Chapter 461 She didn't forget (2)
The silence between them stretched.
The fleet continued its steady course through the waters, the cheers and celebrations of the knights fading into the background, becoming nothing more than distant noise. The waves lapped gently against the hull, the rhythmic sound filling the space between father and daughter.
Duke Thaddeus remained still, his gaze never leaving Aeliana. She stood with her back straight, her expression unreadable, her arms loosely crossed as if she had already braced herself for whatever conversation would come next.
But none came.
There were countless things he wanted to ask.
'Are you sure?'
He had seen it with his own eyes—her skin, once marked with sickness, was now flawless. Her stance, once fragile and careful, was now firm. The sickness that had chained her to her chambers for years, the one that no healer, no mage, no scholar had been able to cure… Was it truly gone?
His instincts told him yes.
But there was a part of him, deep and relentless, that refused to believe it so easily. A part of him that had spent too many years expecting to lose her.
'What happened to you?'
His daughter had vanished.
Swallowed by the abyss, lost to the same vortex that had consumed so many
Swallowed by the abyss, lost to the same vortex that had consumed so many lives. He had accepted—been forced to accept—that the ocean had taken her. That she, like the others, had been erased from existence.
And yet, she was here.
Standing before him.
'What was that place?'
He knew enough now to understand that wherever she had gone, it had not been the depths of the ocean. Luca had said something about a 'different space.'
Was it another world? Another dimension? Something unnatural, beyond human comprehension?
Did she suffer there?
Did she fight? Did she struggle?
Did she change?
She was not the same as before. That much was obvious.
The fire in her eyes wasn't new, but now it held weight.@@novelbin@@
'Did that adventurer help you?'
Thaddeus' gaze flickered toward the young man standing off to the side, arms lazily folded, his expression unreadable. Luca had spoken so easily, so carelessly, but there was something else beneath that ease. Something deeper.
The way he stood in that cavern, as if he belonged there. The way he had answered his questions with carefully chosen words, never revealing too much, never revealing too little.
The way Aeliana hadn't dismissed him.
Thaddeus had spent years learning how to read people. He knew when someone was lying. He knew when someone was keeping a secret.
And Luca was keeping something.
But most of all, what gnawed at him the most—
'How did you survive?'
His daughter had always been strong-willed, but this was something beyond will.
This was impossible.
And yet, he could not bring himself to ask.
Not here.
Not now.
Instead, he did something he had never done before.
He said nothing.
The silence continued, unbroken between them, the ocean stretching endlessly around them.
And Aeliana did not break it either.
She simply stood there, facing forward, her hands tightening just slightly around her arms.
She knew.
She knew he wanted to ask.
But she didn't offer anything.
Not yet.
The silence stretched, the rhythmic sound of the waves filling the space between them. Duke Thaddeus stood beside his daughter, his gaze drifting across the endless horizon. He had been drowning in questions, in everything he wanted to ask, but if she wasn't ready to answer—then pushing wouldn't help.
Instead, he exhaled quietly and shifted the conversation to something simpler.
"Are you hungry?" His voice was level, calm. "Should I have something prepared for you?"
It was a surface-level question, nothing deep, nothing intrusive.
But even as he said it, the realization settled over him.
I should have asked this years ago.
He had spent years ensuring that Aeliana received the best care, that she had what she needed to survive, but when was the last time he had simply asked her if she wanted something?
It was such a simple thing. Too simple.
And yet, it felt strange now, as if he had missed an opportunity that had long since passed.
Aeliana didn't look at him when she responded.
"I don't have any appetite."
Thaddeus was silent for a moment.
".....I see."
But before the silence could stretch again, Aeliana added, "But I want a glass of Everhollow Reserve."
Thaddeus' head turned sharply. His golden eyes narrowed.
Everhollow Reserve.
A wine from the northern vineyards, aged for decades, known for its rich, deep taste. Expensive. Sophisticated.
And something Aeliana had never been allowed to drink.
"No." His response came automatically, firm, without hesitation. Stay updated through My Virtual Library Empire
Aeliana finally turned to look at him, her expression flat but her eyes sharp.
"I am cured now."
There was no uncertainty in her tone. No question. Just a statement—unshaken, undeniable.
But Thaddeus did not yield so easily.
"You were forbidden from drinking because it would weaken you further. Just because your body is well now doesn't mean—"
"Doesn't mean what?" Aeliana cut him off, her voice rising slightly. Her amber eyes burned with something different now—not just frustration, but something that had been building for years. "Doesn't mean I can make my own decisions? Doesn't mean I can do what I want? Father, you always do this."
The tension on the deck thickened. The waves still lapped gently against the hull, the air still carried the scent of salt and steel, but the space between them had shifted—sharpened.
Duke Thaddeus' golden eyes darkened, his gaze locking onto Aeliana's with an intensity that made lesser men falter.
But Aeliana did not falter.
She stood firm, her posture rigid, her amber eyes burning with the same defiance he had once thought illness had extinguished. But no—it had never been the sickness that made her fragile. It had been his own expectations, his own restrictions, the walls he had built around her.
He had thought they were for her protection.
Now, she was standing before him, whole, and she was breaking them.
His jaw tightened.
"You always do this."
Her voice rang clear, cutting through the air between them like a blade. There was no hesitation, no deference—just a challenge. She wasn't holding back anymore.
"You decide what is best. You dictate what I can and cannot do." Her hands clenched at her sides, and for the first time since stepping onto this deck, she wasn't looking past him. She was looking at him. Through him. "Even now, after everything, after I—" She stopped herself. A brief pause. Then, a sharp exhale. "You haven't changed."
Something in Thaddeus snapped.
"And you have?" His voice was low, steady—too steady. A dangerous calm, the kind that came before the storm.
Aeliana did not flinch.
"I am not the same person you locked away, Father." Her words were cold, her tone clipped. "I am not the same girl who had to ask permission to step outside, who had to beg for the right to breathe fresh air, to see the sea." Her chin lifted slightly, her expression unreadable but unyielding. "You cannot control me anymore."
Thaddeus inhaled sharply, his breath measured—too measured. His fingers curled into his palms, the leather of his gloves creaking from the pressure.
"You think I did all of that to control you?" His voice dropped lower, a storm brewing beneath his tone. "To oppress you?"
Aeliana's eyes flickered with something he couldn't place. Not fear. Not anger. Something deeper.
"I th-"
But then a voice echoed.
"Let's stop."
It was the young man who was standing beside the deck calmly whole the time.
"You have put quite a show, but everything has a location, don't you think?"
---------A/N---------
Hope you liked Aeliana's development. I really put a lot thought into her character, but writing her is a little bit hard.
What do you think?
Total Responses: 0