#twisted wonderland novel
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Savanaclaw Yuu: Hey Guys! Heartslabyul Yuu: Who are you? Savanaclaw Yuu: I'm Yuuka Hirasaka! I'm from another another dimension Book Yuu: How many Yuus are there Octavinelle Yuu: Hey Fellas! Scarabia Yuu: Hello~ Grim: This literally cannot get any weirder Shrimp Yuu: It can get weirder!
#twisted wonderland#twst#disney twisted wonderland#disney twst#twst yuu#twst manga#twisted wonderland manga#twisted wonderland novel
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Img that's inside my copy of the heartslabyul novel
#twst novel#twisted wonderland novel#heartslabyul novel#overblot#riddle rosehearts#twst#disney twst#twisted wonderland#disney twisted wonderland
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IM TREY CLOVER YEAH I KNOW BUT I STILL CANT GET OVER THIS

I'm analyzing this text like crazy bc it makes me feel so sad for Riddle
Like it shows so much about Riddle's and his mother's relationship and its so sad that he wants his mother to... idk how to word it
Like notice him? She does but at the same time she doesn't in a way. And maybe it's an effect since his mother always orders him around and tells him not to do things and so her calling out to him "so gently, so desperately, so indiscreetly" makes him feel comforted in a way or it feels nicer.
It's like how some moms yell at their child and the child cries but then the mom comes to comfort them. It's like that feeling LMAOO
But it's even sadder to hear him say that the voice wouldn't be her and it would make sense since he knows his mother
He knows his mother would never notice his hurt or pain and she would be ignorant like in all those years of strict rules and abuse.
And you can say "well he knows it's not his mom bc he's in nrc overblotting" but he doesn't say "it must be Trey" or Ace or Deuce or Crowley
He leaves it off with "who is it then?" Like he absolutely doesn't know who's calling for him and the first thing he expects is his mom but he knows it's not his mom
And JAJDUDHEHFHHSHHEHH IT HURTS SOO BAD IT HURTS GRAHHH
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Just received my english version of the novel and realizing we have been robbed with the french version because we don't have a single illustration.
Ok, it's not needed, but it's nice… especially this wonderful illustration in first page!
So the french version is bigger and thicker… but we have less things inside… and the translation sucks! (no really, changing "dormleader" into "guardian of the house"... also taking off Ruggie's laugh...)
I want to get my hand on a japanese copy too, to see if it's also different or if only the french version have been this bad...
#disney twst#twisted wonderland#twst#disney twisted wonderland#twst wonderland#twst novel#twisted wonderland disney#twisted wonderland novel
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28/11/2024
Reading the Twisted Wonderland Heartslabyul novel has made me realize that it’s not just Leona and Vil who almost murdered/gravely injured someone before they fully overbloted.
In fact nearly all of them did…
Riddle tried to literally skewer Ace by transforming rose bushes into lances. (It’s not that obvious in the game but it is more so in the manga and EVEN MORE BRUTAL in the novel). If Trey hadn’t used his magic, Ace would have actually died or at the very least had life-threatening injuries.
Leona tried to disintegrate Ruggie Shigaraki style (from mha). Literally about to reduce that hyena to athoms if it wasn’t for Jack.
Azul sucking out the strength/magic/life force from everyone at Octavinelle. Pretty sure that left some mental scarring for the victims at least, wouldn’t be surprised if he would have stolen Leona and Ruggie’s entire life as a punishment for destroying his contracts.
Jamil driving everyone to exhaustion and possibly heat stroke by controlling Kalim. And wouldn’t be surprised if he would have let other Scarabia students beat the life out of him when they rebelled. Technically they were trying to do that when he was controlling all of them to attack Azul and Co.
Vil trying to poison Neige, with the guilt leading him to overblot.
While not technically attempting to kill/harm anyone BEFORE the overblot.
Idia and Ortho literally tried to destroy/conquer the world so that’s something. Also Idia was letting Ortho attack the Styx employees and civilians when he was running to join Ortho in Tartarus.
