The Villainess Wants To Retire-Chapter 295: The Desperate Journey

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Chapter 295: The Desperate Journey

Morning came too soon and not soon enough.

Caelen stood in the courtyard adjusting his riding gloves when Ophelia found him. She moved slowly, one hand resting on the small swell of her belly, her expression gentle and worried in equal measure.

"You barely slept." Not a question. An observation spoken softly, without accusation.

She reached up to adjust his cloak, her fingers smoothing the fabric over his shoulders with the practiced care of a wife who’d performed this small ritual dozens of times. Her hand lingered on his arm, warm through the leather.

Trying to reach him. Trying to bridge the distance that had grown between them like a chasm neither could cross.

"I’m fine." Caelen’s voice came automatic, hollow. He covered her hand with his, squeezed gently. "Just eager to reach Nevareth."

"For diplomatic reasons." Her eyes searched his face.

"Of course."

The lie tasted like ashes. They both knew. Both pretended they didn’t.

He leaned down and kissed her forehead... tender, careful, distant. The gesture of a man going through the motions because duty demanded it, not because his heart was in it.

Ophelia felt the emptiness in that kiss like a wound.

"We should go," Caelen said, already turning away. "Rael’s waiting."

She watched him leave, watched the hollow space between them grow wider with every step, and tried not to imagine what would happen when that space finally consumed them both.

At the provincial capital of Winter Plains, the magistrate himself came to greet them, his face grave beneath his formal hat.

"Your Majesty." He bowed low. "We are honored by your presence, though I must inform you... a terrible tragedy has struck our capital."

Caelen’s stomach dropped. "What kind of tragedy?"

"Demons, Your Majesty. Hell itself opened in the outer district days past. Two hundred twenty-four souls lost before the portal was sealed."

The words landed like stones.

Demons.

Caelen had studied enough history, enough magic, to know: demons didn’t simply appear. Hell didn’t open on its own. Portals required ritual, sacrifice, intention. Someone had done this deliberately. Someone had torn a hole between worlds and unleashed horror upon innocents.

"The wedding has been postponed," the magistrate continued. "The court is in mourning. The capital is in chaos. I’m afraid your timing is... unfortunate."

Caelen barely heard him. His mind raced, calculating, worrying.

What was happening in Nevareth? What had Eris walked into? What dangers surrounded her while he’d been an ocean away, dreaming of her like a lovesick fool?

"How was the portal closed?" The question came sharp.

"Lady Eris closed it herself, Your Majesty." The magistrate’s expression flickered with something between awe and fear. "She sent the demons back to hell with fire magic of... considerable power. Saved countless more lives in doing so."

Eris.

Of course it was Eris. Of course she’d thrown herself into danger, wielded magic that could have consumed her, risked everything to save people who probably hated her for it.

That was who she was. Who she’d always been beneath the cruelty, beneath the rage. Someone who protected, even when it destroyed her.

But the Eris he’d known in Solmire had been powerful... devastatingly so. To close a demonic portal? To send hell itself running?

What has she become?

And more importantly: What is she caught in the middle of?

They traveled through the Winter Plains heartland over the next day, and Caelen listened.

At relay stations. In small towns. Wherever people gathered and gossiped, thinking the foreign king couldn’t hear or wouldn’t care.

"Fire magic is unnatural here. Against the very fabric of Nevareth."

"She’s an outsider. Doesn’t belong. Never will."

"The Regent Empress is right to oppose this union. It defies tradition."

"But... she did save people. Risked herself to close that portal."

"Probably summoned the demons herself. Fire magic attracts hell, everyone knows that."

"Still. Two hundred dead would’ve been two thousand without her."

Divided. Even here in the traditional heartland, opinion split down the middle. Fear warring with grudging respect. Suspicion battling gratitude.

And Eris in the center of it all, bearing the weight of their judgment.

Caelen’s hands tightened on his reins until his knuckles went white.

She was in danger. Real danger. Not just physical... though demons and political conspiracies certainly qualified... but social. Reputational. The kind of danger that could break someone as thoroughly as any blade.

And he was still days away.

That night, he dreamed of her again.

It was always the same dream. A memory, really, dressed in sleep’s distortion.

Her smile. The rare, genuine one she’d given him before everything went wrong. Before he’d ruined it with suspicion and alcohol and his own festering guilt.

Her laugh. Low and rich, the sound she made when something genuinely amused her rather than when she was performing cruelty for an audience.

The way she’d said his name. Caelen. Like it meant something. Like he meant something.

He woke gasping, her name on his lips, the phantom sensation of her skin under his fingers so real it hurt.

The room was dark and cold and empty.

And he was still away from her.

Gods, Eris. What have I done to us?

Ophelia watched him from her carriage window the next morning.

Watched the way he sat his horse with mechanical precision, his shoulders tight with tension, his gaze fixed on the horizon as though he could will the capital closer through sheer desperation.

They were getting closer. Another two days, maybe less at the pace Caelen was setting.

Closer to Nevareth. Closer to the palace.

