Serpent Emperor's Bride-Chapter 15: The Softest Intrusion
[Silthara Palace—Courtyard—Continuation]
The flowers trembled, not from wind—there was none—but from something moving with intent.
Levin held his ground.
His dagger remained steady in his hand, blade angled low, ready. He did not shout. He did not retreat. The warmth of the morning vanished from his awareness as his senses sharpened.
"Stay back," he repeated, quieter now—but firmer.
Behind him, attendants obeyed instantly, retreating toward the pillars. Iru rose from his knees at once, positioning himself half a step behind Levin, eyes fixed on the shifting hedge.
"Consort, allow me to—" 𝓯𝙧𝙚𝒆𝙬𝙚𝒃𝙣𝙤𝒗𝓮𝓵.𝙘𝙤𝙢
"No," Levin replied without turning. "If it rushes, then you move."
The rustling stopped for one breath. Then the leaves parted and—"Mrrr–raow?"
The sound was small. Uncertain. Almost apologetic.
Levin blinked.
So did everyone else.
A tiny tiger cub tumbled out of the bushes and rolled straight into the sunlight, paws flailing awkwardly before it landed in the dust with a soft poof. Its stripes were still faint, more shadow than ink, its ears too large for its head, and its eyes wide and brilliantly crimson with alarm.
Silence.
Utter, stunned silence.
The cub sneezed.
"Hrrshh—mrrp."
Levin stared.
"...A baby cub?" he breathed.
The cub scrambled upright, slipped, then sat down hard on its haunches, tail flicking anxiously. It looked from face to face—armed guards, frozen attendants, drawn blades—then did the only reasonable thing.
It squeaked.
"Mewrr."
Someone gasped, " By the gods..."
Iru stared at the small striped creature, disbelief written plainly across his face. "...That is...a very cute assassin."
Levin blinked, then let out a breath he hadn’t realized he was holding.
Slowly, deliberately, he lowered his dagger and crouched. He reached out and gathered the cub into his arms. It protested weakly, paws flailing for a heartbeat before settling against his chest.
Levin’s hand moved instinctively, rubbing its back in slow, reassuring strokes.
"There, easy, little one. You startled everyone."
The cub’s ears twitched. It tilted its head, studying Levin with intense seriousness, then leaned forward to sniff his hand. It paused—
—and sneezed again.
Levin smiled faintly, a small sound of genuine surprise, "Bless you."
And then...
"CONSORT!"
The shout cracked through the courtyard like a struck gong.
Every attendant fell to their knees in unison.
Zeramet strode through the archway with unrestrained urgency, robes flaring behind him. In three long strides he reached Levin and seized his arms, turning him sharply—left, then right—hands firm, searching.
"Are you harmed?" Zeramet demanded, golden eyes blazing. "Speak. Where were you struck? I will kill whoever dared to touch you."
Levin blinked, startled by the sudden ferocity. "Zer—wait—"
Zeramet’s hands moved to his shoulders, then down his sides, scanning for blood, for venom, for any sign of injury.
"By Urzan’s coils," he growled, voice low and lethal, "I felt the wards tremble. Do not tell me you stood unguarded—"
Levin lifted the cub slightly. "...It sneezed on me."
Silence.
Zeramet stopped.
His gaze dropped. The cub stared back at him, wide-eyed, then lifted one tiny paw and placed it on Levin’s chest.
"Mrrp."
For a heartbeat, the Emperor of Zahryssar did not speak.
Then Zeramet exhaled—slow, controlled—pinching the bridge of his nose. "...So, this is the threat that summoned half my guard."
Iru cleared his throat. "Your Radiance, it appears the enemy has sent... fluff."
Zeramet shot him a look. Levin, still holding the cub, smiled faintly. "I don’t think it means harm."
Zeramet studied the cub, then Levin, then the cub again. His expression shifted—not soft, not amused—but thoughtful.
"Tigers do not wander into inner courts," Zeramet said. "And cubs do not come alone. I wonder how it appeared here?"
The cub chose that moment to yawn—wide and shameless—revealing tiny, harmless fangs before tucking its head neatly beneath Levin’s chin, as if it had decided this was the safest place in the world.
Zeramet’s jaw tightened. "...And it is clinging far too close to you."
Levin blinked in surprise, then smiled. Not the careful curve he wore in court. Not the gentle restraint of duty.
A real smile. Small. Unguarded, "It’s only a cub, Zer."
And—Zeramet forgot how to breathe.
For a heartbeat, the courtyard vanished—the guards, the tension, and the whispers. There was only Levin’s smile, faint and luminous, and the way it softened everything it touched.
Levin glanced down at the cub, who responded by making a pleased, rumbling sound and kneading his robe with clumsy paws. "If you allow it, may I keep him?"
Zeramet looked at the cub.
