The Villainess Wants To Retire-Chapter 342: The Long Dark

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Chapter 342: The Long Dark

Dearest, most observant reader, the third day dawned not with a sun, but with a shroud. The sky over Nevareth did not wake; it merely shifted from the bruised purple of night to a leaden, suffocating gray.

The wind howled through the high mountain passes like a wounded beast, carrying with it the herald of the Long Dark... the polar night that turned this empire into a beautiful, frozen tomb for months on end.

But inside the palace, the air was anything but cold. It was thick with the scent of woodsmoke, spiced wine, and the kind of gossip that could melt a glacier.

In the guest chambers of the middle wing, the atmosphere was as brittle as thin ice. King Caelen of Solmire paced the length of his parlor, his boots striking the rug with a rhythmic, frantic energy. He looked like a man trying to outrun a ghost.

"Faster," Caelen snapped at the servants who were currently folding his tunics into heavy leather trunks. "We need to be at the gates by midday."

He had not slept. Every time he closed his eyes, the echoes of the palace gossip played on a loop in his mind. Six sets of sheets. Marks on her neck. She couldn’t walk.

The images were a physical assault, a series of mental lashings he couldn’t escape. He needed to get Ophelia and Rael out of this place before the very walls started whispering Eris’s moans into his ears.

Ophelia sat by the window, her hands folded over a silk gown she had been holding for ten minutes without moving. She watched her husband with a quiet, devastating clarity.

She knew why he was running. She knew that every trunk packed was a desperate attempt to flee the reality that his former-wife was currently being worshipped in a bed only a few hundred yards away.

She said nothing. There was a dignified, hollow sorrow in her silence... the look of a woman who realized she was a consolation prize in a game that had already ended.

"Do we have to go, Papa?"

The voice of young Rael cut through the tension like a sunbeam through fog. The boy was bouncing on the edge of an ottoman, his eyes wide and bright. "I like it here! Uncle Soren said he’d teach me ice magic if the frost stayed! He said I had the ’discipline of a blizzard.’"

Caelen stopped pacing, his jaw tightening so hard a muscle jumped in his cheek. "We have responsibilities in Solmire, Rael. A kingdom doesn’t run itself."

"But I want to stay!" Rael pouted, kicking his heels against the furniture. "And Mama promised she’d show me the glass gardens when she feels better! She told me there are flowers that glow like embers."

"We’ll visit again, sweetling," Ophelia said softly, her voice straining for a comfort she didn’t feel.

Caelen turned away, his gaze fixed on the frost creeping across the windowpane. Never, he thought with a vicious finality. We are never coming back to this cursed, frozen hell.

A sharp knock at the door interrupted his brooding. The Guard Captain entered, his face as grim as the weather outside. He didn’t even wait for a formal greeting before he bowed.

"Your Majesty. The scouts have just returned from the mountain pass."

Caelen stepped forward, hope flare-up in his eyes like a dying coal. "And? Is the route clear? Can we make the descent before nightfall?"

"I’m afraid not, Your Majesty," the Captain said, his voice heavy. "The mountain pass is impassable. The blizzard hit three weeks early this year. The main artery is completely blocked by a shelf of ice and ten feet of fresh powder."

Caelen froze. "What? Clear it. Send the mages. Use the fire-teams... "

"It’s no use, sir. We’re entering the Long Dark. The polar night has begun. The storms will be constant for weeks, possibly months. No one can travel safely until the Great Thaw begins."

Ophelia stood slowly, her face pale. "The Long Dark?"

"The period of no sun, Your Majesty," the Captain explained. "Nevareth closes its doors to the world during this time. We are essentially cut off."

Caelen’s face went through a sickening transformation... turning a ghostly white, then a furious, mottled red, before settling back into a hollow, sickly gray. The internal scream was evident in the way his hands shook. Trapped. I am trapped here in his house. Listening to them.

"I see," Caelen said, his voice sounding like it was coming from the bottom of a well. "Thank you, Captain."

As the door closed, Ophelia stepped toward him. "Caelen... "

"Don’t," he spat, turning his back on her.

"We’ll make the best of it," she tried again, her voice hurt but resilient. "Rael is happy here, and perhaps... "

"The best of it?" Caelen let out a bitter, jagged laugh. "We’re stuck in her palace. Living on his charity. Listening to every servant and noble in this gods-forsaken city talk about how he’s spent the last forty-eight hours breaking her in like a common mare!"

"Then perhaps," Ophelia said, her voice dropping into a cold, composed sharpness that finally matched the climate, "you should stop listening so intently. It might hurt less."

Caelen spun around, a sharp retort on his tongue, but the sight of the raw, bleeding hurt in his wife’s eyes stopped him. Guilt flooded him, but it was too late. Ophelia didn’t wait for an apology.

"I’ll inform the servants we’re staying," she said, her head held high as she swept from the room.

Caelen stood alone in the center of the chamber, the silence of the blizzard pressing in against the glass. "Fuck," he whispered to the empty air.

While Caelen was mourning his imprisonment, the Emperor of Nevareth was finally preparing to rejoin the world of the living.

Inside the Imperial chambers, the air was still warm and heavy with the scent of jasmine and spent passion. Eris was deeply asleep, a tangled mess of white hair and midnight-blue silk.

She looked utterly wrecked. Her breathing was slow and rhythmic, her body draped in a way that suggested she couldn’t have moved if the palace were on fire.

The marks Soren had left... the dark, flowering bruises on her neck and the faint scratches along her shoulders glowed like badges of conquest in the dim light.

A smirk bloomed across his face as he took in the state of his wife. Then a soft, rhythmic scratching sounded at the heavy oak door. He didn’t call out; he moved with the silent, fluid grace of a wolf, crossing the thick rugs to crack the door just enough to receive a folded slip of parchment from a trembling page.

He stepped back into the amber glow of the hearth, unfolding the note.

The blizzard has closed the pass, Aldric’s scrawl informed him. King Caelen and his party cannot leave. They will remain in Nevareth for the foreseeable future.

Soren stared at the ink until it blurred. A slow, dark heat that had nothing to do with the fire in the grate rose in his chest. He tried to pull his features into a mask of professional concern... after all, a blocked pass meant delayed trade and stranded travelers but the corners of his mouth betrayed him. They twitched upward, unbidden and sharp.

Perfect.

Soren turned back toward the bed, the parchment crinkling in his grip. Eris was still lost to the world, one arm thrown over her head, her skin glowing like polished ivory against the dark furs.

She looked fragile, but Soren knew better. He knew the strength in those limbs, the way she had fought him and then clung to him until the world dissolved into salt and heat.

‎He walked to the edge of the mattress, his gaze lingering on the vivid, blooming marks he had left along her collarbone. They were a map of his hunger.

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