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The Villainess Wants To Retire-Chapter 422: A messy business
The private dining hall was smaller than the grand ceremonial chambers, intended for intimate gatherings of the inner circle, but tonight the stone walls seemed to lean in, amplifying every scrape of silver against porcelain. The hearth crackled, casting dancing amber shadows across a table that felt miles wide.
At the head sat Eris, her posture regal despite the exhaustion of the day. To her right, Caelen remained propped up, his recovery visible in his steady hands but absent from his hollow eyes. Beside him, Ophelia sat with her hands resting protectively over the four-month swell of her stomach, her usual ethereal glow replaced by a sharper, more brittle radiance.
At the center of it all was Rael.
The boy was the only source of true light in the room. He sat on a raised chair, his legs swinging, while Bjorn, the massive white wolf, lay like a living rug at his feet. The wolf’s tail thudded rhythmically against the floor, a soft thump-thump that was the only steady beat in a room pulsing with unspoken friction.
Soren was absent, buried in the late-night logistics of the imperial transition, leaving the remnants of the old world and the architects of the new to navigate the evening alone. The atmosphere should have been pleasant... a quiet family meal... but there was an undercurrent of something sour, like wine left too long in the sun.
"And then," Rael chirped, his face bright with the thrill of his own story, "Sir Ryse showed me how the practice dummies move if you hit them just right on the spring! He said I have the balance of a mountain cat, Mama. Did you see? I practiced for two whole hours!"
Eris turned to her son, and the imperial mask she had worn all day finally crumbled into a look of pure, unadulterated devotion. She reached out, ruffling his hair with a gentle hand. "I heard you were very impressive, Rael. Ryse told me your footwork is improving every day. I’m very proud of you."
"Bjorn helped too," Rael added, leaning over to pat the wolf’s head. Bjorn let out a short, muffled bark, nudging the boy’s hand for more attention. Rael giggled, a sound so clear and innocent it briefly dispelled the heavy fog in the room. "He tried to trip the dummy!"
Eris laughed, a genuine, warm sound that made Caelen flinch beside his wife. It was a reminder of a woman he had once known... and a version of her he had never truly earned.
The warmth was short-lived. Ophelia, who had been watching the exchange with a fixed, glassy smile, finally spoke. Her voice was like silk stretched over a blade.
"You really are wonderful with him, Eris," Ophelia said. She tilted her head, her blue eyes tracking the way Eris’s hand lingered on Rael’s shoulder. "It’s quite a sight to see."
Eris looked up, her smile softening but her eyes remaining cautious. "Thank you, Ophelia. He makes it very easy to be a mother."
"He adores you so much," Ophelia continued, her voice gaining a strange, melodic weight. She paused, her gaze drifting toward Caelen for a fraction of a second before returning to Eris. "They all do."
She let the silence hang, heavy and pregnant.
"Don’t they?"
The tone was light, conversational, the sort of remark one makes about the weather. But underneath the sweetness was a jagged barb, a subtle reminder of the hearts Eris had collected along her path.
Eris felt a slight frown pull at her brow. "They?"
Ophelia let out a delicate, tinkling laugh that didn’t reach her eyes. "Oh, you know," she said, waving a hand dismissively as if the thought were too obvious to state. "Men. The way they seem to orbit you, like you’re some... celestial event."
The air in the room seemed to drop several degrees. Even Rael sensed the shift, his chattering dying down as he looked curiously between his mother and the "Auntie" who was smiling far too brightly.
Ophelia took a slow, deliberate sip of her wine, her eyes never leaving Eris over the rim of the glass. "It’s remarkable, really," she said, setting the glass down with a soft clink. "How you seem to win their hearts. The devotion you command... and you do it without even trying. It’s a gift, I suppose."
The implication was a jagged streak of lightning in the dark.
I have to work for every crumb of affection, the words screamed beneath the surface. I have to be the saint, the healer, the perfect wife, and still, their eyes wander to you. You, the villainess. You, who does nothing but exist.
Caelen stiffened so violently his chair creaked. He recognized that tone... the low, simmering resentment of a woman who had realized over and over again that she was the second choice in her own marriage. He glanced at Eris, then at Ophelia, his throat working as he tried to find words. But guilt, thick and suffocating, paralyzed him. He was the reason for that look on Ophelia’s face. He was the one who had brought this poison into their home.
