"Right away, Your Majesty, but..." Lucius spoke cautiously as he stepped forward, his tone uncertain, as though weighing the weight of what he was about to say. "Regarding Prince Hendrix, we... I observed sothing very suspicious about him that I believe you should know."
Heinz pinched the bridge of his nose, eyes shut, trying to suppress the rage steadily burning beneath his skin. His voice ca out tight and clipped. "What?"
What more could he possibly have to know about that fucking nuisance?
Lucius hesitated for a beat, then said, "I couldn’t see his emotions at all. There has only ever been one person I’ve been unable to read—and that’s always been you, Your Majesty. I had no idea His Highness, Prince Hendrix, could even use that kind of magic considering..."
He didn’t finish the sentence. He didn’t have to. Heinz already knew what he ant.
Considering Hendrix was only half-Concordian.
Heinz opened his eyes slowly, the red in them darker now. "Alright. Go fetch Afton now."
That order alone made both Lucius and Lancelot tense.
"T-That’s all, Your Majesty?" Lancelot asked, clearly expecting more. More orders. More fury.
"That is all. Just do what I asked you both to do." Heinz said, waving them off with a hand before leaning back against his chair with barely contained irritation. "And soone get rid of this damn desk."
He motioned toward the shattered remains of his desk—the jagged splinters and splintered drawers a reflection of the storm still swirling inside him.
The two exchanged uncertain glances, then lowered their heads in unison. "As you wish, Your Majesty," they replied before quietly turning and exiting the room.
The heavy silence that followed their departure settled around Heinz like a suffocating fog.
Finally alone, Heinz allowed himself to breathe—but it wasn’t relief that filled his lungs.
He had to think.
He needed to think.
Because, damn it—Florian was right.
Lucius had just confird it: Hendrix could conceal his emotions, sothing no one else had ever been able to do. Not unless they were like Heinz.
And that changed everything.
Hendrix knew sothing.
And Hendrix might also have mories of their first life.
Not even might.
Because Florian had been right. Again. Uncomfortably right.
Hendrix had stayed away from the palace for years—hid himself in the farthest edges of the kingdom. Never appeared. Not once. Until Heinz’s twenty-second birthday.
That wasn’t coincidence. That wasn’t ambition.
It was sothing else.
Heinz could’ve understood if it had only been about the throne. He could’ve played that ga—could’ve ended that ga.
But Hendrix was after Florian, too?
’Did Hendrix care for that one night with Florian that much? Did—’
"Agh," Heinz hissed as a sharp pain shot through his skull, forcing him to clutch his head. It was sudden, piercing—an invisible knife lodged sowhere deep inside.
And then the chest pain followed. It wasn’t physical. It was heavier. Worse.
It was emotional.
"Y-Your Majesty! You’re... please don’t...!"
Florian’s voice—raw, trembling—echoed in his head. Heinz’s eyes widened as the sound reverberated within him, slicing through his thoughts like glass.
’What?’ Heinz thought, gripping his temples.
His breath caught.
His heart dropped.
’Was that another mory?’
Florian had been sobbing. Heinz could feel it—hear it in the way his voice cracked. It wasn’t fear. It was sothing deeper. Desperation. Grief.
"Please don’t what?" Heinz muttered aloud, eyes narrowing, pain tightening his face. "Fuck. Why am I not rembering certain things? What is this?"
Is this also what the original Florian ant? That it wasn’t over?
Because of Hendrix?
Did the original Florian know? That Hendrix also had his mories? That he was coming for Florian?
How?
Why?
And why the fuck did Heinz hate that more than anything?
Was the original Florian... waiting for Hendrix?
No.
Fuck.
No.
Heinz’s pulse roared in his ears. His breaths ca quick, shallow. The room felt too small, too quiet, too still.
He was spiraling.
Is this what spiraling was?
No.
He couldn’t spiral.
He wouldn’t.
Heinz doesn’t spiral.
He wasn’t like his mother.
He thinks. He calculates. He strategizes.
He would solve this.
He would end Hendrix.
And Florian would be his.
All his.
Besides, this Florian... was different.
This Florian didn’t cling to Lucius with naive eyes or hide behind Lancelot’s armor like a scared child.
He stayed away from them both.
He wasn’t the sa as before—not as trusting, not as reckless with affection.
And the only reason he wanted to get closer to Hendrix now was for Heinz’s sake. For the kingdom, yes, but mostly—for him.
This Florian wouldn’t make the mistake of sleeping with Hendrix. He was too smart for that. Too cautious. Too loyal.
Heinz’s hands slowly relaxed from their tense grip as he allowed himself to breathe, if only a little.
Because this Florian... this Florian was his.
This was the Florian who slept in Heinz’s bed, who curled into him in the quiet of the night.
This was the Florian who received Heinz’s kisses, who was touched by his hands.
The only thing similar about his Florian and the original is that they both loved Heinz.
Right?
So, no. He didn’t need to worry that much.
’All I have to do now is find more information about who is selling the ancient and illegal magic.’
Whether or not it was Hendrix, Heinz needed to know. He had to know.
Because it wasn’t just a gut feeling anymore—it was certainty building in his bones. This wasn’t a coincidence. It couldn’t be. Hendrix’s ability to wield such powerful, forbidden spells... spells that had long since been buried in the history of Concordia... and now whispers of them being sold in the underground?
There was no way it wasn’t connected.
And one of the only leads he had right now was Afton. That man knew soone who had knowledge—too much of it—about magic that should’ve been lost.
Heinz didn’t know if Afton would have the answers now since it hadn’t been too long since they’ve spoken, but Heinz will get whatever answers he could use today.
Heinz let out a slow breath and dragged a hand through his long black hair, fingers shaking just faintly from tension as he leaned back into his seat.
His gaze flickered to the side, to the faint light bleeding in through the curtains. The palace was quiet now, or at least this part of it. But Heinz’s mind was anything but still.
His lips parted as he murmured under his breath, voice barely above a whisper."I wonder what he’s doing right now."
’I want to see him already.’
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