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Too Lazy to be a Villainess - Chapter 329

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  3. Too Lazy to be a Villainess
  4. Chapter 329 - Chapter 329: What Ends, and What Begins
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Chapter 329: What Ends, and What Begins
[Haldor’s POV—Outside Lavinia’s Chamber—Red Wall Castle]

“Sir Haldor…” her voice—firm, composed—cut through the tension like a blade. “Wait for me outside.”

She said it so simply.

So gently. I bowed, because that is what I always do. That is what my duty is. “Yes, Your Highness.”

But I didn’t want to leave.

I wanted to stay. I wanted to stand between her and that man. I wanted to tell her— Grand Duke Osric feels like a threat now. A danger. A storm waiting to crack open.

Not to the Empire.

To her.

To the quiet, steady strength she’d spent years building.

I stepped away. Not far. Just outside the door. Just enough that I could still hear her if she raised her voice. Just enough that—if she called for help—I’d be the first sword drawn.

The corridor was empty. Quiet. Still.

Until I heard his voice.

“He… touched you.” The Grand Duke’s tone cracked like thunder—angry, frustrated, and laced with something darker. Possession. Jealousy. Fear.

And then—”And how does that concern you, Grand Duke?”

Her Highness’s voice—sharp, cold, and controlled—struck like lightning.

A smile tugged at my lips.

Why…why did I smile?

Because—for the first time—she didn’t soften for him.

For the first time, she didn’t explain herself, or shrink, or give him space to twist her silence into guilt.

She stood tall.

She stood fierce.

And she stood free.

Their conversation blurred into a flurry of rising words—his voice pleading, defensive, and indignant; hers, precise and cutting like the edge of a blade honed over years.

And then it came.

Her voice—low, final, absolute, “You have no claim over me. No rights. No privilege. Not anymore.”

A silence followed. Deafening. Something inside me stopped moving. Not because I feared what came next. But because I knew—deep down—that something had ended.

Truly ended.

The chains between them had snapped. Her Highness… had let him go. Not with rage. Not even with sadness. With peace. Like she had burned the last of his name from her chest and sealed it shut with iron.

No tears.No hesitation.Not even a trace of pain.

And the strangest part?

It didn’t make me feel victorious.

It didn’t feel like an open door swinging wide for me to step through.

It just… made my chest ache.

Ache for her—because I could feel how long she had carried that weight alone, gripping a shattered love not because she wanted it, but because she had been expected to.

Ache for myself—because somewhere along the line, I began watching her too closely.

Not as a soldier.Not as a captain.But as something else.

As Haldor Vaelthorn, the man—not the knight.

The final exchange inside snapped me out of spiraling thoughts.

Osric’s voice—trembling, angry: “You’re repeating everything again, Your Highness.”

I didn’t understand what he meant—but her answer came like a descending blade.

Cold. Final.

“I will send Papa a message—explaining everything between us. Whatever future your father imagined for us ends today. He will see me only as his Crown Princess—not his daughter-in-law.”

A pause.

A breath.

Then her voice rose, sharp enough to cut stone—”Now. GET. OUT.”

The hall froze.

The tension thickened.

And then the door slammed open. Grand Duke Osric walked out—no, stormed out—his fury so hot it burned through the air.

His eyes found mine instantly.

Rage boiled in them. Possessive. Wounded. Vengeful. He took a step toward me. Then another.

His breath shook with barely contained anger. “It’s all because of you.”

A declaration.An accusation.A threat.

He leaned in, voice dripping venom. “And I’m not letting you go easily.”

I didn’t flinch.

I didn’t bow.

I met his gaze—eye to eye, steel to wildfire—and answered quietly, evenly, “…And I am ready to crush whatever you bring, Grand Duke Osric.”

His jaw twitched. His fists tightened until his knuckles went white. For a second—for a dangerous second—he looked like he might strike me.

But instead he spat a breath, turned sharply, and stalked down the hall, his cloak snapping behind him like a wounded beast retreating to lick its pride.

Only when he disappeared around the corner did I exhale.

Not from fear.

But from certainty.

A line had been drawn today.

Not by me. Not by him. But by her.

And I whispered to myself—not a vow, not a promise, but a quiet truth I wasn’t ready to face fully:

“Whatever storm he brings… I’ll face it. Because she deserves better than a man who sees her as a possession.”

***

[Lavinia’s POV—Evening—War Chamber]

The war table was littered with maps, marked routes, and sealed scrolls—each one proof of territories trembling before we even arrived. The torches burned low, casting long shadows across the walls, but my generals stood straight and sharp, waiting for orders.

