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The Villainess Wants To Retire-Chapter 414: Invisible
The imperial palace of Nevareth, usually a bastion of frozen stability, felt like a hollow shell in the days following Vetra’s arrest. The stone walls, thick with ancient enchantments, seemed to absorb the warmth of any room, leaving behind only the biting chill of isolation.
Between the Emperor’s study and the Empress’s private wing, a chasm had opened, one not made of distance, but of silence and a thousand things left unsaid.
They were like ships passing in a fog-thick night. Soren was buried beneath a landslide of legalities and testimonies, his desk a graveyard of vellum and ink.
He moved through the corridors like a phantom, intentionally timing his returns to his chambers for the hours when he knew Eris would be deep in the recovery of sleep.
When the exhaustion became too much to fight, he simply collapsed on the sofa in his study, the weight of his crown never truly leaving his brow.
Eris, for her part, occupied the spaces he vacated. She spent her mornings with Rael, her afternoons checking the stability of Caelen’s core, and her evenings locked away with the Grimoire, whispering to the shadows of her past.
She looked for Soren in the hallways, her eyes searching for the specific blue glint of his eyes or the steady, grounded rhythm of his stride, but she only ever found his absence.
Their exchanges were reduced to hurried, functional sentences in passing, logistics about the trial, updates on Caelen’s health and Rael’s lessons, a nod of acknowledgment that felt like a closed door.
Though Soren could not bring himself to stand in the same room as her, terrified that one look at her face would confirm the echoes of her sleep-whispers, he was never truly far. He governed her life from the shadows with a frantic, obsessive care.
He had commissioned Aldric and Ryse to provide him with hourly reports, though he couched them in the language of security.
"Did she eat the broth sent at midday?" he would ask, his eyes never leaving the document he was signing.
"She took a few sips, Your Majesty," Aldric would reply wear. "But she spent most of the hour in the library."
Soren’s jaw would tighten. "Ensure the kitchens send the spiced lamb tonight. The North is too cold for her fire if she isn’t fueled."
He was constantly fussing, a silent gale of protection blowing around her. He ordered the head healer to perform "routine" checks on the palace staff, specifically ensuring they passed by the Empress to monitor the way she rested.
He had extra furs delivered to her chambers under the guise of a seasonal inventory change. He was perfecting her world, smoothing every edge, making sure she was comfortable and safe, all while remaining invisible to her.
He couldn’t face her. Every time he closed his eyes, he heard her voice, raw and aching, calling out for Caelen. He felt that if he looked into her eyes, he would see the ghost of the man in Eris’s heart reflected there.
He was protecting himself, building a fortress of work and distance to shield his heart from the final confirmation that he was merely the man she had settled for. It was easier to love her from the other side of a door than to risk seeing the love she held for someone else.
Eris noticed. Of course she noticed. She was a creature of heat and instinct, and the sudden withdrawal of Soren’s stabilizing cold was like a limb being severed.
She sat in their bed at night, the expanse of the mattress feeling like a desert. She would reach out her hand in the darkness, her fingers searching for the familiar dip in the furs, for the radiating chill of his skin that always balanced the restless fever of Pyronox’s fire inside her. She found only cold linen and the scent of cedar.
The confusion began as a dull ache and sharpened into a needle-like anxiety. Did I do something wrong? she wondered, staring at the canopy. She replayed the ritual in her mind, the extraction, the collapse. Had she revealed too much of the darkness in her soul? Had the sight of her breaking beneath the weight of her past finally repulsed him?
She missed him with a physical intensity that frightened her. She missed his presence in the room, the way the air seemed to settle when he entered.
She missed his terrible, dry jokes that were always poorly timed but perfectly delivered. She missed the way he looked at her as if she were the only real thing in a world of illusions.
He’s just busy, she told herself, clutching a pillow to her chest. The trial is everything. He’s securing the empire. He’s being the Emperor.
But the lie tasted like ash. She was busy, too, the Grimoire was a demanding, dark weight on her mind, and her visits to Caelen were draining, but she would have dropped it all for ten minutes of his undivided attention.
She wanted him to hold her and tell her that the past was dead. She wanted to tell him that while the memory of Caelen was a scar, he was the heartbeat. But the distance he had placed between them was a wall she didn’t know how to climb.
The irony of the palace was a cruel tragedy played out in two separate rooms.
In the study, Soren would drop his pen, his head falling into his hands. He would look at the door, his heart screaming at him to just walk down the hall, to climb into bed, and to pull her against him. He wanted to beg her to tell him that he was enough.
He wanted to feel her fire against his frost. But the image of her crying for Caelen stopped him every time. He stayed in the chair, the silence of the room a heavy shroud.
In the bedroom, Eris would finally succumb to a fitful sleep, her heart aching with a loneliness that felt lethal. She felt abandoned in the one place she had finally felt safe. The irony was that they were both suffering from the same wound, the fear of not being loved the way they loved.
They were both desperately lonely, trapped in the same palace, separated only by a few stone walls and a mountain of misunderstood grief. They both reached out in the dark, and they both found nothing but the cold, empty space where the other should have been.
The North had never felt so desolate.







