Chapter 7
âWhat happenedâwhy did you come in here being carried in the Grand Dukeâs arms?â
 âWhat do you mean, I was carried by the Grand Duke?â
Right now, in the empire, the only Grand Duke is meâCharlotte AfrosâŠ
While Charlotte was overloaded by this nonsense, Adrian kept talking in a way that only confused her more. He joked that she must have finally sweet-talked the Grand Duke from the northern borderâthe one who slays monstersâand that the Grand Duke looked so fierce when he saw her that he thought the two of them were lovers.
Thinking it was a dream, Charlotte half ignored himâuntil the sensations grew too real. She pinched her cheek hard.
âAh!â
It hurtâenough to bring tears to her eyes.
âCome on, Charlotte. Tricks like that wonât get you out of my questioning,â Adrian said, smiling slyly, assuming she was acting to distract him.
Charlotte ignored him and rubbed her stinging cheek. If this was a dream, why did it hurt?
Seeing her dazed, Adrian brought her back to the moment. âWe can talk about this slowly later. For now, you should go in aloneâquickly. You have to hear Grand Duke Afrosâs announcement, right?â
ââŠWhat? Noctum Afros? Noctum is here?â
âHmm? âNoctumâ?â he repeated naturally. He narrowed his eyes; heâd never heard her say his name like that.
Charlotte, still shocked, asked urgently, âNoctum is alive?â
âMy, whatâs with you today, Charlotte? Do you think the empireâs only Sword Master has⊠died?â
His tone held a faint mockery, but he was puzzled by the change in her.
Charlotte also frowned. Adrian was speaking as if Noctum were a swordsman who hunted monsters on the border. But in her world, her husband was a reclusive Archmage who rarely left the house.
This has to be a dreamâan incredibly vivid one.
She moved toward the door almost automatically, guided by the habits of this worldâs âCharlotte.â
Adrian slipped an arm over her shoulder and grumbled, âYou wonât even answer me. Iâm hurt, Charlotte.â
âHurt, my foot,â she shot back with a half-smileâagain, a reflex more than her own will. She shook off his arm, but that was all her body would obey.
A red warning bell rang in her head. If she wasnât careful, this dream would swallow her whole.
Think. Think of the real meânot the Charlotte from this world.
Charlotte Daphsine wasnât a woman who bullied citizens and chased marriage with the Grand Duke. She had tried hard not to become a villainess despite the scorn. She had pushed Noctum away, and in the end, by her choices, she drove her husband to his death.
NoctumâŠ
When she pictured himâlong-haired, gentle, using magicâthe control of her body seemed to return to her.
***
She refused Adrianâs offer to rest and stepped out. Maybe because it was a dream, her head rang and she swayed.
âWhatâs the rush, Charlotte?â Adrian quickly steadied her and hooked arms.
ââŠI need to see the Grand Duke.â
âFrom the way you say that, there is something between you two, huh?â He leaned in, voice low, fishing for gossip.
Charlotte slipped from his graspâtoo quickly for a delicate lady. Adrian raised his brows. Today she seemed⊠differentâher walk, her tone, her air. Almost like a different person from when she arrived.
Did she finally snap when she heard the Grand Duke is getting engaged?
He knew how obsessively this worldâs Charlotte had chased Noctumâblocking other matches, threatening ladies who sent proposals, sending Noctum letters that his staff never delivered. So a breakdown made sense⊠and yet, strangely, she seemed more composed and dignified than usual.
âSince when did Charlotte Daphsine and the Grand Duke fall in love?â he prodded again.
Charlotte sighed inwardly. Persistent, arenât you? Out loud, calm and flat: âItâs not like that. I just want to see him.â
âWhy?â
âBecause itâs strange.â
âStrange?â
âYeah. That he carries a sword.â
She had never, ever pictured him with a sword. He was gentleâhe wouldnât join in cruel experiments like other mages, he could hardly bring himself to pluck a flower. She could barely imagine him holding even a letter opener.
And yet here he was, supposedly wearing a greatsword used to cut down tough monsters. It hurt to think her past words might have shaped him into this. And still⊠she felt a strange, excited pull to see him.
Please let me see him clearly. Let me remember his face when I wake up.
She quickened her steps toward the main hall.
When she arrived, she didnât do any of the things sheâd rehearsed.
