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The Villainess Wants To Retire-Chapter 426: Winterkeep preparations
The click of the latch was a final, cold punctuation mark. Soren remained exactly where he was, his back pressed against the heavy oak door of his study, listening to the retreating, uneven rhythm of Ophelia’s bare footsteps on the stone.
Soren exhaled a long, heavy breath that hitched in his chest. He closed his eyes, his head thumping back against the wood. What the hell was that?
The confusion was an sticky film he couldn’t wash off. Ophelia’s visit hadn’t just been an interruption; it had been an assault on his senses that felt fundamentally wrong. The hair down, the bare feet, the carefully timed tears, it wasn’t the behavior of a grieving, pregnant friend seeking counsel. It was a performance. For the first time in his life, Soren had felt like prey in his own office.
He had felt the manipulation in every breathy word and every step she took toward him. It was a calculated vulnerability, a "damsel" routine that felt like a trap. The way she had tried to probe his feelings for Eris, the way she had leaned into his space, everything about it was off.
He couldn’t shake the lingering discomfort. It sat in the pit of his stomach like lead. He knew court intrigue; he knew when a woman was playing a part. But Ophelia? The "Saint" of Solmire? The realization that she was capable of such a jagged, desperate play was unsettling.
Despite the weight of the encounter, Soren knew he couldn’t dwell on it. The sun would be rising over the frost-peaks in a few hours, and Day 19 was not just any day. It was the Winterkeep Festival.
He would be with Eris all day. That thought alone was enough to drown out the memory of Ophelia’s silk nightgown. He would see her, stand beside her, and navigate the crowds of Nevareth as a unified front.
He stood in the dark, debating the ethics of silence. Should I tell Eris? He imagined her reaction, the sharp flare of her amber eyes, the defensive wall she would inevitably build higher. Should I tell Caelen? No. Caelen was already a man held together by glass and guilt; telling him his wife had spent midnight in the Emperor’s study in her shifts might be the blow that shattered him.
Soren decided: No. Not yet. Perhaps never. He would bury the memory of the night and focus on the woman who actually held his heart.
The palace didn’t wake up the following day; it exploded into life. Before the first sliver of grey dawn touched the ramparts, the halls were buzzing with an energy that felt like a physical hum.
Servants rushed through the corridors, their arms laden with garlands of evergreen and silver ribbons. In the kitchens, the heat was stifling as hundred-pound hams were glazed and the smell of spiced cider and honey-cakes drifted up through the vents. Everywhere there was the sound of frantic, joyous preparation, the polishing of ceremonial armor, the final stitching of banners, and the shouted orders of the Lord Chamberlain.
Outside the palace walls, the great market square of the capital was a hive of activity. Citizens had been working through the night under the glow of mag-lamps. Massive blocks of ice were being carved into translucent statues of Aenithra and the Great Wolves of the North. Stalls were being draped in the blue and white of the empire, and the grand banners of the Frost and Fire, Soren and Eris’s joint sigil, fluttered in the brisk wind.
The mood in the city was one of joyful, breathless anticipation. For the people of Nevareth, Winterkeep was more than a festival; it was a defiance of the coming Long Dark. It was a promise that they would survive the harshest time of the year together.
But this year, there was a new current of curiosity. This was the first Winterkeep with a new Empress, the Fire Queen from the South. The rumors had been flying for months. Would she attend? Would she hate the cold? Would she look upon their traditions with Solmire’s legendary disdain?
Children bundled in thick furs chased each other around the base of the massive ice-skating rink that had been magically flash-frozen in the center of the square. Families prepared their communal offerings for the feast tables, and the temples of Aenithra were filled with the scent of burning pine as prayers were offered for a safe winter. Everything was ready. The stage was set for the crown to show its face.
In her private chambers, Eris sat before her vanity, her heart performing a nervous, rhythmic flutter she refused to acknowledge.
She was excited, genuinely, childishly excited, but she kept her face a mask of imperial calm. She would see Soren today. They would be forced into proximity for hours, bound by ritual and public expectation. It was the first major public event they would navigate as a couple since the wedding ceremony.
Her maids including Mira were a whirlwind of activity, their voices high and chattering. "You’ll love the ice sculptures, Your Majesty!" one chirped. "The music at the opening ceremony is enough to make the stars weep," another added.
Eris ignored the gossip, focusing instead on the reflection in the mirror. The requirements for her attire were strict: she had to be warm enough to endure the Northern winds even when she clearly didn’t need to be, practical enough to move through the crowds, but regal enough to remind every citizen that she was their Empress.
