Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Chapter 61: The Rose before the Malika from Serpent Emperor's Bride, a Yaoi novel by supriyashukla.

[The Tournant—Continuation]

The arena did not cheer as she climbed the steps.

It watched.

Stone tiers fell into a hush so complete that even the banners seed to still, their embroidered suns frozen mid-billow. The dust had not yet settled upon the field, yet the air above the Malika’s dais stood untouched—sacred, held apart from the roar below.

Lady Arinaya ascended without haste.

Her armor bore the scars of battle—gold marred by dust and blood—but her spine was straight, her steps deliberate. The red rose lay cradled in her hand, its petals uncrushed despite the violence that had birthed its offering.

Levin rose.

Not fully.

Not yet.

Protocol demanded restraint—but instinct pulled him forward all the sa. When she reached the final step, Lady Arinaya stopped.

She did not bow at once; instead, she lifted her gaze.

Crimson t blue.

For a heartbeat, the world narrowed to that exchange—a Malika and an real heir forged by war and oath, asuring not strength, but truth.

Then she bowed.

Deep.

Precise.

A warrior’s bow—not submission, but acknowledgnt.

"I greet the mother of Zahryssar," she said, voice steady despite the dust in her lungs. "I stand before you as Arinaya of House Karzath—by my blade, not my na."

A murmur stirred among the nobles.

Levin inclined his head in return. "You fought beneath no banner, and yet the arena rembers you. You did very well Lady Arinaya"

Her lips curved faintly. "Then the arena is wiser than most, Malika."

She straightened and extended the rose. "This bloom was earned in defeat. I offer it not as victory, but as intention."

Levin’s eyes dropped to the rose.

Red.

Alive.

A symbol ant to bind mory to blood.

"And what intention is that?" he asked quietly.

Arinaya did not look away. Instead, a faint smile touched her lips—not daring, not coy, but resolute.

"I would be honored," she said, voice clear enough to carry, "to serve as one of your personal attendants, Malika."

For a heartbeat—the world broke.

A sharp intake of breath tore through the arena. Nobles leaned forward. Courtiers stiffened. Whispers flared like sparks thrown into dry oil.

"Did she say—"

"A Karzath heir?"

"But she is not an heir anymore."

"Still, a personal attendant—?"

Shock rippled outward, loud and uncontrolled, but Levin did not move. His eyes lifted slowly to her face, and then—he raised his hand, and the murmurs died mid-breath.

Levin accepted the rose as acknowledgnt. His fingers closed around the stem, steady and deliberate.

"Lady Arinaya," he said, voice calm, carrying authority that did not need volu, "such matters are not decided before drums and blood."

He held her gaze.

"Nor in the heat of spectacle, but I will not dismiss what is offered in courage. When the tournant concludes," Levin said, "I would like you to join for tea."

Not if.

When.

There it was.

Not a promise.

Not a rejection.

A door left dangerously open. Arinaya’s smile deepened—not in triumph, but in understanding. She bowed again, deeper this ti.

"Thank you, Malika," she said softly. "That is all I ask."

Levin inclined his head in return, and behind him, Naburash exhaled slowly—already calculating the political shockwaves, and among the gathered nobles, one truth spread faster than rumor:

Lady Arinaya had not asked for a favor. She had asked for proximity, and Malika had not turned her away.

***

[anwhile—Contestants’ Tent—Sa Ti]

"...I wonder what Lady Arinaya is thinking," Arkhazunn murmured.

Zerat did not answer at once; his gaze remained fixed beyond the tent—on the dais, on Levin, on the woman descending the steps with a rose in her hand and war still clinging to her armor.

"At last," Zerat said slowly, "she has chosen to stand."

Arkhazunn turned to him, brows lifting, "Stand... for House Karzath?"

Zerat nodded once, "Yes. Publicly and deliberately. She is showing that....why her father choose her as a heir."

A pause.

"She intends to reclaim the seat that was stolen from her."

Arkhazunn exhaled softly. "And she chooses to do that by becoming the Malika’s personal attendant?" He frowned. "That is not a throne, Malik. It is a shadow."

Zerat’s eyes narrowed, "Shadows reach places thrones cannot."

Arkhazunn stilled.

Zerat continued, voice lower now, edged with certainty. "To stand beside the Malika is to hear what courts whisper only at night. It is to see who bows when they think no one watches. Influence does not always wear a crown."

He glanced back toward the dais, "She has thought this through."

Arkhazunn inclined his head slowly, "Then House Karzath will soon bleed again."

