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The Villainess Wants To Retire-Chapter 446: Dainty Danger
The Long Dark was a blessing for a ghost. Bianca moved through the freezing streets of the capital, a shadow among shadows. She was wrapped in a heavy, charcoal-black cloak that swallowed the faint light of the distant lanterns.
Beneath the wool, she wore the plain, nondescript clothes of a tradesman’s wife... durable, drab, and entirely forgettable. Her unmistakable midnight blue hair was tucked tightly beneath a dark linen coif, and the deep hood of her cloak obscured her face, leaving only the sharp glint of her eyes visible.
In the realm, illusion magic was a myth, a fairy tale for children. There were no spells to weave a new face or mask one’s height. Bianca had to rely on the ancient art of physical deception. She walked with a slight slouch, tempering her noble gait into a weary trudge.
She was painfully aware that her face had been spotted in the markets; the city guard was on high alert, their torches flickering like angry stars in the distance. She stayed to the narrowest alleys, avoiding the main thoroughfares where the heavy snow was already being packed down by patrols.
Reaching the palace was the easy part for a woman of her standing. She knew which guards were vulnerable. Near the servant’s entrance by the western granaries, she found a young man shivering in his plate armor, his eyes darting toward the warmth of the guardhouse.
Bianca didn’t use magic first. She used gold. She approached him not as a noble, but as a desperate woman with a heavy purse. A few words about a "late delivery for the kitchens" and a palm full of imperial coins were enough to make the boy look at the falling snow while she slipped through the heavy oak door.
Success bred a dangerous confidence. As she moved through the damp, torch-lit service corridors, she rounded a corner and nearly collided with a young maid carrying a stack of fresh linens.
The girl froze. Her eyes traveled from Bianca’s muddy boots up to the sliver of her face visible beneath the hood. Recognition flared... sharp and terrifying. "Wait, you’re... "
Bianca didn’t let her finish. She didn’t have time for a scream. With a flick of her wrist, she manifested a shard of ice magic, not as a projectile, but as a flash-freeze. She grabbed the girl’s throat, the frost instantly sealing the maid’s vocal cords into a jagged crystalline silence. The girl’s eyes went wide, clawing at Bianca’s hand as her lungs burned for air that wouldn’t come.
Bianca held her until the struggling stopped. She dragged the limp body into an unused storage room filled with empty wine crates. Using a concentrated burst of cold, she encased the girl’s torso in a thin layer of rime to mask the scent and slow the inevitable discovery. It wouldn’t hold forever, but it would buy her the night.
Bianca breathed out a cloud of white vapor, her heart hammering against her ribs. She knew these halls. She had spent years as a guest here over and over, whispering in Soren’s ear and plotting Vetra’s rise. She knew the servant passages that ran like veins behind the grand tapestries of the main halls.
She wasn’t heading for the imperial wing. Not yet. She needed guidance. She needed the viper who had raised the Emperor. She began her descent toward the dungeons.
The luck of the desperate eventually ran dry. Bianca reached the end of a narrow servant’s flue and pressed her ear to the wood of the hidden door. Silence. She pushed it open, stepping out into the Guest Wing.
To reach the next set of stairs leading to the lower levels, she had to cross a twenty-foot stretch of open corridor. It was a risk, but the wing was usually quiet this late during the Long Dark. She pulled her cloak tight and stepped out, her soft leather boots making no sound on the stone.
The rhythm of the palace was etched into her mind. She heard the synchronized clank of armor... a patrol.
She pressed herself into the deep shadow of a marble pillar, her breath held until her lungs ached. Three guards passed, their lanterns casting long, swinging shadows that danced over her hiding spot.
She waited for the count of ten after the sound of their boots faded, then broke into a run.
She turned the corner toward the grand staircase and slammed into a wall of silk and soft perfume.
Ophelia stood there, looking as if she had been waiting for a carriage rather than wandering a hallway at midnight.
She was draped in an elegant, pale blue gown and a fur-trimmed robe, her ginger hair pinned back in a perfect, shimmering coil. She looked entirely composed, though her eyes were restless.
Both women froze. Recognition was immediate.
Shit. Bianca’s hand instinctively rose, her fingers curling as the air around them began to crystallize. Ophelia knew her face.
Ophelia was a guest of the Emperor. If she screamed, the entire wing would be crawling with steel in seconds. Bianca prepared to strike, her eyes narrowing with murderous intent.
