Extra's Life: MILFs Won't Leave the Incubus Alone-Chapter 230: The Empress of the Quiet Throne
The capital had not slept for three nights.
From the high solar of the imperial palace, the empress stood before the towering crystal windows, her Golden eyes watching the city below writhe under the uneasy glow of lanterns and half-controlled fires.
The fog drifting over the streets caught the orange light and smothered it, making the whole capital seem like a single, trembling ember struggling against suffocation.
Soldiers marched in tense patterns, hurried and disorganized, as if responding to threats that shifted as quickly as rumors. Bells tolled from distant districts—sometimes as warnings, sometimes as calls for aid, sometimes out of sheer confusion.
Every sound from the city below reached the palace as a muted vibration against the glass, each one a reminder that her empire was no longer steady beneath her feet.
She squeaked her white hair, pressing her palm to the cold surface.
The people can sense it, she thought. They sense the throne cracking.
Tonight felt worse than the others. Something in the air carried a metallic tension, like the breath before lightning struck.
A faint rustle of silk signaled that someone had entered the chamber. Only one person moved so softly.
"Your Majesty," a warm voice murmured.
The empress didn’t turn immediately. She needed one final heartbeat of stillness before facing her only remaining confidante.
Saintess Calipso—revered as the Empire’s Moon, favored by the God since childhood, the most beautiful woman in the realm—approached with calm steps. Her presence always brought a gentle hush to the air, as if the chaos of the world softened in deference to her.
Tonight, however, even she carried a tension beneath her serene expression.
Calipso stopped at the empress’s side, her silver-white cloak whispering across the polished floor. "The city is restless again," she said softly.
The empress let out a slow breath. "Restless is too kind."
She gestured to the fog-choked streets. "Look. They hover between fear and rebellion. Just like the nobles."
Calipso’s eyes lingered on the city—their city. Her gaze carried weight, like someone reading the shape of the future in smoke patterns.
"The rumors from the Holy Church have spread faster than any decree we send," Calipso said. "The people whisper of prophecies. Of a dawn." She paused, voice lowering. "Of a prophet, my prophet...Lucifer."
The empress’s fingers curled slightly against the crystal.
"I know," she said. "Our spies confirmed that the Church is rupturing. Their Prophet’s declaration is stirring panic across every kingdom. A holy war may already be taking root."
Calipso turned her head slightly, observing the empress in profile. "And that panic might reache here."
"Its already here," the empress admitted.
Behind her, the candles burned low, shadows bending in strange shapes across the solar’s mirrored pillars. The light reflected the two women hundreds of times—some distorted, some clear—like a fractured tapestry of two lonely figures bearing the weight of a collapsing world.
Calipso stepped closer, her voice intimate. "You look exhausted, my Empress."
The empress managed a faint smile. "I am."
Calipso reached out but stopped inches from touching her arm—hesitating, as if unsure whether comfort would help or break her further. "You’ve been carrying this burden alone for too long."
"It seems each day adds another stone," the empress whispered. "And I am running out of hands to hold them."
They both turned back toward the city. A distant shout echoed—followed by the clanging of steel. The empress felt the sound reverberate in her bones.
Calipso exhaled. "The Archdukes are making their moves, then."
"They are," the empress replied. "All four of them."
The Wolves in Noble Cloth
The empress moved away from the window and crossed the solar. Calipso followed at her side, her steps soundless on the marble.
"They pretend loyalty in daylight," the empress said bitterly. "But at night..."
She pressed her hand against her forehead.
"At night, they gather troops. Whisper in corners. Forge alliances behind my back."
Her voice trembled—not from fear, but from exhaustion sharpened to a painful edge.
"Archduke Azure has mobilized his navy under the excuse of ’border security.’ Archduke Thorn has been seen meeting with wealthy dissidents from the lower districts."
She paused.
"Archduchess Ivory has stopped grain shipments to the capital. She claims her mills are ’compromised’ but we both know she’s testing how quickly unrest will turn to riots."
Calipso’s brows furrowed. "And the fourth?"
The empress laughed—but the sound carried no mirth. "The Archduke of Dragon? They say he’s dead but his followers, they are demanding control of the city guard. Says they’re undertrained. He wants authority to ’protect’ me."
Calipso’s eyes sharpened. "He wants the throne."
"They all do," the empress whispered.
A long silence followed.
It pressed on them like a thick veil.
The empress sank into a chair near the long table of maps and reports. Dozens of markers indicated troop movements. Lines of ink crossed the parchment like veins of worry.
Calipso stood across from her.
"May I speak candidly?" she asked.
"You always may."
Calipso rested her hands on the table’s edge. "You cannot hold all four at bay forever. Their ambitions are growing teeth."
"I know," the empress said quietly. "But if I move against one, the other three will attack. If I show weakness, they will pounce. And if the people riot..."
She swallowed.
"The capital will fracture in a single night."
Calipso watched her with eyes that missed nothing—neither the tremor of her hands nor the quiet despair lingering behind her regal mask.
"You fear the nobles," Calipso murmured. "But you fear the rebellion more."
"Yes," the empress whispered. "Because the nobles may tear me from the throne... but the rebellion would tear the entire empire apart..and the emperial weapon will be unleashed, devastating the whole of the empire."
Her breath hitched. "And I don’t know which will strike first."
Calipso straightened slowly. "Walk with me."
The empress looked up, surprised by the firmness in her tone. But there was no room to refuse—Calipso was her anchor, the one person who could still pull her out of her spiraling thoughts.
The saintess extended a hand.
The empress accepted.
They walked down the silent corridor toward the Hall of Mirrors.
Torches flickered along the walls, casting trembling light. Every distant footstep of a guard sounded too loud. The palace felt depleted tonight—like it was holding its breath.