Now funny enough, Malleus is the only one to not have killed/gravely injured someone BEFORE his overblot. As far as we know the only person he (and kind of successfully) killed is Ortho. Although I don’t really know if his spell stops the persons trapped in their dreams from aging or not. Since it literally stops time I think it does. Which mean Malleus is currently the overblot with the least amount of bodily harm (done outside of dreams and to non-robotic beings). Although that will probably change soon…
Anyway it’s 10pm I should probably sleep…oh no
#random#twisted wonderland overblot#twisted wonderland#twisted wonderland novel#twisted wonderland manga#almost all the overblots have attempted murder before they went berserk#why are they like this#I probably should have realized sooner#hopefully this stops the hate towards Vil and Leona for attempting murder sine they aren’t the only ones by far#I hope this makes sense#why do I suddenly feel sleepy#where’s that humming coming from ?#malleus draconia#riddle rosehearts#vil schoenheit#leona kingscholar#azul ashengrotto#jamil viper#idia shroud#ortho shroud#brief mention of Trey Clover Jack Howl and Ruggie Buchie#why’s the humming becoming louder#I can’t stop my eyes from closing#help-
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My brother helped me buy this book I found at SM 🥺🥺🥺🥺🥺
😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭 I cant cry in public but I am grateful for my bro
#//it literally cost 999 pesos#twisted wonderland#twst#riddle rosehearts#twst riddle#twisted wonderland novel
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Hii! How are you? Do you know why for each manga/novel there is a different Yuu? And will we be seeing them again outside of their respective novels? I have never understood this matter that well

Quick clarification to avoid confusing some readers: the manga changes its Yuu every book of the main story (so Heartslabyul has Yuuken Enma, Savanaclaw has Yuuka Hirasaki, Octavinelle has Yuuta Mito.) The manga trailer also implies that future dorms will also have their own Yuus. The light novel, however, seems to maintain the same Yuu for each dorm. It’s still Yuuya Kuroki for Heartslabyul and Savanaclaw.
As of right now, we don’t officially know why each dormitory’s story features a different Yuu. It has, however, fueled many fan theories about canon alternate universes and time loops. We don’t know if the Yuus will return in the future or what TWST’s plans are for them are since we’re not even done with the manga’s Episodes of Savanaclaw or Octavinelle yet!
For now, I think the reason could be as innocuous as “TWST wanted to represent various different interpretations of Yuu”. I also definitely see there being a deeper reason for all these different iterations. We only have speculation to work with at the moment though!
#twisted wonderland#twst#twst manga#twisted wonderland manga#twst light novel#twisted wonderland novel#Kuroki Yuuya#Yuuya Kuroki#Yuuken Enma#Enma Yuuken#Yuuka Hirasaka#Hirasaka Yuuka#Yuuta Mito#Mito Yuuta#disney twisted wonderland#disney twst#notes from the writing raven#question#Yuu#episode of octavinelle#episode of savanaclaw#episode of octavinelle manga#episode of savanaclaw manga
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This is me reading the Rose-Red Tyrant right now.
I can't stop. It is fun. I like it. It makes me laugh out loud. And there are lots of fun things that make my theory brain go brrrr
I hope they write more of these.
I like Yuya too. I can relate to him a lot as a person who is very bad at dealing with conflicts.
#twisted wonderland disney#disney twisted wonderland#disney twst#twst#twst wonderland#twisted wonderland#twisted wonderland novel#rose red tyrant#book 1
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Spoilers ahead:
I'm reading the twst novel, and I've gotten to the part where Grim runs away from window cleaning duty.
"Neither boy looked back at Yuya, a clear sign of how utterly useless they considered him."
Man that's just said. I get it, he has no magic, he can't really do anything because of it, but like...he's trying okay?!!
Yuya is sad boi
Yuya is sweet boi
Yuya is quiet boy and a people pleaser
Kinda reminds me of myself.
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wow twst novel.... a little too real......

no I'm not talking about being aroace whaat?
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GUESS WHAT INDIGO HAS

My collection expands


#twisted wonderland#twst#twisted wonderland manga#twisted wonderland anthology#twisted wonderland novel
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...
OK SO I read this part in the novel for Twisted Wonderland and found it very interesting.
I remember seeing a post a long time ago about how fantasy settles shouldn't really speak English or that it doesn't make sense that in every fantasy setting, everyone speaks English.
But here in the Novel for Twst they have an interesting way around the issue.
