Current location: Novel nest SHADOWS OF NOCTIS Chapter 24 — The Moment He Stopped Pretending

"SHADOWS OF NOCTIS" Chapter 24 — The Moment He Stopped Pretending

Chapter 24 — The Moment He Stopped Pretending

The banquet hall glittered like a jeweled coffin.

Crystal chandeliers hung from the cathedral ceiling above endless rows of silver and black dining tables while imperial officers, noble families, and academy officials gathered beneath candlelight polished carefully enough to disguise the fact that half the empire was preparing for war.

Outside, snow buried the mountains surrounding Noctis.

Inside, everyone smiled too beautifully.

Evelyn hated formal banquets.

At Noctis, elegance usually meant someone dangerous had decided violence should become ceremonial.

She sat beside Cassian near the lower diplomatic tables while servants moved quietly between guests carrying dark wine and silver trays beneath drifting orchestra music.

The atmosphere remained tense after the assassination attempt during the War Games.

No one discussed it directly.

Which meant everyone was discussing it privately.

“You’ve become politically catastrophic,” Cassian murmured while adjusting the cufflinks on his formal jacket.

Evelyn accepted a glass of water from a passing servant. “You say that like it wasn’t already obvious.”

“Before, people thought Lucien might be emotionally unstable around you.” Cassian lowered his voice. “Now they think he might start killing government officials recreationally.”

Fair.

Across the hall, Lucien stood beside General Rhys and several northern command officers near the elevated royal platform.

Black formal uniform.

Dark gloves.

Silver insignia sharp beneath candlelight.

He looked terrifyingly composed tonight.

Which somehow worried Evelyn more than the shadows did.

Because she had begun recognizing the difference between Lucien calm and Lucien containing violence carefully enough not to alarm civilians.

And tonight—

tonight he looked like a man balancing something sharp behind his teeth.

The assassination attempt had changed him.

Not emotionally.

Strategically.

The empire had threatened something he cared about publicly.

And Lucien Mordane had been trained since childhood to respond to threats decisively.

Evelyn became aware suddenly that his attention had shifted toward her again across the banquet hall.

The awareness landed instantly beneath her ribs.

Heavy.

Constant lately.

Lucien’s gaze lingered several seconds longer than necessary before General Rhys said something quietly beside him.

Only then did he look away.

Cassian followed the exchange with visible regret.

“You two have reached the stage where entire governments should probably become nervous.”

Before Evelyn could answer, another servant approached carrying wine.

This one unfamiliar.

Young.

Eyes lowered carefully beneath academy formalwear.

He poured for the lower diplomatic tables one guest at a time before stopping beside Evelyn.

The moment the wine reached her glass—

Lucien moved.

The reaction happened so fast Evelyn barely processed it.

One second he stood across the hall beside the northern officers.

The next the shadows exploded sharply beneath the banquet floor while Lucien crossed half the cathedral chamber toward her with terrifying speed.

The servant froze.

Every conversation in the hall stopped instantly.

Lucien reached the table and knocked the wineglass from Evelyn’s hand hard enough for crystal to shatter violently across the marble floor.

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Red wine spread everywhere.

The shadows surged immediately toward the servant.

Military guards reacted too slowly.

Lucien already had one hand wrapped around the young man’s throat.

The entire banquet hall recoiled backward.

Evelyn stared at Lucien in shock while the servant struggled violently against the shadows tightening around his wrists.

“Lucien—”

“He poisoned it.”

The quietness of his voice terrified the room more than shouting would have.

Not rage.

Certainty.

The servant’s face had already gone pale beneath Lucien’s grip.

General Rhys crossed the hall immediately alongside armed guards while nobles rose from their tables in growing panic around them.

Lucien didn’t look at any of them.

His attention remained fixed entirely on the servant clawing desperately at his wrist.

“What did they use?” Rhys demanded sharply.

Lucien’s expression hardened.

“Nightshade derivative.” His gaze lowered briefly toward the spilled wine across the floor. “Enhanced with shadow toxin.”

Evelyn felt cold move sharply through her chest.

The same poison from the masquerade attack.

The servant gasped violently against Lucien’s hold. “I-I didn’t know—”

The shadows tightened instantly.

Lucien stepped closer.

“Who sent you?”

The cathedral hall had gone completely silent now.

No music.

No movement.

Only fear.

The servant trembled visibly beneath Lucien’s grip while military guards surrounded the banquet perimeter with drawn weapons.

Evelyn watched the shadows moving along the marble beneath Lucien’s boots.

Restless.

Hungry.

The assassin swallowed hard enough to hurt.

“The Vane family,” he choked out finally.

Across the banquet hall, Lady Isolde Vane went white.

Every noble table shifted instantly away from her.

Lucien looked toward the Vane delegation slowly.

And for the first time since meeting him, Evelyn understood what imperial wrath actually looked like before violence fully arrived.

Not loud.

Not emotional.

Cold enough to freeze entire bloodlines.

Lady Isolde stood abruptly from the royal tables. “Your Highness, this is absurd—”

“The poison reached her glass.”

Lucien’s voice cut through the hall softly.

Deadly precisely because he no longer sounded angry.

The shadows spread farther beneath the banquet floor.

Several nobles physically backed away now.

“You will lower your tone immediately,” one older Vane lord snapped from the upper tables.

Lucien looked at him once.

Just once.

The shadows slammed violently upward across the nobleman’s chair hard enough to splinter wood beneath him.

Screaming erupted through the banquet hall.

Military officers surged forward instantly.

General Rhys stepped directly between the Vane delegation and Lucien before the entire room descended into massacre.

“Enough.”

The command cracked sharply across the cathedral chamber.

Lucien remained motionless.

But the shadows continued moving.

Evelyn could feel the atmosphere around him destabilizing now in dangerous waves.

Not because he lacked control.

Because he was choosing very carefully how much violence to allow himself publicly.

And that realization frightened her more than losing control ever had.

Lady Isolde stared at Lucien with genuine fear now.

“You would threaten noble houses over a scholarship student?”

The sentence landed badly.

Terribly.

Evelyn saw it immediately in the way Lucien’s expression changed.

Not rage.

Something colder.

More final.

Lucien released the servant abruptly.

The young assassin collapsed gasping onto the marble floor while shadows twisted violently through the candlelight around the banquet hall.

Then Lucien looked directly toward the Vane family table.

And spoke softly enough that everyone heard every word perfectly.

“If another member of your family comes near Evelyn again,” he said quietly, “there won’t be enough left of House Vane for historians to romanticize afterward.”

Silence followed.

Absolute.

No one moved.

No one breathed correctly.

Because he meant it.

Every person in the cathedral hall understood that instantly.

General Rhys closed his eyes briefly like a man developing a headache severe enough to become historical.

Evelyn stared at Lucien beneath the shattered chandelier light while shadows moved restlessly around his feet.

The terrifying part wasn’t the threat itself.

It was how little hesitation existed inside it.

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