When they entered the Hall of Mirrors, the air cooled noticeably. Hundreds of tall mirrors lined the walls from floor to ceiling. Their reflections stretched infinitely, creating a labyrinth of gleaming surfaces.
Once, emperors sought clarity here. Now, the reflections seemed to show the empress as fragmented, her image splitting into a dozen fractured silhouettes.
She paused in the center.
"So many," she murmured. "Almost as if the hall mocks me."
Calipso came to stand beside her.
"No," she said softly. "It mourns with you."
The empress blinked.
Calipso lifted her hand, touching one reflection. "Your world has cracked. The mirrors merely reflect the truth of your burden."
She turned her gaze to the empress, voice gentler than glass. "You have not slept. You barely eat. And yet you carry the empire alone."
The empress’s throat tightened. "There is no one else who can."
"That is not true," Calipso whispered.
The empress looked at her sharply—but Calipso only smiled faintly. "Not tonight. Tonight you will lean on me."
For a moment, the empress allowed herself to breathe.
Allowed herself to not stand perfectly straight.
Allowed her shoulders to sag the smallest fraction.
Calipso observed her quietly. "This is why I’m worried. You carry yourself as if you’re lifting the sky."
"Someone must," the empress murmured.
"But you are breaking beneath it."
The empress closed her eyes. "Let me have my illusions."
Calipso hesitated, then spoke carefully. "You are losing your grip on the palace."
The empress released a bitter laugh. "I know."
"The nobles smell opportunity."
"I know."
"And your enemies are multiplying."
The empress’s voice cracked. "I know."
Calipso stepped closer and placed a hand on her shoulder. "Then why do you insist on bearing this alone?"
For a long moment, the empress said nothing.
Finally, she whispered: "Because there is no one else left whom I trust with the truth."
Calipso’s expression flickered—hurt, empathy, and something unreadable.
"Then tell it to me," she said quietly. "The whole truth. No more half-answers."
The empress opened her eyes.
Calipso’s face reflected in a nearby mirror, clear and steady, unlike the empress’s own fractured image.
The saintess took a breath. "Before we speak of rebellions or archdukes or collapsing faith..."
Her voice lowered.
"I need to ask you a question. One I have avoided for weeks."
The empress felt the world narrow to a single trembling point.
Calipso stepped closer, until their foreheads almost touched.
"Is the emperor," she whispered, "still alive?"
The question hung in the air like a blade suspended by a thread.
The empress didn’t speak.
Her hand trembled.
Her breath caught.
Her eyes burned.
Calipso waited, patient yet unyielding.
"Answer me truthfully," she murmured. "I cannot guide you blindly."
The empress swallowed hard.
She looked into Calipso’s eyes—deep, luminous, unwavering.
Slowly, painfully...
She shook her head.
Calipso’s breath hitched—but she did not step back.
The empress tried to steady her voice. "He’s been dead since the start of the winter. Before the sickness spread. Before the unrest... I..I hid it."
Calipso’s eyes softened—not in shock, but in understanding.
"You hid it," she repeated gently, "because you feared what the truth would unleash."
"I hid it," the empress whispered, "because I knew the nobles would seize the throne the moment they sensed a void. Because the people would panic. Because the Archdukes would declare war."
Her voice thinned.
"And because I needed time."
Calipso exhaled slowly, the weight of the revelation settling over her. The mirrors reflected her expression—dozens of calm, sorrowful faces shining back at them.
"For weeks," Calipso murmured, "you have ruled without a shadow. Without a protector. Without a partner beside you."
The empress nodded weakly. "Yes."
"And you bore that grief alone."
"Yes."
Calipso’s hand rose, brushing the empress’s cheek. "You should not have."
Something inside the empress finally gave way. A soft, broken sound escaped her—barely a sob, barely a breath. The palace walls had not heard her break in years.
For the first time since her husband’s death, she allowed herself to tremble.
Only once.
Only for Calipso.
The saintess held her through it—one arm steady around her, the other smoothing her hair like a blessing.
When the empress stepped back, Calipso did not release her fully.
"The nobles must not learn this," the empress whispered, fear flickering through her voice. "If they do—"
"They won’t," Calipso said firmly. "Not from me."
The empress looked up at her. "You believe I should have told you?"
"Yes," Calipso answered without hesitation. "Because now I understand the full danger. And what I should do.."
She stepped back, surveying the reflections around them.
"And understanding it..." she continued softly, "...means I can protect you better."
They made their way to the balcony overlooking the capital again. The fog had grown thicker, swallowing entire districts. Lights flickered like dying stars.
"Calipso," the empress murmured, "what do you see happening next? Truly?"
Calipso watched the fog shift—like a tide about to turn crimson.
"The Church’s collapse will reach us soon," she said. "Lucifer’s prophecy has already scattered fear into every kingdom. Half the empire’s priests are fleeing. The other half are preparing for war."
The empress gripped the balcony rail. "The Archdukes will use that chaos."
"They will," Calipso agreed. "And the rebellion will grow under their shadow."
A faint metallic clang echoed from the streets.
"War is coming," Calipso murmured. "From above. From below. From within the palace walls."
The empress’s eyes tightened. "Then guide me, Calipso. Tell me what I must do."
The saintess turned toward her slowly.
"My guidance will become a blade," she warned. "One that might draw blood."
"I am prepared."
Calipso’s voice dropped to a near-whisper—intense, steady, resolute.
"Then know this truth: A man will come, A man whome I trust the most, A man who can make the impossible possible....A man who will be our pillar, your pillar..."
She lifted her hand, cupping the empress’s cheek with reverence that bordered on sorrow.
"And because of him... the empire will be saved."