Spoilers for Novel below:
So here technically, we don't even know what language they speak in Twisted wonderland, just that it will be translated back to the Mc as whatever language they speak at home.

(At least what can be interpreted from this excerpt right here.)
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Do you see the differences between the game and the novel Twisted Wonderland? I didn't notice much until I searched on Youtube, Novel Ace was ready to apologize to Yuu ( in this case Yuuya) for insulting, Malleus isn't our little sweet dragon boy but literally choking Yuuya ?!
I haven't read the novel adaptation yet, but oh my god! Malleus tried to harm Yuuya?!
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Got jumpscared by something today.
I had completely forgotten that I ordered this !




It is thick and imma read it :]
#random#twisted wonderland novel#rose red tyrant#twisted wonderland overblot#twisted wonderland#riddle rosehearts#completely forgot about that#surprise delivery#Time to read
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Trash Novel Chronicles: Speedrunning Marriage Fraud || Ace Trappola
You get isekai’d as the heroine in a romance novel, but instead of dreamy suitors, you’re stuck with a yandere cryptid, a billionaire with no impulse control, and a knight who thinks he's in a Shakespearean tragedy (and more).
Your solution? Commit marriage fraud with your best friend, Ace Trappola, and hope no one asks for a marriage certificate.
Series Masterlist
You should have known better than to leave your apartment. You should have listened to your instincts, that deep, primal voice that told you the outside world was a dangerous and unforgiving place. But no. You just had to touch grass.
It had all started with an innocent desire for fresh air. You had gone to the park, found a nice spot, and opened the novel that a colleague had given you—probably as a form of psychological torture disguised as a gift. From the summary alone, you knew it was going to be a lot, but you had no idea just how much your soul would suffer.
The heroine was a noble who clearly did not want to be in this story. Every single page was filled with her staring off into the void, giving half-hearted responses to the five men vying for her attention, like she was a protagonist who hadn’t realized she was in a romance novel yet.
And the love interests. Oh, the love interests.
The (Discount) Yandere Viscount (who had never heard of stealth)
His idea of "obsessively watching over the heroine" was lurking in the shadows like a particularly uncoordinated cryptid. Every single time he tried to “stalk” her, he tripped over his own sword. At one point, he dramatically whispered, “I will protect you… wait, don’t run!” before faceplanting into a bush.
2. The Childhood Acquaintance (who was delusional)
This man had spoken to the heroine exactly once when they were both six years old, but somehow convinced himself they were soulmates. He carried around the same handkerchief she had given him more than 15 years ago like it was a sacred relic and refused to take no for an answer.
3. The "Genius Strategist" Prince (who had the IQ of a raisin)
The man had already planned their wedding, their honeymoon, and the names of their three children within four minutes of meeting her. When she told him she wasn’t interested, his brain blue-screened and he simply repeated, “Ah, you’re just shy.” No, sir. She is not shy. She just isn't interested.
4. The Brooding Duke of the North (who was a caricature of a chaebol heir from a K-Drama)
He believed love could be bought. He once gifted her a solid gold chair because “only the finest furniture is worthy of your presence.” He bought an entire carnival just so she wouldn’t have to wait in line. At one point, he threw money at a random tree, and you weren’t even sure why.
5. The Drama King Knight (who needed to calm down)
He was so powerful but refused to use his strength unless it was for dramatic effect. He got scratched by a cat once and collapsed into the heroine’s arms like he had been mortally wounded. His sword had the power to split mountains, but the only time he ever drew it was to dramatically point at the moon while monologuing about destiny.
And the villainess? She wasn’t even that bad. Compared to these five disasters, she looked like a sensible person.
Somehow, despite all odds, the heroine chose Ace Trappola, her childhood friend, which you had to respect. That was the one good decision this novel made. But just when you thought there might be some semblance of satisfaction—an assassin appeared out of nowhere (sent by the villainess of course) and killed her.
That was it. That was the ending.
You felt your soul leave your body.
Tears pricked at your eyes, but you weren’t sure if it was grief for the heroine, sheer frustration, or physical pain from how hard you had been laughing at this disaster of a novel. It was the most ridiculous, nonsensical, brain-cell-destroying thing you had ever read. You could feel your neurons committing arson inside your skull.
You snapped the book shut and decided that was enough stupidity for one day.
It was time to go home.
