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Villainess.exe-Chapter 73: The End of Cassian Vinter
[WarehouseβValemire ForestβThe Next DayβEvelinaβs POV]
"Mmmfffβ!" The sound hit first.
Muffled. Wet. Desperate. π§πππππ«π·π€πΏππ‘.ππ€πΆ
It bounced off the metal walls of the warehouse like a dying echo as the doors groaned open. The hinges screamed in protest, and cold forest air spilled insideβsharp, damp, and carrying the scent of rust and old oil.
We stepped in.
Cassian Vinter was tied to a chair at the center of the space.
Ropes dug deep into his wrists and ankles, biting skin raw. A thick black cloth was wrapped around his head, knotted tight at the back, swallowing his face whole. His body thrashed uselessly, muscles jerking in fury and panic, boots scraping against the concrete.
"Mmmffffβmmmf!"
I stopped walking. For a long moment, I just... looked, and then I smiled.
"What a beautiful scene," I said softly.
Theoβs low chuckle slid through the air like a blade being drawn. Rowan stood a step behind me, silent, watchfulβbut I could feel his gaze on me, measuring, steady.
Theo moved closer and placed his hands on my shoulders. Warm. Solid. Possessive.
"Do you like my gift, babe?" he murmured near my ear. "Isnβt it beautiful?"
I nodded slowly. "Very beautiful."
Because at that exact momentβDING.
The world flickered. Cold light bloomed in front of my eyes.
[System: Final Objective Reached. Kill Cassian Vinter. Form a true bond with the Deleted Male Lead: Theo Vinter. Reward: Return to your original world. Bonus Financial Reward: Millions transferred upon return]
My pulse steadied.
This was it.
The end of the game. The final episode. The door to home.
Cassianβs body stiffened as if he sensed itβsome animal instinct screaming that the world had finally turned against him. Theo stepped forward, crouching until he was level with Cassianβs bound form. He didnβt remove the cloth. Didnβt need to.
"You know," Theo said calmly, "you talked a lot about control."
Cassian growled beneath the fabric, thrashing harder.
Theo smiled.
"You were right about one thing," he continued. "Fear is boring."
He straightened and turned to me.
"But this?" His eyes glinted. "This is art."
Rowan shifted slightly. "Miss," he said quietly, "are you sure?"
I met his gaze.
Not hesitant. Not afraid.
Certain.
"Yes."
Theo reached out and placed something cold into my hand. A gun. Clean. Heavy. Loaded. My fingers closed around it without shaking.
Cassian froze.
The warehouse held its breath.
The only sound left was Cassianβs ragged, furious breathing beneath the clothβwet, animal, stripped of every trace of dignity he once wore like a crown.
I walked forward.
One step.Then another.
My boots echoed against the concrete, slow and deliberate, each sound landing like a countdown. I stopped in front of him and tilted my head, studying him the way one might examine a cracked mirrorβsomething that once reflected power and now only showed rot.
Theo moved beside me.
Without ceremony, he reached out and pulled the black cloth free.
Cassian Vinterβs face was revealedβeyes blazing, veins standing out at his temples, mouth gagged with filthy, crumpled fabric. The sight of it was almost... underwhelming.
Theo lifted his hand in a mock greeting, smiling lazily.
"Hello, my dear brother," he said softly. "Long time."
Cassian thrashed violently, a muffled roar tearing out of his throat. His eyes locked onto Theo with pure, unfiltered hatred.
"Mmmfffβ! Mmmffffβ!!"
Theo chuckled, low and amused.
"Wow, wow," he said, clicking his tongue. "Why so angry?" He leaned closer, voice warm and poisonous. "Donβt worry. Weβll kill you elegantly."
His smile vanished.
"Not quickly," he added, his tone dropping into something dark and final. "But without chaos. After all... we need to return everything first."
Theoβs gaze flickedβslow, deliberateβto Alinaβs absence, to the empty space she should never have had to fear.
"...All the pain you gave my niece," he continued.
"And," his eyes slid to me, possessive and burning, "...my girl."
Cassianβs fury shifted.
His eyes snapped to me.
I smiled.
Not wide.Not kind.
"How does it feel?" I asked quietly. "Being tied up. Helpless." I crouched slightly so we were eye level. "The ropes biting into your skin."
I tilted my head again.
"I felt that too," I murmured. "Fear. Powerlessness. Waiting to see what kind of monster would walk through the door."
Cassian shook his head violently, muffled sounds tearing out of him as panic finally bled through the rage.
That was when Rowan stepped forward.
A metal table rolled across the floor, its wheels rattling softly in the silence. He stopped it beside Cassian with surgical precision. No hurry. No emotion.
Cassianβs eyes widened.
Good.
I straightened and smiled againβslow, satisfied.
"What?" I asked lightly. "Scared?"