Whispers swelled around her:
âWhy did she come here?â
âTo snare His Grace, of courseâor make a scene.â
âI wish sheâd stay out of society.â
âAt least sheâll be humiliated today.â
It had been a while since sheâd heard such venom. She ignored it. In the real world, sheâd watched some of these same nobles kneel and apologize.
She only saw one person:
Her husbandâNoctum Afros.
His hair, neatly cut, didnât even touch his nape; the fringe lay clean above his brows. He wore a tuxedo tailored to his frame, a badge marking him as a knight, andâthough weapons were banned in the hallâat his waist, a long sword allowed by special exception.
Even for a dream, this was too much.
Her eyes burned. It felt like he had come this way on purpose, as if to say:
âThis is what you like, isnât it, Charlotte? How is itâdo you like it?â
No, Noctum. I donât. I love your original self.
She couldnât hold it in. She wanted to tell him the truthâat least here, where it was âonly a dream.â
That her past words were lies. That sheâd spoken cruelly because she knew he was the hero of the âstoryâ and she was the villainess who would be cast aside. That she never truly hated him, and only after his death did she realize she loved him.
Say it, Charlotte Afros. You can do it.
She clenched her hands; her short nails bit her palms.
Tap. Tap.
She walked toward him. Fifty more steps. Forty. Closer, closerâ
âYour Grace!â
With only ten steps left, a woman suddenly grabbed Noctumâs arm.
Charlotte froze and stared. A beautiful woman with dirty-blonde hair and blue eyesâLina Goldstein. Her family had once been commoners who earned a title through a great trading house and rose by serving the crown. If she remembered right, the only daughter had married into a foreign land.
So why was she by Noctumâs side? Had Charlotte ever cared about this woman?
Dreams draw from the unconscious, but Charlotte had never once thought of Lina.
As Charlotte stood stunned, the crowd sensed drama and buzzed: the villainess Charlotte Daphsine, Noctum Afros, and Lina Goldsteinâa love triangle!
The murmurs grew so loud they drowned the music. Noctum frowned.
âThis may not be the time to share good news.â
His voice was low and rough. Even thatâshe had never imagined.
She blinked to cool her hot eyes; a tear clung at the corner.
Silence fell with a single sentence from him.
Smiling slightly, Noctum drew Lina close. âGood things happen when I return to the capital. Like gaining a fiancĂ©e.â
âFiâŠancĂ©e?â
Her mind went blank.
FiancĂ©e? Thatâs too much⊠The thought slipped out in a whisper.
Even in the noise, Noctumâs eyes snapped to hers. His face twisted.
âSo from today on, I wonât accept any more proposals.â
Annoyance darkened his features. It wasnât the noisy nobles or the gossip. Charlotte knew:
He was upset because of her.
Because she disgusted him.
She couldnât bear it. She fled the hall. Worst dream ever.
***
Noctum watched Charlotte disappear with quick steps.
Strangely, he couldnât look away.
So the rumor about her using black magic was true.
Heâd laughed when heâd heard it out on the northern border. But seeing her today, he was suddenly convinced.
Otherwise, why would I be like this nowâand why would I have cried like a madman before?
He remembered an hour earlier, when he found Charlotte collapsed in the garden and carried her to a guest room. At first, he acted on impulse; leaving a weeping woman lying there felt wrong. He felt nothing specialâuntil the moment he turned to go.
âNoctum. Donât go, please. Iâm sorry. So please, donât goâŠâ
With a voice full of tears, Charlotte begged him. The hand that lay limp on the sheets groped and caught his pinky finger.
He met her wet green eyes again.
It felt like a flood of green summer leaves rushed into himâstealing his breath. And his eyes filled helplessly.
âAhâŠâ
Tears fell and fell, faster than he could wipe them. He didnât even know why he was crying.
Why does it hurt?
As if someone were slicing his heart with a sharp knife. As if only sobbing could release the pain.
He had no idea why.
What finally pulled him out of that swamp of feeling was Adrian Vercheâ
âor rather, Adrian barging in, looking for Charlotte. The interruption snapped Noctum awake enough to leave the room.
Sheâs⊠a strange woman.
He stared at the empty space where Charlotte had been and reached that late conclusion.
đđ why are you got like this