Then at the way Levin held it—careful, instinctive, protective. His jaw tightened again—not with anger this time, but with something far more dangerous.
Affection and Jealousy.
Yet he forced his voice to remain even. "First, we find its mother. A cub cannot be separated from its dam."
His gaze returned to Levin, steady and sincere. "You would not wish that, would you, Consort?"
Levin nodded at once. "Of course not."
Zeramet turned to the attendants. "Search the palace grounds and the outer gardens," he commanded. "Quietly. If there is a tiger searching for her young, you will find her—and you will not provoke her."
The attendants bowed deeply and scattered at once. Levin shifted the cub slightly, adjusting his hold. The little cub pressed closer, warm and trusting.
Zeramet stepped nearer and placed a hand at Levin’s back, protective without pressing, his voice lowering, "If the mother is found, we will see her safely reunited with her child."
"And if she isn’t?" Levin asked softly.
Zeramet’s eyes softened as they met Levin’s smile again. "...Then, You can keep him."
Levin’s smile deepened—just a fraction.
The cub purred.
For a brief, fragile moment, the courtyard of Silthara felt less like a battleground—and more like a place where something gentle had chosen to remain.
Zeramet watched the cub, then Levin; a rare hint of amusement touched his lips. "It seems that you are collecting more than just enemies."
Levin laughed softly. "I didn’t plan on it."
"Few things worth keeping are planned," Zeramet replied.
After a pause, he added, almost casually, "You wished to write a letter, did you not?"
Levin nodded. "Yes."
Zeramet stepped closer and set his hand at Levin’s waist, firm and steady, guiding rather than restraining. "Then come, we will send word at once. A father should not be left to imagine his child in danger."
Levin’s expression softened at that. He adjusted the cub in his arms and nodded. "Yes."
Together, they left the courtyard, the attendants parting in silent reverence. The cub peeked over Levin’s arm, blinking at the passing columns and torchlight, as though already memorizing the palace it had decided to claim.
"You will write what you wish," Zeramet said softly. "I will add only my seal."
They disappeared into the deeper halls of Silthara—
Levin carrying a cub, and Zeramet carrying the quiet certainty that, piece by piece, his palace was changing.
***
[Silthara Palace—Emperor’s Working Chamber—Later]
The Emperor’s working chamber breathed of ink and stone.
High shelves climbed the walls, heavy with clay tablets, scrolls bound in leather, and bronze seals laid out like sleeping beasts. A tall window admitted a bar of afternoon light that cut across the writing table, illuminating dust motes and the slow curl of incense smoke.
Near Levin’s feet, the tiger cub lay sprawled in a patch of warmth, one tiny paw twitching as it slept.
Levin’s expression was soft as he wrote, the quill moving in steady strokes.
Behind him, Zeramet leaned against the wall. He had said nothing for a long while, only watched: the careful set of Levin’s shoulders, the way his brow furrowed when he chose his words, and the quiet patience of his breathing.
"You look different today," Zeramet said at last, his voice low.
Levin glanced back, a faint smile in his eyes. "Different how?"
Zeramet walked and leaned closer to him; his thumb moved slowly at Levin’s side, a small, absent-minded gesture.
"Until this morning, it felt as though you were holding your breath." He paused. "And today... it feels as though you have finally found it."
The quill stilled.
Levin’s fingers tightened slightly around it as the words settled.
’Am I...?’ he wondered. ’Am I truly at ease?’
He looked down at the letter—at the careful lines meant to reassure a father far away—and then finished the final stroke.
"I am done," he said quietly, passing the letter back.
Zeramet took it at once. Without hesitation, he reached for the imperial seal—heavy, ancient, carved with the coiled serpent of Zahryssar—and pressed it into warm wax.
The seal set.
Levin startled. "Wait—you stamped it already? You are not going to read it?"
Zeramet looked at him as if the answer were obvious. He leaned in and pressed a brief, reverent kiss to Levin’s forehead.
"I trust my Consort," he said simply. "I know you’re no harm to me."
Levin’s breath caught. "But—how can you trust a man from another—"
"You are my Consort," Zeramet continued. "My chosen. My equal. As an Alpha, you’re ready to endure the immense pain of womb formation. That’s all it takes to have faith in you.
Levin stared at him.
’So... he trusts me.’ Something fragile and warm unfolded in Levin’s chest.
A small smile touched his lips—faint, but real. "Thank you... for believing in me."
Zeramet smiled back, rare and beautiful in its sincerity. He rested his forehead briefly against Levin’s.
"Keep smiling like this, Consort," he murmured. "You bring peace to my heart."
Levin lifted his gaze, blue meeting gold—human warmth meeting ancient serpent fire. And in that quiet space between breaths, Levin’s heart opened just a little to the Serpent King—without his knowing.







