Extra’s Life: MILFs Won’t Leave the Incubus Alone

Chapter 148: My Victory


The dungeon beneath the Wessex keep had no windows—only stone, sweat, and silence.

Moisture ran down the walls like veins of decay. The air was heavy with the scent of rusted iron and the slow drip of water that fell, unhurried, into the black.

It was here that the old 'Earl of Wessex' sat—no longer a man, but a husk wrapped in faded nobility. His robes were gone. His signet ring had been taken. In its place, the mark of the chains bit deep into his wrists.

He had once ruled this castle. His word had once shaken fields and cities alike.

Now, the rats moved closer each night, unafraid of his titles.

He sat in silence, head bowed, as the guards outside laughed—voices echoing faintly down the corridor.

"Did you hear?" one said, his tone dripping with amusement.

"The boy's being toasted in the great hall. Our new Earl, eh?"

Another snorted. "Temporary Earl, they said—but you can see it in his eyes. He'll fight to keep it. Blood always does."

Their voices faded into the distance, but their words burned like acid.

The old Earl closed his eyes. In the dark behind his eyelids, he saw his hall—once his—now filled with song and wine and laughter. His son sitting where he had sat. His banner lowered. His power shattered not by sword, but by something far quieter, far crueler: the will of one man.

Aiden.

He thought he had understood power. Thought the young envoy was a fool, a wanderer, a reckless dreamer lucky enough to court favor with Flora's mercies.

He thought wrong.

He had learned—too late—that monsters do not always roar. Some smile. Some kneel. Some wait until the moment you believe you've won, then whisper a word that turns empires to ash.

Above, the celebration burned bright.

Candles flickered from chandeliers like stars fallen from the heavens, gilding the new Earl's chamber in soft gold. The scent of roasted venison and sweet wine drifted through the air.

Music echoed faintly from the great hall beyond—flutes, strings, the sound of joy built on silent ruins.

Aethal sat in the great chair once occupied by his father. The seat of Wessex power—dark oak carved with the family sigil of twin stags, antlers entwined.

It felt heavier than he expected, this chair. Not merely in wood, but in expectation.

He traced the engraved patterns on the armrest, a nervous habit he hadn't yet unlearned.

He looked up as the door opened.

Aiden stepped inside quietly, his shadow long against the firelight. His attire was simple—black coat, gold trim, a faint scent of smoke clinging to him. His eyes, always too sharp, took in everything—the desk, the quill, the scrolls, even the nervous twitch in Aethal's jaw.

"My lord Earl," Aiden said lightly, his tone edged with quiet irony. "You wear the chair well."

Aethal stood quickly, smiling despite the faint tremor in his hands. "It feels strange, I admit. To sit where my father sat. To have men bow where I once bowed."

Aiden inclined his head, stepping closer. "Strange. Yes. But not undeserved."

He placed a hand on Aethal's shoulder—a gesture of camaraderie that carried weight. "You held your ground when all others hid behind walls of silence. You chose action over fear. You chose justice when your father chose pride."

Aethal's chest lifted slightly with pride. "I only did what was right."

"That," Aiden said, eyes narrowing slightly, "is precisely why you succeeded."

For a moment, they simply stood there, the fire crackling between them. Then Aethal gestured to the table. "Would you… sit, perhaps? There's something odd about standing while the room still echoes with celebration."

Aiden smiled faintly and took the offered seat. The room's golden glow reflected in his eyes, making them seem almost molten.

They sat across from one another—power old and new, the forge and the flame.

"Tell me," Aethal began after a pause, "you said earlier—'be ready.' For what?"

Aiden leaned back, folding his hands. "For what comes after glory. It's the one thing most men forget to prepare for."

Aethal frowned. "You mean the burden of rule?"

"Nothing that poetic...I mean the vultures," Aiden said softly. "Every brother, every cousin, every merchant who smells profit—they will come now.

Some with smiles, some with knives. You must know which is which before they reach your table."

Aethal laughed nervously. "That easy, hm?"

Aiden's lips curved. "Nothing worth surviving ever is."

He reached into his coat, drawing out a thin stack of parchment—precise, crisp, marked with seals. He placed it gently upon the desk before the young Earl. The faint scent of ink and wax filled the air.

"What's this?" Aethal asked.

"Opportunity," Aiden replied. "The beginning of something greater than a chair."

Aethal hesitated, then picked up the top page. His eyes scanned the lines—and widened.

"Premium gold…?" he whispered. His voice cracked slightly, disbelief chasing it. "One hundred coins accounted—each marked under treasury expenditure for the southern garrison. This… this could fund a legion for years...but we...we didn't even ha..."