Closer to her.

Ophelia’s hand rested on her belly, feeling the small flutter of life within. Their child. The baby that should have been enough to anchor Caelen to her, to their life together, to their future.

But it wasn’t enough.

She’d known, logically, that Caelen had loved Eris once. That their marriage had been complicated, toxic, but not without genuine feeling beneath the politics and cruelty.

She’d thought time would heal it. Thought distance would fade the attachment. Thought her own kindness, her devotion, her willingness to give him peace after years of chaos... thought it would be enough.

She’d been wrong.

She was losing him. Had been losing him since the moment Eris walked away from Solmire and took Caelen’s heart with her.

This is just a final goodbye, Ophelia told herself. He just needs to see her one more time. To say goodbye properly. Then he’ll come back to me.

But she didn’t believe it.

Not really.

Not when she saw the way he stared ahead like a man dying of thirst who’d finally glimpsed water on the horizon.

The mountains rose on the next day, jagged peaks clawing at the sky like frozen fingers.

They were close now. The capital lay just beyond those peaks, nestled in the valley that gave Nevareth its power and protection.

The military presence increased. Patrols on the roads. Checkpoints manned by soldiers whose eyes were hard and suspicious. Evidence of recent chaos... hastily erected defensive positions, burn marks on some structures they passed, the lingering smell of smoke and death.

Whatever had happened here, it had shaken the kingdom to its core.

In the larger towns near the capital, Caelen heard more voices. More opinions. More division.

"She risked herself to save us. Whatever else she is, she’s brave."

"The Emperor chose her. We should trust his judgment."

"She’s been helping at the relief sites. Saw her myself, using her magic to clear rubble."

But also:

"She brought this curse upon us. Fire magic summons demons... everyone knows."

"She’s the Villainess of Solmire. A monster wearing a pretty face."

"The Regent Empress knows. That’s why she opposes this union."

A powder keg. That’s what the capital was. One spark away from explosion, and Eris at the center of it all.

He pushed harder.

Longer travel hours. Shorter rests. The pace brutal enough that even his guards looked concerned, that Ophelia’s healers quietly expressed worry about the stress on her condition.

But Caelen couldn’t stop. Couldn’t slow down.

Because every moment spent traveling was a moment he wasn’t with her. Wasn’t seeing her. Wasn’t...

What?

Protecting her? She didn’t need his protection. Never had.

Stopping the wedding? Impossible, and he knew it.

No. The truth was simpler and more pathetic.

He just needed to see her. Needed it like drowning men need air. Needed it with a desperation that had nothing to do with reason and everything to do with the ache that had lived in his chest since the day she left.

Missing Eris wasn’t a momentary weakness. It was a permanent condition. A chronic pain that colored every thought, every breath, every waking moment.

Her face haunted him. Her voice echoed in his memory. The absence she’d left behind wasn’t a gap... it was a void, vast and consuming, that nothing else could fill.

Not duty. Not Ophelia’s kindness. Not the promise of a new child.

Nothing.

And the guilt compounded it. Because he had no right to miss her. No right to ache for her. He’d driven her away with his coldness, his suspicion, his willingness to believe the worst of her when the truth had been so much more complicated.

He’d kept Rael from her. Poisoned their son against his own mother. Made a five-year-old child forget the woman who’d loved him more than life.

It was his fault. All of it.

He used to blame her for leaving. Called her cruel, selfish, a bad mother who’d abandoned her child for political ambition.

But the truth... the truth he could no longer deny... was that he’d driven her away. Made Solmire unbearable. Made their home a prison. Made every day a battle she couldn’t win.

She hadn’t left them. She’d escaped.

And he’d been too much of a coward to admit it until now.

By evening, Ophelia requested a private conversation.

They sat in a small room at the inn, firelight casting shadows across her tired face. She’d been bearing the journey well, but the strain showed in the lines around her eyes, the way she held herself with careful fragility.

"Caelen." She took his hand. "I need you to talk to me."

"About what?"

"About us. About our child. About the life we’re building together." Her voice stayed steady, but her eyes betrayed her desperation. "I know this journey has been difficult. I know you’re worried about the political situation in Nevareth. But when we return to Solmire... "

"We’ll return," he said automatically. "Everything will be fine."

"Will it?" She searched his face. "Will you be there? Really be there? Or will you be..." She paused, choosing her words carefully. "Somewhere else?"

The question hung between them.

Will you be with her? Even when you’re standing next to me?

"Ophelia... "

"It’s a beautiful thing, really." Her smile was small and sad. "The wedding. Emperor Soren and Lady Eris. A union of fire and ice. Unprecedented. Historic." She watched his expression carefully. "Don’t you think?"

His face betrayed him. Just for a moment. Just enough.

"I see." Ophelia released his hand gently. Stood. "I’ll let you rest. We have another long day tomorrow."

She left without another word.

And Caelen sat alone with the truth she’d seen written across his face: he’d already lost. Already given his heart away to a woman who belonged to someone else now.

There was no getting it back.