I planted my hands on the table.

“…Let’s move to West Darn,” I said, my voice slicing through the room. “We leave early morning. If we march without pause, we reach by tomorrow night.”

A ripple of acknowledgment passed through the commanders.

I turned to Arwin. “Did you send my decree?”

He nodded. “Yes, Your Highness. The message must have reached the city by now. Before sunrise, the entire region will know your law.”

“Good,” I said, exhaling slowly. “Then let’s not waste any more time.”

I straightened, cloak brushing the floor with a whisper. “Prepare the troops. Pack our provisions lightly. We take only what we need.”

Zerith smirked. “We’re finally claiming West Darn.”

Rey swung his staff across his shoulders lazily. “I wonder how many of their leaders are already gone. Maybe I should prepare a congratulations spell.”

“Rey,” Arwin warned with a sigh.

“What? I’m being supportive!”

I ignored them both.

“Tomorrow,” I repeated, voice firm. “By tomorrow night, West Darn will fall—without a battle.”

They bowed.

The room moved—papers shuffled, armor clinked, and boots echoed as the generals dispersed to fulfill their orders.

And then—Silence. The war room emptied slowly, each soldier and commander disappearing down the corridor one by one.

Soon only one pair of footsteps remained behind me.

Haldor.

Quiet. Constant. Always my shadow on the edge of flame.

I didn’t turn, not right away. I took a breath, long and steady, keeping my eyes on the map of Meren. One push forward. One strike. One step closer to the capital. To Kaelren.

To the throne.

I finally spoke. “Sir Haldor.”

“Yes, Your Highness.”

His tone was the same as always—controlled, steady—but the air around him felt different. Warmer somehow. Or maybe I was the one who had changed.

“Tomorrow’s march is long,” I said, my eyes drifting back to the map. “Do you think Kaelren will do something before we reach Western Darn?”

Haldor stepped closer—not enough to be improper, but close enough that his presence pushed against the silence.

His answer came low and firm.

“No,” he said. “If Kaelren plans anything, he will act after we move. Not before.”

I lifted a brow. “And why is that?”

His gaze stayed locked on the map—but I could feel the sharpness behind it.

“Because Kaelren is not reckless,” Haldor replied. “He’s young, but he is not impulsive. He waits for openings. He wants you to move first so he can strike your shadow—not your army.”

My lips curved slightly. “My shadow, hm?”

Haldor’s jaw tightened. “Yes.”

He didn’t look away. Not this time.

“He will not risk facing your army directly,” he continued. “But he will target the moment we separate from our main forces—or the moment you are on neutral ground.”

A strategic mind. A defensive instinct. A prediction spoken not as a soldier, but as someone who thought too deeply about me.

“And what do you suggest?” I asked.

Haldor’s eyes softened—barely, but enough.

“I suggest,” he said slowly, “that you do not travel even one step without me by your side.”

I blinked.

“But I never left your side.”

He didn’t hesitate—not even for a heartbeat.

“And…” His voice lowered, almost a whisper. “…I request that you never leave my side in the future either.”

Something warm tugged at my chest.

I forced a light smile. “I can protect myself, Haldor.”

“I know,” he replied softly. “But I still want to be there.”

I turned back to the map to hide the smile threatening to betray me.

“As you say. Now, after Western Darn…” I traced the line leading straight to the heart of Meren. “Our next target is the capital. Our biggest and most dangerous battle.”

The room seemed to darken around the words.

“We may take Western Darn without bloodshed,” I continued, “but the throne… Kaelren’s throne… will not come so easily. It will be horrifying. Brutal. And we will lose people.”

Silence stretched between us.

Until I looked up and locked eyes with him.

“But we survive,” I said firmly. “We survive, we stay standing, and we win the battle. So…let’s stay alive.”

Haldor stepped closer—just enough that I could feel the quiet conviction radiating from him.

“Yes, Your Highness,” he murmured. “Let’s stay alive.”

A faint smirk touched my lips. “That would be helpful. Because I’m certain of one thing,” I said. “Kaelren is waiting outside the Western Darn borders. He’ll be there—with his army—watching us approach.”

Haldor nodded once. Slow. Certain. “Then let him wait.”

I nodded back.

And just like that, the final line between preparation and war was drawn. We were inches away from the real battle now.

The capital.The throne.The prince who wanted me dead.

And the soldier who refused to let me fall.

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