The Villainess Wants To Retire-Chapter 279: The Hunt

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Chapter 279: The Hunt

The night was cold and sharp as a blade, the kind of cold that bit through even the thickest cloaks.

Ryse urged his horse forward, the animal’s breath misting in the darkness as hooves pounded against frozen earth. Behind him, two dozen of his best men followed in tight formation, their faces grim and focused.

They had hours. Maybe less.

The search parties had already fanned out across the city’s eastern approaches, covering every road, every alley, every forgotten path that might lead beyond the capital’s walls.

Ryse had chosen the likeliest route himself, the old trading road that wound through the outskirts, dotted with abandoned mills and forgotten warehouses. The kind of places where people did business they didn’t want witnessed.

The kind of places where human cargo changed hands.

His jaw tightened. If the Ravencrests had harmed Lady Eris’s maid, if they’d done even half of what the evidence suggested, they would answer for it. Slowly.

"Commander!" One of his scouts rode up hard, his horse lathered and panting. "Fresh tracks. Three travelers, one cart. Heading northeast toward the old mill district."

Ryse nodded once. "How far ahead?"

"An hour, maybe less. They’re moving slow. Heavy load."

"Then we close the distance. Move out!"

They rode harder, the darkness beginning to thin at the edges as dawn approached. The stars were fading, the sky turning from black to deep blue, and Ryse could feel time slipping through his fingers like sand.

...

The old mill squatted at the edge of the forest like a rotting tooth, its wheel long since collapsed, its walls sagging with neglect. Perfect for the kind of transaction that required privacy and a complete absence of morality.

Isolde stood in the clearing before it, her arms wrapped tight around herself despite the heavy cloak. Exhaustion had carved shadows beneath her eyes, and her usual composure had cracked somewhere during the desperate flight from the palace. Beside her, Kael and Damon kept watch, their hands never far from their weapons.

Between them, the sack lay in the dirt like discarded refuse.

"You’re late." The voice came from the mill’s doorway, low and oily. A man emerged, tall, thin, his face hidden beneath a hood. He moved like a spider, all angles and calculation. "I don’t like waiting."

"We had... complications." Isolde forced steel into her voice. "The goods are here. Intact. That’s what matters."

The merchant approached slowly, his gaze flicking over the sack with the casual assessment of someone pricing livestock. He crouched, pulling the canvas aside just enough to reveal Mira’s bruised face, her shallow breathing, the way her body lay limp and unresisting.

"Damaged," he observed mildly. "Malnourished too. Multiple contusions. She’ll need considerable... rehabilitation before she’s marketable."

"That wasn’t part of our agreement," Isolde snapped. "You said, "

"I said I’d take her. I didn’t guarantee full price for damaged goods." His smile was a thin, bloodless thing. "Half. Take it or leave her here."

Isolde’s hands curled into fists. They didn’t have time for this. Dawn was breaking, and somewhere behind them, she could feel pursuit like a knife at her back. "Fine. Half. Just finish this."

The merchant produced a coin purse, weighing it casually. Gold glinted in the growing light. "Pleasure doing business with..."

"By order of Emperor Soren Nivarre, you are under arrest."

The voice cut through the clearing like a whip crack, sharp and absolute. Isolde’s blood turned to ice.

From every direction, the trees, the mill, the road behind them, soldiers emerged with the synchronized precision of a trap snapping shut. Twenty. Thirty. More. All armed, all focused, all positioned to cut off every possible escape route.

And at their head, mounted on a warhorse that gleamed like silver in the dawn light, Commander Ryse sat with his sword already drawn.

"Don’t move," he said quietly. The words didn’t need volume to carry weight. "Any of you."

For one frozen moment, no one breathed.

Then Kael shifted, his hand moving toward his blade. Damon mirrored him, muscles coiling, 𝘧𝑟𝑒𝑒𝘸𝘦𝘣𝑛𝑜𝘷𝑒𝓁.𝘤𝘰𝓂

"I wouldn’t." Ryse’s voice remained calm, almost conversational. "You’re outnumbered five to one. You’ll be dead before your swords clear their sheaths. Is that how you want this to end?"

Kael’s jaw worked. His eyes darted across the circle of soldiers, counting numbers, calculating odds, and finding nothing but suicide in every direction.

Slowly, very slowly, his hand fell away from his weapon.

"Smart man," Ryse said. He dismounted with fluid grace, his boots hitting the ground with finality. "Lady Isolde. Kael and Damon Ravencrest. You are hereby charged with kidnapping, torture, conspiracy, and attempted human trafficking. You will surrender your weapons and submit to custody. Now."

Isolde opened her mouth, to protest, to argue, to demand recognition of her rank and station, but the words died in her throat. This was over. They’d lost.

The soldiers moved in, disarming the Ravencrests with efficient brutality. The merchant tried to bolt, managed three steps before two soldiers tackled him into the mud, his coin purse scattering gold across the dirt like fallen stars.

Through it all, Ryse moved toward the sack lying abandoned in the clearing’s center.

He knelt slowly, his hands gentle as he pulled back the canvas. What he saw made something dark and cold settle in his chest.

Gods.

Mira lay curled on her side, her skin mottled with bruises in various stages of healing, fresh purple overlapping faded yellow-green, a map of sustained cruelty.

Her cheekbones jutted sharp beneath skin stretched too thin, and her breathing came shallow and uneven. When Ryse carefully touched her shoulder, she flinched weakly, a small broken sound escaping her lips.

"Healer," he called, his voice carefully controlled. "Now."

One of his men rushed forward with a medical kit, but Ryse was already lifting Mira from the sack with the kind of careful precision usually reserved for handling something infinitely fragile. Her head lolled against his shoulder, and he could feel the tremors running through her body despite the blanket someone draped across her.

"You’re safe now," he murmured, though he doubted she could hear him. "We’re taking you home. Lady Eris is waiting."

Behind him, Isolde watched with an expression caught between fury and terror. Ryse didn’t spare her a glance.

They’d face Lady Eris’s justice soon enough.

And somehow, Ryse suspected, that would be far worse than anything the Emperor might decree.