Current location: Novel nest SHADOWS OF NOCTIS Chapter 26 — The Things That Finally Broke

"SHADOWS OF NOCTIS" Chapter 26 — The Things That Finally Broke

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Chapter 26 — The Things That Finally Broke

The restricted war archives beneath Noctis smelled like dust, candle smoke, and old violence.

Evelyn stood alone between towering shelves of sealed military records while stormlight flickered faintly through the narrow cathedral windows high above. Midnight bells had already passed. Curfew patrols crossed the upper halls overhead in distant rhythmic intervals.

She should not have been here again.

That realization had stopped mattering weeks ago.

The rebel letters remained hidden beneath her floorboards.

Lucien’s silence after the banquet still lingered beneath her ribs like unfinished grief.

And somewhere inside the academy, the empire continued preparing him for a war it fully intended to survive through mass slaughter.

Evelyn unfolded another classified report beneath candlelight.

PROJECT VEIL — CORONATION CONTINGENCY PROTOCOL

Her pulse tightened instantly.

She scanned the next lines quickly.

In the event of civil destabilization following ascension, Crown Subject Mordane demonstrates sufficient suppression capability for regional cleansing operations across rebel territories.

Regional cleansing.

The empire always preferred elegant language for atrocities.

A second document referenced something worse:

EMOTIONAL STABILITY RISKS IN SUBJECT VEIL-01

Primary destabilization trigger remains attachment fixation.

Should emotional dependency form, corrective isolation procedures are recommended immediately.

Evelyn stared at the sentence while cold fury spread slowly through her chest.

They knew.

Not guessed.

Knew.

The empire had studied Lucien’s capacity for attachment like physicians studying disease progression.

And somewhere beneath all of it rested the horrifying implication:

if Lucien loved someone enough, they would try to take that person away.

Footsteps echoed sharply through the archive corridor behind her.

Evelyn turned instantly.

Lucien stood at the end of the aisle beneath dim cathedral lamps.

No shadows moved around him tonight.

That frightened her more.

Because the stillest versions of Lucien usually meant he was closest to breaking.

Neither spoke immediately.

Snow tapped softly against the upper windows while silence stretched heavily between the archive shelves.

Lucien’s gaze moved once across the documents spread open in her hands.

Then toward her face.

“You lied to me.”

The quietness of his voice hollowed the room.

Not accusation.

Worse.

Disappointment sharpened carefully enough to cut through restraint.

Evelyn lowered the papers slowly. “Lucien—”

“You said the journal contained nothing important.”

He crossed toward her then.

Slowly.

No visible anger.

But the atmosphere around him felt dangerously controlled, like violence compressed tightly enough to stop looking violent at all.

Evelyn’s pulse climbed hard beneath her ribs.

Not fear.

Never fear anymore.

Something more devastating than that.

Lucien stopped directly in front of her beside the archive table.

Close enough that she could see exhaustion carved sharply beneath his silver-gray eyes.

Close enough that she noticed he hadn’t slept again.

“You kept searching anyway,” he said quietly.

“Because they’re using you.”

His jaw tightened instantly.

“That wasn’t your decision to make alone.”

The words landed harder than shouting would have.

Evelyn stared at him. “You think I wanted to hide this from you?”

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“I think,” Lucien said softly, “you decided I couldn’t survive the truth.”

The silence afterward felt unbearable.

Because he was right.

Evelyn looked away first.

Bad instinct.

Lucien noticed immediately.

“Who contacted you?”

The question froze the air between them.

Evelyn stayed silent.

Lucien’s expression changed almost imperceptibly.

Not surprise.

Recognition.

“The rebels.”

The storm outside intensified suddenly, wind rattling faintly against the cathedral glass overhead.

Evelyn folded her arms tightly. “They think the empire’s planning to use you to suppress the northern territories once you become emperor.”

“They’re correct.”

The immediate honesty stunned her.

Lucien looked down briefly toward the military reports spread across the archive table.

“I already knew.”

The answer hollowed her chest.

“You knew they planned mass executions?”

“I know exactly what northern command expects from me.”

His voice remained terrifyingly calm.

Not because he accepted it.

Because he had lived his entire life being treated like a weapon sophisticated enough to issue commands through.

Evelyn stepped closer despite herself. “And you were just going to let them?”

Something dangerous flickered behind Lucien’s eyes then.

Not rage.

Pain.

“Do you think I’ve ever belonged to myself enough to refuse?”

The sentence shattered something quietly inside her.

For several seconds neither moved.

The archives seemed to narrow around them beneath candlelight and storm shadows while thousands of classified records watched silently from the shelves surrounding them.

Lucien exhaled slowly before speaking again.

“You should’ve told me.”

Not anger now.

Just hurt.

Real enough that Evelyn felt it physically.

“I was trying to protect you.”

Lucien laughed once softly.

The sound carried no humor at all.

“Evelyn.” His gaze lifted toward her again. “You don’t hide knives from someone already bleeding.”

The words settled heavily through the room.

Evelyn felt emotion rising too fast beneath her ribs now.

Fear.

Love.

Exhaustion.

Weeks of watching Lucien destroy himself quietly while pretending survival still qualified as living.

“They conditioned you to think attachment makes you weak,” she said suddenly. “And now everyone around you keeps proving them right.”

Lucien went still.

The storm hammered harder against the cathedral windows overhead.

“They’re going to use me eventually,” he said quietly. “The empire. The rebels. The court.” A pause. “And now you’re hiding things from me because you’re afraid of what loving me might cost.”

The honesty of it hit too directly.

Because she had no defense against the truth anymore.

Evelyn’s eyes burned unexpectedly.

“I’m afraid they’ll turn you into something that destroys itself trying to protect me.”

Something in Lucien’s expression finally cracked.

Not composure.

Restraint.

Years of restraint collapsing inward all at once beneath exhaustion and grief and wanting too much.

He crossed the remaining distance between them instantly.

Evelyn barely had time to breathe before Lucien’s hand closed around her wrist and pulled her sharply against him.

Then he kissed her.

Violently.

Not cruel.

Desperate.

The kind of kiss that felt dragged upward from weeks of repression breaking apart simultaneously.

Evelyn gasped softly against his mouth as the archive papers scattered across the table beneath them.

Lucien kissed her like someone starving.

One hand tangled tightly in the fabric near her waist while the other slid against the side of her throat with visible restraint, as though some part of him still feared touching her too hard even now.

The storm outside roared through the cathedral towers.

Somewhere distant, archive bells rang midnight warnings.

Neither heard them properly.

Evelyn’s hands closed instinctively against his coat as the kiss deepened, all the unbearable tension between them finally collapsing into something raw enough to survive no longer being hidden.

Lucien broke away first.

Only barely.

Their foreheads rested together while both of them struggled unevenly for breath in the dim archive light.

The shadows had returned now.

Not violent.

Worse.

Softly restless around their feet like living things responding to his heartbeat.

Lucien closed his eyes briefly before speaking against the space between them.

“You are going to ruin me,” he whispered.

Evelyn’s chest ached so sharply it almost felt like breaking.

Because the terrible part was—

he already sounded grateful for it.

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