Kiss of the Scarlet Prince
Chapter Four — The First Move (Serenya’s POV) The knock at dawn wasn’t polite. Three short raps, certain of themselves, like the person on the other side knew I would answer because everyone answers here. “Enter,” I said, and pretended my voice didn’t catch. A girl slipped in with an armful of linen and a look that belonged to small birds—quick, careful, ready to bolt. “My lady, His Highness requests your presence in the east courtyard within the hour.” Requests. I tried the word on my tongue. It tasted like orders with perfume dabbed on the pulse. By the time she laced me into a pale blue gown, the sky had shrugged into morning. I let her pin my hair the way she wanted; I didn’t know which styles meant “obedient” and which meant “impertinent” yet, and I didn’t feel like learning the hard way. The palace was a maze softened by light. Windows poured gold down corridors, caught on gilt frames and the silver throats of candlesticks, turned dust to glitter. People moved like pieces: servants quick and quiet along the edges, officials with ink-smudged fingers striding as if the floor were a sentence they needed to finish. No one looked lost. I hated that I did. The east courtyard breathed cool air on my face. A gathered crowd breathed everything else—incense from someone’s sleeve, wine from last night, a restless interest that prickled along my arms. Soldiers stood in a neat line of dark metal; courtiers bloomed in jewel tones. At the center, scarlet broke the morning like a wound. Kael wore that color as if it had been invented just to lie against his shoulders. His gaze found me in one clean movement, the way a hawk finds the glint of a fish in moving water. He didn’t beckon. He didn’t have to. The sea of silks parted, and I walked through it. “Lady Vale,” he said, mild as weather. “Do you play chess?” “I’ve seen it played.” “Good.” He gestured to a small table already waiting between two chairs, board set, pieces polished to a soft glow. “We’ll play now.” We’ll play, as if sleep weren’t still sand in the corners of my eyes, as if last night hadn’t been a tangle of fire and silk and threats politely wrapped. Murmurs slid around us. I felt them press against my back, curious hands. I sat. The chair was just slightly lower than his. I noticed that and told myself it didn’t matter while my spine decided to lengthen anyway. “What exactly am I playing for?” I asked. “Survival,” he said, and moved a pawn two squares as if he’d said good morning. I stared at the board because looking at his mouth when it said things like that felt dangerous. The pieces were little works of art—carved blackwood and pale bone, veined faintly like something that had once been alive. I mirrored his move and pretended I didn’t hear the soft collective inhale of the onlookers, as if they’d all been waiting to judge whether I knew how to move a pawn. “Not bad,” Kael murmured. “But pawns alone rarely win a game.” “That depends on how many survive,” I said, surprising both of us. A beat. Then an almost-smile, the kind that never quite reached his eyes. He developed a knight. I answered with a bishop because I liked the angle, the quiet way lines cross without touching. Across the courtyard, armor gleamed. My pulse stuttered before I told it not to. He stood beyond the ring of courtiers, helmet under his arm, watching. The knight who had looked at me last night as if he were reading something half-erased. Morning made him clearer: dark hair tied back, a warmer brown flickering through near the temple where the sun found it; eyes the color of old leather, not dull but deep, the kind that take their time. A thin scar curved along his jaw, turning at the corner of his mouth like the beginning of a secret. I looked away first. Again. I hated that I kept doing that. Kael followed my glance without moving his head. “Eyes are blades,” he said softly. “Point them where you intend to cut.” “I thought we were playing chess,” I said. “We are. Swords, tongues, glances—it’s all the same board.” He castled. The little clink of wood on wood sounded louder than it should have. I touched the queen—not to move her, just to feel the cool smoothness under my fingertip. Everyone always laughed about the queen, the way she can move anywhere, as if freedom were the same as safety. I slid a different pawn forward instead, a small, unremarkable progression. “Cautious,” Kael said. “Alive,” I said. “That, too.” A breeze lifted the edge of his scarlet cloak and dropped it again. Someone whispered behind a fan. I