The Villainess Wants To Retire-Chapter 129: Questions Without Answers pt 2

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Chapter 129: Questions Without Answers pt 2

Figuring out through instinct what I’d been told directly... that we were all characters playing roles, that free will was negotiable, that everything we thought we chose had been chosen for us by hands we couldn’t see?

The thought terrified me.

Because if someone else gained awareness, if someone else figured out the truth, Orrian had said it wouldn’t necessarily be good. Had warned me that people reacted differently to understanding their world was written, that some embraced it and some broke from it and some just went quietly insane.

What if it was Soren?

What if he woke up one day and understood that everything he felt might not be his own feelings but scripted emotions, predetermined connections, the Author’s hand pushing him toward the reformed villainess for narrative satisfaction?

Would he stay?

If his love was independent of the script, if it existed outside the Author’s intentions, if it was genuinely his and not just words on a page... maybe he’d stay. Maybe knowing the truth wouldn’t change anything because what he felt was real regardless of how it started.

But if not...

If his affection was just another plot point, another story beat designed to give me the redemption arc I’d never wanted...

Would he leave me too?

My mind went back to the palace.

To Solmire. To standing in that hallway with Caelen after the ballroom scene, after Soren had proposed, after everything had shifted and reality had started rearranging itself around my choices.

Caelen’s behavior had been strange.

More than strange. Confusing. Like he’d wanted to say something but couldn’t find the words, like he’d wanted to stop me from leaving but didn’t know how, like some part of him that had never existed before was suddenly screaming that losing me was wrong even though he’d spent years making it clear I was an obligation rather than a desire.

He’d looked at me differently.

Not with the hatred I’d earned. Not with the resentment that had colored every interaction. But with something else. Something that looked almost like regret.

Almost like he hadn’t wanted me to go.

The possibility stung.

Because if it was real, if Caelen had actually cared somewhere beneath all the hurt and obligation and bitterness, then I’d wasted five years married to someone who might have loved me if I’d just been different, been better, been less of whatever the script had made me into.

But was I delusional?

Was I seeing patterns that didn’t exist? Reading meaning into behavior that had no meaning beyond the Author deciding to twist the knife one more time, to make me doubt, to give me just enough hope that maybe I hadn’t been completely unloved before snatching it away?

Or maybe Caelen was changing too.

Maybe the script was loosening around him. Maybe he was starting to question his own actions, his own choices, his own hatred that had felt righteous in the first timeline but now seemed excessive, disproportionate, cruel.

If Caelen knew his actions weren’t entirely his own...

If he understood that the script had pushed him to hate me, to resent me, to prioritize Ophelia over his actual wife...

Would he have tried harder to stop me from leaving?

Would he have fought for something he’d never wanted in the first place?

And Ophelia.

Ever so bright and gentle. So impossibly kind even after everything I’d done to her in the first timeline, even after I’d made her life hell out of jealousy and possession and the twisted logic that said if Caelen loved her then destroying her would make him love me instead.

She’d never shown anger.

Never lashed out. Never responded with anything except that infuriating grace and forgiveness that made me feel like a monster for hating her when she’d never done anything except exist and be loved by the man I’d wanted.

But maybe that was the script too.

Maybe Ophelia’s endless kindness wasn’t genuine patience but forced characterization, the Author’s hand keeping her sweet and forgiving because the story needed a pure heroine who could contrast with the villain’s cruelty.

Would she rebel if she knew?

Would she finally show the anger she should have felt years ago? Would she stop being the perfect gentle victim and become something sharper, something real, something that chose to forgive instead of being written to forgive?

All these thoughts pressed down on me.

Suffocating. Heavy. Making the cold air feel thick and difficult to breathe even though there was nothing wrong with the air, nothing wrong with anything except my mind refusing to stop asking questions that had no answers.

I needed to move.

Needed air. Needed space. Needed to think without Soren’s arms around me reminding me that I’d let someone in again, that I’d made myself vulnerable again, that I was setting myself up for the same kind of hurt that had defined my first life.

But first I had to escape his grip.

Which was proving more difficult than anticipated.

I tested angles.

Mentally calculating which direction would work. Whether I could slide down and slip out from under his arms. Whether twisting would loosen his hold enough to extract myself. Whether I’d have to wake him and deal with whatever smug comment he’d make about me trying to escape.

The answer after several minutes of careful assessment: down and to the left.

His arms were locked around my waist but looser near my hips. If I could get my upper body lower, could slide down inch by inch, could use the blankets for leverage...

I moved.

Slowly. Carefully. Testing every shift to make sure it didn’t trigger a response, didn’t make him tighten his grip, didn’t wake him from whatever sleep he’d finally found.

Inch by inch.

His arms slid higher as I moved lower. Over my ribs. My chest. My shoulders. Finally past my head as I extracted myself completely and rolled away onto the furs beside him.

Success.

He didn’t wake.

Just made a small sound... protest maybe, or confusion at finding his arms suddenly empty... and curled slightly toward where I’d been, reaching for warmth that was no longer there.

I stood carefully.

Testing my legs. My balance. My body that still felt strange without the constant heat, without the fire pressing against the inside of my skin demanding release.

I felt lighter.

Physically lighter. Like gravity had less hold on me. Like the absence of burning made movement easier, made existence less exhausting.

I needed to get outside.

Needed real space. Needed to see something beyond cave walls and glowing water and the man who’d somehow become the center of thoughts I’d promised myself I wouldn’t have.

Before I could question the decision, before I could talk myself out of it, I walked toward the waterfall entrance.

Toward cold morning air and whatever answers I might find beyond the safety of this sacred space.