The Villainess Wants To Retire-Chapter 318: THE CATHEDRAL AWAITS

If audio player doesn't work, press Reset or reload the page.
Chapter 318: THE CATHEDRAL AWAITS

The Temple of Aenithra was not built; it was dreamed into existence from the deepest strata of the world’s oldest glacier.

Inside, the architecture defied the laws of weight and warmth. Vaulted ceilings of crystal-clear ice soared into the gloom, supported by columns carved to resemble ancient, frozen trees whose branches interlaced in a canopy of frost.

The morning light, filtered through the thick, translucent walls, didn’t merely illuminate the space... it shattered. Everywhere one looked, rainbow prisms danced across the ornate ice pews, splashing violet and crimson light over the high nobility of Nevareth.

The atmosphere was a suffocating hush of silk and bated breath. At the far end of the long aisle, lined with ice roses frozen in eternal, sapphire-tinted bloom, stood the High Priestess Serah.

She was a woman who looked as though she had been carved from the same glacier as the walls, draped in ceremonial robes of white and silver, her gnarled hands gripping a staff of frozen wood that pulsed with a faint, blue light.

And there stood Soren.

Outwardly, he was the personification of the Northern ideal: serene, unmoving, his hands clasped before him in a gesture of perfect imperial composure.

But beneath the weighted silk and the silver crown, he was a man on the verge of shattering. Every second felt like an eternity carved into his skin. His mind was a frantic repetition of a single, devastating question: What if she’s starting to regret?

Behind him, the pews were alive with the low, rhythmic hum of gossip.

"I heard the dress took six months and nearly blinded the seamstresses," one duchess whispered behind a lace fan.

"Fire and Ice," a count murmured beside her. "It’s either the most poetic union in history or a doom we’ll all burn for."

In the visiting pews, Ophelia sat close to the fawning wives of Northern lords, her smile a masterpiece of graciousness that hid the slow, agonizing death of her spirit.

She felt the heavy, brooding silence of the man beside her. Caelen was present in body, but his soul was fixed on the empty entrance.

They sat in the section reserved for royalty, his jaw set so tight it looked like stone. He couldn’t stop the image of Eris in the corridor from playing on a loop... the vision of the woman he had lost, now dressed to be claimed by another.

Then, the horns sounded.

It was a deep, resonant, primeval blast that shook the very foundations of the cathedral.

The murmurs died instantly. Every head turned. Soren felt his heart stop, then kick against his ribs so hard the vibration reached his skull.

First came the heralds, then the ring-bearer.

The guests let out a collective, charmed breath. Little Rael, looking like a miniature icon of grace, sat atop Bjorn’s massive back.

The wolf moved with a slow, regal deliberation, his silver-braided collar glinting. On a pillow of ice-crystal between them sat the rings.

Rael was so serious, his brow furrowed in concentration, unaware of the hundreds of eyes on him.

Soren watched them, seeing Eris’s fire and Caelen’s features in the boy, and felt a surge of protectiveness that nearly brought him to his knees.

Then, the doors opened wider.

Eris appeared, but she was not alone. According to the ancient rites of Nevareth, the previous Empress was to escort the new. Vetra stepped out of the shadows, her presence a cold, commanding shadow beside the shimmering brilliance of the bride.

The intake of breath from the crowd was audible. It was a sight of predatory magnificence: Fire and Ice, the reigning lioness and the rising phoenix.

As they began the long walk, their voices were low, meant only for each other beneath the swell of the choral music.

"You look exquisite," Vetra murmured, her eyes fixed forward, her smile never wavering. "Like a true Empress of Nevareth. One can almost forget you are a creature of ash."

"And you look as regal as ever, Regent Empress," Eris replied, her voice a cool chime that didn’t betray a flicker of nerves.

"I do hope you’ll be happy here," Vetra said, the threat hidden in the honey of her tone. "Happiness is so... fleeting in the North, isn’t it? Like a summer leaf in an early frost."

"I intend to make mine last," Eris countered. "I am quite good at surviving the cold."

Vetra’s smile deepened, a razor-thin line. "We shall see."

They moved as one, a sizzle of unspoken warfare beneath the silk. Behind them, Mira and Ryse stood in a state of absolute, uncharacteristic awe. Mira clutched her hands to her chest, looking at her mistress as if she were a god made flesh. Beside her, even Aldric... the man who found fault with the very stars... stood with his mouth slightly agape.

Ryse nudged him with an elbow. "Close your mouth, Aldric. You’re catching frost-flies."

Aldric’s face flushed a deep, indignant red. "I am merely... assessing the structural integrity of the embroidery," he hissed, though his eyes never left Eris. Mira giggled, but the levity was brief. The weight of the moment pulled them back.

Caelen watched her every step. It was a slow-motion torture. Each rhythmic sway of her massive skirt, each glint of her crystalline crown, was a nail driven into the coffin of his past.

That should be me, his mind screamed. I was the one who held her first.

Beside him, Ophelia didn’t look at the aisle. She kept her gaze fixed on her husband’s face, watching him mourn a living woman while her own hand rested on the child he had given her out of duty, not desire.

At the foot of the altar, Vetra stopped. She took Eris’s hand...the heat of it even through the ice-silk gloves making the older woman’s eyes narrow and presented her toward the back of the Emperor.

"I present Lady Eris Igniva," Vetra announced, her voice echoing through the vaulted ceiling, "to be wed to Emperor Soren Nivarre."

Vetra met Eris’s eyes one last time, a silent acknowledgment of the war to come and stepped back to take her seat.

Eris stood alone.

Then, Soren turned.

He had spent his life surrounded by beauty, the aurora borealis, the glitter of fallen snow, the intricate carvings of a thousand-year-old dynasty. But as he faced Eris, time didn’t just stop; it ceased to exist.

If Shakespeare had existed their world and seen her, he would have burned his quills in shame. If the gods themselves had looked down, they would have wept at the perfection of their own creation.

She was not just beautiful; she was transcendent. She looked as though every star in the frozen sky had been captured, crushed, and woven into the form of a woman.

The gown shimmered with a life that seemed to breathe, the crown of crystalline branches making her look like a primal deity of winter.

But it was her eyes that destroyed him.

In those golden depths, beneath the layers of paint and the mask of an Empress, he saw it all: the uncertainty of a woman who had been betrayed by love, the hope of a heart that had been cold for too long, and a fierce, terrifying determination.

He had seen her burn, and he had seen her hurt, but he had never seen her like this. She wasn’t a monster. She wasn’t a tyrant. She was the only thing in the world that mattered.

Soren felt his composure dissolve. His breath hitched, a soft, broken sound that only she could hear. He didn’t just fall in love again; he drowned in it.

He looked at her as if she were the first and last thing he would ever see, his gaze a silent, desperate vow that reached out to hers.

The world outside the cathedral... the politics, the Southern King, the brewing wars... vanished. There was only the hum of the ice, the scent of winter roses, and the woman who held his soul in her fire-scarred hands.