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The Omega Who Wasn't Supposed to Exist-Chapter 60: Operation Matrimonial Surveillance: Part II
Chapter 60: Operation Matrimonial Surveillance: Part II
[Imperial Palace – Grand Entrance / Late Afternoon Drama Hour]
The gold-trimmed carriage came to a stop with royal silence.
A liveried footman opened the door, and Silas Rynthall stepped down with the grace of a man who owned half the empire and worried about all of it.
Crisp cravat. Impeccable coat. Slight frown. Heavy sigh.
His boots clicked against the marble steps like punctuation marks from a man composing betrayal in his mind. He strode toward the towering gates of the Imperial Palace—straight-backed, steady, eyes forward, clearly preoccupied with Very Important Thoughts.
He didn’t look left.
He didn’t look right.
He didn’t know.
Behind him...
A second carriage rolled to a halt.
Much simpler. Much quieter.
Much more suspicious.
And from its heavily tinted, drama-soaked window, two bejeweled silhouettes slowly emerged, like sapphires peeking through velvet shadows.
Lucien Rynthall leaned forward, his red velvet cloak cascading over his belly like royal suspicion incarnate. His sunglasses—comically enormous and impossibly chic—reflected the palace steps with soap-opera-level tension. His feathered fan was trembling. Possibly alive.
Beside him, Lady Seraphina, draped in a gown so black it made mourning fashionable again, adjusted her razor-edged sunglasses and peeked through the lace veil like she was auditioning for a villainess role in a gothic dessert opera.
Lucien whispered, his voice trembling with scandal: "He’s entering the palace. I REPEAT—THE EAGLE HAS NESTED."
Seraphina squinted like a vulture with excellent taste. "Why is he walking like that? That’s not casual. That’s—’I’m going to commit tax fraud behind your back’ posture."
Lucien clutched his fan. "HE JUST LOOKED LEFT—DOES THAT MEAN GUILT?"
"Or indigestion," Seraphina mused.
"He never has indigestion on Wednesdays!" Lucien hissed, clutching his bump like it contained divine secrets. "HE’S PLANNING SOMETHING. I know that face. That’s his ’I hope I remembered to hide the scandalous letters’ face!" freewēbnoveℓ.com
The footman approached to open their door, his expression stoic but oddly reverent—like he, too, understood the weight of the espionage he was now complicit in.
Lucien raised one hand. Dramatically. Commandingly. "Not yet," he said in a low whisper.
The footman nodded, as if briefed by the Empress herself. He stepped back like a trained agent giving clearance.
Silas disappeared behind the palace doors.
Lucien’s sunglasses glinted. "Now... we move."
The door was flung open like a portal to justice. Lucien descended with all the grace of a swan wrapped in suspicion, one hand on his belly, the other waving slightly like he was blessing the operation. Seraphina hovered beside him, heels clacking, hands steadying him with the finesse of a woman used to dramatic men in silk robes.
They crept toward the side entrance like the world’s most overdressed assassins.
But—
"Lord Luce—!" came a voice from the shadows.
"GAH!" Seraphina shrieked, nearly stabbing the speaker with her bejeweled pen.
Lucien jumped and clutched his belly and chest at once. "MY WOBBLEBEAN ALMOST POPPED OUT!"
A palace maid stood there, frozen in horror, bowing so low she almost disappeared.
"I—I’m sorry, my lord! Lady! I didn’t mean to startle you! I was sent by the Empress—it’s a secret! I was told to escort you discreetly!"
Lucien exhaled like a widow in a soap opera. "Well next time, whistle first! Or wear a bell! Or toss some macarons ahead of you so we know you’re friendly!"
The maid bowed even lower. "Understood, my lord."
Seraphina pressed a hand to her racing heart. "Gods, you nearly made me go into early labor, and I’m not even pregnant."
Lucien fluttered his fan. "My unborn child now knows the sting of betrayal and jumpscares. Thank you."
The maid gave a nervous curtsy. "If you would follow me, the Empress is waiting... through the west passage. It’s... the secret way."
Lucien raised a brow above his sunglasses. "Secret way?"
Seraphina’s eyes lit up. "We get to go through a secret passage? Like in the spy novels?!"
Lucien’s gasp echoed off the courtyard stones. "Does it involve trapdoors? Moving bookcases? A corridor full of portraits with shifting eyes?!"
The maid blinked. "Uh... no. But the floor tiles are very slippery."
Lucien grabbed Seraphina’s arm. "I KNEW IT. DANGER. DRAMA. DIPLOMACY."
"Mostly just marble and anxiety, my lord," the maid muttered under her breath.
Still, Lucien straightened his robe, fluffed his feathered collar, and declared, "Lead the way. We follow the shadows now. Operation Scandalous Husband Is Officially in Phase Two."
They disappeared into the narrow servants’ corridor behind the palace wall—three figures in ridiculous sunglasses, whispering about betrayal and bracing for espionage...
