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The Villainess Wants To Retire-Chapter 161: The announcement
She picked up her fork, speared a delicate piece of fish, and examined it with the kind of attention usually reserved for fascinating puzzles.
"He was indeed passionate," she said quietly, almost conversationally. "About many things. Power. Control. Legacy." She lifted her eyes to meet Vetra’s directly, and there was something in that gaze that made even Lady Isolde shift uncomfortably. "I learned much from watching him."
A pause. Deliberate. Weighted.
"Perhaps more than he intended."
Translation: I know exactly what you’re doing. I was trained by a master manipulator. And everything he taught me, through intention or through trauma, I have learned to wield better than he ever did.
The nobles who understood the subtext, and most of them did, felt their assumptions about this woman shift and realign like ice cracking underfoot.
She wasn’t deflecting. Wasn’t defending her father or trying to distance herself from his legacy. She was *acknowledging* it. Claiming it. Using it.
This wasn’t a woman ashamed of her past. This was a woman who’d studied it, learned from it, and weaponized it.
Marquess Theron looked like he might actually faint. His entire fortune, his entire position, depended on Vetra’s favor, on the assumption that the Regent Empress was untouchable, unshakeable, absolutely in control.
But right now, watching these two women trade poisoned pleasantries across the high table, he wasn’t so certain anymore.
Under the table, hidden from view but absolutely deliberate, Soren’s hand found Eris’s thigh, a slight brush of his fingers before slowly gripping them with the utmost possessiveness disguised as gentleness.
The touch was warm, warmer than it should have been, warmer than any man’s hand had a right to be. His fingers pressed gently against the fabric of her dress, a claim and a comfort and a silent message all at once.
He leaned closer, his breath ghosting against her ear as he whispered low enough that only she could hear: "You’re magnificent when you’re dismantling people."
Eris didn’t turn her head. Didn’t break eye contact with Vetra. Her voice, when she responded, was pitched to carry only to him.
"Focus on your meal, Your Majesty."
His thumb traced a small circle against her leg, maddeningly slow, deliberately distracting. "I am focused," he murmured. "Just not on the one sitting on my plate but next to me."
Her fingers tightened fractionally around her fork. Anyone watching might have thought she was simply emphasizing a point. Only Soren, close enough to feel the heat radiating from her skin, could tell it was restraint.
"You’re going to lose that hand," she said quietly.
"Promises, promises."
Across the table, Vetra watched this exchange with the kind of attention that missed nothing. The way Soren leaned close. The way Eris’s posture shifted ever so slightly toward him even as she maintained her outward composure. The intimacy that existed in the small space between them, obvious even when they were pretending otherwise.
It was... inconvenient.
She’d expected infatuation. Perhaps even obsession, Soren had always been intense when something caught his interest. But this looked distressingly like partnership. Like two people who understood each other’s rhythms, who could communicate in glances and small touches, who trusted each other enough to engage in separate battles while knowing the other was there.
That was dangerous.
Infatuation could be manipulated. Partnership was considerably harder to break.
The first course continued in relative silence after that initial volley, though the tension in the hall had shifted from anticipation to something more electric. Nobles who’d been watching with detached curiosity were now leaning forward, straining to hear, desperately trying to catch every word and gesture that might tell them which way the wind was blowing.
Because make no mistake, a war had just been declared.
Not with swords or armies or dramatic proclamations, but with the far more civilized weapons of court intrigue. Subtle insults disguised as pleasantries. Poisoned compliments wrapped in silk. The kind of warfare that left no bodies but could destroy lives just as effectively.
Servers moved through the hall clearing plates, their movements careful, their eyes downcast. Even they could feel the weight of what was happening.
When the last plate was removed, when the hall settled into that strange liminal space between courses, Soren stood.
The effect was immediate. Conversations died. Every head turned. The floating light orbs overhead seemed to brighten slightly, as though the hall itself was holding its breath.
He lifted his goblet, the ice-wine inside catching the light, and for a moment he simply stood there, Emperor of Nevareth, bare-faced and powerful and absolutely certain of his authority.
