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Now reading: Chapter 262: The Pain of Parting from Supreme Spouse System., a Fantasy novel by Scorpiosaturn777.

The Pain of Parting

The gloom still shrouded Moonspire, but it was beginning to relax its hold. The rich obsidian of the heavens was lightening—tender wisps of blue seeping in like the first gasp before dawn. Morning would co later still—maybe an hour, possibly two—but sothing in the atmosphere had already changed.

Streetlights burned softly along the palace walks, their golden glow shimring like drowsy embers. Lanterns, suspended far up against walls of marble, traced slow-moving shadows across cobblestone courtyards. The city slumbered, enclosed in silence. Not a murmur awakened. Only the random re-echo of a guard’s boots broke the quiet.

In the Core Palace, black-armored sentries strode with sharp precision, their patrols doubled following the king’s new instructions. Every step was deliberate, but taut. Paranoia seeped in—perating walls, weaving itself in and out of whispers and stares. It was a city poised to awaken into sothing sinister.

But within the Queen’s private quarters, the outside world didn’t exist.

There, silence ant sothing else—sothing holy, sothing communal.

The velvet curtains stayed closed, shrouding the room in half-darkness. A lone candle still burned, the small fla sputtering precariously low, as if it might gutter out with the next bob. The room was heavy with heat and residual perfu—a heavy blend of lilies, lavender, and rose... combined with sweat, skin, and the unmistakable scent of musk from a night spent entwined with one another.

In the midst of it all was the big bed, its red sheets rumpled, breathless ss. Thin outlines of bodies were left in the sheet. The half-drawn blanket over them barely concealed the naked forms underneath—two bodies close, entangled in silence that required no words.

Leon reclined on his back, the black hair spilled unconcernedly over the pillows, a few strands wandering into the half-lidded golden eyes. One arm was folded protectively around Sona’s slender form, holding her close to him. The other hand stroked in deliberate, contemplative motions—his fingers spreading wide through the fine silver threads of her hair, as if morizing the feel.

His movents were slow. Soft. As if he was afraid the mont would evaporate if he moved too quickly.

Sona was stretched out on his chest, her cheek against the bend of his shoulder, skin still warm from the night. Her breathing was quiet, but her blue eyes stayed open—unblinking. She wasn’t asleep. She hadn’t been in a long ti.

Her naked skin pressed against his, each inch of her shaped to the heat of his body. But her eyes were far away, caught in a place sowhere between contemplation and silence. Neither of them had spoken for a while now, but neither of them felt compelled to. The silence between them was rich—heavy with all the things they didn’t speak.

The storm hadn’t caught up to them yet.

But both knew it would.

Nevertheless, at this delicate dawn hour, they held onto the quietude like a shared secret that neither of them dared to forsake.

Sona’s thighs still shuddered lightly under the silk sheets, the heat between them still lingering—engraved in flesh and mory both. Natasha’s voice had since faded, her bantering goodbye giving place to silence. What ca thereafter wasn’t uncomfortable. It was oppressive. Holy.

She had caught a glimpse of it in Leon’s eyes—the storm that raged behind that tranquil golden look. The concern that he attempted to conceal. The burden he bore on his own.

And so, wordlessly, she had reached out.

Their bodies touched once more, their motion now a cadence chiseled out of pain and longing. It hadn’t been lust—no, this was sothing more. Fiery and intimate. Gentle and unbridled.

A silent desperation woven through each kiss, each panting moan. They had loved slowly, then unsparingly, again and again, as if attempting to inscribe each other into mory. As if their flesh could stem the passage of ti.

Now, hours later, they rested together in the quiet, flesh on flesh, heart on heart. Neither sleeping nor fully awake. But entirely together.

The only sound the soft crackle of a dying candle and the soft rhythm of their breathing. Outside, the world in the window waited, yet in this room, ti was still.

Leon’s fingers idly raked out her black hair, his other arm still around her waist, holding fast.

Then—

Chirp.

A gentle noise, light as a feather, wafted in through the open windows.

Chirp... chirp.

It returned.

Sona’s lashes fluttered as she caught her breath, and Leon’s hand froze. His eyes narrowed, golden.

Both of them knew it imdiately.

Her head turned in its direction, lips parting with soft reverence.

"The First Waking Bird..." she whispered, voice no more than a whisper of air—but charged with significance.

Leon nodded involuntarily, his throat constricting as reality settled between them.

"So... dawn is near."

Throughout all of Galvia, the gentle trill of that pale bird was said to foretell the rising sun—long before the first stirrings of the city. Its call didn’t announce morning. It announced departure.

The bird cried out three additional tis.

