I was the Emperor of the Gren Empire—vast, wealthy, and feared across the continent. To the world, I was power itself. Yet in truth, I was nothing more than a foolish man.
My folly began with love. Not the noble kind sung in poems, but the kind that blinds and poisons. I gave my heart to a woman who was already pregnant with another man’s child. The boy’s blond hair and build resembled mine so closely that I deceived myself into believing he was my son. I raised him tenderly, all the while knowing deep inside that he was not truly of my blood.
But duty bound me elsewhere. Under the command of my mother, the Empress Dowager, I was forced into a marriage with the empire’s noble daughter, the woman who would become my Empress. She did not love me. Her heart belonged to the Grand Duke. And I—I had already pledged my soul to the woman who ensnared me. Ours was a loveless marriage, held together only by power and duty.
When I ascended the throne, I conspired with my beloved to remove the Empress. Together, we accused her of witchcraft and had her executed. Or so I believed. For years I thought
myself victorious, blind to the truth that the woman we killed was nothing more than a double. The real Empress had escaped, eloping with the Grand Duke—the man she had always loved. And the boy I once raised as my own son? He was their child all along.
What a bitter truth.
But before that truth ever reached me, I committed sins that will forever blacken my soul. I had a daughter with my Empress, a girl I never truly saw as a daughter, only as a political tool. I left her in her mother’s hands, knowing full well she despised the child. When I turned my gaze upon that girl, I saw
not innocence, but a symbol of betrayal. And so, I tormented her.
I killed her pets.
I starved her.
I locked her away from the world.
I murdered anyone who dared show her kindness.
But I never struck her. No—my cruelty was colder than fists. I wanted her broken, not bruised.
Now I know: I was not punishing her. I was punishing myself through her, the child of a woman who had never loved me.
And then… came the final betrayal.
The woman I had sacrificed everything for—the woman for whom I killed my Empress, for whom I betrayed my daughter—had been poisoning me all along. A slow, patient poison, dripping into my veins from the very day I became Emperor.
On my deathbed, as my body withered and my empire slipped from my grasp, she whispered to me with a smile:
“You were a foolish man. A man I wrapped around my fingers. A man too blind to see the truth until it was far too late.”
And she was right.
I was the Emperor of the Gren Empire. I had the world in my hands.
Yet in the end, I was nothing but a fool who destroyed his family, his throne, and himself—all for a love that was never mine.