"Yes," Aiden said quietly, "...and yes."

Aethal looked up, confused. "But… these signatures—these ledgers—they're… forged,."

Aiden's smile deepened, faint but deliberate. "No, Aethal. They are real enough to make the truth irrelevant."

The young man stared at the papers as though they might burn through his fingers. "But why—? What is this?"

"Power," Aiden said simply. "The kind you don't buy with gold, but with guilt."

Aethal's breath quickened as he began to see it—the shape of the plan, the monstrous elegance of it. "You mean…you mean to lay this blame upon them. My father. My brothers. To make it appear they squandered the treasury."

"To make it true in the eyes that matter," Aiden corrected softly. "Once these papers circulate, suspicion will do the rest.

The nobles will whisper. The court will question. By the time they try to protest, it will no longer matter who actually took the gold—only who lost it."

Aethal swallowed hard. "And that… that will end them."

"It will define them," Aiden said. "History has no memory for the accused, only for the victors who write it."

He stood then, circling behind the young man's chair, his voice dropping to a whisper that brushed against the ear like smoke. "You asked me once how to make this chair yours forever. This is how. Not by killing your blood, but by letting them destroy themselves in the eyes of the realm."

Aethal turned the papers over again, eyes flickering between disbelief and awe. "And the gold itself? Where is it now?"

Aiden's smile was ghostly, dangerous. "Haha....Gone. Spent wisely."

Aethal blinked. "You—used it?"

"Shhhhh...." Aiden said calmly, "...speak your words wisely."

The young Earl leaned back, stunned. His mind whirled. "Okay, okay, I will shut up..but…you ...forged this. Every coin. Every line. Every seal."

"I forged nothing," Aiden said, gaze sharp. "I guided what already existed. Corruption is not created—it's merely given a face."

Aethal exhaled shakily, gripping the papers tighter. He looked at Aiden with new eyes—eyes that saw not a man, but a force, quiet and absolute. "And what now? What happens when the court finds these documents?"

Aiden turned toward the window, the firelight painting one side of his face in gold and the other in shadow. "Then they will believe the Wessex corruption runs deep.

They will call for inquiry. Your father will take the fall. His allies will scatter, his rivals will rise. And in the midst of it all, you—clean, righteous, 'betrayed by circumstance'—will stand untouched."

Aethal said nothing. The crackle of the fire filled the silence between them.

After a long moment, Aiden reached forward and placed his hand atop the papers, pressing them lightly against the desk. "Use this well," he said.

"It's not merely gold you hold—it's narrative. And narrative, my dear Earl, is worth more than any coin."

He withdrew his hand, turned, and headed for the door.

"Wait," Aethal called, his voice trembling slightly. "Aiden—why....why help me? You could have taken this seat yourself. With your influence, with your brains..."

Aiden paused at the threshold, half in shadow. He looked back, and for the first time, Aethal thought he saw weariness in the man's eyes—a strange, human softness beneath the iron calm.

"Because this seat is too small for me," Aiden said quietly. "My duty lies elsewhere. Lord Augustus gave me a mission, and it's done. The pieces are where they must be. The rest will unfold… as it always does."

He stepped through the doorway, his voice fading like the last note of a dying song.

"Enjoy your victory, Aethal. But remember—victory tastes sweetest only to those who know it won't last."

The door closed softly behind him.

Aethal sat alone for a long while, the firelight flickering across his face. He looked again at the papers—the neat handwriting, the precise seals, the weight of destiny disguised as ink.

He thought of his father, alone in the cold dark.

He thought of his brothers, scheming and snarling like dogs behind gilded doors.

And he thought of himself—sitting in a chair that suddenly felt more like a throne and a noose all at once.

He reached out and touched the papers again, feeling the faint texture of the inked words beneath his fingertips.

"So this," he murmured, "is what power feels like.."

Outside, the night wind carried Aiden's footsteps down the long corridors of Wessex Keep. He moved like a shadow among shadows, his coat brushing against ancient stone.

His mind was calm now—too calm. The mission was finished. The path Augustus had set before him was fulfilled. Ten years of movement, of strategy and silence, had led to this quiet conclusion.

He still had eighty-six coins—and with them, the means to shape anything he wanted. No no matter he spent, nothing will come back to him.

Aiden stepped into the courtyard, where the wind carried the faint echo of music from the great hall above. He looked up toward the tower where Flora's light still burned, a single golden glow against the night.

He allowed himself a small smile.

"Victory," he whispered. "My victory."

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