Silent Crown: The Masked Prince's Bride-Chapter 285: Claiming Each Other

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Chapter 285: Claiming Each Other

Emma watched him... really watched him.

The faint shimmer of candlelight caught in Elias’s eyes, turning them into dark pools of hesitation and longing. His hands clutched at the sheets as though holding himself back, every muscle drawn tight, every breath measured.

And in that instant, she understood.

He wasn’t uninterested. He was restraining himself.

All this time... the quiet nights, the gentle kisses she had to initiate, she’d wondered if perhaps his affection was gentler than hers, that maybe she loved him more than he loved her. The thought used to sting, quietly, like a thorn under her heart.

But now... looking at him, trembling between desire and reverence... she knew.

He wasn’t distant; he was careful. Too careful. He looked at her like she was something sacred, something that might break if he held her too tightly.

And for once, Emma didn’t want to be sacred. She wanted to be his.

A warmth rose in her chest, fierce and certain. It was against every modest instinct, every unspoken rule, but she didn’t care.

If he wouldn’t reach for her because he thought she was too precious, then she would reach for him.

She leaned forward. Her heart hammered, but her hands were steady as she cupped his face.

"Elias," she whispered.

He opened his mouth, perhaps to apologize again, or to speak her name like a prayer, but she silenced him with her lips.

Soft. Sure. Undeniable.

The world stilled for a heartbeat, and then, like something struck by lightning, he came alive.

Elias froze as Emma’s lips pressed against his, soft and trembling, as though she were offering him something sacred. For a heartbeat, neither moved. The air between them seemed to hum fragile, trembling, and alive. Then Elias broke, his restraint crumbling like ice under sunlight.

He kissed her back, hesitant at first, as though afraid she would disappear if he was too rough. But when Emma’s hand found the back of his neck, when her breath mingled with his, something in him gave way — slow, reverent, desperate.

Her fingers clutched his tunic, pulling him closer, and he obeyed. The kiss deepened, their breaths uneven, hearts pounding in perfect, chaotic rhythm. Elias drew back for a moment, searching her face, her eyes, silently asking if she was sure.

Emma nodded, her blush fierce but her gaze steady.

He smiled, that gentle, shy smile she loved, and brushed a strand of hair from her face. "I’ll be careful," he whispered.

"I know," she breathed.

The candlelight flickered, painting gold across their joined hands. And as he kissed her again, slower this time, softer, more certain, the world outside ceased to exist.

His hand trembled slightly as it brushed against her sleeve, tracing up to her shoulder. Her skin was warm beneath his fingertips, soft as silk. Their kiss deepened—slowly, achingly—until the world outside their little room ceased to exist.

He drew her closer, hesitant yet hungry, and she felt the restraint in every movement, the reverence that made her chest tighten. His touch was unhurried, learning her as though she were something sacred.

Her fingers found his hair, and his breath hitched, breaking the kiss only to rest his forehead against hers.

"Emma," he whispered, voice hoarse with awe, "tell me this is real."

She smiled faintly, her lips brushing his. "It’s as real as you."

The candle flickered, shadows spilling across the walls like waves. And in that quiet, trembling space between one breath and the next, pure and unguarded love, found them at last.

That night, they didn’t rush. They simply learned each other, breath by breath, touch by touch, as if love itself were something newly discovered.

Her voice trembled when she whispered his name, turned breathless when she cried it out against his shoulder. He watched her come undone with awe in his eyes, smiling like a man who had just witnessed a miracle.

When the room finally quieted, they were wrapped in the soft hum of their shared breathing.

Candlelight flickered against the walls, painting their skin in gold. The air smelled faintly of wax, of warmth, of her.

Emma lay nestled in Elias’s arms, her cheek pressed to his chest, feeling the steady rhythm of his heartbeat beneath her palm. His hand traced slow, absent circles over her belly, as though soothing something sacred into her. His lips brushed her hair, her temple, her ear—too gentle to be demanding, too constant to be casual.

"Why were you mad at me?" he whispered at last, his voice hoarse, edged with sleep and care.

Emma’s lips curved. "Is it important now?" She turned toward him, fingers gliding over the scar that marred his abdomen, now almost healed. She pressed her lips to it; a kiss of gratitude, of claim.

This man.

Her husband.

The thought alone made her smile. She’d married the man who treated her as if she were something too precious to touch.

"Yes," Elias murmured, lifting her chin until their eyes met. The candlelight caught in his lashes, in the softened brown of his gaze. "It’s important. So I don’t make that mistake again."

Emma searched his eyes, her own reflection shimmering there. There was no armor in him tonight, only sincerity, and that quiet strength that always made her heart ache.

"I was hurt," she confessed softly. "That you thought we were only married today... and even then, you avoided me."

He blinked, looking so bewildered, so him, that she almost laughed. His confusion was honest, sweet even.

"I considered us married the day I kissed you first," she said, brushing her thumb across his jaw. "Did you think I’d live under the same roof with a man I didn’t already call my husband in my heart?"

Elias’s breath hitched, his eyes softening as if the world itself had stopped turning. And before he could say anything, she kissed him; once, tenderly, then again, deeper, her breath trembling against his lips.

"My dearest husband," she murmured, her voice hushed and full of warmth. "I’ve wanted this for so long... I’ve wanted us for so long."

The candles burned low, their flames swaying lazily in the still air. The room smelled faintly of smoke and skin, warmth pooling between them like honey. Beyond the window, the city slept under a veil of moonlight, but here, within these quiet walls, the world had finally fallen into place.

Her head rested against his chest, and his heartbeat echoed in her ear—steady, grounding, impossibly real.

"Then I will not let this bed go cold when you lie here," Elias whispered. It was a vow, a promise, spoken against her hair.