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The Villainess Wants To Retire-Chapter 484: Guilty
The High Magistrate’s staff struck the stone floor with a hollow, rhythmic thud that signaled a momentary reprieve.
"This tribunal will recess for one half-hour," he announced, his voice echoing with the practiced indifference of a man who had overseen a thousand such pauses.
It was standard procedure, a necessary breath in the lungs of the law.
To the observers in the gallery, there was nothing alarming about it. It was, in fact, the ultimate illusion of control.
The chairs shifted, the heavy rustle of silk and wool filling the chamber as the tension partially deflated. Low murmurs began to ripple through the noble clusters.
Servants entered with silver trays of water and dampened cloths, moving with the mechanical business of waiting. It looked like any other day of high court. It looked like order.
Soren did not move. He remained seated on the high throne, his hands flat against the cold stone armrests, watching the room with a gaze that saw too much and not enough.
When Aldric leaned in, his shadow falling across the imperial robes to offer a brief report, Soren waved him off with two sharp fingers. Not yet. He wasn’t ready to hear the logistical minutiae of the palace when the air in the room felt like it was ionizing before a lightning strike.
Beside him, Eris was equally motionless. Her eyes didn’t rest on any single person; they moved in a slow, predatory sweep over the faces of the dukes and the magistrates.
Underneath her ribs, something was screaming. It was a primal, wordless warning, a jagged alarm with no identifiable source.
She didn’t turn to Soren, and he didn’t turn to her, but their silence was a shared language. Their shoulders didn’t touch, yet the space between them was charged with the same growing dread.
In the corners of the hall, the dukes utilized the recess to nurse their own mounting unease. Duke Konstantin stood near a high, narrow window, though he didn’t look at the gray sky outside.
He was checking his signet ring again, polishing the metal with his thumb for the third time since the bells had rung. It was displacement behavior, a physical manifestation of a psychic itch.
No word from the province, he thought, his thumb rubbing the crest until the skin was red.
A courier should have arrived yesterday. They are never a full day late. It’s the weather. Just the snow.
He repeated it like a mantra, a wrong conclusion intended to smother a very correct fear.
Duchess Maren was speaking in low, urgent tones with a junior magistrate, her politeness a thin veil over her desperation.
"How long until the verdict? How long until this is finally over?" she asked.
Her southern districts were silent. Three reports on grain allocations had failed to materialize, a lapse she had attributed to bureaucratic slowness.
Now, standing in the shadow of the tribunal, she was no longer certain. The suspicion was forming, dark and cold, but she wasn’t ready to name it. 𝘧𝓇𝑒𝑒𝑤ℯ𝑏𝓃𝘰𝑣ℯ𝘭.𝘤ℴ𝘮
The minor nobles clustered like sheep, whispering of a quick end. "She’ll be condemned by nightfall," one said, his voice light with premature relief.
"I want to go home," another added quietly. They believed the walls of the palace were thick enough to keep the world outside exactly as they had left it.
They were wrong. Far to the south, the road was already lost.
Joris, an imperial courier who no longer looked like one, urged his horse through the slush of the Southern Supply Road. He should not have been alive. The road behind him was a thin, ragged grave stretched across the landscape.
His horse was lathered, limping, and half-blind with gore. Joris had discarded his imperial tabard days ago; it was a death sentence to wear the sun-and-crown in the provinces now. He wore a dead farmer’s coat, and his hands wouldn’t stop shaking.
He had passed a village at dawn. There were no screams left... only the heavy, oily smoke of thatched roofs and the baying of abandoned dogs.
At the second village, he had seen the "survivors." They weren’t fleeing; they were marching. They carried pitchforks, rusted scythes, and stolen imperial steel. They didn’t even bother to chase him. They didn’t need to. They had the roads.
Joris didn’t know who had lit the first torch. He only knew what he had seen: men in imperial cloaks butchering peasants, and peasants hanging those same men from the gallows of their own watchtowers.
He had tried to write a report, but the parchment had torn under his trembling quill. Now, he only had a single seal-case tied to his saddle.
If I stop riding, he thought through the haze of exhaustion, the capital never learns this wasn’t just one riot.
He rode on, unaware that in the Frostspine Low City, the archives were already being methodically burned.
A magistrate named Dava watched her own clerks feed the ledgers into the fire. Imperial wax melted and ran like blood across the stone.
"The Emperor ordered it!" someone shouted. "The Empress is starving us!" another screamed.
Dava realized then that there was no authority left to appeal to. She didn’t take the grain tallies.
She took a memorized list of troop deployments and the horrifying knowledge that the capital was now ruling over a ghost of an empire. Its numbers were lies. Its borders were shadows.