...as the Empress waited in the shadows with a map, a magnifying glass, and possibly two slices of cake.
***
[Imperial Palace—The East Garden of Scandalous Convenience]
The maid led them through a shaded archway, past rows of imperial hedges trimmed into unnecessarily judgmental swans, and into the Empress’s private garden.
Sunlight spilled like golden syrup across the white stone path. Birds chirped in harmony (possibly hired), and the scent of rosewater, honey, and barely contained gossip filled the air.
At the center of the garden, under a lacy pergola, sat Empress Elise.
Lounging like a divine peony in bloom, she reclined on a cushioned chair beside an elegant tea table that was so overloaded with food it might qualify as a diplomatic buffet.
She wore flowing pistachio silk, her bump cradled beneath layers of floral embroidery, her hair twisted into a perfect crown of braids and emerald combs.
She didn’t even look up.
"About time," she said, picking up a grape with the air of someone who ruled kingdoms and fruit bowls.
Lucien lit up like a scandalous sunrise. "Hi, darling!"
He waddled—gracefully—and dropped into the seat across from her like a swan fainting into silk. Without a second of hesitation, he picked up a spoon, reached for the mango pudding, and moaned, "OH MY STARS. This tastes like betrayal covered in sugar."
"Do you want more?"
"Yes, please."
Seraphina stood frozen. "Wait—aren’t we here to spy? Why are we eating?"
Lucien blinked at her with the blankness of a man who had just discovered edible divinity.
Empress Elise casually chewed a biscuit and gestured to a plate of lemon tarts. "Lady Seraphina, please. There’s a time for espionage, and there’s a time for eclairs. This is both."
"That’s not how spying works—" Seraphina began.
"Oh, relax," the Empress said, waving her hand as if swatting away reality. "I already handled it. I’m very resourceful. That’s why Adrien married me, you know."
Lucien paused mid-bite, gasped, and set his spoon down slowly.
Seraphina’s eyes narrowed into slits of pure nobility. "Oh, please. Adrien chose you because you bribed his council to put your name at the top of the ’Wife Candidate’ list."
Elise leaned forward, smiling sweetly—like a tiger in pearls. "Correction: He chose me without waiting for the wife candidate list."
Seraphina scoffed. "How romantic."
Their eyes locked.
Somewhere, the wind stilled.
A bee buzzed past, took one look at the tension, and rerouted.
Lucien looked between them, chewing dramatically. "Why does every tea break end in violence between you two?"
The Empress broke eye contact first and flipped her hair with imperial flair. "Anyway, as I was saying before I was rudely attacked by jealousy—I’ve already arranged everything."
Seraphina folded her arms. "Arranged what, exactly?"
Elise smirked, reaching for a cinnamon twist with all the smugness of a mastermind mid-villain monologue. "I bribed Adrien’s favorite knight."
Seraphina blinked.
Lucien choked on his pudding. "You did WHAT?!"
"He’s very fond of candied almonds," the Empress said casually, "and loose lips. He’s agreed to relay every word—every syllable—Silas and Adrien exchange in private."
She sipped her tea with elegance that bordered on villainy.
"Nothing escapes us now. Not a secret. Not a whisper. Not a grain of suspiciously symbolic soil."
Lucien nearly clapped himself into early labor.
"YOU’RE AMAZING!" he cried, positively vibrating in his chair, his spoon flinging pudding into the hibiscus bush behind him. "We are UNTOUCHABLE. WE ARE THE WIND."
The Empress gave a radiant smile and flipped her hair like a victorious goddess on a magazine cover. "I know."
Seraphina rolled her eyes so hard it could’ve been considered exercise.
She finally sat, crossing one leg over the other with practiced disdain, and huffed, "Pfft. I could do that too."
Elise didn’t even blink. She merely turned her head, raised one perfectly sculpted brow, and said sweetly, "You cannot bribe Adrien’s knights, Seraphina."
And so, the bickering subsided into dramatic sips and subtle glares, with only the clink of teacups filling the royal silence.
They waited.
Like queens of fate perched on pastry thrones, they waited.
For the knight.
For the truth.
For the revelation that would, in their minds, finally expose the secret plans Silas and Adrien had been cooking behind Lucien’s back.
Lucien fanned himself dramatically with his lace-edged silk handkerchief, muttering, "Soon, we shall know everything. Every. Little. Thing."
Elise nodded, her expression unreadable. Seraphina popped a strawberry tart into her mouth with military precision.
The garden, beautiful and blooming, felt almost... too quiet.
Too perfect.
Too still.
And what none of them knew—what even Lucien, in all his divine pregnancy wisdom and heightened scandal senses, could not predict—Was that the revelation waiting for them just around the corner...
Would not just sting.
It would shatter.
And when it came—
There would be no sunglasses dark enough to shield him from that truth.
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