The Villainess Wants To Retire-Chapter 270: MIDNIGHT CONSPIRACIES
The meeting location was carefully chosen, an abandoned warehouse in the mid-districts, far enough from palace scrutiny but accessible enough that three separate groups could arrive without drawing attention.
Torchlight flickered against water-damaged walls while Viktor Virelya stood at the center like conductor preparing orchestra of chaos.
Three distinct factions gathered before him, each separated by deliberate space that spoke of distrust and different grievances.
To his left clustered displaced merchants, men and women who’d lost everything in the demon attack.
Their shops burned, their inventory destroyed, their livelihoods reduced to ash and insurance claims that would never cover actual losses.
They wore middle-class clothing gone shabby, faces carved with desperation that made them vulnerable to promises they’d normally question.
To his right stood grieving families. Parents who’d buried children. Spouses who’d lost partners. Siblings mourning siblings.
Their grief was raw, unprocessed, still bleeding like fresh wounds. They wanted someone to blame, needed targets for rage that had nowhere else to go. Viktor would give them that target.
At the back lurked the radical ice purists, ideological extremists who viewed fire magic as heretical corruption of Nevareth’s pure ice-blessed heritage.
They’d existed on the fringes for years, dismissed as fanatics by mainstream nobility. But grief and chaos made excellent recruitment tools for extremism. 𝘧𝑟𝑒𝑒𝘸𝘦𝘣𝑛𝑜𝘷𝑒𝓁.𝘤𝘰𝓂
Their leader, a gaunt man named Theron the Pale, watched Viktor with eyes that burned with zealot’s certainty.
"Thank you all for coming," Viktor began, voice pitched to carry authority without arrogance.
"I know these are difficult times. I know you’ve suffered losses that can never be replaced. But I’m here tonight because someone needs to speak truth that our emperor refuses to hear."
He let that settle, the implication that Soren had failed them, had prioritized something over their safety.
"Fire magic destroyed your homes," Viktor continued, moving into the poisoned narrative he and Vetra had crafted.
"Fire demons, servants of Pyronox, tore through our streets because fire called to fire. The foreign bride brought her cursed power to our ice-blessed empire, and hell itself followed."
Murmurs of agreement rippled through the merchants and families. The ice purists nodded with satisfaction, vindicated in their beliefs.
"But that’s not the worst of it." Viktor’s voice dropped, became confidential, drawing them closer.
"Our emperor, the man we trusted to protect us, has been bewitched by the Fire Witch. You’ve all heard the stories from Solmire. The Tyrant Queen. The woman who burned her own citizens without remorse. And now she has her claws in Soren Nivarre."
He paced deliberately, making eye contact with different people, ensuring they felt personally addressed.
"She will corrupt him. Turn him into a tyrant like his father, the mad king who butchered his own children in paranoid frenzy. Fire magic breeds madness, violence, destruction. It’s in her nature. And now she’s spreading that corruption into the man who should be protecting us."
The grieving families looked increasingly agitated. One woman, whose daughter had died in the attack, stepped forward with tears streaming down her face.
"What can we do?" she asked, voice breaking. "How do we stop this?"
Viktor’s expression softened with false sympathy. "Spread the truth. Make your voices heard. Public opinion matters, even emperors must listen when enough people demand change. Oppose the wedding. Publicly. Loudly. Make it impossible for Soren to ignore that his people reject this dangerous alliance."
He paused, then added the bribe wrapped in promises.
"Those who stand publicly against this union will receive compensation for losses. Superior housing in reconstructed districts, not the temporary shelters being thrown up now, but permanent homes in the inner city where you’ll be safe from future attacks. Political favor. Access to imperial resources currently reserved for nobility."
The merchants perked up at that. Compensation. New opportunities. Ways to rebuild better than before.
"All you need to do," Viktor concluded smoothly, "is make your opposition known. Voice your rejection. Petition the Emperor. Write testimony about how fire magic endangered your families. The truth, nothing more, but spoken loudly enough that he cannot ignore it."
The seeds were planted in fertile ground of grief and desperation. Some looked uncertain, old habits of respecting authority warring with anger and need. But others nodded, already convinced, already planning how to make their voices heard.
Viktor smiled internally. Vetra would be pleased. They didn’t need everyone, just enough visible opposition to make the wedding politically untenable, to force Soren into choosing between his throne and his foreign bride.
The factions dispersed separately, each group leaving through different exits to avoid being seen together. Viktor remained behind, watching shadows swallow them, satisfaction warming him against winter cold.
She could help rebuild, she coul demonstrate competence and care but It wouldn’t matter once public opinion turned decisively against her.
And public opinion, properly manipulated, was more powerful than any demon army.
...
The imperial archives smelled of old parchment and preservation spells, dust motes dancing in candlelight as Soren hunched over another ancient text.
Hours had passed, midnight approaching, then passing, time marked only by candles burning lower and eyes growing grittier with exhaustion.
He’d searched desperately through historical records, magical theory, accounts from previous emperors. Looking for any mention of spatial anomalies, cracks in reality, veils between worlds that glowed and called to those who witnessed them.
Nothing.
No historical precedent. No explanation. Not even folklore or dismissed-as-myth stories that might contain kernels of truth.
Either he’d witnessed something completely unprecedented, or, more troubling, he’d witnessed something that had been deliberately erased from record.
Soren leaned back in his chair, rubbing eyes that burned from hours of reading by inadequate light. His reflection stared back from darkened window, pale, exhausted, looking every year of the twenty-seven he’d lived plus several he hadn’t earned yet.
He looked like the old Soren. The one he’d buried years ago.
Most people didn’t know this about him, that beneath the composed emperor, the confident ruler, the man who commanded winter itself with casual authority, lurked someone naturally gloomy and socially inept. Someone who spiraled into uncertainty when faced with problems he couldn’t solve through logic or force.
He’d buried that side of himself when he met Caelen. Had learned to wear confidence like armor, to project certainty even when drowning in doubt. The mask had become so natural he’d almost forgotten it was mask at all.
But now it was slipping. The spatial anomaly, the missing maid, Vetra’s conspiracies, the weight of dead citizens, all of it pressing down until the old darkness resurfaced.
He recognized he hadn’t been himself earlier with Eris. Had been mentally absent, distracted by spiraling thoughts about cracks in reality and questions with no answers. Had treated their conversation like political briefing rather than interaction with the woman who...
The woman who made his dark world brighter.
That realization cut through the spiral like blade through fog.
Eris. Who carried her own darkness, her own grief, her own crushing weight of responsibility. Who somehow remained herself despite divine power that should have consumed her, despit the pain of betrayal.
Being around her felt like standing near fire, not the destructive kind, but warmth that pushed back winter cold he’d lived with so long he’d forgotten what warmth felt like.
And he’d been distant with her tonight. Professionally courteous when she deserved... more than that. Deserved his full attention rather than distracted remnants while his mind chased impossible questions.
Regret settled heavy in his chest.
Soren closed the useless books, extinguished candles, gave up the search that was yielding nothing but more questions. Headed toward his chambers expecting, hoping, to find Eris asleep in his bed where she belonged.