At the Northern Frontier, Lieutenant Emrik gave the order that would haunt his lineage.
"Open the gates," he said, watching the wounded refugees flood in. But the arrows that began to kill them didn’t come from the hills; they came from the battlements behind him.
The armory had already been turned. As he fought his way out, Emrik realized the orders he had followed hadn’t emptied the post for defense—they had prepared it for a massacre.
...
The bells of the palace rang, cutting through the murmurs of the hall. The half-hour was complete. The machinery of law resumed its motion with terrifying precision. Everything was on time. Everything was "ordered."
Soren stood, the room settling into an immediate, heavy silence at the sight of him. He was composed, regal, and absolutely frightened. No one saw the second thing; he had worn the Emperor’s mask for too long to let it slip now. No reports have come in, he thought. Very good or very bad. I have to proceed. There is no other path.
Eris stood a half-step behind him, her dress absorbing the light. The wire in her chest was pulled so taut it felt like it might snap and sever her ribs. The Magistrate’s voice rang out, incantatory and ritualistic. "This tribunal is resumed."
The last door of the safe world closed.
The testimony phase began with the relentless rhythm of a hammer. An official from the Imperial Treasury was called first.
He was mid-forties, his hands trembling as he held the documents. "The grain records are unambiguous," he testified, his voice cracking. "The supply diversion was systematic, spanning eleven years. The seals match Vetra’s own signet."
The hall absorbed the blow. Maren’s jaw tightened. Konstantin remained paralyzed.
Vetra, however, watched the official with a look of genuine, polite curiosity. She looked like a traveler watching a local custom she found mildly amusing. Soren noticed it. She isn’t worried, he realized. She never was.
The second witness, a retired Senior Magistrate named Aldren, spoke of manufactured evidence and innocent people sent to the block on Vetra’s whims.
"I told myself the law was being served," he said, his voice thick with a guilt that had arrived a decade too late.
Eris watched him with a look of recognition; she knew this man’s type—the bureaucrat who traded his soul for the comfort of a desk.
Then came Caelen. The King of Solmire stood as a foreign presence in a foreign court. His account of the cursed ring was brief and cold. "I used it," he said, his voice flat. "I told myself she deserved it. She didn’t."
He was there to put the final nail in the coffin, not to ask for forgiveness. Eris didn’t look at him. She looked at her hands, her expression unreadable... something old and tired and far beyond the reach of an apology.
As Caelen stepped back to his seat, a sudden movement broke the rigid protocol of the room. Ophelia, the Queen of Solmire, rose.
There was a hard, decided clarity in her face.
Caelen’s mouth opened, then closed; he could not reach her without breaking the ritual.
He watched, helpless, as she walked toward the side doors with measured, queenly steps. She didn’t look back. She looked like a woman who had seen the bottom of a well and decided she no longer wished to drink.
The doors opened for her, and she vanished. Soren noted it. Eris felt it. A thread had been pulled.
The final witness was a former guard from Vetra’s private wing. He described the blood rituals of the sanctum with a plainness that was more monstrous than any poetic description.
When he finished, the room was in a state of collective nausea.
The Senior Magistrate rolled the final scroll. "The prosecution presents its case as complete. The evidence is submitted. The tribunal will deliberate."
A wave of relief passed through the room. The worst was over. The charges were confirmed. The sentence would be a formality. This was the thought that kept the dukes from screaming.
Soren, however, felt the "perfection" of the day like a noose.
The deliberation in the adjacent chamber took forty minutes. It was a ritual of confirmation, not a debate. Soren sat with the three senior magistrates and the High Priestess. They didn’t discuss guilt; guilt was a settled fact. They discussed the end.
Execution was too clean. Imprisonment was too ordinary. Exile was a joke; she would simply find another throne to whisper behind. "She has turned the law into a weapon," the High Priestess said, her voice grave. "We must ensure the law is the thing that finally silences her."
Soren’s decision was born of a cold, desperate logic. He chose a sentence that would be revealed in the final reading... a punishment that history had only used once before, in the days of the first kings.
They filed back into the hall. The Assembly rose. The silence was so total that even the candles seemed to hold their flames still. The High Magistrate stood, the final scroll in his hand.
"This tribunal finds the accused—Vetra Helena Nivarre—guilty on all charges presented."
A faint, collective release of breath echoed in the rafters. It was almost over. The Magistrate looked at Vetra, his voice carrying the weight of the ages.
"For the crimes of high treason, dark sorcery, and the corruption of the Imperial bloodline, the sentence—"
The Magistrate paused, the word hovering on the edge of the world. Vetra looked up, and for the first time that day, the small, enigmatic smile on her lips widened. She wasn’t waiting for her sentence. She was waiting for the clock to strike.







