The Villainess Wants To Retire-Chapter 533: A tiny dragon
The legend of Master Aldwin was a towering thing, constructed of starlight and shadow, a name whispered in the same breath as the shaping of continents.
But as the man himself stood before the gates of the capital, he looked less like a monument and more like a mountain that had simply grown tired of standing still.
He was genuinely, profoundly old... weathered past the point of mere age into something elemental.
His skin was a map of a thousand winters, his posture upright with the wiry agility of a man who had spent decades navigating the uneven spine of the world.
He didn’t wear the silk of a scholar or the velvet of a court mage; his clothes were patched, salt-stained, and smelling of cedar smoke and the sharp, green scent of high-altitude lichen.
Only his eyes betrayed the truth. They were startlingly clear, possessing the terrifying clarity of a deep lake. They saw.
"The Emperor," Aldwin said, his voice a low rasp that cut through the city’s mourning quiet. He looked at the jagged ruins of the palace, where the sky now peered through the ribs of collapsed ballrooms. "Where is he?"
Aldric, who had eventually joined and rushed to the gates with a desperation that bordered on the unseemly, bowed his head.
"The provinces. He left hours ago, before we knew you had crossed the border."
A shadow crossed Aldwin’s clear eyes. "I came to see him."
The hesitation was heavy. Aldwin had fled this palace when it was a tomb of Soren’s making, leaving because he couldn’t bear to look at the monster he felt he had helped create in Soren’s father. Walking back into these halls carried the weight of a ghost returning to its grave.
"It’s not the same palace, Master," Aldric said softly, gesturing to the broken masonry. "It barely is a palace anymore. And there is something else. His wife, the empress... she is dying."
"The fire queen," Aldwin murmured. It wasn’t a question. News of the Igniva vessel had reached even the silent peaks. He stood still for a long, agonizing moment, the wind tugging at his worn cloak. Then, he nodded once. "Show me."
The entrance into the imperial bedchamber was met with the prickly tension of an animal cornered in the dark. The room was crowded with a select, weary few: Caelen, with a sleeping Rael tucked against his shoulder like a leaden weight; Ryse, standing like a sentry at the foot of the bed; Mira, whose knuckles were white from gripping her skirts; and High Priestess Serah, who watched Aldwin with the wariness one reserved for a wildfire that had once been tamed.
The palace healers, exhausted and defensive, looked at the old man’s patched trousers and woodsmoke scent with blatant skepticism.
"Master Aldwin," the head healer said, his voice stiff with professional pride. "We have the situation under control. Her core is deteriorating, and we have applied every stabilization ritual in the imperial codex."
Aldwin walked past him toward the bed, pausing at the pulsing blue crystals Soren had embedded months ago. He looked at them for a long time, a flicker of recognition and something like grim approval, crossing his face.
He knew who had carved these. He knew the level of desperate, silent love required to calibrate ice so precisely for a woman who ran too hot.
"Do you?" Aldwin asked mildly, his eyes never leaving Eris.
He didn’t wait for an answer. His hands moved, hovering inches above her chest in a way that predated the clinical magic of the modern era.
He wasn’t looking for symptoms; he was listening to the frequency of her soul. His face shifted, his brow furrowing as he felt the jagged edges of the seal, the ancient dragon-binding, and the frantic, roaring heat of the Igniva fire.
The room held Its breath. Even Rael seemed to still in his sleep. Aldwin placed his palms flat over Eris’s sternum, not quite touching, his eyes sliding shut. The silence was absolute.
When he finally withdrew, he didn’t look alarmed. He looked... pensive.
"Well?" the head healer pressed, his impatience bubbling over. "We believe she has days, perhaps a week. The deterioration is—"
"We wait," Aldwin said.
"I beg your—"
"That is the diagnosis," Aldwin repeated, his voice calm but immovable. "We wait."
The room erupted. "Her core is weakening!" Serah protested. "We cannot simply sit by while she fades!"
Aldwin didn’t raise his voice. He simply waited for the noise to run out of breath, the patience of the wilderness settled deep in his bones. When they finally quieted, he looked at Eris, then at the room.
"I am aware of what you are observing," he said. "Her core is under significant stress. But stress and deterioration are not the same thing. Her core is not failing. It is working. Very hard."
"To house the dragon," Ryse whispered to himself but the old mage caught it.
"Among other things," Aldwin replied, his vagueness a shield.
Caelen leaned forward, his grip tightening on Rael. "What other things?"
Aldwin looked at Caelen, reading the history of grief in the man’s face, then at Aldric. He took a measured breath, the kind that precedes a landslide.
"When I placed my hands over her," Aldwin said, his voice dropping to a whisper that echoed in the stone. "I counted. I am convinced she will wake. Because her core is not working to preserve her own life."
He paused, letting the air in the room thicken.
"It is working to preserve a new life blooming within her."
The silence that followed was so complete it felt like a vacuum. Mira’s hand flew to her mouth, her eyes welling with a sudden, violent hope.
Aldric stood frozen, his mind clearly racing through the impossible mathematics of an empire that now had an heir and a dying empress at the same time.
Caelen’s expression was a shattered mosaic... shock, pain, and a strange, fierce protectiveness all warring for space.
