Login via

Too Lazy to be a Villainess novel Chapter 282

Chapter 282: Kneeling Before Fate

[Lavinia’s POV — Irethene Forest—Continuation]

The forest stilled as I stepped from the saddle. Every movement was measured and deliberate—a predator uncoiling. Sunlight glanced off my sword, but it was the weight behind my stare that cut the clearing. Leaves shivered. Shadows seemed to shrink away. They all knew, as I did, who owned this place.

Eleania clung to Osric, pale and streaked with blood, eyes darting to me with that same thin, calculating smile. A viper in silks. Her fear flitted across her features for the barest instant. And yet she dared to cross the boundary.

Should I kill her?

The thought rose as easily as breath—sharp, delicious.

Of course I could. I am the crown princess. My hand could fall and no voice here would raise a question. She had tasted my man once before; I would never let her be so bold again. She snatched my man from me in my previous life; not again.

A small, almost private smile curved my lips. There would be time for retribution. There would be spectacle. I liked the spectacle.

I slipped from the horse, boots meeting loam with the softest authority. Sir Haldor and Marshi were behind me, two living extensions of my will. I did not hurry; I did not need to. Power walked slowly.

"Osric." My voice was silk that cut. I stepped closer until the air between us thrummed. "My love."

He held her—careful, unwilling. There was that tightness in his jaw I had watched for years: honor, duty, or whatever foolish thing bound him. It made him handsome. It made him mine.

"Put her down." The command was casual, as if I were asking for tea. "I will handle the rest."

There was no plea in the words. No room to bargain. It was an order wrapped in a promise: obey, and I would be merciful; defy me, and mercy would be the last sound you ever hear.

Eleania’s fingers tightened in a vain, wet hope. Her eyes begged, not for Osric, but for my mercy—a small, pathetic thing. I let my smile deepen. Let her beg. Let her learn humility on her knees.

Osric’s fingers faltered. He glanced at me, the man torn between a gentleman’s instinct and the lie of his heart. He obeyed.

He set her down.

I stepped closer, letting the world narrow to three figures: the trembling viper at his feet, the man who could not quite be blamed, and me—the thing that had returned to correct foolish mistakes. Osric opened his mouth, voice rough with an apology he wanted to give and a defense he wanted to hide.

"Lavi... you need to calm down—"

A laugh like a blade. "I am—very—calm, Osric." Each word was measured. My smile was small and precise, and it did more harm than a shout.

He exhaled, defeated. I crouched, close enough that the scent of her sweat and blood was sharp. The wound on her leg was furtive and ugly, a smear of red on silk. Deliberate or convenient? It hardly mattered; the spectacle existed, and spectacle was a language I spoke fluently.

"Is this why you lifted her?" I asked, voice soft as velvet and edged like steel. I let the suggestion hang between us. "To make it look... intimate? To make a gentleman appear complicit?"

Osric’s eyes widened, honest shock raw on his face. "Lavi... I really didn’t—"

"Oh, Osric." I straightened, amused. "Do not muddle truth with the kindness you can never fully afford. I have trust in you..." I let the clause dangle. He felt it: the compliment and the caveat, both as binding as a chain.

Then I turned to Eleania. She was small there, still clinging to bravado like a bad cloak. Her stare was a flicker of the old defiance—enough to be noticed, not enough to matter.

"But some people," I said slowly, eyes cold and absolute, "think themselves white flowers—delicate, untouchable, safe beneath polite hands." I stepped around her and the light fell across her face. "And as crown princess, I teach white flowers what happens when they forget they grow in my garden."

Her breath hitched. The clearing inhaled with her.

Eleania opened her mouth, voice trembling, "Princess... you cannot harm me. I... I am Count Talvan’s daughter—"

"ADOPTED DAUGHTER!" I snapped, the word a steel slap that echoed through the trees. I leaned in close, so close she could feel the chill from my armor. "Do not forget your place, Eleania."

"Pffttt." I wiped a single mock tear from my cheek. "Oh, Eleania. You believe threats are like toys to be waved about. How quaint."

Chapter 282: Kneeling Before Fate 1

"This is my empire, Eleania," I said, voice soft enough to be intimate and sharp enough to carve stone. "I rule it. No one—no pawn, no bargain, no petty lineage—crumbles my throne. Those who try?" I pressed until she flinched. "They find death waiting at the edge of my patience."

I rose like a shadow uncoiling and drew my sword with a whisper of metal. The blade caught the sun, a thin, cold smile. "That’s right. Today I will show the world what happens when someone dares to stain my heart with their filthy manipulation."

My smile cut him off before the next desperate word could form. "SHUT UP, OSRIC. OR ELSE..." The threat hung, cold and simple. "THIS WILL BE THE END OF US."

"Treason?" I echoed, voice low and venomous. I felt the low hum of power at my bones. "You call seduction and manipulation ’games’ harmlessly. But attempting to corrupt the loyalty of a royal’s sworn man—using a betrothal to twist honor—is treason enough in my court."

Verify captcha to read the content.VERIFYCAPTCHA_LABEL

Reading History

No history.

Comments

The readers' comments on the novel: Too Lazy to be a Villainess