"Crown of Malice: A Second Life of Ashes" Chapter 3

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Chapter 3: The Predator’s Gaze

The ballroom was a masterpiece of orchestrated decadence. Crystal chandeliers dripped like frozen waterfalls of light, casting a shimmering glow over the sea of silks, jewels, and painted smiles.

For Isolde, the atmosphere felt less like a celebration and more like a mausoleum. Every guest was a mannequin draped in expensive rot, and every laugh was a jagged piece of glass.

She moved through the crowd with the fluidity of a phantom.

Her emerald gown, embroidered with threads of spun gold, whispered against the marble floor—a stark contrast to the ivory and gold of the Vane family crest she had worn in her previous, naive life.

"My dearest Isolde," Valerius’s voice rang out, practiced and smooth as honeyed poison.

He appeared at her side, his arm sliding around her waist with the proprietary air of a master claiming a prize.

He wore his hero’s smile, the one that made the noblewomen sigh and the Church elders nod in approval.

"You are radiant tonight. The entire court is watching us."

Isolde looked up at him, her eyes wide and luminous. She allowed herself a small, fluttery smile—the smile of a girl who believed in fairy tales.

"I only wish to be worthy of you, Valerius. People say the mining rights in the Southern Reach are the crown jewel of our house. It must be such a burden to oversee them alone."

Valerius’s smile didn’t falter, but the grip on her waist tightened, a microscopic warning.

"Business is a man’s sphere, my love. You need not concern yourself with the heavy ledgers of the state."

"Of course," she breathed, her voice airy and soft.

"It is just that I overheard the trade ministers discussing the recent depletion of the sulfur mines. They seemed concerned about the lack of oversight. I worry, Valerius—if the crown finds out the quotas are failing, they might blame your administration. I’d hate for your reputation to suffer because of a… clerical error."

The air between them chilled. Valerius’s eyes flashed with a sudden, sharp intelligence. He was a man who lived for optics; a public inquiry regarding the mines would ruin him before the wedding. He leaned in, his voice dropping to a low, jagged hiss.

"What are you implying, Isolde?"

"Nothing, darling," she said, her smile broadening.

"I’m merely your future wife. I would hate to see you fall before we even reach the altar."

She turned, leaving him standing there—a statue of perfectly composed panic. She had set the trap; now, he would spend the rest of the night frantically checking his ledgers, terrified that his carefully constructed saintly image was beginning to crack.

She turned to drift toward the terrace, needing a moment of silence, when the atmosphere of the ballroom underwent a violent shift.

The mindless chatter died a sudden death, replaced by a ripple of tension that moved through the crowd like a shockwave.

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Servants stepped back, their heads bowed low. The music seemed to stutter, the notes losing their luster.

Sebastian de Wolfe had arrived.

He didn't need a herald to announce him. He entered the room like a localized storm.

He was dressed in obsidian-black military dress robes, stark and unadorned, the harshness of his attire making the colorful plumage of the nobility look like toys. His presence was an anchor of darkness in a room of superficial light.

He didn’t look at the sycophants clamoring for his favor. He didn’t offer a nod to the King’s ministers. His gaze, dark and lethal as a drawn blade, cut through the crowd with singular, unerring precision.

He was looking for her.

Isolde felt the familiar prickle of a predator’s eyes on her skin.

She forced herself to remain calm, to keep her pace measured as she stepped onto the darkened terrace.

She knew he was coming.

She could hear the rhythmic, heavy thud of his boots against the marble, a heartbeat of impending disaster.

She reached the stone railing, her fingers digging into the cold marble.

She didn’t have to wait long.

A shadow fell over her, tall and suffocating. The scent of ozone, dried blood, and ancient, rain-drenched earth enveloped her.

Sebastian didn’t stop at a polite distance. He stepped into her personal space, his chest mere inches from her back, effectively sealing her against the terrace railing.

"You are playing a dangerous game tonight, little saint," he murmured.

