Mask of Shadows chapter 1: the meeting
orignal villain x heroine story
TWs: grief, fantasy violence, sleep drugging, genre-typical leering and dubcon-ey implications (tame for now)
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The soldiers deposit you inelegantly on the throne room floor. Just hours ago you walked here arm-in-arm with Lysander, heads high, crowns glittering. Now the carpet is blackened with bootprints, the room dark and reeking of ash, the screams of your people ringing in the distance.
âYour grace,â a cool, masculine voice announceds. âWelcome. I apologize for the crudeness of the circumstances, but Iâm afraid I couldnât wait for an audience.â
On the throne â your father-by-lawâs throne, one day to be your husbandâs â lounges a tall, lithe figure, cloaked in darkness. You canât make out his face.
It doesnât matter. You pull yourself up from the floor with as much authority as you can muster. âCall off your army at once. Whatever your demands, we can come to an agreement without thisâ this atrocity.â
He laughs, high and clear and ringing off the stone walls. Tears fill your eyes. You glimpsed the devastation yourself, as they dragged you across the courtyard: the smoke rising from the city, the wailing children and bloody cobblestones.
âPlease,â you say, quietly.Â
The laughter stops.
âDo you know who I am, princess?â The figure asks, cold and imperious.
You do know. Or at least, thereâs only one person he could be. âThe Lord of Shadows.â
He rises from the throne, and itâs clear, now, how the shadows move around him unnaturally, almost like smoke, obscuring the details of his figure in the dark room. The rumors of his power are true, then. Heâs haunted every report from the front for years, the subject of a gruesome childrenâs rhymes and hushed old soldiersâ tales alike. He summoned an army of demons out of the pits and bound them to his will, or so the stories say.
Itâs no wonder the city garrison was no match for them. Men against monsters.
âPlease,â you say again, trying to stay steady, âWhere is my husband? And the king? Theyâre the ones you seek an audience with, not me.â
âIâm afraid thatâs impossible. Theyâre dead, you see.â
Your breath freezes in your chest. âDead.â
âMy men slayed the king in his sleep,â he croons, descending the dias towards you. âA pity, really, that he missed all the excitement. Your prince performed quite admirably, rallying his guardsmen, leading the efforts to keep us from breaching the palace walls.âÂ
âNo,â You murmur, horror threatening to overwhelm you.
âBut he was no match for my shadows.â The man lifts a hand and the shadows swirl around it, almost affectionate.
âNo,â you repeat, your vision blurring, your pulse rushing in your ears. Your knees buckle and you fall again, crumpling to the carpet.
Dead. Lysander couldnât be dead, he was so lovely, so strong and bright and full of life, already a king in the eyes of his people. You picture his gleaming gold hair, his brilliant smile, and a sob threatens to break you in half. âYouâre lying!â
âWhy would I?â He retorts coldly. âIf he wasnât dead, he soon would be. The city has fallen and the kingdom with it.â
âWhy are you doing this?â You cry, caught between hate and sorrow. âWhat you do you want?âÂ
The shadows obscure his face, masklike, as he comes to stand before you. âI want what all men want. A kingdom. Wrongs righted. A pretty little wife. Iâve worked very hard, for many years, to take whatâs mine.â
You barely hear his last sentence, your mind halting at the list. Surely he couldnât meanâÂ
âWhat do you want,â You say slowly, trembling. âWith me.â
The grief is too crushing to feel anything else, but you are aware, suddenly, acutely, that youâre alone with him and his armored men. There is no one who could help you, no matter how loudly you screamed.
âYouâre a smart girl. I know you were listening,â he says. Thereâs a smirk in his voice. âNow, tell me ââ He kneels, lowering himself to where youâve collapsed on the carpet. âWhich of the things I want have I not yet acquired?â
A pretty little wife. Loathing so hot it burns courses through you.
âMy people are dying, my city is burning, and my king is dead.â you glare at him through tears. âYouâll have to spell it out for me, my lord.â
âHow right you are,â he says, slick and pitying. âThoughtless of me to not consider what a difficult time youâre going through. Let me be quite clear, then.â He leans further in, and takes your chin in his hand, wrenching your face up towards his where you both kneel. His fingers are pale and slim, deceptively strong. âI want you to marry me.â
âNever,â you spit, more on instinct than anything, wrenching yourself from his grip. Itâs too much. You can feel yourself verging on hysteria, dizzy with shock. The palace taken, the king dead, Lysander gone. You so vividly recall the last thing he said to you: Iâll be to bed soon, Cressida darling. I just want to make a round with the patrols. Thereâs been unrest at the north gate.
Perhaps if youâd begged him to stay with you, heâs still be alive.
âYouââ Itâs a struggle to speak at all around the emotions choking you. âYou wage war on my kingdom, you kill my husband, and you expect me to marry you?â
Though you canât make out any of his features through the writhing mask of shadows, you can somehow see his grin.
âYou monster,â you hiss, hands fisting in your nightgown.
