"They were childhood best friends? Well, that makes much more sense," Florian said, trying to keep his tone casual. Still, there was a growing tension in his chest, a suspicion that had been quietly gnawing at him ever since Heinz started recounting Anastasia and Delilah’s story.
Something unspoken.
Something aching beneath the surface.
"Delilah was in love with my mother," Heinz said—so calmly, so matter-of-factly, that Florian almost missed the weight of his words.
Florian’s eyes widened. He stared at Heinz, stunned. ’How can he just say it like that? Like it’s no big deal?’
"D-Did she tell you, or...?" Florian asked, stumbling over his words. He was flustered, mainly because he had only suspected Delilah might have been in love with Queen Anastasia. But to hear it confirmed so bluntly...
It unsettled him.
It also made everything Delilah did—her protectiveness, her hostility toward him, her constant interference—start to fall into place.
Heinz shook his head. "No. But it wasn’t something one could miss." His voice was calm but laced with an odd gravity. "Even as a child, I always wondered why Delilah was so devoted to my mother. It was my mother who told me they were friends, but I think... deep down, she knew. She just never acknowledged it out loud."
Florian looked down, uncertain. "And... it never bothered you? That she was in love with your mother?"
"Why should it?" Heinz answered without hesitation. "Delilah never acted on her feelings—not inappropriately. She just... loved her from afar. And that love made her stay, even when she had to watch the person she adored fall apart for a man who never loved her back."
Heinz’s gaze flicked to Florian, steady and almost unreadable. "It’s that love that made her hate you. Well, the original Florian."
Florian felt his stomach twist at that. Delilah had always looked at him like he was a threat, like he wasn’t supposed to be there.
And now it all made sense.
"However..." Heinz’s voice softened. "It seems you, as you are now, remind her of my mother in her youth."
Florian blinked. "Oh."
The word came out barely above a whisper. ’Me? Like her?’
"I don’t think I’m like her, am I?" he asked hesitantly. His fingers twisted against the fabric of his sleeves, unsure of who this younger Anastasia even was, beyond the pieces Heinz had painted.
Heinz gave a small smirk. "I think even Duke Elara sees her in you. That’s probably why she wants to give you a task. As for me... I don’t remember much of my mother before she broke. But Delilah? She remembers everything."
Heinz stood up from where he sat at the edge of the bed, the silk of his royal robes brushing softly as he moved. He walked closer to Florian, slow and deliberate. With every step, Florian’s heart skipped faster.
And then he remembered—last night.
The closeness.
The heat of Heinz’s hands on his skin.
The weight of his breath against his neck.
Florian’s face turned a shade darker. ’Why is he walking toward me like that again?’
Heinz stood in front of him now, and gently—almost tenderly—placed a hand against Florian’s cheek. Florian stiffened, not out of fear, but out of sheer nervousness. His skin tingled where Heinz touched him.
"Uh... Your Majesty?" Florian murmured, voice tight in his throat.
Heinz gazed down at him, thumb brushing softly over his cheekbone. "Apparently, she was headstrong. Stubborn. She loved Concordia and its people fiercely. My grandfather saw it. That’s why he chose her as my father’s bride—not because of her noble blood, or Duke Darkthorn’s influence, but because he saw a queen in her."
There was something mournful in Heinz’s voice now. A melancholy that settled into the air between them like dust in sunlight.
"She was never even given the chance to be a queen... nor the chance to be her one and only love’s wife."
The bitterness in his tone made Florian’s chest ache.
’He really did love his mother. Even if she was broken. Even if he barely knew her before the breaking.’
He wanted to reach out. Say something comforting. But the words never formed, and Heinz had already pulled away. His hand fell from Florian’s face, the warmth vanishing with it. He turned his back to him, hands now folded behind him like a true monarch once more.
"If you want to talk to Delilah, do it now," Heinz said, his voice returning to its cool command. "I won’t prolong her punishment. No matter what history lies between us, the fact remains—she’s hiding whoever the real perpetrator is."
He paused. Then added, more softly, "But... if she confesses, maybe I’ll make the sentence lighter."
Florian’s eyes widened.
’Oh. He’s... giving me a chance?’
"Really, Your Majesty?" Florian asked, standing from the couch. He hadn’t expected Heinz to bend—not after the way he had spoken earlier with such finality.
✧༺ ⏱︎ ༻✧
Heinz stared ahead, his back still turned to Florian, unmoving. A flicker of disbelief crossed his expression. To think Florian could still be happy—genuinely happy—over the chance to save a woman who had done nothing but treat him with coldness and suspicion... a woman who had accused him, undermined him, and even protected someone who sought to sabotage him...
Florian really was just... surprising.
Then—click—the door closed.
Now, after speaking with Florian... looking at him, seeing the sincerity in his eyes, the subtle flush on his cheeks, the way he listened and tried—tried even when he didn’t have to...
And worse... much worse... he had been compelled to grant Florian that chance with Delilah. Not even because Florian had asked—he hadn’t. He hadn’t begged or pleaded. Heinz had simply known.
Comments
The readers' comments on the novel: Please get me out of this BL novel...I'm straight!