When he spoke, his voice carried through the vaulted chamber with the kind of clarity that suggested he’d been trained since childhood to command attention.
"My lords and ladies. Honored guests." He paused, letting the silence stretch just long enough to ensure every ear was focused. "Before we proceed, I must acknowledge the woman who has guided this empire through uncertain times."
He turned slightly, nodding toward Vetra.
"The Regent Empress’s dedication to Nevareth’s stability has been... invaluable. Her counsel shaped much of what we have become. The peace we enjoy, the prosperity we’ve cultivated, the strength of our borders, all of these things bear the mark of her governance."
It was gracious. Generous. Exactly the kind of acknowledgment protocol demanded.
Polite applause rippled through the hall, the sound of hands meeting in careful rhythm. Vetra inclined her head in acceptance, her expression serene, pleased, exactly as it should be.
But those who knew Soren well, Ryse, Aldric, the handful of military officers who’d served under him in border campaigns, noticed the careful emphasis on certain words. *Has been.* *What we have become.* Not what they would continue to be. Not what they should remain.
Past tense.
The applause faded. Soren let the silence settle before continuing.
"Which is why," he said, his voice taking on a different quality, still respectful, but edged with something harder, "I know she will understand the decision I have made for our empire’s future."
The silence that followed was sharp. Immediate. The kind of quiet that came when an entire room collectively held its breath.
Every person in that hall knew, in that instant, that something significant was about to happen.
Soren turned, his gaze finding Eris where she sat composed and watchful. When he extended his hand toward her, it wasn’t a command. It was an invitation. A choice offered and accepted.
"Lady Eris Igniva of Solmire."
His voice carried through the hall like a declaration of war wrapped in velvet.
"Daughter of Solmire’s most powerful lineage. Wielder of fire magic unmatched in her generation." His eyes never left hers, and there was something in that gaze, pride, possession, absolute certainty, that made even the most cynical nobles shift in their seats. "A woman who has governed, commanded, and ruled with strength that empires respect and enemies fear."
He paused, letting each word settle into the collective consciousness of Nevareth’s nobility.
"She has walked through fire and emerged unburned. She has faced death and claimed victory. She has ruled with power that makes kingdoms tremble and has chosen, " his voice dropped slightly, became more intimate despite carrying to every corner of the hall, ", to stand here. In our cold. In our ice. To bring her fire to our winter."
The metaphor wasn’t subtle. It wasn’t meant to be.
Eris remained seated, her expression carefully neutral, but those close enough could see the faint tension in her shoulders, the way her fingers rested perhaps a bit too precisely against the armrest of her chair. She hadn’t expected this. Or perhaps she had, but hearing it spoken aloud in front of hundreds of witnesses was different from knowing it would happen.
Soren’s next words fell into the waiting silence like stones into still water.
"I have chosen her as my bride."
Gasps. Actual gasps. From nobles who’d spent their entire lives training not to show emotion in public.
"As Nevareth’s future Empress."
Lady Isolde’s face had gone absolutely white. Marquess Theron looked like he was about to slide off his chair. Duke Konstantin’s eyes narrowed with renewed interest, his merchant’s mind already recalculating everything.
"As the woman who will stand beside me, " Soren’s emphasis on that word was deliberate, unmistakable, ", as we forge this empire’s next Chapter."
He reached Into his coat and withdrew a ring.
Not some hastily acquired piece of jewelry, but an ancient thing, ice-blue stone set in platinum, carved with runes so old most scholars had forgotten their meaning. It had belonged to Nevareth’s first Empress, had been worn by exactly three women in the empire’s entire history.
It was a symbol. A statement. A declaration of legitimacy that couldn’t be questioned.
Soren held it up so the light caught the stone, making it glow with that distinctive blue that seemed to hold captured winter in its depths.
"With this ring, "
"Your Majesty."
Vetra’s voice cut through his words like a blade through silk.





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