Atrocious Empress Bad End -final- -sexecute- Site

Once her most loyal consort, he was now a patchwork of healed burns and ritual scars. She had branded him, caged him, and made him watch as she seduced and slew his twin sister. Now, he held the ceremonial axe of the Selenian Guard—the very blade used to behead traitors.

“Refuse,” Kaelen said, “and we sew your eyes open and play the recordings of your victims’ final pleas for you, on loop, until your heart gives out from shame. It would take days.”

“The Atrocious Empress is dead,” he said. “Long live the memory of what she stole.”

No one cheered. No one wept. They simply watched as her body crumbled into a fine, grey ash, leaving only the crown of onyx—now cracked clean in two—resting in a pile of dead roses. Atrocious Empress BAD END -Final- -Sexecute-

But her eyes remained open. And for one more hour, the throne room was filled with a low, keening sound—not a scream, but the noise of a soul being slowly, meticulously, unmade from the inside.

For a single, eternal second, nothing happened. Then her spine arched. Her mouth opened in a silent shriek. Her eyes became kaleidoscopes—in each pupil, a different horror played out. The young archer whose fingers she’d melted. The midwife she’d forced to eat her own newborn. The poet she’d drowned in ink, one drop at a time.

Her limbs were lead. Her tongue, once a whip that could flay a man’s soul from his body, now lay useless and thick in her mouth. Before her, the marble floor was a sea of faces she had wronged: the scarred generals whose families she’d fed to her beasts, the noble widows whose husbands she’d executed for a sneer, the common folk whose children she’d taken for her “gardens.” Once her most loyal consort, he was now

Kaelen poured the black liquid between her lips.

Lysandra looked at the vial. Then at Kaelen’s face—so full of a calm, terrible love. He wasn’t doing this to be cruel. He was doing this to be just .

The air in the throne room was thick—not with incense, but with the metallic reek of blood and the sweeter, cloying rot of spilled wine. Lysandra, the Atrocious Empress, sat slumped upon her obsidian throne, her crown of jagged onyx resting askew on her brow. Ten years of terror had ended not with a bang, but with the slow, agonizing trickle of poison in her morning chalice. “Refuse,” Kaelen said, “and we sew your eyes

Lysandra’s eyes widened. She remembered the game. She would lock a prisoner in a room with a single, sharp object and a single, sweet poison. Then she would whisper to them for hours—about their failures, their shames, their secret desires—until they either slit their own throat or drank the poison. Most chose both.

He gestured. Two masked figures emerged from the shadows, dragging a third—a man Lysandra barely recognized: the Royal Alchemist, her last loyal servant. His hands were gone, replaced by smoking stumps. He sobbed.