The Villainess Wants To Retire-Chapter 453: Death Sentence

If audio player doesn't work, press Reset or reload the page.
Chapter 453: Death Sentence

Soren’s blood didn’t just feel cold; it felt as though it had turned to slush, jagged and abrasive, scraping against the interior of his veins.

He stood paralyzed, the world outside this cramped, frozen cell blurring into insignificance.

His face, usually a fortress of marble and indifference, betrayed him in the most primal way.

His pupils blown wide, the slight quiver of a muscle in his jaw, the way his breath hitched... it was a symphony of confirmation.

He couldn’t hide it. The truth was written in the very way he recoiled from her words, as if she had struck him with a physical blow.

Vetra watched him with a predatory stillness, her eyes scanning every micro-expression with the precision of a jeweler.

She saw the flickers of horror, the dawning realization, and the desperate, futile attempt to rebuild his walls.

Her smile didn’t just return; it widened, splitting her face in a look of triumphant vindication.

She had known... well, she had suspected. It had been a theory born from the whispers of Aira, the witch she had snuffed out before she could cause trouble.

Aira had babbled about a fire that couldn’t be contained dwelling in Eris and Vetra had tucked that seed away. Seeing Soren’s reaction now, the seed bloomed into a monstrous certainty.

"So it’s true," Vetra whispered, her voice breathy and filled with a perverse kind of wonder. "She’s actually... housing a dragon."

She let the words linger, tasting them, letting the sheer impossibility of the statement settle in the freezing air. "In all the ages, Soren. Through all the centuries of our fractured history, through every generation of the dragon-born and the frost-touched, such a thing has never been heard of. A human. Housing a dragon. It’s... impossible."

She shook her head, her gaze drifting as she calculated the sheer magnitude of the anomaly. "It is a biological and magical absurdity. It shouldn’t exist. The sheer density of a dragon’s essence should have reduced her to ash within seconds of the binding."

She looked back at Soren, her eyes gleaming with an intellectual hunger that was almost as terrifying as her cruelty.

"How?" she demanded, the question sharp and direct. "How has she managed it? How is she able to survive such a spectacle? To walk, to talk, to sleep in your bed while a god of fire rages beneath her skin? Normally, she would be dead. We aren’t talking about a mere spirit or a familiar, Soren. We are talking about a dragon. The difference in the scale of their power and ours is astronomical. It is incomparable. Anyone attempting such a feat would have had their soul incinerated instantly."

Vetra stepped closer, her voice dropping into the tone of a lecturer dissecting a fascinating specimen.

"Every person in this realm has a core, Soren. You know this. It is the very essence of our being, the central engine that keeps us alive and channels the magic we were gifted. It is the source of life within us. Carrying an entity like that... a primordial force of nature... would certainly wear out her core, wouldn’t it? The friction alone, the sheer heat of that power rubbing against the fragile boundaries of a human soul... it would erode her from the inside out."

She paused, watching the way Soren’s eyes darkened with a pain he couldn’t mask. "The fact that she isn’t dead yet... or hasn’t lost her mind to the screaming of the dragon’s consciousness... means Eris must be a very special woman indeed. Or perhaps, she is simply a very sturdy vessel for a very long suicide." Vetra let out a short, sharp laugh. "Another mystery to solve, don’t you think? Isn’t that another kind of mystery that begs for an answer, my son?"

"Mind your business," Soren snapped, his voice a jagged shard of ice. He forced his walls back up, his expression hardening into a mask of brutal indifference, but the effort was visible. He was protecting her, shielding the thought of Eris from Vetra’s prying, analytical mind. He refused to engage, refused to give her the satisfaction of seeing him wonder.

Vetra laughed, a genuine sound of amusement that echoed off the frost-covered walls.

"Your reaction... it means you haven’t thought about that part yet. Or rather, you have, and you’re simply too terrified to face it. The part where carrying a dragon actually means death for an ordinary human. Somehow, Eris is surviving it... for now. But that doesn’t mean the fire isn’t consuming the wood of the house. It Is just a matter of time, Soren. A slow burn or a sudden explosion, the end is the same. It is a death sentence."

Soren didn’t answer because he couldn’t. She was voicing the nightmare he had buried under piles of research and administrative duties.

He knew. Deep down, in the quiet, dark places of his mind, he had seen the toll it took on her. He had seen the way she was when the fire surged, the way her skin sometimes seemed too tight for her spirit.

He hadn’t been able to face it. He had spent his time with her avoiding the inevitable, and now Vetra was holding his head and forcing him to look into the sun.

His heart dropped to the bottom of his chest, a heavy, leaden thing. He couldn’t picture a world where Eris simply... ceased. He refused to. His mind began to shut down, a defensive reflex against a grief too large to process.