Leon took a slow breath, the air whispering against her skin as his arm tightened around her just a little bit more.

Leon exhaled slowly, the noise nearly a sigh as his arm relaxed a little more around the woman in his arms.

"Ahem. my love," he spoke softly, voice low and warm, "I believe. it’s ti for to take my leave."

But he didn’t budge. And neither did she.

Sona’s arms naturally tightened further around him, her cheek resting against the hard heat of his chest. Her bare legs under the knotted sheets stayed wrapped with his, like her body did not want to release him. There was no speech—none at first. Only a gentle, unwilling hum on his skin.

She knew this mont would arrive.

But now it was here. she wished she could close her eyes and pretend otherwise.

Leon sensed it in her quiet—the heavy burden of unspoken desire, the sadness of farewell. He leaned his head toward her, lips grazing the crown of her head as his fingers brushed through her long silver hair.

"My love," he breathed, the words gentle, "according to the King’s edict... regional lords have to return to their cities at dawn. You understand this..."

"I know, Leon..." she said softly, her breath trembling as it left her lips. "I just—" She hesitated, then sighed again, more quietly. "—I just wish you’d stay a little longer."

Her voice held no demand. Just quiet sorrow.

Leon smiled faintly at her honesty, a touch of tenderness warming his golden eyes.

Carefully, he started to co up, moving upright against the headboard. The sheet slipped down his chest, resting at his waist, showing the solidity of his bare, chiseled torso. Candlelight followed the sharp lines of muscle; the old scars etched on his skin—a silent reminder of fights endured and won.

Sona followed him, climbing slowly without releasing him, her body remaining close as the blanket fell lower. Her silver-white hair spilled across her shoulder, the pale strands shimring softly in the shadowy light. The sheet hardly clung to her contours now—exposing the tender shape of her shoulders, the rise of her breasts, the pink silvery marks left on her collar from last night’s passion.

Leon’s eyes lingered.

Not in hunger—but in reverence.

At the soft folds half-concealed in linen, the delicate rise and fall of her breast, the moonlit sheen of her skin... she resembled sothing from a dwindling dream. Lovely and naked, fragile and resilient.

His Queen. His wife.

And in this still morning, she was simply his woman—eyes brimming with longing, lips slightly open as if she still had words to say... but couldn’t quite find them.

Leon’s heart ached, torn between duty and lust, the call of battle and the gentleness of the woman in his arms.

And while morning drew near, neither of them wanted to et it.

The earliest whispers of dawn seeped in from the windows high above, filling the room with a warm, golden veil. But ti itself, for the two of them, had co to a halt.

Leon leaned in and softly ran the back of his hand over her cheek, as if to morize the sensation of it one final ti.

"I know you don’t want to go," he stated softly, his voice husky with self-control. "Truth is... I don’t want to go either. Not now that we’ve finally beco what we always dread we could be. And now, I have to leave you behind—just when I’ve found you again. That pain... I feel it too, Sona."

Her eyes scanned his face, grasping the tempest of feelings that hovered just under the surface. Her lips opened, but her voice faltered in her throat.

Leon locked eyes with her for a second longer before going on, the words heavy in his heart. "But if I take you with now—out in the open or even in hiding—once the King learns of it, he’ll move. He’ll do what he always does—protect his reputation, his authority. He’ll kill us both before we even get to Silver City."

Sona’s lips pursed into a thin line. "I know... I know that too well," she whispered, her voice soft but firm.

Leon breathed out slowly, the burden of unspoken peril behind his breath. "If I remain now and battle the King—without allies, without a clear claim—it won’t just be suicide for . It’ll get you into his line of fire. Nova too. And my other wives too.

He reached out, his hand lifting gently to cradle her face. The warmth of her skin grounded him, even as his heart ached. His voice dropped—low, firm, carrying a quiet steel beneath the sorrow. "I can’t risk making the first move before we’re ready. The King is watching. One mistake, one sign of rebellion, and he’ll strike without hesitation."

Sona’s gaze didn’t falter, yet sothing within her changed. Her face, once darkened by uncertainty, now held the weight of resolve. She knew—more than he had wished she would.

Leon’s thumb swept her cheek, his voice gruff with suppressed feeling. "No matter how much it hurts... to be this far away from you is still preferable to losing you forever. If hiding our connection keeps you safe, I’ll suffer the silence."

She raised her hand and set it over his, coaxing it nearer to her cheek. Her fingers were warm, shaking, but saturated with acceptance. Her thumb caressed the edge of his jaw slowly as she gazed up at him through the glisten of unshed tears.

"I know, Leon. That’s why I never pleaded with you to remain. But..." She paused, her voice gentling into sothing more delicate. "I want you to promise sothing."

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