***

[Across the Arena—Another Contestant’s Tent]

Rakhane stood half-hidden by shadow, fingers clenched so tightly around the spear shaft that the wood groaned in protest. His crimson eyes burned—not with heat, but with hatred sharpened by ti.

"That girl..." he muttered, jaw tightening. "I should have finished her when—"

His breath caught.

"...when I killedMother."

The mory twisted—wrong, unfinished, festering—of his dead mother. His lip curled, "She walks as if the dead never clawed at her heels. Seems like she needs to be taught a lesson again."

***

[Arena Floor—Arinaya’s Descent]

Lady Arinaya stepped down from the dais; each footfall was asured.

Unhurried.

The crowd parted before her without command—instinctive, reverent, uneasy. Halfway down the stone steps—she felt it.

A gaze, heavy and familiar.

Her eyes lifted and locked.

Rakhane.

For one suspended mont, the world narrowed until there was nothing else—no drums, no banners, no nobles holding their breath.

Only twins.

Blood to blood.

Hatred flashed between them—raw, ancient, and unhidden.

In his eyes: rage and disbelief.In hers: mory and resolve.

Not fear.

Never fear.

Her lips curved—just slightly, a promise and a challenge.

’I am still here.’

Rakhane’s fingers twitched.

Arinaya did not slow; she passed him as if he were nothing more than air. But as she did, the truth settled between them like a drawn blade:

She had not returned to survive. She had returned to reclaim, and when she vanished into the crowd—armor swallowed by silk and dust—Rakhane understood sothing that chilled even his blood:

Silence does not usually return.

But when it does...it does not return quietly. It returns for what was stolen, and it never cos alone.

"NOW—CALL FOR THE NEXT WARRIOR—!"

The Herald’s voice shattered the mont.

The tournant rolled on, relentless as fate itself.

Steel clashed against steel. Noble houses tested bloodlines. Knights fell, rose, and fell again beneath the rciless sun. Cheers surged, died, and surged once more—Sunfire devouring spectacle as it always had.

Yet not all eyes were on the arena.

Captain Varash’s gaze remained fixed on the upper tiers.

On the red-haired serpent.

The man had not moved for hours.

Too still.

Too patient.

Then—

He stood.

Slowly.

Deliberately.

The hood slipped back just enough for that unnatural red hair to catch the light. His gaze did not wander, did not scan the field.

It remained fixed on Levin.

Then the man stepped down from the tier and moved toward the contestants’ tents. Varash’s brow furrowed. He studied the armor now visible beneath the cloak—battle-worn, practical.

"...So," Varash muttered, "he ans to enter the tournant."

It explained the movent.

It did not ease his unease.

He turned sharply to the nearest knights, "Maintain distance. Do not engage unless he deviates."

The knight bowed, "Yes, Captain."

Varash exhaled once, then turned away, already moving, "I must inform the Malika."

***

[Monts Later—Malika’s Dais]

Captain Varash dropped to one knee.

"Malika," he reported, "the red-haired man has descended. He appears to be a tournant entrant."

Levin’s eyes lifted—sharp, assessing.

"Is that so?" he said quietly.

His gaze drifted, following the unseen path the man would have taken.

"...Then why," Levin added, frowning faintly, "does my instinct refuse to rest?"

Naburash inclined his head, cautious but calm, "Sunfire draws many Red Knights, Malika. So co for honor. Others for recognition. He may simply wish to prove his worth."

Levin sighed—soft, controlled.

"Perhaps."

He paused and then his voice hardened, "But eyes that linger do not belong to simple ambition."

Levin turned back to Varash. "Keep him within sight."

"Yes, Malika."

"If he strays from the path of a contestant—" Levin continued.

"I will know," Varash finished, already understanding.

He bowed once more and withdrew. As the drums resud and the crowd roared anew, Levin remained still upon the dais—watching.

Waiting.

Because warriors ca to Sunfire seeking glory.

But this Serpent, he ca seeking sothing else. And whatever had just entered the arena had not co rely to fight.

"NOW—CALL FOR THE NEXT BATTLE—!"

The Herald’s voice rang out, sharp as struck bronze.

"Rakhane of House Karzath—"

A ripple passed through the stands.

"And his opponent—Tarshek Bel of House Namar!"

The gates groaned open.

Rakhane strode onto the arena floor clad in dark steel, his movents precise, controlled. His crimson eyes swept the tiers—not searching for his opponent—But for the dais.

For Levin.

The duel was brutal, swift, and rciless. House Namar’s blade was skilled—but Rakhane fought like a man with sothing to prove, sothing to assert. Steel rang. Dust rose. The crowd scread as blood struck the sand.

