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The Villainess Wants To Retire-Chapter 350: Temptation
The heavy oak doors of the council chamber clicked shut, a final, resonant sound that signaled the end of Vetra’s era. She walked through the sprawling corridors of the Imperial Palace with her spine as straight as a spear and her chin tilted at an angle of serene indifference. To any servant or guard passing by, she looked exactly as she always had: the immovable Regent Empress, a woman carved from the very permafrost of Nevareth.
But beneath the silk and the calculated composure, Vetra was crumbling.
Her blood felt like molten lead, thick and scorching with a rage that threatened to crack her ribs. Displaced. Relocated. The words looped in her mind, each repetition a fresh lash against her pride.
Soren, the boy she had molded, the boy she had broken and rebuilt to be her perfect, icy instrument, had cast her aside like a piece of dry-rotted furniture.
And he had done it for her. For that Sun-scorched witch from the south who had waltzed into their kingdom and dismantled Vetra’s legacy in a matter of weeks.
Vetra’s eyes flicked to the side, looking for the shadow of her most loyal supporter. Viktor was gone. He hadn’t followed her out to offer consolations or plot their next move.
He had bolted the moment the council was dismissed, his face pale and eyes wide with a frantic, sweating terror. He was too busy trying to save his own skin, too busy scurrying toward his ledgers to even spare her a parting glance.
She looked further back. The other lords, the ministers who had once bowed so low their foreheads nearly touched the frost, were dispersing with uncharacteristic haste. They didn’t meet her gaze. They stayed in tight, hushed circles, their backs turned to her as they navigated the halls.
They were rats, she realized. Rats fleeing a sinking ship, terrified that staying near her would drag them under the ice along with her.
Cowards, she thought, her lips thinning into a line of pure venom. I built this court. I sustained this Empire while Soren was nothing but a brooding child in the dark. And they abandon me the moment a new flame is lit.
But the rage was quickly overtaken by a cold, calculating resolve. Vetra Nivarre did not accept defeat. She did not go quietly into the night, regardless of how many silver-choked estates Soren tried to bury her in.
She would do anything, sacrifice anyone, to drive Eris out. She would remind Soren what he truly was: a monster of her making. And she would start by finding the weakest link in the new Empress’s armor.
Turning the corner into the main thoroughfare that led toward the guest wing, Vetra spotted him.
Caelen Caldrith was a silhouette of misery against the pale afternoon light. He walked with a heavy, dragging gait, his shoulders slumped as if the crown of Solmire had become a physical weight he was no longer strong enough to carry.
There were dark, bruised circles under his eyes, and his face was hollow, the sharp handsomeness of the King of Solmire replaced by the look of a man who had forgotten the taste of food and the comfort of sleep.
Vetra felt a slow, predatory smile tug at the corners of her mouth.
Perfect.
She knew the history. Everyone did. Eris’s love for this man had once been a terrifying phenomenon, a desperate, obsessive devotion that had rattled the courts of the south for years. It had been a madness of the spirit, a fierce, burning thing that had driven Eris to the brink of ruin.
But now? Now Eris didn’t even seem to remember he existed. When she looked at Soren, there was a softness, a genuine, terrifying contentment that Vetra had never seen in the girl before. Eris was happy. She was whole.
And Caelen? Caelen was the embodiment of regret. He was the man who had realized the value of his diamond only after he’d traded it for a handful of gravel. It was made all the more delicious by the timing.
He had arrived just in time to watch his "best friend" claim his ex-wife. He was trapped here by the blizzard, forced to live in the same house where the air vibrated with the whispers of Eris’s screams, whispers of how she had been "bred thoroughly" by the Emperor for three days straight.
Vetra straightened her robes, her eyes gleaming. Truly, he was pitiful. And that was exactly why he was the perfect pawn.
"King Caelen," Vetra called out, her voice a warm, melodic chime in the chilly hallway. "What a pleasant surprise."
Caelen stopped dead. He didn’t turn immediately; his back stiffened, and his hands curled into tight, defensive fists at his sides.
When he finally turned to face her, his expression was hard, his guards pulled up to their full, jagged height. He knew she was dangerous. He knew she was the viper in the garden.
"Regent Empress," he said, his voice clipped and formal.
Vetra let out a slight, self-deprecating laugh. "Just Vetra now, it seems. My title has been... adjusted by my nephew. A strategic ’relocation,’ as he so delicately put it."
Caelen said nothing. He looked like he wanted to be anywhere else on the planet, even out in the heart of the blizzard, than in a corridor with her. He made a move to step past her, his eyes fixed on a point somewhere over her shoulder.
"I heard about your inability to proceed with your journey back to Solmire," Vetra continued, ignoring his clear desire to flee. Her tone was dripping with a false, cloying sympathy. "The blizzard. To be trapped here, of all places... how unfortunate for you."
"These things happen," Caelen said, his voice sounding like it was being pulled through gravel. He tried to leave again, his stride lengthening.
