MPNS Ch 58
by berryChapter 58
There were but a few who remainedâbut for Lucien, who possessed both gold and genius, they were more than enough to build upon. Thus he became the great serpent coiled fully around the House of Turun.
It was terrifying to consider: a man who could bare his secrets to enemies, then bury them along with their corpses in one pit, and still wear a face of pristine beauty.
Nikiel marveled at the dissonance, though he chose his words carefully, lest he betray how much he already knew.
âWell, no⌠Only that everyone says Your Grace is the true genius of our age.â
The compliment startled Lucien slightly, one pale brow flicking upward. Nikiel thought it simply a look that said âWhy sudden friendliness?â But what Lucien experienced was something else.
When praise for himself fell from Nikielâs lips, Lucien felt a tremor through his bodyâa rush of male satisfaction, as though a serpent acknowledged by its chosen mate.
Why do I feel thisâŚ
Since earlier, his own body was betraying himâpheromones thick as those of a serpent in rut. He was shaken. No woman had ever moved him so, nor man. Not once had his instincts roused so fiercely.
He was shocked for three reasons: first, that some deep beast within him now defined Nikiel as his mating partner. Second, that a handful of words could stir in him such a primal, male pride. Thirdâthat Nikielâs lips, from which those words had slipped, looked unbearably beautiful.
If I bit those lips, theyâd burst juicy and sweetâŚ
He wrenched his gaze away before he could lose himself further. It was ludicrous. He had long assumed himself sexless, even asexualâthough his beast form symbolized virility, in truth he had never once felt desire, not for men, not for women. Even when faced with societyâs most stunning nobles, sculpted aristocrats and famed courtesans, nothing stirred.
Even Nikielâthe âold Nikielâârenowned as the kingdomâs greatest beauty, had never moved him. Until now.
And here, with only a few unexpected words, Nikiel had awakened in him a maleâs basest contentmentâso easily.
FoolishâŚ
His ears and cheeks flooded crimson. He had no chance to conceal them, but Nikiel, sharp at times and oddly oblivious at others, remained lost in his own musings, and pressed on:
âCould you⌠perhaps mix quartz and obsidian, and false stone, in a certain ratioš?â
And like any male newly captivated, the usually cold and untrusting Lucienâthe greatest sorcerer of his era, the anonymous author of alchemy theses that dominated the academiesânodded eagerly before he knew it.
Normally, sober Lucien would never so swiftly concede. But caught unaware of his own infatuation, he revealed himself without realizing.
The alloying of metals to precise ratios was an immense challengeâbut not impossible. At his earnest agreement, Nikielâs lips curved faintly.
Even that small smile sent waves of gratification slamming into Lucien like surf pounding a shore. For a moment he stood stunned, as though drenched, before belated suspicion crossed his thoughts.
ââŚAnd what need have you to ask me such a thing?â
âThereâs an object Iâd like to make. Iâll bring the design. If you could forge it for me⌠Iâll pay you, of courseââ
âCome to my laboratory tomorrow morning. It shall be done.â
Nikiel glanced up at the abrupt firmness of his tone. For once, his excessive eagerness had spared Nikiel a trapâhe sighed a quiet relief.
âGood. Then Iâll see you tomorrow.â
He turned to leave now, book confiscated but his true purpose accomplished. Yet once again Lucien seized his wrist.
ââŚIâll escort you back.â
Nikiel looked down, puzzled. Werenât they supposed to avoid touching him? His gaze fell on the hand clasping himâLucien, caught by his stare, snatched it away and cleared his throat.
ââŚForgive me.â
âNo need. And Iâm hardly a threeâyearâold child, lost in the palace. If anything, the harsh sun does you more harm than meâIâd rather not trouble Your Grace.â
Lucien hesitated. Against Nikielâs firmness, he lacked the confidence to insist, I am fine. He had already strayed far from his usual self today.
Slowly his hand slipped away from Nikielâlike a serpentâs tail uncoiling from a wrist, slithering free. Their fingers briefly brushed as they parted, leaving a strange prickling in its wake.
Nikiel shivered faintly but stuck to plan, turning on his heel. The book was gone, but relations were not soured; perhaps later, he might coax Lucien to show it again in secret.
Besides, once he understands why I need that alloy, he wonât refuse me.
Nikiel chuckled to himself as his boots clicked on the marble of the libraryâs outer hall, mind already racing with schemesâunaware of the heavy, lingering gaze clinging to his back.
âHas Your Highness considered this yearâs dance partner?â
Lounging on the sofa, scratching his stomach as he skimmed monsterology tomes, Nikiel blinked dumbly at Paulâs question.
ââŚEh?â
âFor the masquerade ball, Your Highness.â
Paul sighed softly, as if heâd expected Nikielâs confusion.
âYou need a partner?â Nikiel asked.
âYou had one every year before, Highness. Whatever your tastes at the time. But this yearânothing. Have you arranged anything with the Four Lords in advance?â
As Paul directed heavy curtains to keep out the chill of autumn, he spoke as if casually.
Nikiel scratched again. So the âpartnersâ of past years had been his debauched selfâs lovers, brought brazenly to the ball. But this year, amnesiac, there were none.
A partner⌠For a dance? He wasnât even sure he knew how to dance. The concept felt surreal. He sat up abruptly, thinking.
ââŚCan I just go alone?â
âThat would be a public humiliation, Highness.â
But privately, Nikiel thought: heâd been humiliated often enough alreadyâwhat was one more public display? Still, he kept that to himself, biting his tongue.
âDo the Four Lords also bring their own partners?â
âNot at all, Highness. Traditionally, the Lordsâ only official partner is you. While you may enter with another on your arm, they cannot. Even a minor prince outranksââ
So it seemed, in this crooked kingdom, even the debauched youngest prince remained bound as the betrothed of the Four.
Nikiel flopped back again, thinking lazily that maybe heâd just find someone free at the time. Chewing idly on dates Paul offered, wiping sticky fingers on his tunic, he muttered absently.
Paul only shook his head. As princeâs valet, heâd done his duty reminding him.
So the day waned, and soon enough came the next round of fencing lessons.
Dressed in simple tunic and bray breeches, Nikiel swung his ashwood practice sword with growing familiarity as he ambled out from the Princeâs Palace.
From his second visit onward, he had chosen not to take the carriage, but to walk. He liked the stroll, even though the distance was long.
Because along the wooded path, squirrels, rabbits, and birds would follow him, chirping at his heels.
And so, strolling with ash sword in hand and grass twirling in his fingers, chatting idly to the little animals that gathered around him, Nikiel thought to himself with amusement:
Feels just like the main character of⌠that Disney film.²