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The Villainess Wants To Retire-Chapter 326: The Dance
The Grand Hall held its breath as the Herald’s staff struck the floor three times, the sound echoing like a gavel in the court of fate. "The Emperor and Empress will now share the First Dance!"
The applause was a polite, anticipatory roar that died into a sudden, vacuum-like silence as the musicians began. The melody was a traditional Nevareth waltz, played on instruments of hollowed ice-crystal that produced a sound so hauntingly beautiful it felt like the wind mourning the sun.
Soren stood first. He didn’t just offer his hand; he offered an invitation into his private storm. "Ready?" he murmured, his voice a low vibration that skipped across Eris’s skin.
Eris took a sharp breath, the silver filigree of her bodice pressing into her lungs. "I should warn you—I barely know this dance," she whispered, her golden eyes darting to the sea of predatory faces below.
"I know," Soren said, his lips pulling into a smile that was far too intimate for a sovereign. "I’ll guide you."
He led her down from the platform, the sheer sapphire fabric of her skirt hissing against the stone. As they reached the center of the cleared floor, the atmosphere in the hall grew so thick with tension it felt as though the very air might fracture.
Soren’s hand settled on her bare waist, and even through his ice-magic, his palm was a brand of heat. His other hand lifted hers, maintaining the formal distance required by tradition, but his eyes were doing things that were anything but proper.
The music swelled, and they began to move.
"Follow my lead," Soren whispered, his breath ghosting over her temple. "Step back with your right foot. Good. Now left."
To the observers... the dukes, the jealous debutantes, the prying ambassadors... they looked like a masterpiece of imperial grace.
In reality, Eris was a wire pulled taut, her entire being concentrated on the rhythm. But as the first verse bled into the second, she began to find the cadence, her movements loosening into a fluid, liquid grace.
Soren noticed. He leaned closer, his lips hovering near the shell of her ear. "You know what I keep thinking about?"
"What?" Eris asked, trying to keep her facade from cracking under the weight of his gaze.
"How easy it would be," he rasped, "to unlace that dress. To see exactly how far this silver metalwork goes."
Eris stumbled, her heel catching on the hem of her gown. Soren caught her instantly, his grip on her waist tightening, hauling her an inch closer than was strictly permissible.
"Behave yourself," she hissed, her heart hammering against her ribs like a trapped bird. "We’re being watched."
"I am behaving," Soren countered, spinning her gently. The fabric of her robe flared out, a white mist against the blue of her dress. He pulled her back, his hand sliding across the bare expanse of her back. "I’m dancing beautifully with my wife. No one can hear a word I’m saying."
Then, he let it leak.
Soren deliberately allowed his ice-magic to seep through his fingertips. The freezing touch hit her bare skin, but it didn’t stay cold. It melted instantly against the fever-heat of her body, turning into a slow, agonizing trail of water that began to drip down her side. Eris let out a sharp, jagged intake of breath, her fingers digging into the muscle of his shoulder.
"Something wrong?" he asked with the faux innocence of a devil.
"You’re doing that on purpose," she panted, her eyes narrowing.
"I can feel how warm you are," he continued, ignoring her protest as he guided her through a complex turn. His hand slid lower, the water trailing intimate paths across her ribs, pooling where the fabric of her skirt met her hip. "Do you know how hard it is not to kiss you right now? To not just take what the gods gave me in front of everyone?"
"Soren—"
"Empress," he corrected, a wicked glint in his blue eyes. "You should use my proper title."
Eris was losing. She could feel the flush climbing her neck, the maddening sensation of the water trickling down her skin, and the low, seductive rumble of his voice in her ear.
She was the Fire Queen, a woman who had burned down a dynasty, yet she was being dismantled by a few drops of water and a whispered promise. I will make him pay for this, she promised herself, but her knees were turning to ash.
"You’re blushing," Soren observed, his voice thick with a dark, triumphant satisfaction.
"I am not," she lied through gritted teeth.
