I will be the perfect wife this time-Chapter 131: The Falling Heir

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Chapter 131: The Falling Heir

The door hadn’t even clicked shut behind Kyle before the mask Alisha called a face began to rot. She turned on Lucius, her "motherly" grief leaking out like pus from an old wound—calculated, slimy, and as hollow as the diamonds choking her throat.

"How could you?" she hissed, the sound a jagged scrape against the silence. "He is your blood, Lucius. Your heir. You threw him into the dirt like a stray dog! Bring him back. Now, before this madness ruins us."

Lucius didn’t flinch. He stood there like a tombstone—cold, heavy, and smelling of stagnant air. He wasn’t seeing his wife; he was looking at a corpse that had forgotten to stop talking.

"Did you do it?" The question wasn’t a shout. It was a flat, dead thud on the floor.

Alisha’s breath hitched—a micro-second of guilt before her predatory instincts kicked back in. "What? Lucius, don’t be a fool. Our son is throwing his life away, and you’re—"

"Did you give the order?" Lucius stepped into her space, his voice dropping to a lethal rasp. "Did you order them to butcher my granddaughter’s eyes, Alisha?"

Alisha swallowed hard, her dry throat clicking like a hammer being cocked. She didn’t answer. Instead, she tried to wrap herself in the same toxic logic she had used to skin Kyle alive.

"That doesn’t matter!" she spat. "What matters is that our son is out there, throwing his crown into the mud! Bring him back, Lucius! He is the only future this rotting empire—"

The slap didn’t just land; it detonated.

The sound cracked through the vaulted stone like a bone snapping in half. Alisha’s head was whipped to the side, her neck jerking with a violent, sickening force. Her hand flew to her cheek, the skin already turning a bruised, angry red.

She stared up at him, those eyes—the eyes she had bought with a child’s sight—finally wide with genuine terror. "You? You struck me, Lucius? After all the filth I’ve waded through to build this throne for you?"

Lucius looked down at her, his gaze two pits of frozen, dead earth. There was no anger left, only a bone-deep, terminal exhaustion.

"I hope that blow knocks some fragment of reality back into your skull," he whispered, the words tasting like wet ash. "Because the woman I married is a ghost. All I see now is this... thing. This creature."

He turned away, his heavy boots striking the floor with the rhythmic finality of a spade hitting a coffin. At the threshold, the guards snapped to attention, their armor clattering like the teeth of a trap closing.

"If the Empress takes so much as a single step outside this door," Lucius rumbled without looking back, "consider your lives forfeit. Understood?"

The guards bowed, their faces ashen. "Understood, Your Imperial Majesty."

Alisha lunged, her expensive silk skirts rustling like a nest of vipers being stepped on. "Lucius! Have you lost your mind? You’re locking me up? ME?"

But the guards moved like machines, their halberds snapping together in a metallic ’X’ that cut her world in half.

"Let me go, you filthy curs!" she shrieked, her voice a jagged howl. "I am your Empress! I am the blood that built this dynasty!"

The guards ignored her, forcing her back with blunt force. The heavy oak doors groaned like a dying animal before slamming shut. Then came the deadbolt—a heavy, metallic thud that felt like the final nail in a coffin.

Outside, Lucius kept walking. Each step was a blow against his own ribs. His heart was a mess of twisted muscle and rotting regrets, bleeding for the woman he had just buried alive—but the stench of her rot had become too thick to ignore. The swamp was finally dragging its architect down into the mud.

Kyle burst through the door, his lungs burning with scorched gasps. He found Lyla standing by the window, clutching Ann as if the infant were the only solid thing left in a dissolving world. She had already stripped herself of the Imperial jewels; they lay scattered like cold, broken teeth pulled from a corpse.

"Lyla—"

"Don’t," she cut him off, her voice a rusted blade. "I married the man, Kyle, not the title. But I’m done. I can’t breathe here. The very air in this palace tastes of my daughter’s blood. I’m leaving this nightmare behind."

Kyle didn’t argue. He moved toward her and pulled them into an embrace so tight it felt like a final anchor before a shipwreck. He pressed a desperate kiss to her forehead, then cupped her face, forcing her to look into eyes that were no longer those of a prince, but of a man who had stared into the abyss.

"Then take me with you," he rasped, his voice thick with the copper tang of exhaustion. "I don’t want this crown. I don’t want this gilded filth. You and Ann are my only kingdom. I’ve already spat the succession back into my father’s face."

Lyla’s eyes widened, a sob of shock hitching in her throat. "What? Kyle... the throne—the empire—"

"If protecting my daughter is madness, then I am insane to the marrow of my bones," Kyle snapped with a cold clarity. "Let’s get out of this hell. Now."

