The throne room was drowning in silence.
Not the gentle kind—but the heavy, smothering quiet that settles after something irreparable has happened.
The great iron gates outside had collapsed long ago, their echoes swallowed by the thick air.
Dust drifted through the fractured stained glass like slow-falling snow.
In the center of the ruin, Maximilian lay against the dais–twenty-one years old, a man carved by duty and guilt, yet dying like a boy who never had the chance to live.
His breath hitched shallowly, each exhale trembling as blood spilled from the wound tearing through his side. Crimson spread beneath him, seeping into the marble, creeping its way toward me.
"Your Majesty..."
My voice cracked apart.
He wasn't a child anymore.
He wasn't the quiet boy I met at a funeral years ago.
He wasn't the prince hiding behind grief.
He was my emperor
And he was dying in my arms.
I dropped beside him, knees sinking into the warmth of his blood. My skirts absorbed it instantly. My hands hovered over the wound, disgustingly small against something so fatal. His pulse fluttered beneath my trembling palms—frantic, uneven, fighting for moments he no longer had.
"I read everything..." Max whispered, searching for me blindly until his blood-slicked fingers caught my sleeve. His voice was raw, warped by pain. "Her diary...every word. Every page she wrote about the green-eyed girl she treasured."
His eyes—once bright with stubbornness, with quiet devotion he never dared voice—were dimming. Dark rings circled them, shadows settling like dust on a forgotten portrait.
"I thought she was the most miserable soul trapped in these halls," he rasped. "But I was wrong."
A thin, broken smile curved on his lips.
"You've suffered so much more than she ever did."
I shook my head, tears blurring my sight, but he continued.
"You've died again and again. Lived centuries alone in a world that wasn't yours. And you did it all with that fragile body of a little girl...while pretending it didn't destroy you."
His grip tightened weakly, desperate.
"You shouldn't have come back for me." His voice cracked. "I never wanted to be the cause of your misery."
My chest seized.
"Max—"
"If you reset again," he whispered, "don't look for me. Don't waste another lifetime chasing a future that leads to your death." His fingers trembled against mine. "Live somewhere far away. Somewhere they can't reach you. Somewhere I won't be able to reach you. A place where you can finally...breathe."
I couldn't breathe at all.
Not with the dagger so close.
Not with the world collapsing around me.
Not with the sound of his heartbeat failing under my palms.
My hands moved on its own.
I grabbed a dagger.
The blade gleamed with someone else's blood.
My hand shook as I turned it toward myself.
"Please..." Max whispered. "Not for me. Not again."
But I couldn't lose him.
Not like this.
Not permanently.
I drove the blade into my stomach.
Pain detonated through me, hot and bright.
I waited.
Waited for time to shiver. For the world to lurch. For the universe to drag me backward into another chance, another try, another desperate loop.
But nothing moved.
The air remained still.
The hall stayed broken.
Max stayed dying.
The reset didn't come.
Max's breathing slowed, his chest rising shallowly, sinking quickly. His fingers brushed my cheek, barely there.
"We were cruel to you," he murmured, voice fading. "My mother...the palace...me..."
His eyes flicked, unfocused.
"I'm sorry...Chloe. The promise...it was a cruel curse on you."
His hand dropped.
His chest fell one last time.
He did not rise again.
The boy I met at fifteen—grieving, polite, lonely—the man he grew into, hard and soft in the same breath, the person I died across lifetimes I could no longer count, became a silent corpse.
My scream was silent, swallowed by the ruins.
I pulled him into my arms, clinging to his fading warmth, my tears dripping onto his unblinking eyes.
The marble beneath us grew cold.
My hands shook against his still chest, willing it to rise. Begging. Breaking
The one thing I could always redo was finally gone.
Clack.
A soft, wooden tap against stone cut through the stillness.
Clack.
Clack.
Clack.
I froze.
A shadow stretched across the marble.
Slow.
Measured.
Unhurried.
From the dim colonnade, the Pope emerged. His robes were immaculate, untouched by dust or blood. His expression unreadable—not sorrowful, not relieved, not angry.
His gaze settled on me.
"So you were here all this time," he murmured softly.
It was neither a threat nor a mercy for my raw, grieving heart; it was a simple statement—as if my presence were the final word in a question he'd been holding under his breath.
His shadow reached me first, enveloping the blood-soaked marble, slithering toward my trembling hands.
My vision blurred.
My body sagged.
Max's hand slipped from my grasp.
And as darkness pressed into the edges of my sight, my last thought was a hollow, terrible truth:
The reset had finally failed.
And the man stepping toward me...
did not come for the fallen emperor.
He came for me.
[From my novel: A Requiem For A Heartbeat Not Yet Lost]