"Crown of Malice: A Second Life of Ashes" Chapter 11
Chapter 11: The Price of Memory
The dream was a relentless, grinding wheel.
It always began the same way: the roar of the crowd, a sound like ocean waves made of rusted iron and spite.
Isolde stood upon the scaffold, the wood beneath her feet rotten and splintered, soaking up the freezing rain. Then, the silence. The terrible, absolute silence that preceded the bite of the steel.
She felt the cold pressure against her throat. She smelled the iron of the headsman’s axe.
And then—the sound. A sickening, wet thud followed by a sudden, jarring shift in the fabric of the universe, as if reality were being folded and shoved into a box far too small to hold it.
No, she gasped in her sleep, her fingers clawing at the fine linen sheets of her bed. Not yet. I haven't burned it all yet.
Her breath came in ragged, jagged hitches, each one a struggle against the suffocating weight of the nightmare. She was back in the dungeons, back on the platform, back in the dark.
"Isolde."
The voice was barely a whisper, a low vibration that didn't belong to the dream.
She flailed, her hand lashing out, striking something solid and warm. She sat up with a violent start, her chest heaving, cold sweat drenching her shift.
The moonlight streaming through the terrace doors turned the room into a landscape of silver and shadow.
A figure was sitting on the edge of her bed.
He was a shadow among shadows, his dark coat shed somewhere in the dim light of the chamber.
He didn't move to restrain her; he simply waited for her frantic pulse to settle, his hands held up, palms open, in a silent gesture of surrender.
"It’s just me," Sebastian said, his voice raspy and stripped of its usual iron authority.
"You were screaming. Not with your voice—with your soul."
Isolde stared at him, her eyes wide, wild, and unfocused. For a terrifying, disorienting moment, she didn't know which life she was in.
She looked at his hands—those hands that had been stained with the blood of the kingdom’s enemies, the hands that carried the weight of the seals—and she saw them hovering in the dark, trembling.
"You shouldn't be here," she whispered, her voice a brittle, broken sound.
"The guards are asleep. Silas is busy with his ledgers," Sebastian replied.
He didn't stand up. He seemed rooted to the spot by her distress, a man who had forgotten how to comfort but was desperate to learn.
He leaned forward, and Isolde flinched, but he only reached out to brush a damp lock of hair from her forehead. His touch was cold, a chilling contrast to the feverish heat radiating from her own skin, but it was gentle. It was the touch of someone who had handled too many broken things and feared he might shatter this one, too.
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"The memories," she murmured, her gaze falling to the sheets, which were crumpled where she had gripped them.
"They don't go away, do they? No matter how many dominos I topple. No matter how many kings I break."
"The price of memory is the only thing we actually own," Sebastian murmured, his hand moving to trace the curve of her jaw, his thumb lingering on the pulse point at her throat.
"I have memories that would turn your blood to ice, Isolde. I carry them every day, carved into my skin, burned into the marrow of my bones."
He sounded so tired. It was the exhaustion of someone who had been holding up the sky for an eternity and had finally forgotten what it felt like to be upright without it.
"Why are you here?" she asked, her voice hovering on the edge of a sob.
"You don't do comfort, Sebastian. You do duty. You do ruin."
"I do whatever you require," he said, and the intensity in his voice was like a physical weight.
He shifted, sliding off the edge of the bed to kneel beside her. It was a position of humility that looked entirely foreign on a man of his stature.
He took her shaking hands in his, his fingers calloused, stained with the faint, persistent soot of his night rituals. He began to rub her knuckles, his touch deliberate and grounding.
"I came to see if the map had broken you," he confessed, his gaze dropping to the floor.
"I came to see if you had realized the impossibility of our position and decided to flee."
"And?"
"And I found you fighting a ghost," he said, his eyes snapping back to hers. "A ghost that I, perhaps, helped create. That... keeps me awake."
Isolde looked at him, and for the first time, she saw past the Regent, past the monster, past the man who held the keys to the abyss.
She saw a boy who had been forced to become a seal, a man who had long ago traded his life for a kingdom that didn't even know he was bleeding.
"Stay," she whispered, the word escaping her before she could hold it back.
Sebastian hesitated. The air in the room grew heavy, charged with a sudden, dangerous electricity.
He wasn't a man meant for closeness; he was a man built for distance and disaster. But he didn't pull away. Instead, he pulled the heavy quilt up around her shoulders, his movements clumsy, almost shy.
"I will stay," he promised.
He sat on the floor beside the bed, his back against the mahogany frame. He didn't try to get into the bed; he simply rested his head against the wood near her hand. He closed his eyes, his breathing slowing, mirroring the rhythm she was trying to force upon her own lungs.
"Sleep, Isolde," he murmured, his voice thick with a strange, longing cadence.
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The name sounded different on his tongue—soft, possessive, yet reverent. It hit her with a force that made her stomach turn over.
Wait.
Her eyes widened in the dark.
Did he say it again?
The memory surfaced, unbidden and sharp: that night on the scaffold, in the final, agonizing second before the axe fell, a voice had whispered that same name—Isolde—with such devastating, soul-crushing grief.
She leaned over the edge of the bed, her breath catching.
"Sebastian? That night... the day I died... were you there?"
He didn't open his eyes. He stayed perfectly still, his profile a stark, angular shadow in the moonlight.
"I was where I am always required to be," he replied, his voice barely audible, a hollow echo in the vast, silent chamber.
"I was watching the seal."
"But you said my name," she pressed, her heart hammering against her ribs. "How did you know my name?"
Sebastian didn't answer. A long, agonizing silence stretched between them, filled only by the distant, rhythmic ticking of the clock on the mantel.
He seemed to shrink into his coat, his shoulders pulling back as if he were trying to hide from the very question he had provoked.
Finally, he spoke, his voice so faint it might have been a trick of the wind.
"I have known your name for a long time, Isolde. Before the scaffold. Before the rebirth. Before the rot."
He opened his eyes, and in the silver light, they looked like molten gold—wide, haunted, and utterly lost.
"I have been waiting for you to return for a very, very long time."
He leaned his head back against the bedframe and didn't say another word.
Isolde lay there, staring at the ceiling, her mind a chaotic storm of questions. The man sitting at her bedside was a monster, a martyr, a stranger, and yet, he was the only thing in this world that felt like home. She reached out, her fingers brushing the dark, unruly hair at his temple.
He didn't move. He leaned into her touch, his eyes finally closing, his expression settling into a fragile, exhausted peace.
She watched him throughout the night. She watched the moonlight crawl across the floor, watched the shadows shift and lengthen, and watched the way he remained, motionless and vigilant, a dark sentinel guarding her against the very ghosts he had spent a lifetime feeding.
The prince of shadows, the keeper of the abyss, was holding her hand as if she were the only light left in the world.
And as the first gray light of dawn began to bleed into the sky, Isolde felt the last of her defenses crumble. She had come here to burn the world down, to dismantle the throne, and to execute the man who had let her die.
But as she drifted off to sleep, with his hand still clasped in hers, she knew the truth.
She had already lost. She didn't want to destroy the kingdom anymore. She wanted to save the monster who had been waiting for her in the dark.
And if that meant the world had to burn to make room for them, then she would be the one to light the match.
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