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Now reading: Chapter 166: When the Malika Chose to End from Serpent Emperor's Bride, a Yaoi novel by supriyashukla.

[Beneath Zahryssar — The Serpents’ Den — Midnight]

The city slept, but beneath it sothing else woke. Deep below the veins of Zahryssar, where roots strangled stone and secrets rotted in patient silence, the serpents gathered, not nobles, not soldiers, but those who listened where others did not—who watched where others feared to look.

The unseen, the forgotten, and the necessary. At the center of it all stood Raviel. The torchlight did not soften him.

It sharpened him.

Figures erged from the narrow corridors, one by one, like whispers given shape. Cloaked. Hooded. Their presence was marked only by the faint drag of fabric... and the asured rhythm of breath trained not to be heard.

No greetings were exchanged; there was no need. Raviel’s gaze moved across them, counting, weighing, discarding, and accepting.

Then he spoke.

"What have you brought ?" The words were quiet, but they did not ask; they demanded.

From the gathered shadows, a figure stepped forward—broad, heavy, and almost beast-like in build. His hood cast his face in darkness, save for a jagged scar that cut across his cheek like a mory that refused to heal.

His voice was rough and grounded.

"We have found... a thread," he said.

Raviel’s eyes narrowed slightly as he replied, "Threads break. Speak of sothing that holds."

The man inclined his head as he continued, "There is a woman, old and forgotten. She is said to be tied to the one you seek. To Nabuarsh."

The na settled into the chamber like poison in water. Raviel did not react, not outwardly. "Related how?"

The serpent hesitated, then—"They claim she is his grandmother."

A faint shift passed through the room: not surprise but interest sharpened into attention. Raviel tilted his head slightly as he repeated. "Claid by whom?"

"By those who rember her na," the man answered. "Few as they are."

"And she rembers him?"

Silence.

"No, she rembers very little."

Raviel exhaled softly through his nose. "Convenient."

The word carried no humor, only suspicion, as the serpent continued, "She speaks in fragnts. Nas that do not stay. Faces that blur. Ti... has taken more than it has left."

Raviel’s fingers tapped once against his arm, thinking and asuring as he murmured, "Or soone has taken it for her."

The chamber stilled; that possibility was far more dangerous. Raviel stepped forward. "Take to her."

The words were imdiate and final as the serpent nodded. "As you wish."

For a brief mont his form shifted, subtle and unnatural. The edges of his body seed to loosen, blur—until, with a low whisper of movent, he slipped downward, becoming sothing leaner and sothing colder.

A grey serpent. It coiled once and then vanished into the cracks of shadow, leaving only silence behind.

"We will return with more than fragnts," his voice echoed faintly.

Then nothing. Raviel remained where he stood and still.

"An old woman..." he murmured, his gaze lowered. "mory broken... or broken for a reason."

He ran a hand through his hair, slow and thoughtful. "If she truly carries his past...then soone has worked very hard to erase it."

And that only made it more valuable. Raviel turned and walked, but the den was not empty. It never was. As he stepped past one of the narrow passages, he collided lightly with sothing—or soone.

He stopped; the air shifted wrong. The scent hit him first, not decay, not filth, but sothing... disturbed. A stench of damp stone, old blood, and sothing bitter beneath it—like a body that had survived too much...and forgotten how to heal.

Raviel’s expression tightened just slightly; before him stood a figure thin to the point of ruin. Clothes hanging like abandoned skin. Shoulders bent, as though carrying weight no one else could see.

And the scent gods, it clung heavy and unnatural. Even among serpents.

Raviel’s eyes sharpened.

"You," he said quietly, not a question.

A recognition without mory, the figure did not imdiately respond. Its head lifted slowly, and when its face caught the torchlight, it was not madness that showed, nor weakness.

But sothing far worse endures. The kind carved from suffering that does not end. Raviel watched him carefully now, every instinct alert.

