Ultimate Villain's Return as a Doctor in the Cultivation World-Chapter 259 - Queen’s Preparation for Getting Banged

If audio player doesn't work, press Reset or reload the page.
Chapter 259: Chapter 259 - Queen’s Preparation for Getting Banged

Then she looked away — back toward the window, toward the plateau, toward the specific, somewhere-else quality of eyes that have found a point in the middle distance and have decided that point is more interesting than the room.

"’—The guest quarters should be relocated,’" she said. "’—Not the western wing. The eastern guest pavilion is separate from the main palace. Better for a cultivator seeking rest.’" A pause. "’—Better for everyone.’"

She said it as if noting weather.

As if the western wing — the queen’s wing, the wing where the queen’s private rooms were and had been for the entirety of Lin Yuxi’s life — was simply a logistical inconvenience rather than something she was saying specifically to be said.

The queen said, "’—I’ll consider it.’"

Lin Yuxi stood.

The movement was not smooth — the hip joint registering its opinion, the cracked ribs sending their report — and she stood through it with the specific quality of someone who has decided the body’s input is advisory and not binding.

She walked toward the door.

Past her mother.

Not brushing past — giving room, the specific, deliberate quality of a woman who keeps physical distance the way other people keep social distance, as a statement.

She reached the corridor.

The queen turned to watch her go.

The specific quality of watching a daughter walk away — the back of her, the long stride of giantess lineage despite the injury, the dark hair and the set of the shoulders and the specific, the-conversation-is-finished quality of a spine that had concluded everything it was going to conclude.

She watched until the corridor bend took her.

Then she looked at the floor.

Her maid — the one standing at the bedside — had found something to examine in the windowsill, the specific, palace-staff quality of becoming architecturally invisible during moments that were not theirs to witness.

The queen stood in the middle of her daughter’s room.

Her hand went to her belly.

Her eyes ran.

Not crying — the specific, quiet quality of eyes that run when the face has decided not to cry and the eyes have made a separate, dissenting decision, thin warmth moving down from the outer corners without any particular drama.

She sat in her own room again.

The east-facing window dark now, the plateau night outside it, the wind that came through in the morning hours still and absent.

She was thinking.

The specific, inward quality of thought that is not planning and is not quite memory — more the specific, unordered quality of a mind sitting down in the middle of everything it has been carrying and simply looking at it.

Her daughter had asked her, once.

Years ago — Lin Yuxi, before the cultivation had fractured, before the leaving, before the specific, cold-eyed return of a daughter who had gone out to find what this backwater couldn’t give her.

She had asked for support.

Not money, not maids — cultivation resources. Access. The backing of the tribe’s senior elders, the specific, formal recognition that would have opened certain doors that were otherwise closed to the daughter of a queen from a weak lineage on a remote plateau.

The queen had gone to the elders.

She had carried the request with both hands the way you carry something precious and fragile.

The elders had looked at her with the specific, polite, the-answer-is-no quality of men who had decided things before she entered the room.

She had come back empty-handed.

And Lin Yuxi had looked at her — brown eyes doing the specific read of a fifteen-year-old who had put her hope in one place and was watching that place fail — and had not said anything, because Lin Yuxi at fifteen had already learned that the things she felt most deeply were not things she said.

She had simply turned away.

And turned away more completely every year after.

The queen looked at the wall.

Then at herself.

At the mirror set in the wall’s alcove — the specific, unavoidable quality of a mirror in a private room that had been there long enough to have recorded many versions of the same face.

She looked at her face.

Then lower.

At the formal robes and what they contained — the belly forward and high, the pregnancy carrying itself with the specific, dense-warm quality of a giantess tribe woman in the late stages, everything rounded and full and warm.

The fabric at her chest.

The neckline cut in the traditional style — lower than women of other lineages wore, the giantess tribe’s specific relationship with their proportions expressed in the cut of their formal wear — and what it showed, and what it carried beneath it.

Her hands came up.

Not to cover — to hold, the specific, mother’s quality of hands that had gone to this location for months now and found the familiar weight of the pregnancy beneath them.

She looked.

At the sagging quality — not the specific, dramatic word for it, just the honest observation of a woman looking at a body that had carried two children and a title and twenty years of rule, and was now looking back at her in a mirror in the specific, unflinching quality of mirrors.

She thought about Miran. 𝒻𝑟ℯℯ𝑤𝑒𝑏𝑛𝘰𝓋𝑒𝓁.𝒸𝑜𝘮

Nineteen years old. Core Formation Peak in a single afternoon.

She thought about her daughter.

About the fractured foundation and the six-month window and the specific, irreversible quality of a cultivation base deteriorating past the point of recovery.

She thought about what he had said.

’Is your body more precious than your daughter’s future?’

She looked at herself in the mirror.

At the belly. At the weight of her chest against the fabric. At the amber eyes that had been running for the last hour and had dried and might run again.

’When you can now help her,’ she thought.

The thought had no particular gentleness in it — the specific, internal quality of a woman who had given up on being gentle with herself at some point and was now simply direct.

’Can you not just use this body.’

She stood.

Looked at herself for another full breath.

’He had twelve inches and two hours and Miran crossed three realms.’

She looked at her belly.

At the sagging fabric. At the full, warm, hairy ache between her thighs that she was not going to name but was going to acknowledge, because it had been there since somewhere in the first hour of standing at that corridor window and she was going to acknowledge it honestly even if she was not going to acknowledge it out loud.

She breathed.

The specific, slow, decision-made quality of breath.

She turned.

The maid by the door — the same senior attendant who had stood with her at the corridor window, who had said nothing about the floor or the mark or the queen’s damp collar when they left — straightened immediately.

"’—Tomorrow morning,’" the queen said.

The maid waited.

"’—Early. Before the household wakes.’" She paused. "’—Tell the cultivator’s chamber maid — the girl, Miran — that he is expected.’" She looked at the attendant. "’—Not the guest pavilion. The Seclusion Cave. The deep one, at the plateau’s north end. The sealed dome.’"

"’—Yes, my Queen.’"

"’—And bring—’" She stopped.

Looked at the wall.

At nothing specific.

The specific quality of a woman arriving at the final item on a list she has been building toward for an hour and finding that saying it out loud makes it real in a different way than thinking it.

"’—Golden hooks,’" she said. "’—And chains. The kind used in the old binding ceremonies. Clean ones, proper quality.’" A pause. "’—As many as you think appropriate.’"

The maid’s expression did not change.

Palace staff.

"’—Yes, my Queen.’"

"’—He and I will enter the Seclusion Cave together at dawn,’" she said. "’—Tell no one else. Whatever happens inside the dome does not leave the dome. Is that understood?’"

"’—Yes, my Queen.’"

The queen looked at the mirror one more time.

At the belly. At the amber eyes.

She pressed her hand against the child beneath the fabric and felt it move.

"’—Good,’" she said.

She turned away from the mirror.

"’—That is all.’"

And in the corridor, the maid bowed to her queen’s retreating back and stood for a moment in the specific, particular silence of someone who had just been given an instruction they were going to remember for the rest of their life, watching the door close.

From somewhere in the western wing, very faint, very distant, the sounds continued.

PAH. PAH. PHACK.

"’—Hngh~!! Aangh~!!—’"

The maid folded her hands.

’Will Queen be able to withstand such mating?’

And went to find golden hooks.

RECENTLY UPDATES