As you trudged back, your brain still processing the absolute war crime of a plot you had just read, you heard it.
A faint rumbling.
A presence.
And then—
“OUT OF THE WAY, SONNY!”
A blur of gray hair and unholy speed tore through the park, the sound of wheels screeching against pavement like a demonic banshee’s cry. You turned your head just in time to see a grandma on rollerblades, moving at a velocity no elderly person should legally be able to achieve.
For a split second, you locked eyes.
And in that moment, you knew.
You were not surviving this.
Before you could even process what was happening, she collided into you full force, sending you into a full aerial somersault before you crashed into the bushes like a ragdoll. You barely registered the thundering roar of her departure as she continued skating into the sunset, leaving you for dead.
Now, as you lay crumpled in a bush, your body feeling like it had been hit by a sentient freight train in orthopedic shoes, you had to accept the consequences of your actions. The world had punished you for your hubris.
She. Didn’t. Even. Stumble.
Your body ached, your limbs refused to move, and as darkness crept into your vision, your last conscious thought was, How is a senior citizen more sturdy than me…?
And then, everything went black.
The first thing you noticed upon waking up was the suspiciously pleasant smell. It was fresh, like lavender and high society, with a hint of expensive tea and wealth you’d never personally known.
Your groggy brain latched onto the first thought it could process:
Damn. Hospitals really upgraded their budget.
Then, half a second later, a much more terrifying realization hit you.
Oh God. The ambulance bill.
Your eyes snapped open in unfiltered financial terror, hands clutching at the sheets as you prepared to calculate your medical debt down to the last miserable cent. You were already accepting your fate as a lifelong indentured servant to the healthcare system when—
The ceiling was too ornate. The bed was too soft.
And there was a man sitting beside you, holding your hand.
Your breath caught in your throat as your vision sharpened. Red hair. Heart earring. A cocky smirk, even in his sleep.
You knew that face.
You knew that godforsaken face.
This wasn’t a hospital. This wasn’t even your world.
Somewhere in the heavens, a cosmic entity was laughing as you stared at Ace Trappola, the very same Ace Trappola from the cover of the book you were reading before you got absolutely trucked by a grandma on rollerblades.
Your will to live immediately evaporated.
This couldn’t be happening. This was not real. There was no way that the trashy dumpster fire of a novel you barely got halfway through had decided to swallow you whole and spit you out as its heroine. You were a victim of circumstance. You hadn’t even wanted to read the book. Your colleague had shoved it into your hands with a laugh, saying, “It’s so bad, you’ll love it.”
And now? Now you were going to die in it.
While you were still reeling from this existential horror, Ace stirred beside you, stretching like he’d just taken a refreshing nap instead of being complicit in your suffering.
“Oh, you’re finally awake,” he said.
You almost threw up in real time.
NO. NO, HE DID NOT JUST SKYRIM YOU.
Before you could even begin to unpack that offensive introduction, Ace leaned back in his chair, regarding you with an amused grin.
“Man, you were out for so long,” he continued, clearly enjoying himself at your expense. “We were starting to get worried.”
He paused, then snickered. “Not that I can blame you, though. You got knocked out real bad after Sir Drama decided to pick you up and carry you across a puddle—y’know, because chivalry—and then you started struggling and he, uh…” Ace coughed, failing to smother his laughter. “He might’ve… dropped you on your head.”
Your soul left your body.
The sheer force of your disgust, fury, and resignation compressed into a singularity of unparalleled despair.
You had already suffered a head injury in this world and it hadn’t even been five minutes.
Meanwhile, Ace—clearly unbothered by your silent mental breakdown—casually reached out and ruffled your hair like you were some kind of small animal.
“Try not to scare everyone like that next time, yeah?” he said, standing up with a stretch. “Anyway, I’ll let you rest. See ya, drama queen.”
And just like that, he walked out.
The door clicked shut.
And you were left alone.
You sat there for a full minute, staring at the ceiling, dead inside.
Then at the overly luxurious furniture.
Then at the mirror across the room.
You knew what you would see before you even looked.
White nightgown. Perfect noble lady bedhead. The very same reflection that haunted you from the novel’s terrible cover.
You squeezed your eyes shut, inhaled, and let out the most guttural, primal scream into your pillow.
