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Now reading: Chapter 59: A sudden shift from The Reborn Sovereign of Ruin, Bound by His Star, a Yaoi novel by Amiba.

Felix.

He was not alone. Two guards stood half a pace behind him, discreet enough to pretend they did not matter and real enough to make the corridor feel imdiately smaller.

Felix himself appeared composed in a way that only n built almost entirely of poison and restraint could. His white hair, straight and carefully arranged, fell past his shoulders with refined elegance. His face remained beautiful, albeit infuriatingly so, despite the fact that ti had touched him more than a dominant oga should.

That had always bothered Liam.

Felix was over ninety, which for a dominant alpha or oga was not particularly old. Late young adult to middle-aged, if one wanted to be generous about it. He should have looked preserved by power, sharpened by it, and polished by the obscene advantages their kind enjoyed.

Instead, Felix had begun to age too fast. Not openly enough for weaker eyes to na it. But Liam had spent too many years studying systems under strain not to notice what did not match its projected lifespan. The faint softness at the corners of Felix’s mouth. The fine lines near the eyes that should not yet have settled there. The almost-imperceptible thinning beneath the skin when the light hit wrong.

Liam had often wondered what exactly Felix had been burning through to get there. What he used his ether for so aggressively, so greedily, that it left ti’s fingerprints on him earlier than it should have? Ether was power, yes, but it was also an expense. Systems wore down. Channels scarred. Even monsters paid sowhere.

Felix’s gaze moved to Liam.

Then to Arik.

Then lower to Arik’s hand.

Liam felt the mont Felix noticed the contact as if the corridor itself had tightened around them.

Arik’s palm had been resting against his back until then, light enough to be called escorting if anyone wanted to lie politely and steady enough to make that lie embarrassingly thin. It was already intolerable. Already too much. Already the kind of thing Liam should have turned down three hallways ago on principle alone.

Then Felix looked at it, and Arik, apparently determined to make diplomacy die screaming in a decorative corridor, moved.

His hand slid down from the middle of Liam’s back to his waist, fingers settling firmly over the fitted line of his coat.

Liam’s breath caught, his eyes widening at the audacity.

Before Liam could respond, Arik drew him close enough that his side brushed against the hard line of Arik’s body. Enough that the warmth of him beca impossible to ignore. Enough so that anyone looking would realize this was no longer a polite guiding touch, no longer a courtesy dressed in court etiquette, and no longer sothing a diplomat could dismiss as misunderstanding.

It was possessive.

Shalessly so.

Liam’s eyes snapped to Arik’s face.

For one brief, furious second, he expected amusent. That faint curve of the mouth, that golden-eyed satisfaction Arik wore when he had said sothing intolerable and decided Liam’s outrage was worth collecting.

But Arik was not smiling.

His face was completely calm.

And colder than Liam had ever seen it.

Admittedly, Liam had seen the Crown Prince of Agaron only three tis and had been near him only twice, including now, but even that was enough to make the difference obvious. Arik had worn danger before. He wore amusent like a blade and arrogance like high-end tailoring. He had looked at Lab V’s impossible ether field with fascination, at George with lazy contempt, and at Liam with a sharp curiosity that made Liam want to throw sothing heavy and scientifically sound.

This was not that.

This was quieter and far worse.

The gold in Arik’s eyes had gone still, stripped of warmth so cleanly it made the corridor feel colder. His expression contained no visible anger, outrage, or open threat. Just an absolute calm that no longer resembled restraint, but the thing restraint was intended to contain.

Liam stayed still against him, forgetting about the hand and his plan to punish Arik for being so bold.

Felix noticed too.

Of course Felix noticed. n like Felix survived by reading the smallest movents in rooms where everyone lied professionally.

His gaze remained lowered for one heartbeat too long, fixed on Arik’s hand at Liam’s waist, on the slight but undeniable way Liam had been drawn closer to the Agaronian prince.

Then Felix lifted his eyes.

"Your Highness," he said, the title smooth as cut glass. "What a surprise."

His voice was flawless, but his smile was far from that.

There was a minute fracture in it now, a hairline break under the polish, and sothing dark and vicious inside Liam lifted its head in satisfaction.

Arik’s hand tightened at his waist.

A warning to Felix, a reassurance for Liam that nothing would touch him again, and a proof for everyone else.

"Felix Canmore," Arik said.

For one suspended second, the corridor lost its form.

Not physically. The walls remained pale and polished, the owl motifs still carved into the stone with Wrohan’s usual obsession for pretending surveillance could be made tasteful, the windows still cutting bands of afternoon light across the floor. George still stood half a step behind them, attempting with increasingly little success to look like the monarch of a country instead of a decorative witness to his own irrelevance.

But sothing had changed.

Arik had changed.

Liam felt it before he understood it.

The hand at his waist remained shalessly where it was, warm through his coat, firm enough to keep him close, and deliberate enough to make any claim of accident laughable. That alone would have been more than sufficient grounds for outrage, violence, or at least a very pointed discussion about the difference between diplomacy and handling rare equipnt without permission.

But Liam’s attention was no longer on the hand.

It was in Arik’s voice.

The cadence had shifted.

Not dramatically enough that George would have understood it. Not perhaps enough for the two guards behind Felix, who were too busy pretending they were not suddenly reconsidering all of their life choices. But Liam heard it. He had only spoken to Arik properly a handful of tis, had only been close enough to him twice, including now, and still the difference struck him with the clean force of a wrong equation.

This was not the prince who had been teasing him five minutes ago.

This was not the man who had looked at the gate with a dangerous mix of curiosity and hunger.

This was not even the royal nace who had stood beside him and decided sha was sothing other dynasties used when they lacked imagination.

This voice was older.

Lower in a way that had nothing to do with volu.

The rhythm was slower, almost indulgent, as though Arik was no longer speaking from the surface of the mont but from sowhere beneath it, sowhere old enough to rember Felix before the man had learned to hide rot beneath perfu and title.

Felix heard it too.

Liam saw the proof in him.

The minute stillness.

The way the old oga’s eyes stopped assessing Arik as a foreign crown prince and began, for one terrible heartbeat, to look at him as sothing else.

Sothing impossible.

"Is that so?" Arik asked, his head tilted with that strange, unfamiliar accuracy. "I thought I frightened you after the welcoming gala."

George stopped breathing.

Actually stopped.

Liam would have mocked him for it under different circumstances, but at that mont he was busy staring at Arik with an unpleasant sense that several facts had just rearranged themselves without asking his permission.

Felix did not answer at once.

That alone was damning.

Felix Canmore answered everything. If he did not answer, it ant he was choosing silence with surgical intent, or because words had briefly beco unreliable. Liam had seen him handle ministers, rivals, petitioners, and even Enia Ravenwood in the full polished violence of maternal hatred. Felix did not hesitate unless the cost of speech had changed faster than expected.

Arik smiled.

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