Eris processed the words in silence. It took a moment for the sheer audacity of the strike to register. Ophelia, the "Saint of Solmire," was finally showing her teeth.
Wait, Eris thought, her mind replaying the cadence of Ophelia’s voice. Did she just...
She looked at the younger woman... really looked at her. She saw the white-knuckled grip Ophelia had on her napkin. She saw the way her eyes were glassier than the wine.
Oh.
Eris felt a wave of surprise, followed quickly by a grim, tired understanding. She wasn’t offended; she was enlightened. Everyone had a darkness, she knew that better than anyone. Even Ophelia, with her light magic and her soft words, was human enough to bleed resentment. What was surprising was that the mask was slipping now. The pressure of Eris’s presence, combined with Caelen’s lingering obsession, had finally caused the perfect façade to crack.
So this is how it starts, Eris mused internally. The resentment. The quiet competition. The war of the tea-tables. It was almost fascinating to watch the saint descend into the mire of human jealousy.
Eris didn’t rise to the bait. She didn’t snap, and she didn’t apologize. Instead, she leaned back, her expression cooling into something enigmatic and knowing.
"I’ve never tried to win anyone’s heart, Ophelia," Eris said calmly. Her voice was steady, carrying the weight of a woman who had lived ten lives in the span of two. She met Ophelia’s gaze directly, refusing to let the younger woman look away. "Hearts choose for themselves. It is a messy, inconvenient business that rarely follows a plan." 𝐟𝚛𝕖𝚎𝕨𝗲𝐛𝚗𝐨𝐯𝐞𝕝.𝐜𝗼𝗺
She paused, letting the words sink in.
"And often..." Eris allowed a small, sharp smile to touch her lips. "...they choose poorly."
The comeback was a surgical strike. She was acknowledging the truth... that she hadn’t pursued Caelen or Soren... while simultaneously pointing out that the love they felt for her was likely a mistake. A "poor choice" that had led to the very mess they were all currently sitting in. It was a gentle but firm redirection of Ophelia’s barb, placing the blame back on the men and fate rather than Eris’s "charms."
Ophelia’s smile tightened until it looked painful. "Of course," she murmured, taking another sip of wine to hide the way her lips trembled. "A messy business indeed."
Message received. The opening salvo had been fired.
Throughout the entire exchange, Caelen had remained a ghost at his own table. He heard every word. He understood every implication. He felt the heat of Eris’s redirected strike and the cold, sharp desperation of his wife’s attack.
And he said nothing.
He couldn’t defend Eris; that would only confirm Ophelia’s fears. He couldn’t defend Ophelia; the lie would be too transparent, and both would see right through it. He sat there, drowning in a sea of his own shame.
The tension settled like ash over the remainder of the meal. The conversation shifted back to safer, hollower topics... the logistics of the winter stores, the weather over the frost-peaks. Rael, sensing the mood had turned "grown-up and boring," focused on feeding Bjorn scraps of meat under the table, his soft whispers to the wolf the only pleasant sound left.
But underneath the mundane chatter, the air was vibrating. Ophelia watched Eris with a new, sharp scrutiny, as if she were trying to dissect the "Empress" to find the "Villain." Eris, in turn, remained perfectly aware of the eyes on her, her movements deliberate and guarded.
The seed had been planted. Ophelia’s resentment was no longer a private shadow; it was a guest at the table. It was growing, taking root in the fertile soil of her fear and her pregnancy, and Eris knew that the "Saint" she had once known was gone.
Eventually, the ordeal concluded. Rael let out a wide, toothy yawn, his head nodding toward his plate.
"Bedtime, little flame," Eris said, her voice softening instantly as she looked at her son.
She stood up, the rustle of her skirts sounding like a final punctuation mark on the evening. She didn’t look at Caelen, but she gave Ophelia a polite, shallow nod.
"Thank you for the dinner," Eris said, her tone composed and regal once more. "It was... illuminating."
She turned and led Rael out of the hall, Bjorn trotting faithfully behind them. As the doors closed, the silence in the dining room became absolute, leaving Caelen and Ophelia alone in the wreckage of a "pleasant" evening.