This was real. This was happening.
And worst of all—
You were about to be pursued by five of the worst men to ever disgrace the literary world.
Tears pricked at your eyes.
You needed a plan.
You needed a way out.
You needed to reject them.
You needed to survive.
With renewed determination, you wiped your tears, hardened your heart, and began plotting your escape.
The moment you accepted that you were, in fact, trapped in this flaming disaster of a novel, you immediately went into damage control mode.
Step One: Gather Allies.
Your first course of action was to round up every single sane person in your immediate social circle—which, in this case, meant the heroine’s original friend group. You weren’t sure how well they’d take this, but desperate times called for desperate measures.
So, within the hour, you managed to corral Ace, Deuce, Riddle, Cater, and Trey into a private room like some kind of organized intervention.
They were all staring at you expectantly.
You took a deep breath, bracing yourself for the sheer stupidity of what you were about to say.
“Listen,” you began, voice firm. “I need help. Serious help. I am being actively hunted by five of the worst men to ever exist, and I need to figure out how to reject them before I end up dead in an alley.”
There was a pause.
Riddle, bless his soul, was the first to react.
He patted you on the back, nodding solemnly. “Finally,” he said. “I’ve been waiting for you to grow a spine. It’s about time.”
You blinked. That was the most support you had ever received in your life.
Meanwhile, Trey and Cater exchanged amused glances, Ace looked way too smug for comfort, and Deuce was already looking at Ace like he was onto something.
“You need to get rid of them?” Trey asked, as if he were merely discussing pastry ingredients.
“Yes,” you stressed. “Immediately.”
Riddle hummed in approval. “Good. Then let’s strategize.”
You, Riddle, Trey, and Cater huddled together like you were planning a war campaign.
Ace and Deuce, on the other hand, were having a separate conversation entirely.
A conversation that consisted of Deuce elbowing Ace repeatedly while Ace sat there, looking like the cat that ate the canary.
Then, with the casual arrogance of someone who absolutely had an ulterior motive, Ace stretched his arms and leaned back.
“Y’know,” he drawled, cutting into your very serious rejection plan, “we could make things way easier if you just tell ‘em you’re already taken.”
You stared at him. “Excuse me?”
Ace smirked. “You'd just need a fake lover, right?”
“…Yes?”
He shrugged. “I could do it.”
The room went silent.
Deuce’s face twisted into an undisguised scowl of "That's not what i meant." Riddle raised an eyebrow. Trey hid a knowing smile behind his hand. Cater was visibly entertained.
You, on the other hand, were experiencing about five different emotions at once.
On one hand, Ace clearly had a crush on the heroine—for you. Which meant using him for this felt slightly scummy.
On the other hand, game was game, and survival was survival.
And you were not above exploiting every advantage you could get.
“…Alright,” you agreed, shoving your morals into a dark abyss.
Ace grinned like he’d just won a bet.
Deuce looked one second away from committing homicide.
And just like that, Operation “Escape Horrible Men” was officially underway.
The first lunatic to cross your path was, tragically, the childhood acquaintance—if you could even call him that. This was a man whose entire personality was built on a single act of kindness you had allegedly performed when you were six, like some kind of feral pigeon imprinting on the first human to throw it bread.
He had the look of a man who had been living exclusively off delusions and a diet of unattainable dreams, and you could already feel your soul attempting to evacuate your body at the sight of him.
It all started when you, Ace, and Deuce were having a perfectly nice day at the market. The sun was shining, the air was crisp, and you were engaged in the kind of casual battery that only true friends participated in—swatting at each other, shoving, stealing food mid-bite, and slinging arms over shoulders like a group of rowdy idiots. It was peace. It was joy. And then he appeared.
Like a cockroach that had survived a nuclear apocalypse, he inserted himself into the conversation with an ease that defied all reason, his hand creeping onto your waist as if that was something people just did.
The audacity. The sheer gall. The unmitigated temerity.
On instinct, you physically rejected his existence. You shoved him off with enough force to make a statement, then slammed your heel down on his foot. You were not the original heroine. You did not believe in suffering in silence. You believed in equal opportunity violence.
But this man—this absolute buffoon—had the mental resilience of a particularly dense brick. He simply did not process rejection.