wanted suddenly to be alone, to hear what my heartbeat sounded like without a hundred strangers leaning in to listen. I wanted—ridiculously—to be back in the music room that was now a skeleton, to find the chipped ivory key only I knew stuck sometimes and press it until it gave. “Why chess?” I asked. “Why here? Why now?” “Because you’ll be on this board whether you understand it or not. Better to move because you mean to.” “And if I refuse to play?” He glanced up from the pieces, silver-grey eyes catching the morning. “Then you remain a square for others to step on.” I moved my knight—no, Kael would have corrected me; a knight, not mine—into a position that looked wrong until it looked right. He watched my hand, not to correct, but to see what my fingers would decide when my mouth was quiet. Beyond his shoulder, armor shifted again. The knight at the edge of the gathering had drawn closer, not by much, but enough that I could see the worn leather of his glove and the way his mouth softened when he looked—not at me this time—but at the board, as if weighing the game from a distance. “Your friends are interested,” I said. “They are not my friends,” Kael said, as gently as if he were correcting a child’s fork. “Your pieces, then.” “Many pieces think they are players simply because they move,” he murmured, sliding a bishop into a line that pressed against my center in a way I felt behind my ribs. “It’s… charming.” “And the knight?” The word was out before I could stop it. “What does a knight think he is?” “Dangerous,” Kael said, and his tone made the word less threat than fact. “Because he arrives where he shouldn’t.” I let the silence sit. I let him think he’d named what I was asking. Maybe he had. Maybe I didn’t even know what I was asking yet. He lifted his gaze to mine. “Who looked away first, last night?” “I did.” A pause. His thumb tapped the edge of a rook, once. “You’ll learn not to.” “From you?” “If you’re clever.” He leaned back slightly. It read as laziness; it wasn’t. “Move.” I moved. Not the queen. Not yet. Another small piece, another breath. The crowd shifted, making space for someone I didn’t see until he was there—closer now, close enough that I could count the faint roughness along the knight’s jaw where the scar cut through stubble. He didn’t speak. He didn’t need to. Presence, here, was its own kind of language. Kael’s attention flicked over my shoulder and returned to me. The temperature of the square we sat on seemed to drop. “When you’re being measured,” he said, so softly that the words were mine alone, “do not give the tailor your breath as well.” “I’m not a dress,” I said, and only realized afterward that I’d said dress and not sacrifice or prize. As if somewhere under all this, I still remembered fabric and pins, my mother’s fingers smoothing a seam. His mouth tilted. “No. You’re a piece I intend not to waste.” “I didn’t ask to be on your board.” “No one does,” he said, and captured my pawn so neatly it felt like someone lifting a cup out of my hand before I’d finished drinking. I should have been paying more attention. I should have been thinking three moves ahead. Instead I was thinking about the way the knight’s eyes didn’t slide off me like everyone else’s, about how they caught and held, not like a trap, but like a hand around a wrist in a crowd, saying—there you are. I forced myself back to the game. I pinned his knight with my bishop; I liked the quiet violence of it, the way a line can hold a horse still. Kael’s glance said better. Approval shouldn’t have felt like air. It did. “Why me?” I asked without looking up. “Why not someone born to this hall and not dragged into it with ash in her hair?” “Because you listen,” he said. “And because no one is afraid of you yet.” “Yet,” I repeated. “Fear is a blunt instrument,” he said. “Underestimation is sharper.” Across the board, his rook slid into a file that boxed my king enough to make my pulse trip. A murmur rippled through the onlookers; even the soldier at the end of the line shifted his weight, mail whispering. A shadow fell across the edge of the table. I didn’t look to see whose it was. I knew. “Check,” Kael said, almost kindly. I breathed. I moved a piece I hadn’t meant to rely on, an awkward little sidestep that looked foolish until it wasn’t. It felt like pressing my palm against a hot wall and finding, suddenly, a hidden door that gave under my fingers. Kael’s eyebrows lifted a fraction. “There she is,” he said. “Who?” I asked, and hated how quickly the word came. “The player,” he said simply. A