She chose a gown of rich, midnight-blue velvet that seemed to absorb the light. It was trimmed with thick, snowy-white fur at the collar and cuffs, the colors of Nevareth, not Solmire. Over it, she donned a heavy, weighted cloak of silver brocade lined with fox fur. Her boots were sturdy, fur-lined leather, elegant but built for the ice. Her hair was styled in an intricate, practical braid woven with silver wire, keeping it away from her face, and her jewelry was minimal, only her imperial signet and a pair of sapphire drops that matched the cold blue of the Northern sky.
I’ll see him today, she thought, her fingers trembling as she fastened the cloak. All day. No desks to hide behind. No darkness to mask our faces. Just us, and the eyes of the empire.
Across the palace, Soren was undergoing his own transformation. He felt the weight of the previous night’s visit from Ophelia lingering in the back of his mind, but he pushed it down with the practiced ease of a man used to compartmentalizing his soul.
Today was about the festival. Today was about Eris.
He donned his ceremonial Winterkeep attire, robes of heavy white wool embroidered with silver threads that mimicked the patterns of frost on a windowpane. His cloak was a massive thing of silver-grey, fastened with a brooch in the shape of a wolf’s head. His ceremonial crown, a lighter, more delicate circlet of white gold and diamonds, sat upon his brow.
He looked every bit the Ice Emperor, but his internal state was far from frozen. He was nervous. He was eager. He was terrified that in the light of day, in front of his people, he wouldn’t be able to hide the way his eyes followed her every movement.
The thought of Ophelia’s visit flickered in his mind, a warning bell that something was wrong in his house, but he shoved it aside. He wouldn’t let that poison touch today.
In the guest wing, Caelen was preparing with a grim, quiet dignity. He wore his formal Solmire blacks, the gold embroidery a sharp contrast to the Northern silver. He would attend as a guest, the King of Solmire showing respect to his hosts, but his heart was a leaden weight. Rael was bouncing beside him, already dressed in a tiny fur-lined cloak, his face bright with a joy Caelen couldn’t mirror.
Ophelia sat as well, her maids carefully draping an elegant maternity gown of pale violet over her frame. Her mask was back on, the perfect, soft lady, but inside, she was seething. The humiliation of the previous night had solidified into a cold, hard resolve. She would play her part today, but she would be watching.
Rael was the only one in the entire royal party who was purely, unreservedly happy. He was already trying to play-fight with Bjorn, the wolf’s tail wagging so hard it knocked over a vase. "Is it time yet, Papa? Is it time to see the ice?"
The time for the opening ceremony arrived with the sounding of the great horn from the palace towers. The tradition dictated that the Emperor and Empress must emerge from the palace together, descending the grand staircase to meet the carriage that would take them to the market square.
Soren stood in the grand entrance hall, surrounded by the heavyweights of his court. Aldric stood to his left, looking sharp and observant. Ryse and Jorel were there in full dress uniform, their medals gleaming. A phalanx of the Imperial Guard stood at attention, their silver spears reflecting the morning light.
Soren tried to look composed. He tried to look like a ruler focused on the ritual. But his heart was racing, a frantic beat against his ribs that he was sure Aldric could hear. He hadn’t seen Eris since their awkward, distanced meeting in his study.
The heavy doors at the top of the grand staircase groaned open. 𝗳𝚛𝗲𝕖𝚠𝚎𝚋𝗻𝗼𝕧𝗲𝐥.𝚌𝚘𝐦
The hall fell silent. Every head turned.
Eris stepped through the doors, and Soren felt the air leave his lungs in a sharp, involuntary gasp.
It happened every time. No matter how many times he saw her, no matter the circumstances, the sight of her was a physical blow.
She was stunning. The midnight-blue velvet and the white fur made her look as if she had been carved from the very night sky and snow of the North. The ice blues suited her, heightening the pale, ethereal white of her hair and the warmth of her amber eyes. She looked regal, formidable, and somehow... soft. The fur at her throat framed her face, making her look younger, more accessible, and achingly beautiful.
Gods, Soren thought, his hand tightening on the hilt of his ceremonial sword. How does she keep doing this to me? How can one woman hold so much power over my heartbeat?
He couldn’t look away. Everything else, the guards, the advisors, the impending ceremony, faded into a blur of meanin, gless color. There was only her.
Eris began her descent. She moved with a slow, practiced grace, her cloak swirling around her boots. As she grew closer, Soren saw the slight tension in her jaw, the way her fingers were curled tightly into the velvet of her skirts.
She was nervous too.
When she reached the bottom of the stairs, she stopped a few feet from him. Up close, he could see the faint dusting of powder on her nose and the way her sapphire earrings caught the light. The anticipation between them was electric, a physical charge that made the hair on Soren’s arms stand up.
They were close enough to touch, close enough to hear each other’s breathing over the murmurs of the court. For a heartbeat, the Emperor and Empress disappeared, leaving only a man and a woman standing in the center of a storm.