Three exchanges.

A feint.

A brutal downward cut.

Tarshek fell.

The drums thundered.

"VICTORY—RAKHANE OF HOUSE KARZATH!"

Cheers erupted, louder than before. Rakhane stood over his fallen opponent, chest rising, a faint smirk touching his lips—not triumph, but calculation.

From the Herald, he took the rose of victory.

And then—He turned, not towards the crowd, but toward the Malika’s dais.

A murmur stirred.

"He approaches—"

"Why the Malika—?"

Rakhane ascended the steps with asured confidence, every movent deliberate, eyes never leaving Levin.

Naburash stiffened beside the throne, "Malika—"

Levin raised a hand, "Let him."

Rakhane stopped at the final step and bowed—shallow, precise.

"I greet the Malika of Zahryssar," he said smoothly, "I offer this rose in honor of today’s victory."

His tone was polished.

Too polished.

Levin studied him—his expression unreadable. Rakkhane’s lips curved into a slow, knowing smirk.

"I hope the Malika will accept this rose," he said smoothly, his voice carrying just far enough for the nobles to hear, "as a token of my respect toward the Mother of the Empire."

The words were chosen carefully.

Deliberately.

Levin understood at once.

A rose offered publicly by a noble—spoken in the language of reverence—could not be refused without consequence. To reject it would be read as insult, not to the giver, but to the ideal he invoked.

Rakhane knew this, and he used it. He stepped closer and extended the rose, his arm steady, his eyes gleaming with quiet triumph.

Levin rose from his seat.

Not because he wished to—But because protocol demanded it.

And then—As Levin reached to accept it, Rakkhane’s fingers shifted. Not by accident, they brushed forward—seeking skin.

Seeking claim.

The air snapped.

Before contact could be made—Levin’s hand closed around the stem.

Sharp. Sudden.

The motion stopped cold. His grip was iron, unyielding, and for the briefest instant, Levin felt it—the twitch of a finger that had dared to seek the Malika’s skin.

A violation.

Small.

Deliberate.

And witnessed by no one but him.

Levin’s eyes lifted beneath the veil. Shock flickered—then vanished, buried beneath command.

He said nothing.

He could not.

Rakhane was a High Ensi—his rank a shield as much as a title. To na the offense aloud would fracture protocol in the open light of the arena.

Rakhane’s lips curved, satisfaction glinting there.

"I apologize, Malika," he said smoothly, already knowing the words would stand uncontested.

Levin released the stem.

Turned.

And seated himself upon the throne.

"If you are finished," he said, voice level, cold as carved stone, "you may leave."

The dismissal struck harder than any rebuke. Rakhane bowed—precise, mocking in its perfection—and withdrew down the steps. Only when the distance was absolute did Levin exhale.

Barely.

"...Disgusting," he murmured.

Not loud enough for the crowd, but enough for the throne to hear.

You are reading Serpent Emperor's Bride Chapter 61: The Rose before the Malika on WuxiaFull. Use Previous, Chapter List, or Next to continue.
Share this chapter
Bookmark saves this novel to your account. Reading History keeps recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You May Also Like

Knot me on ice, Captain(BL) cover
Same genre

Knot me on ice, Captain(BL)

Lorelei2 ·Yaoi

[MATURECONTENTWARNING:18+Only.HeavySmuts,knotting,possessivethemes,anddub-con.]“Iknottedyouthricetoday,littleliar.Tellme…isthegamestillworthit?”Int...

The Mafia's Stolen Prize (BL) cover
Same genre

The Mafia's Stolen Prize (BL)

MoeCara ·Yaoi

Toescapeapoisonoussnake,MiloHartleymustbegaliontosavehim.“Milo,crawlhere.Showhimwhoyoubelongto!”NeroHartley“Well,staystill.Beabigboy,foronce.Tellhi...

Guide Me If You Dare cover
Same genre

Guide Me If You Dare

solacola ·Yaoi

Yunoisanunluckypart-timerworkinginaconveniencestoreforEspersandGuides.Thatmeanstheysellstuffthatmakestheirstorelooklikeanadultshop.Duringhisshift,t...

Lord of the Truth cover
Trending now

Lord of the Truth

TruthTeller ·Action

RobinBurtonisayoungmanwhogrowwitheverythinganyonecanhopefor,immensetalentforcultivation,sharpmind,awealthyfamilythatwillstopatnothingtoprotectandnu...

User Comments

0 comments from readers

Post Comment
By posting a comment, you agree to all relevant terms.
There are currently no comments. Join the community and start the discussion.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.