"I’m curious," Vetra mused, her tone thoughtful, almost gentle in its malice. "... Very very curious to see how you would turn out if you were to ever lose her. If you had to watch Eris be consumed by her own fire."

An unbidden Image flashed through Soren’s mind, vivid and terrifying. He saw Eris’s body cracking like fine porcelain. He saw her skin splitting, not with blood, but with a blinding, golden light that bled through the fissures.

He remembered the market incident, the way she had looked in the ruins of the journey to Nevareth, the close calls where the heat had been so intense it singed the air.

He saw her fracturing, her body unable to contain the divine fire of Pyronox any longer. He saw the dragon breaking free from the shell of her corpse, and the image was so real, so visceral, that he felt he might lose his mind then and there.

"Enough," Soren whispered, his voice trembling with a lethal edge. "I’ve heard enough for one night."

He raised his hand, his magic responding with a violent, sudden surge. He didn’t just lock the cell; he wove a new cage of ice, thick and impenetrable, over the iron bars and around Vetra herself. The ice glowed with deep, jagged runes of suppression, an unbreakable barrier that hummed with his fury.

He turned away, his movement deliberate and controlled, though his insides were a wreck of glass. He walked away, carrying the weight of a new truth that felt like a mountain on his shoulders. Eris would die. Soon. And he was powerless to stop the fire.

"It’s not too late!" Vetra called after him, her voice muffled but clear through the ice. "It’s not too late to turn back to me, Soren! Remove your weakness! Go back to being what you were truly meant to be! A powerful ruler! An ice-cold emperor who feels nothing!"

Soren didn’t look back. He didn’t speak. He simply kept walking, his boots thudding on the stone, each step a silent rejection of the monster who had birthed him. The dungeon doors shut tight.

He passed the guards, who bowed so low their foreheads nearly touched the frost on the floor, terrified by the murderous aura still radiating from their Emperor.

Soren didn’t even see them. He was already gone, his mind racing toward the bedroom where a woman made of fire was slowly, inevitably, burning away.

Once the sound of his footsteps had completely faded into the depths of the dungeon, the silence returned to the cell, heavy and cold.

Vetra stood behind her screen of ice, her expression calm, waiting. She waited several long seconds, ensuring the magical signature of her son had truly departed the level.

"You can come out now," she said, her voice echoing in the small space.

The storage chest in the corner creaked, the lid lifting slowly. Bianca emerged, shaking so violently that she nearly fell as she climbed out. She was pale, her clothes dusted with frost, her lips a faint shade of blue from the unnatural cold Soren had left behind.

But it wasn’t just the cold making her tremble; it was the rage. It was a hot, liquid hatred that burned in her gut, clashing with the terror she had felt while hidden.

"Dragon," Bianca hissed, the word a curse. "She has a dragon inside her. That’s why she’s so... special. That’s why he looks at her like that." Her voice was high, bordering on unhinged.

The jealousy was a physical thing now, a poison that had finally reached her heart. She looked at Vetra through the bars and the thick, translucent ice. "What was all that about? The core, the death... what does it mean?" 𝙛𝓻𝒆𝓮𝒘𝙚𝙗𝒏𝙤𝙫𝓮𝒍.𝓬𝒐𝙢

Vetra smiled, a smooth, practiced deflection. "Nothing you need to concern yourself with, child. Just a mother speaking some hard truths to her son." She watched Bianca, enjoying the girl’s desperation.

Bianca was perfect... a tool so sharpened by envy and loss that she was ready to snap. She was a weapon Vetra could aim with a single word.

"I want her dead," Bianca whispered, her eyes wide and glassy. "I want to see her burn. I want to see her crack like he saw in his head. I want to destroy her."

"Patience," Vetra purred. "Desperation is a clumsy motivator. We must be strategic." She tilted her head. "Tell me, has your father fulfilled his last orders?"

Bianca nodded, her breath coming in ragged gasps. "Yes. He has. He’s done everything you asked. The network is ready. The others are waiting."

"Perfect," Vetra said, her voice dropping into a dark, satisfied hum. "Your father has proven to be quite useful. And so now, I have new orders for you, Bianca. Something to take care of our little empress."

She leaned against the ice, her eyes gleaming with a lethal intent that promised a catastrophe. "Something that will ensure that when Eris explodes, there is nothing left of this palace... or your ’beloved’ Soren’s heart... to salvage."

Bianca leaned in, her hunger for vengeance overriding her fear. She was no longer the girl who had arrived at the palace seeking a place. She was a shadow, a vessel for Vetra’s lingering malice, and the plan they began to whisper in the cold dark of the dungeon was one that would set the very foundations of Nevareth on fire.