Because serpents did not survive like this without purpose.

"Who are you?" Raviel asked.

The figure’s lips parted, dry and cracked. As if speech itself had beco unfamiliar. When it spoke, its voice was low and uneven but deliberate.

"...soone," it said, "...who rembers what others were made to forget."

Silence fell heavy and alive. Raviel did not move, but sothing behind his eyes shifted. Interest had just turned into sothing far more dangerous.

***

[Silthara Palace — The Emperor’s Chamber — Midnight]

Midnight did not silence the palace—it tightened it. The courtyard lay washed in silver. Moonlight spilled across marble and stone, settling into every carved line, every silent corner—as though the night itself had co to witness what would unfold.

Near one of the tall pillars stood Levin, still and composed.

Too composed.

His gaze rested upon the moon, distant and cold... as if he were searching for sothing that had already been taken from him. Below him, close to the steps, two figures lingered.

Lyresaph was coiled in a reduced form, his scales faintly reflecting the pale light, his blue eyes fixed upward. Beside him, smaller, restless—Asha watched in quiet confusion, her tail flicking once, twice, sensing sothing wrong she could not yet understand.

Levin’s hand rested over his abdon, unmoving, protective, and half empty. The silence stretched, and then footsteps approached, asured and disciplined.

Captain Varesh and Raevahn stepped into the courtyard, stopping at a respectful distance. They bowed deep.

"You summoned us, Malika?"

Levin did not turn, did not acknowledge them. For a mont, it seed as though their voices had never reached him. Then he spoke.

"Arrest Naburash." The words fell softly, but they struck like iron.

Varesh’s head lifted slightly in shock. Raevahn’s breath stilled.

Levin continued—"...from his chamber—no."

Slowly he turned, and when his gaze t theirs, it was not grief they saw. It was sothing far more dangerous, controlled, cold, and precise, and Levin’s each word fell more deliberately.

"Drag him through the main hallway. Let every servant see him fall. Let every noble hear his na dragged across stone." His voice lowered deadly. "And when you take him to the dungeon...show him no rcy."

Silence shattered not outwardly but within. Varesh’s eyes widened as he began carefully. "My Malika...to arrest the Malik’s closest ally without decree—"

Levin did not blink as he said it was not a request but a verdict. "You will do it."

Varesh bowed deeper as he said, steady but strained. "I an no defiance, but such an order... requires the Malik’s sanction. Without it, this—"

"—becos dangerous?" Levin finished.

Varesh did not answer; he did not need to. Levin’s gaze sharpened as he said quietly, "So you will not obey."

Varesh flinched. "That is not my intent—"

"Then what is?" Levin cut in.

The air shifted and tightened. Varesh forced the words out. "It places you at risk, Malika. We must proceed with caution—"

"Caution?" Levin’s voice did not rise, but sothing in it broke.

"Caution," he repeated softly, as though tasting the word, then more sharply. "While the one who poisoned and killed one of my children within breathes within these walls?"

Varesh fell silent because there was no answer that would not offend. No truth that would not wound, and then—Levin spoke again, not to them but past them.

"To remain still... is to protect him, and I will not protect what seeks to destroy ."

Varesh bowed his head lower. "I ask only for ti—"

"Enough." The word cut clean, with no shout and no fury. Just finality.

Levin turned away from them. His gaze fell instead upon Lyresaph as he asked, "Can you do it?"

No command, no explanation Just understanding. Lyresaph’s eyes lifted and t his, and in that silent exchange—sothing ancient passed between them.

Then the dragon moved. A low sound rumbled from his chest, deep and rising. The air trembled. Asha stepped back instinctively, ears flattening.

And then—ROOOOAAAAARRRRRRRRR!!!!! It tore through the courtyard—violent, alive, uncontained.

Lyresaph’s form shifted, expanded, and unfolded—until silver scales glead beneath the moon like forged steel, his body imnse and powerful—a creature of legend, now awake.