But Ophelia didn’t scream. She didn’t even recoil. She simply looked at Bianca’s raised hand, then back at her face, her expression unreadable.
"Lady Ophelia?"
The voice was deep, authoritative, and far too close. A captain guard rounded the far end of the corridor with two other guards in tow.
He stopped, his hand immediately dropping to the hilt of his sword as he spotted the two women... one a noble lady, the other a hooded, suspicious figure with frost creeping up her sleeve.
"What are you doing out here at this hour?" The captain asked, his eyes narrowing as he stepped toward them. "And who is this?"
Bianca braced herself to kill them all, even knowing it would be her end. But before she could release the ice, Ophelia stepped forward. She placed herself directly between Bianca and the captain, her voluminous skirts creating a physical barrier.
"Oh!" Ophelia let out a soft, fluttery breath, her tone brimming with relief. She moved toward the captain, drawing his attention entirely away from the shadows. "Thank goodness you’ve come. I was feeling quite unwell... the baby, you see. I needed the air, but the chill is much sharper than I anticipated."
She placed a delicate hand on her stomach, her face tilting upward in a display of classic feminine distress.
The captain’s focus shattered. The warrior’s instinct to protect a pregnant noblewoman overrode his suspicion of the hooded figure. "Are you alright, My Lady? It is far too cold for you to be out here. Should I fetch a healer?"
"No, no," Ophelia said, gently taking his arm and leading him back toward the main hall, away from the alcove. "Perhaps just some warm water from the kitchens? My head is spinning quite dreadfully."
The guards followed their captain, one of them glancing back toward the pillar where Bianca had been standing. But the space was empty. Bianca had already melted into the darkness of a side passage, her heart thumping a frantic rhythm against her ribs.
Bianca waited until the sound of Ryse’s reassurances faded completely. The corridor returned to a deathly silence. She stepped out from behind a heavy tapestry, her hand still glowing with a faint, lethal blue light.
Soft, deliberate footsteps echoed on the stone. Ophelia returned, walking alone this time, her expression no longer one of distress, but of cold, calculating clarity.
"Why did you help me?" Bianca hissed, her defensive stance widening. She didn’t trust this woman; in her experience, "kindness" was just a precursor to a knife in the back.
Ophelia stopped a few paces away, well out of reach of an ice shard. She tilted her head. "A good question. Why did I help the most wanted woman in the North?"
Ophelia looked at Bianca and didn’t see a fugitive. She saw a weapon. She knew Bianca’s history... the obsession with Soren, the hatred for the "Southern Usurper." They shared a common obstacle. Eris was the wall between Bianca and her crown, and the wall between Ophelia and the influence she craved.
"Because," Ophelia said, her voice dropping into a low, smooth melody, "I expect a favor in return."
Bianca blinked, her brow furrowing. "A favor? You are a guest of the Emperor. You have a husband, a title, a child on the way. Why would someone like you need anything from me?"
Bianca looked closer. She saw the way Ophelia’s eyes didn’t match her smile. The softness was a mask, a layer of silk over a foundation of iron.
"I see," Bianca murmured, a slow, dark smirk spreading across her lips. "You’re not the dainty little flower you pretend to be, are you?"
Ophelia returned the smile... a small, sharp thing that reached nowhere near her eyes. "Neither are you, Lady Bianca. You’re supposed to be in a cell, yet here you are, haunting the halls like a vengeful spirit."
"We’ll meet again," Ophelia said, her tone suggesting she was already bored with the conversation. "To discuss the terms of our... mutual interests."
"Where?" Bianca asked, her interest piqued.
"The east gardens. Tomorrow night, at midnight. The snow will be at its peak; no one will be patrolling the outer terraces."
Bianca considered it, her eyes searching for any sign of a trap. "Fine. But if I see a single guard, I will freeze the heart in your chest before they can reach me."
"It isn’t a trap, Bianca," Ophelia said, turning to walk away. "We want the same thing, don’t we? A world where the Fire Queen is nothing more than a memory."
She glanced over her shoulder one last time, her smile widening. "Be careful. This palace is dangerous. Especially for someone who doesn’t realize who her true friends are."
Bianca watched her go, a chill that had nothing to do with her magic settling in her bones. She had come for Vetra, but she might have found something much more useful.