I stepped closer, voice dropping into something cold and intimate.
"Oh... donβt worry," I whispered. "I wonβt rush this."
I met his gaze and held it.
"Iβll make sure you understand," I said calmly, "what it feels like to hurt your own child."
Theo didnβt interrupt. Rowan didnβt move. And Cassian Vinterβonce feared, once untouchableβfinally understood something far too late:
This wasnβt revenge.
This was judgment.
And it had already been decided.
Cassian realized it the moment Theo stepped forward. Not when the gun was raised. Not when the rope cut deeper into his wrists.
But when Theo smiled. Not the charming one. Not the amused one.
The empty one.
Theo rolled his sleeves up slowly, methodically, like a man preparing for work rather than violence. He glanced at Rowan once.
"Make sure he stays conscious," he said calmly. "I want him to remember."
Rowan nodded. No questions. No hesitation.
Cassian struggled again, the gag muffling a stream of furious sound. His chair scraped against the concrete, metal screaming briefly before Theoβs hand came down on the backrest.
"Easy," Theo murmured, almost gentle. "Weβre not there yet."
He leaned down so they were eye level.
"You know," Theo said conversationally, "people always assume Iβm violent because I enjoy it."
He straightened, pacing once around Cassian like a predator circling wounded prey.
"Thatβs not true," he continued. "Iβm violent because itβs effective."
Cassianβs eyes flicked to meβwide now, desperate, searching for something that wasnβt there.
Mercy.
I didnβt look away.
Theo noticed.
His mouth curved faintly.
"You hurt a child," Theo said, stopping behind Cassian. His voice was soft nowβdangerously so. "My niece. A little girl who trusted you because you shared blood."
He rested a hand on Cassianβs shoulder.
"Do you know what that makes you?"
Cassian shook his head violently, the gag tearing at his mouth. Theo leaned in, his breath warm against Cassianβs ear. "It makes you something even I canβt forgive."
He stepped back and nodded once to Rowan.
Rowan moved. Not fast. Not slow. Just inevitable. Cassian cried out as pain flaredβsharp, controlled, never crossing into chaos. Theo watched closely, eyes calculating, adjusting pressure, timing, rhythm.
"No screaming," Theo said calmly. "You donβt deserve that release."
Cassianβs body shook, breath coming in harsh, broken gasps.
Theo crouched in front of him again.
"Every night," he said quietly, "Alina went to sleep afraid. Do you know how many nights that was?"
Cassianβs eyes squeezed shut.
Theo smiled.
"Good," he said. "Count them."
He straightened and stepped away, wiping his hands as if cleaning up after a meal.
"You thought you were untouchable," Theo went on. "You thought power meant you could erase consequences."
His gaze slid to meβjust for a second. "And then you touched what was mine."
Cassian froze.
Theoβs voice dropped, heavy with finality.
"This ends now."
He nodded once.
Rowan moved in again, and this time Cassian didnβt struggle. Because somewhere between the silence, the precision, and Theoβs unwavering control, he understood the truth far too lateβThis wasnβt about pain.
This was about breaking the idea that he had ever mattered.
And Theo Vinter was very, very good at that, yet even thenβhe was slow.
I stepped forward.
"Let me handle it," I said quietly.
Theo turned his head, surprisedβnot alarmed. Just curious. Rowan didnβt move. I took the knife. Cassianβs eyes widened beneath the grime and sweat, his breathing hitching as he realized the shift. Not escalation.
Change.
I moved with calm intent, striking not to killβnever to kill. He cried out, muffled, his body jerking as pain tore through him in waves he couldnβt escape. I leaned close enough for him to see my smile.
"You spent your life hurting what couldnβt fight back," I said softly. "So letβs be fair."
I twisted the blade just enough to remind him this wasnβt mercy, then withdrew and struck againβmeasured, deliberate. His screams filled the warehouse, useless and unanswered.
Theo exhaled slowly.
"Youβre truly a psychopath," he murmuredβnot condemning. Observing.
Rowan nodded once. Agreement.
I smiled, straightening. "Thatβs why Iβm still alive."
I stepped back, kicked off my heels, and pressed my foot downβnot to crush, but to ground the moment. To make him understand that power had changed hands and would never return.
Cassian shook, breaking in a way pain alone couldnβt achieve.
Theo approached, his shadow swallowing Cassian whole.
"How will you kill him?" I asked, voice steady.
Theo didnβt hesitate. "The same way we ended Kael."
I looked at him, eyes sharp. "Then Iβll take his final breath."
Theo studied me for a long secondβthen nodded. "I donβt mind."
The decision settled like a sealed verdict.
Rowan stepped back, giving us space. And just like that, the process beganβnot rushed, not chaotic, not cruel for crueltyβs sake. It was methodical. Final.







