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The witch inclined her hooded head. "Then you’ll need more than this relic. More than spells. More than conventional power."

"What do I need?"

The scarred hand opened the black book. Pages rustled, ancient and fragile, covered in text that seed to writhe in the firelight.

"Knowledge," the witch said. "Preparation. And a willingness to use thods that even Pyronox himself would condemn."

Vetra’s smile returned. Cold. Sharp. Absolutely rciless.

"Then let’s begin."

Outside, snow began to fall. Soft. Silent. Covering the palace grounds in fresh white that would be beautiful by morning.

Inside Vetra’s chambers, three won bent over a black book covered in ancient symbols.

Planning.

Plotting.

Preparing to unleash sothing that should have stayed buried.

Deep into the night, when even the palace guards had retreated to warr halls and the servants had long since extinguished the lesser torches, Vetra’s private chamber breathed with a darkness that had nothing to do with the absence of light.

The room she dedicated to activities such as this itself seed to recoil from what transpired within it.

Three figures bent over an ancient to, their shadows stretching long and distorted across walls carved from ice so old it had forgotten how to reflect. Candles burned in unnatural colors, white flas that cast no warmth, green tongues that hissed and spat, purple light that made the skin appear corpse-like.

Vetra Helena Nivarre, Regent Empress, stood at the head of the table with the posture of a woman conducting a symphony. Her silver hair glead like frost under moonlight, her expression serene, almost ditative, as though searching through forbidden texts for ways to unmake a kingdom was no different from selecting embroidery patterns.

Beside her, Aira, the witch nad herself turned pages with fingers gnarled and scarred, each movent deliberate, reverent. The burns that covered her from head to toe screaming their story, a tale of fire and failure, of a queen who had survived an assassination attempt and left her attackers as ash. The scars pulled tight when she moved, a constant reminder of divine retribution.

And there, hovering at the edges like a ghost uncertain of its haunting, stood Lady Isolde Ravencrest. Her face still bore the faint shadow of bruising where Eris’s hand had struck, a mark she would possibly try to conceal with powder and pride. She watched with eyes that couldn’t quite decide between horror and fascination, a moth circling a fla that had already burned others.

On the table between them lay the black book, containing dark spells, bound in leather that might once have been skin. Its pages whispered when turned, secrets spilling into air too cold to hold them.

And beside it, the bone compass, needle trembling as it pointed unerringly toward the distant wing where Eris was, unaware that her presence disturbed the instrunts of the dead.

"This one," Aira murmured, her voice like gravel scraping glass. She read aloud in a tongue that predated ti, syllables that tasted of smoke and sulfur. "The Binding of flaming Hearts. Requires three days of preparation and the subject’s blood."

Vetra’s lips pressed into a thin line. "Too slow."

Another page turned, parchnt crackling like old bones.

"The Plague of the Black fla," Aira continued. "Victims suffocate slowly, their breath turning to smoke."

"Too obvious." Vetra’s fingers drumd once against the table. "The court physicians would trace it back to sorcery within hours."

Isolde shifted her weight, the movent drawing Vetra’s glacial attention. The younger woman stilled imdiately, rembering her place, rembering that she was here by sufferance, that Vetra’s rcy extended only as far as her usefulness.

More pages. More ancient horrors catalogued in careful script.

"The Summoning of the fla Riders. Brings forth—"

"Not devastating enough," Vetra interrupted, impatience finally coloring her tone. "I don’t want whispers of plague or quiet deaths in the night. I want chaos. I want the kind of destruction that makes the history books, that forces Soren’s hand, that proves beyond doubt that the fire-blooded witch he’s brought into our empire is exactly the monster I’ve been warning about."

The witch’s scarred lips curved, an expression that might have been a smile on soone whose face rembered how. Her fingers, twisted like roots, traced over the next page, then stopped.

Silence fell, heavier than before.

Even the unnatural candles seed to dim, as though the flas themselves feared what ca next.

"Here," Aira whispered, and there was sothing in her voice now, sothing that made Isolde take an involuntary step back. "The Summoning of the Fallen Fla."

Vetra leaned forward, reading over the witch’s shoulder. The text was written in script so old it predated the dragons themselves, back when the first fires learned to think, to hunger, to hate.

"What does it do?" Vetra’s voice had gone soft, the way ice grows quiet before it cracks.

Aira’s finger traced the words, translating as she went. "It breaks the seal holding the condemned beneath the earth. Ifrit, the fire demons, Pyronox’s first children before they fell from grace. They were bound millennia ago, during the Age of Gods, sealed beneath Solmire’s volcanic core after they fueled the crack between humans."

"Fire demons," Vetra repeated, tasting the words. "In my empire of ice."

"The irony," Aira agreed, "will be lost on no one. The spell tears open the earth itself, allows the Zahkar to crawl up from their prison. They don’t rampage mindlessly, they’re too intelligent for that. They rember their purpose, to judge, to punish, to turn flesh to ash."

"And they would be blad on Eris." Understanding dawned in Vetra’s eyes, cold and beautiful as winter stars. "The fire queen brings fire demons. How... poetic."

Isolde’s voice erged thin and wavering. "Your Grace, surely there must be risks, if the spell is so powerful, why was it forbidden?"

Both won turned to look at her, and Isolde felt the weight of their combined attention like ice water down her spine.

"Because," Aira said slowly, as though explaining sothing to a particularly slow child, "it is irreversible once begun. The demons will not stop, will not return willingly. They must be sealed again by soone with divine power, or they will burn until there is nothing left to burn."

"Good," Vetra said simply.

Isolde blanched. "But, Your Grace, innocent people would die, your people, the citizens of Nevareth..."

"A few more sacrifices," Vetra’s tone suggested she was discussing politics, "for the greater good. I’d like to see Eris try to save them with that unstable power of hers. Let everyone see what happens when she inevitably loses control, when the dragon inside her breaks free and burns everything she touches. Soren will watch his precious fire queen beco exactly what I’ve warned him about."

You are reading The Villainess Wants To Retire Chapter 204: "The Summoning of the Fallen Flame." on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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