Chapter 82: Chapter 82: Shift
Chapter 82: Shift
—ARIA—
The moment the word left Cynthia’s lips, something inside me shifted so sharply.
I felt a strange clarity that cut through everything else I had been holding onto since I woke up inside this world.
For quite a while, I had lived with the assumption that I was walking on a blade’s edge. Every step I took was measured against the original story I remembered. Every interaction, every decision, every relationship was filtered through one terrifying possibility and that I would end up exactly like how Aria Valen was supposed to end up.
The villainess.
The condemned noblewoman.
The girl who died hated by everyone.
That fear had shaped everything I did.
But now... ƒreeωebnovel.ƈom
Standing here in front of Cynthia, I realized something unsettling.
I wasn’t afraid anymore.
Because when I looked at her now, I wasn’t looking at someone who held my fate in her hands.
I was looking at someone making a choice.
And more importantly...
I had not done anything wrong.
That thought relieved me and it settled inside me like I had just stepped outside of a role I had been wearing for so long I forgot it wasn’t my skin.
The original Aria’s memories lingered in the back of my mind like faded ink on paper.
Emotions that weren’t fully mine, yet weren’t entirely separate either. I could still remember her loneliness if I focused too much. Still feel the sting of isolation she endured in her own family, the cold indifference of her father, the way the household slowly began to treat her like someone inconvenient rather than someone important.
And Cynthia...
Cynthia had been there.
She was the one who turned everything upside down for Aria.
She was the one who stood at the center of the shift that turned Aria Valen into a villain in the first place.
That was how the original story had framed it.
The villainess and the heroine.
But as I stood there now, breathing steadily in the tense silence of the room, I suddenly realized that I had managed to change things.
I had already changed things.
Sebastian no longer treated me like an obstacle.
Matthias no longer looked at me with suspicion.
Ezekiel had begun standing closer than he ever should have.
Even Aelith, who was supposed to remain distant and untouchable, had already stepped into a different role entirely.
Everything I thought was fixed had already begun shifting.
And I hadn’t even noticed when it started.
My gaze slowly lifted toward Cynthia again.
She still stood there, rigid and upright, her expression carved sharp and righteous.
But something about her felt... different now.
A thought began forming in the back of my mind which made me quietly laugh.
Did I change the story this much?
My breath caught slightly as I considered it.
No.
That wasn’t the right question.
The real question was...
Did the roles change because of me?
The heroine.
The villainess.
The narrative positions that were supposed to define everything.
Had I unknowingly shifted them?
The idea was so absurd I almost wanted to dismiss it immediately.
But I couldn’t.
Because if I wasn’t the villain anymore...
Then what was I?
And more importantly...
What was Cynthia becoming?
My fingers curled slightly at my side without me realizing it.
So instead of reacting the way I normally would, instead of snapping back or asserting dominance or letting this escalate, I forced myself to breathe.
Slowly and carefully.
Then I spoke.
"Cynthia..." I spoke and met Cynthia’s eyes directly. "Why are you doing this?"
For a moment, there was nothing. I received no response.
Cynthia blinked once, clearly not expecting that question.
But I didn’t stop.
"Why?" I asked again, softer this time, almost like I was trying to understand something I couldn’t quite grasp. "Is this really about what you saw?"
Her expression tightened immediately.
That reaction alone told me more than I wanted it to.
I inhaled slowly, keeping my voice steady.
"I don’t understand. I have never mistreated you."
Cynthia’s lips pressed into a thin line.
But I continued anyway, because stopping now would mean giving in to silence, and silence was far more dangerous in moments like this.
"I have never humiliated you." I paused.
"I have never stopped you from rising in status."
My gaze didn’t waver.
"I have defended you when others tried to dismiss you."
Each sentence felt heavier than the last, not because I was trying to prove myself, but because I was slowly realizing how strange this situation had become.
If I had done none of those things...
Then what exactly had I done to deserve this reaction?
Finally, I stepped forward just enough to close the distance slightly.
"So tell me," I said quietly, "what exactly are you punishing me for?"
Cynthia’s fingers twitched slightly at her side, as a small but noticeable crack in her earlier composure began to show.
She suddenly looked shaken and uncertain.
