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Chapter 153: A Bloom in a Dead Land

Beautiful. Benevolent. Loved by literally every breathing soul from the sun-drenched Southern coast all the way to the ridiculously fancy halls of the capital.

Those were the words, the holy trinity of descriptors, that had been plastered all over the novel Cherion once held in his hands. In the ink-and-paper world, Philia was the main character. The blueprint. The gold standard. An orphan with a backstory so tragic it practically bled off the page, he’d lived a life of gri and hushed prayers until a single visit from the Crown Prince changed everything. It was a 180-degree flip that would make any reader dizzy. A blossoming romance, a power awakening, and a rise to grace that had, quite literally, driven the "real" Cherion straight into madness.

The original Cherion, the one whose mories now felt like so weird fever dream you wake up from and imdiately regret, had been... yeah, petty.. He’d tried to retort, to lash out, to make Yerel and everyone see Philia for the "scher" he supposedly was. But in a world governed by narrative tropes, the villain never wins.

Everything went south. Cherion’s desperate asures to hurt Philia only accelerated his own demise. Yerel grew disgusted, the court turned their backs, and eventually, Cherion’s body t the cold embrace of the executioner’s block. His head had rolled, his blood had stained the stone, and through it all, Philia had remained "too good for his own good." He hadn’t even held a grudge, simply sighed and whispered that the execution was "perhaps a bit much."

What a load of absolute rubbish, Cherion’s boots crunched softly over the frost-covered gravel as that thought crossed his mind.

Because the Philia walking next to him right now?

Yeah. No.

This guy did not feel like kindness and sunlight wrapped in human form. It was honestly a bit bizarre, funny, even, in a dark way, how Cherion still found himself clinging to the remnants of the book he’d read, even when his own eyes, ears, and gut were screaming that the reality was sothing else entirely. This is not that story anymore!!!

They were strolling through the gardens, a place where the wind had teeth and the sky was the color of a bruised plum. They weren’t alone, of course. Cherion wasn’t that suicidal. Reiner and Ezek trailed a few paces behind them, silent and watchful as gargoyles. They gave the pair enough space to talk, but their hands hovered close to their weapons the entire ti. Just in case.

Philia suddenly stopped near a cluster of sharp-edged flowers with silver petals that sohow managed to survive in the frozen ground. He reached out, looking like he’d just discovered a rare artifact.

"I must admit, I am surprised," Philia murmured, his voice smooth as ever. "I truly didn’t expect that the North could grow anything... alive. Especially sothing this beautiful in such a harsh wasteland. It feels almost cruel to let them bloom here, don’t you think?"

Cherion didn’t even look at the flowers. His attention stayed locked on Philia, specifically the way the man angled himself just right to catch the pale sunlight. Of course he did. "You might want to expand your worldview a little, Philia. Beauty doesn’t just exist where there’s sunshine and silk. Here, survival is the beauty. It’s a bit more honest than the Palace, wouldn’t you say?"

Philia let out a soft chuckle, his gaze dipping for a brief mont before lifting again, asured, appraising, as if Cherion had just t the bare minimum of his expectations.

"Honesty," Philia repeated, as if the word were a foreign delicacy he wasn’t sure he liked. "You’ve certainly picked up so... rustic ideas, Cherion."

"Let’s skip the gardening comntary, shall we?" Cherion cut in. He stopped walking and turned to face Philia fully. "What are you actually doing here? And don’t give

the official version. I’m not in the mood."

Philia blinked, a flash of fake hurt passing through his expression like a well-rehearsed scene. "Ignorant as ever, I see," he sighed. "Have you truly forgotten how the world works? I told you before, the King was terrified. He was restless, worried that you were all alone in this fortress while the Duke was away on his little... monster-hunting trip. He feared your loneliness."

Cherion let out a short, ugly scoff that startled a raven out of a nearby tree. "Lonely? That’s rich. Tell His Majesty that his worries were for nothing. I wasn’t lonely at all. In fact, I was having the ti of my life out there on the subjugation. Turns out watching monsters get decapitated is incredibly therapeutic. It puts things into perspective."

He sighed, a long, dramatic sound that seed to vibrate with disappointnt. "You’ve beco so... an. So prickly. You haven’t asked a single question about ho since I arrived. Not about , not about His Highness, not even about His Majesty."

He made it sound like Cherion was an ungrateful runaway, as if the entire nobility were currently crying into their silk pillows over his absence. It was a classic guilt-trip..

But Cherion just tilted his head, smiling like he’d just been mildly entertained.

"Oh, I know they’re fine," Cherion replied. "In fact, I’d bet they’re enjoying the ’peace’ of my absence just as much as I’m enjoying theirs. Let’s not lie to each other, Philia. It’s tacky. The Palace is much quieter without the ’Mad Fiancé’ around to stir up trouble, right?"

He stepped closer, voice lowering just a little. "But it seems you don’t enjoy the peace as much as I thought. You ca all this way, through the snow and the dirt, just for ? I’m flattered, truly. But I can guess your motives are far from ’worry.’"

Cherion leaned in, his gaze hardened. "Whatever it is, stop it. Don’t do anything foolish. This isn’t the Palace."

Philia went dead still.

The patronizing, "too good" smile stiffened. His eyes locked onto Cherion, sharp and searching, like he was trying to peel him apart layer by layer.

"It really is fascinating," Philia whispered. The air around them seed to drop. The garden went still in a way that felt unnatural.

"To see how much you’ve changed," Philia continued. "And no... not since you ca to the North."

He took a step forward, invading Cherion’s personal space. Reiner and Ezek shifted behind them, their armor clinking, but Philia didn’t even blink. He kept his gaze locked on Cherion’s eyes.

"It’s been different since the day His Highness broke the engagent."

He paused, his eyes narrowing, the look on his face shifting into clear, unmistakable doubt.

"It’s almost as if another being took up residence in his skin," Philia whispered. "A ghost? A demon?"

For a mont, everything just went still, heavy, suffocating, and honestly kind of creepy. The two of them stood there in the middle of the winter garden, just staring at each other like neither planned to blink first. One of them was clearly picking up that sothing was very, very wrong, like a glitch in the system, and the other was having the deeply unpleasant realization, sowhere in his stomach, that his "perfect disguise" might not be as perfect as he’d thought.

At that mont, neither of them was playing a role anymore. They were just two predators stuck in the sa cage, waiting to see who would crack first.

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