"You are. It’s beautiful. Almost as beautiful as the sounds you’ll make when I finally get you alone."
Eris’s breath hitched. "I swear to God, Soren—"
---
From his seat, Caelen watched.
He didn’t want to see it, but he couldn’t look away. It was a physical agony, a sword driven through his chest and twisted with every rotation of the dance.
He watched Soren hold her... the man’s large hand splayed across Eris’s bare waist—and he saw the way Eris responded. She wasn’t stiff. She wasn’t the distant, cold woman she had been in Solmire. She was vibrant. She was responding.
A memory hit him, jagged and cruel: the Pyrosanct festival. He had watched them dance then, too. He hadn’t known then that he was watching his future disintegrate. He should have seen it in the way she looked at the Northern wolf even then.
"She looks happy," Ophelia said beside him. Her voice was quiet, but it carried the weight of a death sentence.
Caelen didn’t respond. His knuckles were white where he gripped the edge of the table.
"They look good together, don’t they?" Ophelia continued, her gaze sharp and hurt. "Do you see how she responds to him? I’ve never seen her like that with you."
"Ophelia—" Caelen’s voice was a low warning.
"You’re not even trying to hide it," she whispered, her eyes brimming with a bitter, jagged pain. "How you’re looking at her. How you’ve been looking at her since we arrived."
"You’re imagining things," Caelen lied, forcing a plastic smile onto his face as he reached for her hand. It was a hollow gesture, a debt paid in lead. "You’re my wife. You’re carrying my second child. I am here with you."
The words were true, but they were empty. Even as he spoke them, his eyes drifted back to the center of the floor, drawn like a moth to the flame he had thrown away. Ophelia saw it. She went quiet, her heart breaking in the middle of a celebration.
---
The music shifted, the tempo rising to indicate that the floor was open. Caelen stood abruptly, his need to escape the conversation overriding his sense of decorum. "Shall we dance?" he asked Ophelia, not waiting for an answer before pulling her to her feet.
The floor filled. Other couples joined... Ryse awkwardly leading a shy Mira into the fray but the center remained a battleground of two stories.
As the couples moved, paths crossed. For a fleeting, devastating second, Eris and Caelen’s eyes met.
Caelen’s expression was a raw wound... hungry, desperate, and full of a longing that should have been buried. Eris barely registered it.
She looked through him as if he were a pane of glass, her focus snapped back to Soren as he pulled her closer than was strictly proper.
Soren had seen the look. He had seen the Southern King’s hunger, and it didn’t make him angry... it made him territorial.
He deliberately slid his hand lower, his fingers ghosting just beneath the band of her lower garment, a touch so hidden and so intimate it made Eris gasp aloud.
"When we’re alone," Soren whispered, his voice a dark caress, "I’m taking this dress off with my teeth."
"Soren!"
"What? Just being honest."
He leaned down and pressed a slow, deliberate kiss to her cheek, then the corner of her jaw, then just below her ear. His cold breath hit her damp skin, and he caught Caelen’s gaze over her shoulder. The message was clear: Look all you want. She is mine. Every inch, every breath, every flame.
Caelen looked away, his face burning with the shame of being caught, of being the spectator in a life he used to own.
The music reached a final, crashing crescendo. Soren didn’t just stop; he dipped Eris, holding her suspended in the air. He looked down at her, triumphant and possessive, his eyes blazing with a love that was indistinguishable from war.
"We’re having words later," Eris panted, her face flushed, her chest heaving.
"I’m counting on it," Soren grinned.
The hall erupted in applause as Soren pulled her up. They bowed to the crowd, hand in hand, and began the walk back to the high table.
"You are impossible," Eris whispered as they ascended the steps.
"You married me anyway," he reminded her, his thumb stroking the back of her hand.
"Clearly a lapse in judgment."
Soren just laughed, the sound rich and joyful, echoing through a hall that had finally, irrevocably, accepted its new Empress.