His voice was a low vibration that seemed to rattle her ribs. Isolde turned slowly, her heart hammering against her chest—not from fear, but from the terrifying recognition of their kinship.

He was a creature of the abyss, and for the first time, she realized that she was no longer afraid of the dark.

Sebastian leaned forward, his hands slamming against the railing on either side of her head, caging her. He tilted his head, his golden eyes—brilliant and predatory—scanning her face as if he were trying to read a script written in a dead language.

"That wasn't the look of a submissive bride you gave Valerius just now," he continued, his tone devoid of judgment, saturated with a dark, agonizing curiosity.

He reached out, his thumb tracing the line of her jaw, his touch cold, deliberate, and searing.

"There was a hollow hunger in your eyes. A desperation to see him ruin himself. You aren't playing for love, Isolde. You’re playing for blood."

Isolde stared up at him. The man who had been a myth in her first life was now flesh, heat, and terrifying reality.

She saw the flickers of shadow clinging to his skin, the subtle, pulsating veins of dark magic beneath his cuffs—the cost of his burden, the price of his throne.

"And if I am?" she challenged, her voice steady, despite the way his proximity made her skin feel like it was being scorched.

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"Does the Regent intend to report me to the Inquisition?"

Sebastian let out a low, guttural sound—a laugh that felt like gravel grinding against stone.

He leaned down, his breath ghosting over her lips, his hand sliding from her jaw to wrap firmly, possessively, around the back of her neck. His fingers were long, hard, and unforgiving.

"Report you?" He pressed his forehead against hers, closing the gap until she could see the flecks of molten gold in his eyes.

"Isolde, I’ve watched you for years. You were a dull, porcelain doll. But tonight? Tonight, you’re something else."

He dragged her closer, his thumb pressing into the soft skin just beneath her ear, a gesture that was half-caress and half-stranglehold. The intensity of his gaze was enough to shatter glass.

"Your eyes," he whispered, his voice thick with a dark, unrecognizable hunger.

"They’ve changed. You look at the world like you’ve already seen it burn. It’s… incredibly intriguing."

He pushed her backward, pinning her shoulders against the rough, cold stone of the wall that formed the terrace’s side.

The impact knocked the breath from her lungs. He loomed over her, his eyes tracing the line of her throat with a terrifying, clinical focus.

"Who are you, really?" he breathed, his hand tightening just enough to make his dominance felt.

"Because the woman I’m looking at right now isn’t the one who was supposed to be Valerius’s queen. She’s something much more dangerous."

Isolde felt the rough stone biting into her back, and the searing, heavy weight of Sebastian’s body pressed against hers.

The danger was palpable, a live wire connecting them. She could have screamed. She could have fought. But instead, she lifted a hand and placed it flat against his chest, right over the heart that beat for a kingdom he hated.

She could feel the cold, unnatural hum of his magic through the fabric of his tunic.

"I am the one," she replied, her voice dropping into a dark, intimate cadence, "who is going to show you that you aren't the only monster in this ballroom, Sebastian."

Sebastian froze. For a heartbeat, the world seemed to stop—the music from the ballroom fading into a distant, muted thrum. His eyes widened, a flash of pure, unadulterated shock breaking through his composure, followed immediately by something far more savage.

He leaned in, his lips hovering inches from hers, a cold, sharp warning that felt like a kiss.

"Be careful, Isolde," he whispered, his hand sliding up to grip the fabric of her gown, his knuckles white with the force of his restraint.

"If you provoke a beast, you don't get to choose how the hunt ends."

He turned away, the darkness of his presence receding just as abruptly as it had arrived, leaving her trembling against the stone.

He didn't look back, but as he disappeared into the ballroom, Isolde knew the game had changed.

The trap she had set for Valerius was merely a distraction.

The real battle was just beginning, and she had just invited the most dangerous creature in the empire to be her shadow.

She stood in the silence of the terrace, her skin still humming with the imprint of his touch, her eyes fixed on the doors he had walked through.

Watch me, Sebastian, she thought, the fire in her soul roaring.

Watch me burn it all down.

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