bell tolled somewhere, clear and bright. The breeze kicked up and dropped again. The knight’s shadow did not move. Kael glanced past me, a look that dismissed a hundred people without ever quite seeing them. “We’re finished for this morning.” “We haven’t—” “You’re not ready for endings.” He stood, scarlet falling clean as a blade from his shoulder. “But you made a beginning that will keep you alive through breakfast.” “What do I win?” I asked, remaining seated because it felt like a rebellion I could afford. “An hour without being devoured,” he said lightly. He didn’t offer a hand. He didn’t need to. I rose anyway, because letting him stand over me felt too much like agreeing. He stepped aside and the onlookers parted again. As I moved through them, the knight’s presence pulled at my skin the way a storm pulls at a field. He was close enough now that I could have reached out and touched the seam at his shoulder. He didn’t speak. His eyes caught mine and held, steady as a tether. I didn’t look away. Not this time. Something like approval flickered along his mouth—there and gone, small as a breath—and then the crowd swallowed him as if he’d only ever been a rumor. Kael fell into step beside me as we left the courtyard. “Better,” he said. “You mean my play,” I said. “I mean your eyes.” Corridors swallowed us again, the air cooler here, the world smaller. My footsteps sounded too loud. I wanted to put my hand against the stone, just to feel something that hadn’t been arranged. “Why tell me any of it?” I asked. “You could have just… placed me and gone on with your day.” “Pieces that don’t know they’re pieces break at the first touch,” he said. “I prefer tools that don’t shatter.” “And if I refuse to be a tool?” He glanced at me, and the corner of his mouth did that almost-smile that felt like it was for him, not me. “Refusal is a kind of move. Make it well, and we’ll both respect it.” We reached my chamber door. He opened it and didn’t cross the threshold, as if the air inside belonged to me for the span of a breath. Firelight licked at the edges of the carpet. A tray waited on the table: tea, fruit, a small wedge of cheese attempting to look innocent. “Rest,” Kael said. “Eat.” His eyes were quiet steel. “And next time, don’t give your knight away for free.” “I didn’t,” I said before I could stop myself. His gaze cut briefly sideways—toward the corridor we’d left, toward the courtyard, toward armor and old leather eyes—and back. “No,” he said. “You didn’t.” He closed the door softly. The latch clicked like a period. I stood very still and listened to the sound of my own breathing until it belonged to me again. The board was still in my head: squares, lines, the places the pieces could go and the places they couldn’t. I poured tea with hands that trembled only a little, and let myself think the dangerous thought: Pawns cross the board and become queens. I set the cup down without drinking. The window showed a slice of pale sky and a darker line of roof beyond it. Somewhere below, the courtyard breathed and whispered and weighed. Someone in armor watched and waited and didn’t speak my name. Not yet.The knock at the door still rang in my ears long after Caspian’s man had gone, swallowed back into the night. I sat at the table, staring at the dying candle as its flame flickered and twisted, shadows crawling across the stone walls. My chest felt tight, as though the air itself had grown heavier. Caspian had turned his back to me, his broad frame cast in gold and shadow, shoulders tense as if he carried the weight of an entire kingdom upon them.I should have spoken first, demanded answers, but silence pressed harder than words. When he finally turned, his eyes met mine with a storm I couldn’t name.“Kael has moved,” he said simply, though the words were thick with meaning. “He’s closer than we feared.”The weight of his voice sank into me. Kael—always the phantom, the shadow just beyond reach—now loomed nearer. My breath caught, and I pressed my palms against the table to steady myself.“How close?” I asked. The question scraped my throat, though I tried to make it sound steady.“C
