot felt like a direct assault on her heart. Her father would have known the right philosophical parry, some ancient wisdom to silence the shadow. But Ilaria did not have his wisdom, she only had her memories.

"The dream," she blurted out, her voice desperate to change the subject before the cold swallowed her completely. "The one at The Verge. You showed me Serenya. You showed me the red sea and... and things that feel catastrophic. Why is that?"

"Dream?" the voice asked, the word dripping with an almost feline curiosity. "We do not deal in the business of sleep, little light. We are the waking dark. We are the silence that remains when the story ends."

Ilaria was insistent. "No, it was more than sleep. It was heavy. It felt like saltwater and blood. You called me ’Queen’ and you pretended to be my husband just to touch my neck. You mocked my peace. You were trying to scare me!"

The wind around her suddenly died, the air turning so still it felt like she was trapped in amber. The laughter that returned was different now, like bone dice being thrown onto a stone floor.

"How flattering," the Blithe whispered, the malice in its tone sharpening into something genuinely amused. "To think that we would labour so hard to construct a theater for your mind. To believe that we would bother to wear the skin of your Prince just to watch you tremble."

The lantern creaked overhead. "If you saw a sea of red and a sister crowned in bone, princess, do not look to us for the map. We did not build your nightmares, we only heard the screaming that invited us in."

The voice dropped, becoming a breath against the shell of her ear. "The Expanse is not our kingdom. It is yours. If the water was red, it was because you were the one bleeding."

Ilaria’s knees felt weak. The audacious dismissal, the way it claimed it did not even know what she was talking about felt like a second betrayal.

"You’re lying," she breathed, though her heart was not in it.

"We do not lie," the entity hissed, the golden light flaring with a sudden, blinding intensity. "Lies require an intent to deceive. We simply are. If you saw a shadow with your husband’s eyes, perhaps you should ask yourself why your heart was so ready to recognize the monster in the man."

"..."

The words stung like a physical slap. To have a creature of rot and silence suggest that she was looking for the monster in Levan, that she was somehow complicit in the darkness she feared, sparked a fire in Ilaria’s chest that finally burned through her terror.

"Don’t you dare," she hissed, her voice low and trembling with a sudden, sharp fury. "Do not speak of my husband as if you know his heart. You are a shadow that feeds on ruins, you know nothing of the light he carries, or the way he has held me when the world felt like it was breaking."

The Blithe’s suggestion flickered through her mind like a lightning strike, and for a terrifying second, it dragged up a memory she had tried to bury. She saw Neven’s cold, pitying gaze on the terrace at the palace. She heard his velvety, dangerous voice questioning the sanctity of the Coronation.

"Be careful which truths you wear like armour, princess. Not every crown reflects the same light."

The suggestion that Levan’s very legitimacy was a pageant engineered by men back then had left her adrift once, but standing here now, she realized that the Blithe was doing exactly what Neven had done: sowing seeds of doubt in the only garden she had left.

To have his sacrifice dismissed as a mere arrangement felt like a desecration. He had bled for every inch of his standing, only for the shadows to whisper that the ground beneath him was hollow. She could not just accept it.

"My husband is a good man," Ilaria stated, her violet eyes flashing with a fierce, stubborn loyalty. "He is not your mirror, and he is not your ’rot.’ If there is a monster in this darkness, it is you, too cowardly to show its face."

The light in the lantern flared one last time, a sharp, angry pulse that felt like a snarl before the pressure on her wrist snapped. 𝘧𝓇ℯℯ𝑤ℯ𝘣𝓃ℴ𝓋𝑒𝑙.𝑐𝘰𝑚

The supernatural weight vanished so abruptly that Ilaria stumbled, her hand catching the stone railing for support. The golden hue bled out of the air, replaced instantly by the warm, steady orange of the lantern and the soft silver of the moon.

The terrace was quiet again. Only the wind remained, whispering through the iron chains overhead.

Ilaria drew in a slow breath, her lungs burning as if she had been underwater for far too long. The night felt strangely ordinary now, the palace lights glowing in distant windows, the gardens below resting in peaceful darkness.

Gone.

The Blithe was gone.

Her fingers trembled as she pushed herself upright, trying to convince her racing heart that the world had returned to something resembling normal. But then something cold slid across her palm.

She frowned.

The lantern light caught the dark smear across her glove. For a moment she thought it was only shadow. Then the wind shifted, and the colour deepened into something that made her eyes wide.

Red.

A slow, crawling unease crept up her spine. Carefully, almost afraid of what she might find, Ilaria tugged at the glove with her other hand and pulled it free.

Her wrist was pale beneath the moonlight. A thin line of crimson welled from the skin, bright and fresh as though the wound had only just been made, cut straight through the throbbing sigil the Expanse had once carved into her flesh.

Ilaria stared at it, her breath catching in her throat once again. She did not remember being cut, but the blood slid down her wrist all the same.

And then, from the doorway behind her, came the voice she knew better than her own heartbeat. "Aria?"