"It must be hard," Vetra said, her voice dropping, becoming intimate and heavy with meaning.
Caelen froze mid-step. He stayed perfectly still for several heartbeats before he slowly, painfully, turned his head back to look at her. His eyes were wary, searching hers for the trap he knew was coming.
"What," he asked, his voice low and dangerous, "must be hard?"
Vetra turned to face him fully, her expression shifting into one of practiced, maternal sorrow. She sighed, a long, weary sound, as if the words she was about to speak were a burden she was reluctant to share. 𝙧𝙚𝙚𝔀𝒆𝓫𝓷𝙤𝓿𝒆𝙡.𝒄𝙤𝓶
"Watching them together," she said simply.
The silence that followed was deafening. Caelen’s jaw tightened so hard the bone looked ready to snap through his skin.
"Eris’s love for you was once a true, terrifying phenomenon, you know," Vetra mused, looking toward the window as if lost in thought. "It rattled our realm for years due to its ferocity. I remember the reports from Solmire, the passion, the desperation. It was a fire that could have consumed an empire."
Caelen’s breath was coming in short, shallow hitches now.
"But now..." Vetra shook her head slowly. "It’s a shame, really. What was once such a fierce thing has become... dead. Slain by the indifference of the very man it was meant for."
Caelen’s brow furrowed, his voice sharpening into a blade. "What are you trying to get at, Vetra?"
"What I’m trying to get at, King Caelen, is that a man like you doesn’t deserve to get the short end of the stick in this love story," she met his eyes, her gaze piercing. "Eris was devoted to you for years. She gave you her youth, her magic, her very soul. But now? Now she’s devoted to your best friend instead. She gives to Soren what she once begged you to take."
Caelen’s fists were clenching and unclenching, his knuckles white as bone.
"And if you refuse to see it," Vetra’s voice became a gentle, cutting whisper, "it’s still quite evident to everyone else how... humiliating it is. To be the guest in the house of the man who is currently enjoying the spoils of your neglect."
The word "humiliating" landed like a cold steel blade between Caelen’s ribs. He looked like he’d been struck. His eyes filled with a raw, agonizing heat, and for a moment, the King of Solmire vanished, leaving behind only a man who was drowning in his own regret.
"Mind your own business," Caelen growled, his voice trembling with a mix of rage and grief. He turned on his heel, his cloak swirling around him as he began to walk away.
"What if I told you there’s a way to reverse things?" Vetra called after him.
Caelen froze. He didn’t turn, but he didn’t move. He stood there, a dark statue in the center of the hall, the words hanging in the air between them like a promise of salvation.
"To bring back what was once yours?" Vetra continued. She didn’t look at him; she began to walk in the opposite direction, her footsteps light and echoing. "To restore the order of things. To make her look at you the way she used to, before Soren Nivarre took what he had no right to claim."
Caelen turned slowly, staring at her retreating back. His throat was closed, his heart hammering against his ribs with a frantic, desperate rhythm. He wanted to scream at her to stop, to tell him how. He wanted to tell her she was a liar. But he couldn’t speak.
"Think carefully about it, King Caelen," Vetra said, her voice drifting back to him as she disappeared around the corner. "I’ll be in touch."
Caelen stood alone in the hallway, the silence of the palace pressing in on him from all sides.
A way to reverse things.
Bring back what was once yours.
The words repeated in his mind like a rhythmic drumbeat. The temptation rose in his chest, a powerful, overwhelming tide of "what if." Could Eris be his again? Could he undo the years of coldness, the marriage to Ophelia, the exile? Could he wipe the memory of Soren’s touch from her skin and replace it with his own?
For a single, intoxicating second, he let himself believe it. He saw her face, the way it used to light up when he entered a room, the way she used to look at him as if he were the only sun in her sky.
Then, the cold reality of the palace returned.
No, he thought, forcing the breath out of his lungs. It’s not possible. Vetra is a snake. She’s manipulating me, using my own grief as a weapon. She’s up to no good, and if I follow her down this path, I’ll lose the last shred of honor I have left.
He shook his head, his hands trembling as he smoothed his tunic. I can’t trust her. I won’t.
But the seed was firmly planted. The temptation didn’t disappear; it simply burrowed deeper into the dark, hollow places of his heart, waiting for the next cold wind to make it grow.
Caelen Caldrith shook his head, the movement sharp enough to rattle the lingering poison of Vetra’s words. He forced his legs to move, his boots clicking with a hollow, military precision against the polished stone floors.
I need to focus, he commanded himself, his internal voice sounding like a ghost’s plea. Work. Business. I came here to discuss security and borders with Soren. That is all I am here for. That is all I have left.
He adjusted his tunic, squaring his shoulders as if preparing for a siege, and turned his back on the corner where the Regent Empress had just tried to dismantle his soul.
He didn’t look back. He couldn’t.
He set his sights on the administrative wing, pushing the image of Eris’s bruised, satisfied neck out of his mind with the sheer force of a man who was already half-broken.


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