Chapter 35 — Firelight and Strategy (Serenya’s POV)The day stretched long in the quiet manor, the air heavy with the scent of herbs drying near the window. I sat by the hearth, pulling my knees to my chest, watching as Caspian leaned over the wooden table with a map unrolled before him. His brow furrowed in thought, the firelight sharpening the edges of his features.I had grown used to studying him in silence — the way he always seemed half in the present and half in some memory, the weight of secrets resting heavy on his shoulders. But today, I couldn’t bear the silence any longer.“We can’t hide here forever,” I said softly, my voice breaking the hush of the room.His dark eyes lifted, locking with mine, and I felt that familiar ripple of tension. He didn’t answer immediately; he never did. Caspian’s silences were deliberate, thoughtful, a habit of someone who had learned long ago that words could be weapons.“No,” he agreed finally, his voice low. “We cannot. Kael won’t rest. And
Chapter 34 — Whispers of the Past (Serenya’s POV)The morning had settled into a slow rhythm, the manor quiet except for the occasional whisper of wind through the ivy and the soft hiss of the fire. I found myself lingering by the hearth, tracing the faint patterns of warmth across the wooden floorboards, and watching Caspian move with that same careful deliberation that had drawn me in yesterday. There was a patience to him, a quiet command that seemed to exist even in this secluded corner of the world. And, though I tried to ignore it, it made my pulse quicken in ways I had not felt in a long time.I caught him glancing at me from the corner of his eye, and I realized that something had shifted overnight. There was less restraint now, a subtle tension in his shoulders, as if he were weighing the distance between us. It reminded me painfully of those stolen moments at the palace — moments that had been both tantalizing and forbidden, where every glance, every touch, was laced with da
Chapter 33 — The Quiet Manor (Serenya’s POV)The morning light crept lazily through the narrow window of the small manor, painting long, thin stripes across the wooden floor. Serenya blinked against the soft brightness, the ropes around her wrists now gone but the faint marks on her skin a constant reminder of the night before. The quiet was almost foreign — no music, no clatter of servants, no the distant echo of the palace. Just the low crackle of the fire and the rhythmic sound of Caspian moving across the room.Her heart jumped slightly as she watched him, not from fear, but from curiosity. He was bending over the hearth, sharpening a dagger with a focus that made her stomach twist. She couldn’t help but notice the careful precision in his movements, the way his dark hair fell over his eyes, and the faint scars along his knuckles. Even in this small, secluded space, he carried himself like a predator who knew exactly what he wanted — and she had to admit, that part of him fascinat
Chapter 32 – The Scarlet Prince’s WrathThe grand hall of the palace trembled with the force of Kael’s fury. Guards lined the walls, standing rigid as the prince paced before the throne. His crimson cloak swept across the marble floor like a trail of blood, and the light from the sconces flickered with each slam of his boots.Serenya was gone.His mind replayed the words over and over, each echo worse than the last. Taken. By him.A captain of the guard knelt at his feet, head bowed low. “My prince… the men combed the gardens, the courtyards, even the forest’s edge. She was seen near the rose arbor at dusk… then nothing. Only a black-feathered arrow lodged into the hedge.”Kael’s fist tightened until the leather of his gloves creaked. “Blackthorn.” He spat the name like venom.He seized the captain by the collar and dragged him up until their faces were nearly touching. “How many times have I told you—her safety is paramount? And yet you let him slither in under your very nose?”The m
Chapter 31The cold night air bit at my skin as I stumbled through the garden, my hands bound behind me and a rough gag muffling my protests. My heart hammered so violently I was certain the entire palace could hear it. The cloaked figure moved silently beside me, guiding me toward a hidden carriage tucked between the hedges. Every instinct screamed at me to run, but the ropes at my wrists made even the simplest movements agonizingly slow.I swallowed nervously against the gag and tried to steady my breathing. My mind raced. Who could this be? My first thought was Kael, but no — this was different. Kael never would have approached me alone in the garden under cover of night. Could it be a rogue guard? Someone sent by the prince?The figure’s grip tightened on my arm when I hesitated near a twisting vine path. I swallowed again and muttered, “Please…” but the muffled sound barely carried. The voice that responded was deep, calm, and measured — almost familiar, yet shrouded in mystery.