"That means—" Ryse started, then stopped, unable to voice the magnitude of it.
"Yes," Aldwin said.
Serah sank into a chair, her ceremonial robes rustling. "The gods have impeccable timing," she whispered, breathless.
Aldwin didn’t mention the third heartbeat. He didn’t speak of the dragon’s ancient, rhythmic thrumming that was now harmonizing with the tiny, new pulse. Some truths were too heavy for a crowded room.
"Keep this secret," Aldric commanded, his voice returning with a sharp, political edge. "No one outside this room knows. Not until she wakes."
For three days, the bedchamber became a sanctuary of old knowledge. Aldwin didn’t use the palace’s glowing reagents; he pulled dried, grey-green herbs from a leather satchel that smelled of rain and earth. He wove enchantments that didn’t roar like the imperial spells but hummed with a gentle, insistent coaxing.
He stayed. He slept in the chair by the window, watching the way Caelen refused to leave the room, the way Mira spoke to Eris in low, urgent tones. He watched Ophelia come and go, her presence like a cold draft under a door, and he filed it away.
On the third morning, the frantic heat finally began to ease. Eris’s color shifted from a violent crimson to a soft, living flush. Her pulse, once a staccato of panic, began to steady.
"Better?" Caelen asked, his voice rough from lack of sleep.
"Better," Aldwin confirmed.
Aldric stood in the doorway, clutching his ever-present papers. "She’ll wake?"
"She’ll wake," Aldwin agreed, looking at the ice crystals that still glowed blue, protecting her even in Soren’s absence. She has no idea, he thought, what is waiting for her when she does.
...
In the realm of Pyronox, the embarrassment was almost as hot as the fire.
Eris sat in the silver grass, her eyes finally dry, feeling a profound desire to vanish. She had cried. She, Eris Igniva, had wept like a broken child in front of a dragon god who had seen the birth of stars.
"Don’t," she said, her voice flat as she stood up and brushed the grass from her skirts.
Pyronox, whose amber eyes were still fixed on her with a patience that was maddening, tilted his massive head. "I said nothing."
"You were about to. Don’t you dare mention this to anyone."
"Who would I tell?" he asked, a deep, resonant rumble in his chest that sounded suspiciously like a laugh.
Eris gave him a look that could have withered a forest and began to walk. She needed motion to process the absurdity of her own vulnerability. As she moved through the field of silver-edged flowers, she looked at the mountain peaks and the polished sky.
"You imagined all of this," she said, her voice softening. "You imagined spending forever here... with her."
The silence was his confirmation. Eris looked at the flowers... ice-blue and silver, the colors of a love he had never been able to voice. They reminded her of Soren.
It was beautiful. Genuinely, devastatingly beautiful. She felt the sting in her eyes again and blinked it back with a ferocity that made her jaw ache.
But as she walked, a strange sensation took hold. Everything felt too close. Every memory of Soren... the weight of his hand, the specific cadence of his voice... hit her with the force of a physical blow. Her armor was gone.
This isn’t normal, she thought, her analytical mind struggling to regain control. I don’t spiral. I don’t feel things at full volume. Has he changed me this much? Or is something actually wrong?
She reached a cluster of gravity-defying stones near a shimmering pool when she heard it. A rustle.
She froze. To her left, the silver flowers were moving against the wind.
"Did you hear that?" she whispered.
Pyronox was alert instantly. The grieving god vanished, replaced by the apex predator. "I hear it."
A shadow flickered at the edge of her vision. It was too fast, a silver-white blur that defied the stillness of the realm.
"What is in here?" Eris demanded, turning. "I thought only I could—"
Pyronox let out a low, reverberating growl, moving his massive form between Eris and the disturbance. But then came the sound. It wasn’t a roar or a hiss. It was small.
"Eris—" Pyronox warned, his head swinging to track the movement.
It was too late. Something launched itself from the tall grass with the speed of a fired bolt. It hit Eris square in the chest, the weight of it solid and determined.
"Oof!" Eris hit the ground hard, the silver flowers cushioning her fall.
Pyronox roared, the realm shaking with his fury, pools rippling and mountains trembling. Eris ignored him, her eyes wide as she stared up at the thing currently sitting on her sternum.
The first thing she noticed was the cold. It was ice-cold, a familiar, biting chill that seeped through her tunic. The second thing she noticed was the weight—small, dense, and proprietary.
It wasn’t a monster. It was a dragon.
But not like Pyronox. This one was tiny, small enough to sit on her chest without crushing her ribs. Its scales weren’t the molten amber of the sun; they were silver, catching the light in a way that looked like moonlight on snow. It looked down at her with an expression of supreme, mischievous satisfaction. It let out a tiny, high-pitched chirrup.
Pyronox’s roar faded into a stunned silence. He loomed over them, his ancient amber eyes wide with something Eris had never seen in him: absolute, total bewilderment.
Eris lay in the dirt, the silver dragon sitting on her heart, looking at the creature and then at the god.
"...What," she whispered.
The tiny dragon chirruped again and settled into a comfortable coil, as if it had no intention of ever leaving.







