The Villainess Wants To Retire-Chapter 520: The weight of the crown
"Your Majesty." He began. "The outer provinces are not responding to capital authority," Jorel reported, standing straight despite the tremor in his legs. "Not because the roads are blocked. Because they’ve been told not to."
He walked to the map, pointing to each region with a shaking hand.
"The Northern Reaches: the border has been abandoned, and the northern clans are raiding without resistance. The Agricultural Heartland: the grain stores have been locked by ’Imperial’ decree, and riots are starting in the streets. The Silver Shores: trade has been suspended, and foreign ships are being turned away under threat of fire. The Frostspine: the mines have ’collapsed,’ but weapons are miraculously appearing in civilian hands. And the Border Territories... civilians are being told that Imperial soldiers are coming to execute them. They are arming themselves against us."
Jorel looked up, meeting Soren’s eyes. "It’s not chaos, Your Majesty. It’s orchestrated chaos. Someone gave very specific instructions before the trial even began. This is a synchronized shutdown."
Konstantin leaned back, a long, wheezing breath escaping his lungs. "This is war," he said quietly. "Not a foreign invasion. A civil war. The worst kind."
"The last time..." Klaus started, his voice trembling. "How long ago was the Coldfire Rebellion?"
"Ten years ago," Maren replied. "In the eastern territories. That was only two provinces, and it took three years and ten thousand lives to resolve. This..." she looked at the map, "this is five provinces. Coordinated. With a narrative already in place that makes us the villains."
The debate erupted immediately. It was a cacophony of competing fears and desperate solutions.
"Military deployment!" Klaus argued. "We have to send the legions to each province. Restore order by force of presence!"
"Military presence in provinces that already believe we are killing them?" Maren countered. "That doesn’t restore order, Klaus. It confirms the massacre reports. It turns a riot into a revolution."
"Financial intervention then," a magistrate suggested. "Release the emergency reserves!"
"Through what channels?" Eris asked, her voice dry and biting. "The supply officers who answer to Vetra’s network? You’ll just be funding the rebellion."
The magistrate fell silent, caught in the logic of the trap.
"The network has to be rooted out first," Konstantin said, his eyes fixed on Soren. "Before any intervention is possible. We need to identify the rot and excise it."
"To root it out," Aldric added, looking at Soren with a heavy, somber realization, "you need someone the provinces will not read as a confirmation of the narrative. You need someone whose presence carries a legitimacy that cannot be fabricated."
The room arrived at the conclusion simultaneously. All eyes turned to Soren. The Emperor. The man with the Nivarre face and the Frostmother’s blood.
"The Emperor moving through the provinces himself," Maren said, the logic settling like stone. "It cannot be reframed as ’the Empress’s influence.’ It is a direct challenge to the lie."
"Personal presence in a crisis of legitimacy," Konstantin nodded, "is the only thing that cannot be faked. They need to see you, Soren. They need to see that you aren’t a puppet."
Soren stood silent for a long moment, the weight of the crown... the real crown, the one made of duty and impossible choices... settling onto his shoulders.
"I’ll go with him," Eris said immediately. Her voice was sharp, leaving no room for argument.
The room went still. Soren didn’t look at her. He looked at the healer standing by the wall. "Tell her," he said.
The healer shifted uncomfortably, looking between the Emperor and the Empress.
"Your Majesty," he said to Eris, "the overexertion from the battle... the physical injuries... travel of that distance, especially through volatile territories... it would be..."
"It would be what?" Eris snapped.
"Potentially fatal," the healer whispered.
The silence that followed was absolute. Eris’s expression didn’t change, her jaw set in a line of pure defiance. "I’ve heard worse," she dismissed.
"No," Soren said. It was one word, but it carried the finality of a closing tomb.
He turned to her then, and for a moment, the room disappeared. It was just the two of them... two dangerous people who had been forged in an equally devastating level of magic, now standing on opposite sides of a necessity. "You will stay. You will be treated. And I will return. That is not a request, Eris. It is the only way this works."
Eris gave him a look of such concentrated fury and heartbreak that several magistrates looked away, finding sudden interest in the singed corners of the maps.
Soren met her gaze with an unyielding steadiness, a silent promise that he was doing this because he refused to lose her now that they had finally found the truth.
The meeting began to disband as assignments were given with a frantic, focused energy.
It was decided.
Soren would travel the provinces personally with a small, elite military escort. It wouldn’t be a mission of suppression, but one of identification, finding the members of Vetra’s network, removing them, and restoring the supply lines by his own hand. A legitimacy tour. 𝕗𝚛𝚎𝚎𝐰𝗲𝗯𝗻𝚘𝚟𝚎𝗹.𝕔𝐨𝕞
"I can offer my household’s resources in the western territories," Konstantin offered, struggling to stand. "My name still carries weight there. My men will secure your path."
"The southern provinces will hold," Maren added. "I will return there immediately. If I am on the ground, the narrative cannot take root."
"The border territories are mine," Klaus said, his voice finding a new, steadied rhythm. "This is what I was appointed for. I’ll go."
Caelen looked at Soren, a brief, silent nod passing between them. "Solmire’s alliance," Caelen said quietly. "Whatever you need, Soren. You have it."
As the council filed out, the weight of what came next hung over them like a shroud. They were no longer fighting for a throne or a trial. They were fighting for the survival of an idea called Nevareth.
Soren remained at the table, his hand resting on the map of the empire. He looked up as Eris remained in her chair, the two of them alone in the flickering light of the ruined hall. The war had begun, and for the first time, they would have to fight it apart.