And then another roar, louder and closer. The ground cracked beneath him as he leapt forward, shattering stone, crushing petals—the garden collapsing beneath raw force.

Flowers were scattered like broken offerings, and the silence was gone. Replaced by sothing far more dangerous.

Varesh stepped forward instinctively. "My Malika—this will—"

Levin did not look at him as he said it, calm and colder than before. "Do not speak when you have nothing worth saying."

The words struck harder than any blade.

Raevahn fell silent. Varesh did not move because now he understood. This was no longer grief; this was judgnt.

Levin turned and walked, not hurried, not shaken but certain. As though the path ahead had already been decided and all that remained was for others to catch up.

Behind him the courtyard trembled beneath a dragon’s fury; before him, the palace waited, unaware and unprepared, and sowhere within its walls a serpent still breathed but not for long.

Because the Malika who had once mourned in silence had now chosen sothing far more terrifying.

He would not weep, he would not wait, he would not ask; he would end, and when Zahryssar awakened, it would not wake to peace. It would wake to a storm.

The palace did not sleep—it held its breath.

Levin walked each step asured... inevitable. Behind him, soft paws followed—Asha moved in silence, her golden eyes flickering between shadows, as though even instinct could feel the shift in the air.

The hallway stretched long before them and at its end stood Zerat waiting. A faint smirk rested upon his lips sothing far more dangerous—approval.

His gaze slid past Levin to the two figures behind. Captain Varesh and Raevahn.

"You dared," Zerat said, his voice smooth, cutting, "to hesitate... when your Malika commanded."

The words did not rise, they did not need to. They pressed heavy and unforgiving. Varesh and Raevahn flinched as if struck, both bowed instantly.

Deep.

"We ask forgiveness, Malik."

Zerat did not answer imdiately, his silence lingered sharp as judgnt. Then he looked away. As though their fate had already been decided.

Levin did not stop, did not acknowledge them and did not acknowledge him.

"I will use your weapon chamber," Levin said.

Zerat fell into step beside him.

"I wonder," he murmured, voice laced with quiet curiosity, "what weapon my consort will choose."

Levin did not respond because tonight the weapon was not steel. It was him.

They walked together, toward sothing the palace had never seen before. Far away in chambers untouched by fear slept Nabuarsh, peacefully, unaware, unchallenged and untouched by consequence.

Until—SHATTER.

Glass exploded inward a storm of shards and moonlight. A roar followed—vast. violent. alive. Lyresaph stood within the ruin of the balcony silver scales gleaming beneath fractured light—blue eyes burning with sothing far beyond instinct and purpose.

Nabuarsh jolted awake breath caught mind scrambling.

"Lyresaph...?" he muttered, voice unsteady. "What... what are you—?"

Recognition struck but it was too late.

"No..." he whispered, fear slipping through control. "When did you—?"

The dragon did not blink, did not hesitate. It moved fast and relentless. Its jaws opened and in one brutal motion he caught him and lifted him like prey.

Nabuarsh’s words shattered into panic. "What are you doing—?!"

Lyresaph turned leapt and vanished from the broken balcony down. Into the night. Into judgnt., the garden below trembled, stone cracked beneath weight.

Air split with the force of arrival, and from the shadows Levin waited.

As the mont finally arrived. Nabuarsh struggled, breathing uneven and control slipping.

"What is this...?" he demanded, though his voice had already begun to betray him. "What are you doing—?"

No one answered, not the dragon, not the night and not the man before him. Because so questions do not deserve answers, they deserve only endings.

Levin stepped forward slowly and deliberately. His eyes t Nabuarsh’s and for the first ti there was no mask, no court and no restraint.

Only sothing cold, sothing final, sothing that did not forgive and did not forget. The palace, above them, remained silent unaware that within its walls—a storm had already begun and below—a serpent had just been dragged—into its own grave.

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