"You are asking me why?"
Her tone carried disbelief, as though I had just asked something obvious.
But I didn’t respond immediately.
I waited.
And that silence alone seemed to irritate her further.
I held Cynthia’s gaze without blinking, letting the silence stretch until it became uncomfortable enough that even she seemed to realize she no longer fully controlled the room.
My heart was still pounding from the shock of her accusation, from the sheer audacity of her intrusion.
The moment she spoke of execution so casually, as though my life were something she could weigh and discard, something inside me finally stopped trembling.
It was not courage born from ignorance. It was clarity that came when I finally understood that I had done nothing wrong here.
Cynthia stood near the doorway like she had every right to be there, like she had every right to judge me.
Her posture was rigid, her expression carefully arranged into outrage that looked almost righteous if one did not look too closely.
But I did.
I saw the tension in her jaw, the slight flare of her nostrils, the way her fingers curled just a little too tightly at her sides.
She was not simply shocked.
She was pleased.
Or perhaps not pleased in the way one celebrated success, but in the way someone felt justified, as though everything was finally aligning with what she had been waiting for.
And that realization made something cold settle in my chest.
I slowly exhaled and straightened my posture, as my breathing began to slow even as the room still felt like it was vibrating from the weight of her words.
I knew exactly how fragile noble standing could be, how easily a rumor could turn into a blade.
And yet, for some reason, I was no longer afraid in the way I had been before.
"You are a young maiden," she said again, louder this time, as though repetition would strengthen her authority.
"You are expected to uphold dignity, discipline, purity. And yet I walk in and find you—" Her eyes flicked again toward Ren before snapping back to me, "—in a compromising situation with your servant."
The words should have stung. They should have made me panic, or recoil, or scramble to explain myself.
Instead, I felt nothing.
I let out a small, humorless breath and took a step forward.
Cynthia reacted immediately, stepping back almost instinctively, and that alone almost made me laugh.
She was afraid, just not enough to admit it.
"Why are you lying?" I asked.
Her eyes widened slightly at that.
I took another step. "You are just a mistress’ daughter," I calmly said . "And yet you walk into my servant’s private space at night, make accusations without evidence, and try to condemn me in my own household."
My gaze sharpened as I closed the distance between us further, forcing her to tilt her head back slightly to keep eye contact. "You have the audacity to point your finger at me?"
Cynthia’s composure cracked. "I—"
"You what?" I cut in sharply, my voice finally carrying heat. "You are the victim here?" I tilted my head slightly, almost in disbelief, letting the words sink in before continuing. "No. I think you have mistaken something very important, Cynthia."
Her lips parted, but no words came out fast enough.
I stepped closer again, until there was barely any space left between us, and I saw it the fear she had been hiding beneath all that indignation.
"I am Aria Valen," I said softly now, almost dangerously calm, "the legitimate heir of the Valen household. Which means I have every right to speak to anyone under my roof, servant or otherwise, at any hour I choose. For you to tell me I deserve execution... you are unbelievable." I paused just long enough to watch her flinch at the authority in my voice.
"What about you? You barged into a male servant’s quarters in the middle of the night?"
Her breathing quickened slightly.
"And yet you stand here accusing me of impropriety?" I leaned in just enough that my voice dropped lower, sharper, meant only for her. "Tell me, Cynthia... what exactly do you think this looks like?"
Her fingers twitched at her sides.
"You are twisting this!" she snapped suddenly.
But I took another step forward, and this time Cynthia actually stumbled back, her heel catching slightly against the edge of the carpet.
Cynthia’s expression shifted then.
"I am simply concerned! Do you have any idea what you are doing? You are degrading the house Valen. You are degrading our father’s–"
The slap cut her off cleanly.
The sound echoed through the room, cutting her off. My hand stung faintly from the impact, but I did not move.
Cynthia’s head had snapped to the side, her hair shifting slightly from the force, and for a moment, the entire room went utterly silent.
Even Ren froze behind me.
Cynthia’s eyes widened, not in pain, but in realization that I had just crossed a line she thought I would never dare approach.
"You..." she whispered, voice trembling now, but not with fury. "You hit me?"
I held her gaze steadily. "Yes. And I will gladly do it again." I answered.