He grabbed her hand, his grip unyielding, and pulled her toward the corridor. They hadn’t gone ten paces before they hit a wall of shadow.

Lucius.

The Emperor stood there, looking older, smaller, as if his crown were finally crushing his skull. He was draped in a shroud of silent, rotting grief. His mouth opened, a word rattling in his throat—a father’s plea, perhaps.

But Kyle didn’t give him the satisfaction. He didn’t even slow down.

With a volcanic fury, Kyle swept Lyla and Ann past him, his shoulder nearly clipping his father’s as he treated the Emperor like a ghost that had stayed too long. He didn’t look back to see the man whose legacy was fracturing into a thousand jagged pieces.

Lucius stood alone in the suffocating silence, watching his blood walk out into the dirt, leaving him with nothing but a throne that smelled of failure and a hollow tomb.

The carriage ground to a shuddering halt before the dark silhouette of Lucron Castle. Mathias and Leon stepped out, anchoring their wives—Olivia and Isabella—to the cold stone of their home. But the air of the Duchy tasted of a warning, sharp and metallic.

Olivia’s obsidian gaze swept the courtyard, snagging on a figure that shouldn’t have been there. She leaned toward Mathias, her voice a jagged whisper. "Something is rotting here. Why has the Head Butler crawled out to meet us himself?"

The Butler approached, his face a sweating mask of unease. He bowed, but his eyes kept darting toward Olivia as if she were a plague.

"Your Grace..." he managed. "There is a... complication. You must enter immediately."

"What the hell are you talking about?" Mathias demanded, his voice a lethal vibration.

The servant hesitated, his gaze lingering on Olivia’s face until Mathias snapped. The sound was like a whip’s crack. "Speak! And stop those insolent looks before I have your eyes torn out!"

The butler flinched. "It’s... it’s regarding the Crown Prince, Your Grace. He is waiting in the drawing room."

"Kyle?" Mathias’s brow furrowed, the name tasting like bitter iron.

Olivia looked at him, her brow arching with a frozen curiosity. "Is there a problem with Kyle? Or has the ’Golden Hope’ finally lost his way?"

"I don’t know," Mathias muttered, his grip tightening on her arm. "The air in this house... it’s foul. It tastes of rot."

They moved through the corridors, the silence pressing like a heavy weight. When they reached the drawing room, Mathias threw the doors open to a sight that belonged in a gutter.

Kyle was there, sprawled like a discarded carcass. His face was a wreckage of grief. He didn’t look like a prince; he looked like a man who had been dragged through the bowels of hell and spat out. A half-empty bottle was clutched in his hand, and the stench of cheap alcohol and stale sweat choked the room.

Mathias moved to bow out of habit. "Your Highness—"

"Don’t." Kyle’s voice was a serrated rasp. "Don’t bow. I’m not the Crown Prince anymore, Mathias. The crown is in the mud where it belongs."

Mathias stood frozen, staring at the ruin of his brother. He wanted to believe it was a joke, but the hollow stare in Kyle’s eyes told a story written in blood and betrayal.

"Mathias..." Kyle began, his voice like broken glass being dragged over stone. "Bear with me... I’m staying here. Things... things are a rotting mess right now."

Mathias stepped closer. "What happened? Why are you in this state? You look like a man waiting for his execution."

Kyle took a desperate swig, the wine spilling over his chin like an ugly stain. "It’s all because of that woman. She destroyed us all. I hate her to the marrow of my bones."

He finally raised his head, a lump of grief in his throat. His eyes were bloodshot, reflecting a raw agony. "She... she tried to butcher Ann’s sight."

"Who tried to hurt Ann?"

The voice was cold and sharp, cutting through the alcohol stench like a blade.

Kyle’s head snapped up, colliding with Olivia’s gaze. As his eyes met those obsidian shards—eyes that knew exactly what it felt like to have the light stolen—the last of his royal pride snapped.

Kyle lunged. He didn’t come as a royal, but as a wounded animal seeking a place to bleed out. He threw himself into Olivia’s arms, his body wracked with violent, bone-deep sobs. He clung to her with white-knuckled desperation, weeping like a child who had found the only person who wouldn’t lie to him.

Olivia felt the scalding heat of his tears soaking her dress, but she didn’t flinch. She looked past him at Mathias, her eyes a silent command: Leave us.

Mathias hesitated before retreating into the shadows, closing the door on the wreckage of his brother.

"Olivia..." Kyle choked out, his face buried in her shoulder. "She really did it... she tried to butcher Ann... just like she butchered you. She’s a monster."

Olivia stayed still, her hand rising to pat his shoulder—a mechanical comfort that felt like a clock ticking toward an explosion. "Who, Kyle? Speak the name."

"My mother," he spat, the word tasting like wet ash and copper. "My mother... she tried to kill my daughter."