He laughs again, low and harsh. âComing from your lovely mouth, Iâm afraid the insult doesnât have much bite, my dear.â
âIâd rather die than marry you.â
That, finally, raises his ire. His shadows flicker dangerously. âIâm afraid thatâs not an option, my dear.â
A commotion sounds from the door far behind you: a sword colliding with shields, a grunted curse that makes your heart clench dangerously. You know that voice. Alayne.
One of the lordâs shadow guards staggers towards you, haggard from battle. âMy Lord, a womanâ was in the palaceâ broke through our ranksââ
The Lord of Shadows rises with the grace of a cat and holds up a hand to silence him. The scuffle at the door grows louder.
âCressida!â Alayne yells, just before you can make her outâ pale, bloodstreaked face, dark hair that matches yours, sword in her hand. A soldier brings the pommel of his sword down on her back hard, and you shriek, unable to stop yourself. She goes limp, falling to the floor. Her sword clatters on the stone.
âAlayne!â You cry helplessly.
With the tiniest nod of the Lordâs head, guards move to pluck her unconscious body from the ground. Tears escape your eyes freely, now, and you canât stop them, even as his attention turns back to you.
âYour sister.â Heâs detached once again as he considers you, still on the floor, helpless.
âYes,â You manage. Your strength fails you in the face of your terrorâ Alayne, still alive. You had barely dared hope. How hard she must have fought to find you only to fall now.
He makes another motion, and the two guards who tore you from your bed and brought you here step forward.
âYouâve had a trying day,â he says, too patiently, âAnd I have much to attend to. Spend some time resting, and weâll speak again after.â Addressing the guards now, he adds, âTake her to the tower.â
âNo,â You object, not thinking clearly. âNo, my sisterââ
âWill be quite safe in my care, I assure you, so long as you donât do anything foolish.â
The guards close in on you, one reaching for your arms, and you try to shove them away. âLet me goâAlayne!ââ
You manage to hurt one, clawing at his unarmored joints, and he grunts. âBitch.â He aims a kick at your side, his armored foot sending a sear of pain through your ribs, and you cry out.
Suddenly, the man emits a strangled sound. You look up, and shadows wreathe him like vines, circling his neck. The lord of shadows has a hand extended, controlling them.
âI thought I was clear,â he snarls, and the shadows tighten. Thereâs a cold depth to his voice that isnât human. âThat she was not to be harmed.â The man chokes, clawing at his neck, but itâs a useless effort. His hands pass through the shadows.
You scramble backwards on your hands as the man drops to his knees, the other guard backing away. The one who kicked you lets out a final sputter and goes limp, his armor clanking where he falls.
For a moment, silence envelops the cavernous room. The Lord lets out a breath, tension slowly leaving his form. The shadows on the guard dissipate, though the ones near their Lord remain, restless.
âMy apologies, princess,â he says at last, seemingly composing himself. He looks to a man in leather armor near the throne. âFind a healer for her. Have them sent up.â
Your head swims. You realize that thereâs a sticky heat blooming at your side where you were kickedâ blood seeping through your nightgown.Â
The pain setting in, your terror and shock drowning you, you feel only numbness as he crosses to you and bends down. His shadows brush against you, cold and vaporous. They almost seem to make a sound, like a distant whisper.
He pulls you upright, gentle but firm, and you can do nothing but comply. For a moment youâre afraid youâll fall again, but he circumvents the worry by hooking his arm beneath your knees and sweeping you into an effortless carry. As if you truly were his bride.
âHave that one put in a holding cell. See that she wakes.â Heâs talking aboutâ
âAlayne,â you croak, and he hushes you gently. His closeness is wrong, strange, nauseating, and he bears your weight entirely too easy for someone so thin, his strength unnatural.
He carries you through the dark palace. Screams and shouts echo in the distance. âStop this,â you beg. âYouâve won. Stop them.â
âI have. Itâs over, I promise you. Merely the dying embers of a flame. You slept through the worst of it. I had your maid slip you something.â
âYouââ You want to scream. You want to sob. You want to tear at his eyes and run a sword through his heart. You canât breathe. The tower, he said to take you to. Thatâs not where your rooms are. How did he have you drugged? How does he know his way around the palace?
You canât think any further before you realize youâre shaking uncontrollably, your ribs on fire. You must let out a whimper, because he responds: âJust a bit further, darling.â
âHow dare you call me that,â you get out through chattering teeth.
The shadows must open the door for him, because thereâs no interruption in his pace at the top of the stairs. He places you on a large, unfamiliar bed.
âI donât understand,â You mutter, feeling delirium tug at you. âAny of this.â
âYou will. In time.â Something cool touches your cheek. A shadow. As if it were caressing you. âCressida.â
Something about the way he says your name is familiar. The sobs youâve held back threaten to break free. âWho are you?â
The shadows still cloak his face and cling to his frame. He reaches out and touches a finger to your temple. âIn time.â
You can taste the cold of his shadows, and everything goes black.