You walked away. He followed. Like a stray cat you accidentally fed once, he clung to your side, ignoring all signs that he was unwelcome.
You showed Deuce a cool charm for his sword; he inserted his completely unsolicited opinion.
You cracked a joke to Ace; he forced out a laugh like you had told it for his benefit.
At one point, you were fairly certain he was just mimicking your breathing patterns to convince himself you were soulmates.
Alright. You had tried being civil. Time to be petty.
You turned to Ace with the kind of dramatic flourish that only came with years of consuming terrible romance novels, throwing yourself into his arms like some damsel in distress. Ace, to his credit, took exactly one second to process before he immediately understood the assignment.
He leaned in close, breath brushing against your ear like he was whispering something scandalous, and you, in turn, made a show of gasping, clutching his shirt like he had just recited the most romantic poetry in existence.
Then he hand-fed you a pastry.
It was too much. Too intimate. Too stupidly effective. You let out a little dreamy sigh, delicately biting into the pastry like it was a love declaration and not just your breakfast. Ace, ever the performer, brushed a crumb off your lips with his thumb.
Deuce, at this point, was convulsing with laughter in the background, nearly choking on his own spit.
But the acquaintance? The parasite? The man who had lived the past decade of his life under the assumption that you were his? He was seething. His face was twisted like he had just swallowed a whole lemon rind and all.
Time to twist the knife.
You turned to Ace with the most lovestruck expression you could muster and, in a voice dripping with sugar and malice, cooed, “Darling, when are you going to propose? I simply cannot wait to be engaged to you”
Ace visibly blue-screened for a moment. You could hear the Windows error noise in real-time. But he was nothing if not quick on his feet.
In a devastating move, he took your hand in both of his, looked into your eyes like you personally invented the concept of love, and murmured, “My love, I’ve searched the entire kingdom for a ring that shines as brightly as your eyes, but nothing has been worthy of you yet.”
That was it. That was the final blow. The childhood acquaintance physically recoiled, his reality shattering like fragile glass, his world crumbling like an over-soaked sponge cake.
“You’re… dating?” he whispered, trembling, as if he was the protagonist in a tragic opera.
You and Ace turned to him in perfect synchrony, all wide eyes and lovesick smiles, and in the most disgustingly sweet voices you could manage, declared, “We’re soooo in love~”
He ran away crying.
It was magnificent. It was euphoric. You turned to watch him flee, skidding into the distance like a wounded deer, while Deuce collapsed against a stand, wheezing.
And then, just for a moment—barely a second—you caught Ace watching you, something unreadable flickering in his expression. Then he smirked, slinging an arm around your shoulder like nothing had happened.
One down. Four to go.
The invitation to the ball had arrived with the pomp and circumstance of an execution notice.
You had already survived assassination attempts (by fate and by your own refusal to engage with the five unhinged men vying for your hand), but now you were being asked to waltz? Like some graceful noble lady who had spent her entire life twirling through candlelit halls and not someone whose idea of “dancing” was flailing in the kitchen at 2 AM while waiting for instant noodles to cook?
You tried to tell yourself, maybe the original heroine’s muscle memory will kick in.
It did not.
You attempted a single spin in your room and promptly tripped over the hem of your dress, landing face-first into the carpet with all the elegance of a sedated goose. The reality was undeniable—you needed help.
Unfortunately, Deuce and Riddle, your two best hopes for structured, competent lessons, were drowning in their official duties. That left you with Trey(thankfully), Cater, and Ace.
Ace. The man who claimed he could “totally waltz” but then proceeded to move like he was dodging invisible potholes. He swore he was just "freestyling," which, sure, was a thing people did—just not in 18th-century ballroom dancing.
Trey, ever the responsible elder brother figure, took pity on your plight and offered to teach you. You gratefully accepted, placing your hand in his, and the two of you began to move across the floor. Or, rather, Trey moved and you decimated his toes with every step.
Ace, watching from the sidelines, looked like he had been personally wronged by the universe.
His jaw tightened. His eyes narrowed. His grip on his drink? White-knuckled. If he had been any tenser, his soul might have ascended on the spot.
Cater, in contrast, was having the time of his life.
Sipping tea like a smug little gremlin, he watched the spectacle unfold with the kind of amusement normally reserved for reality TV drama. He did not care that Ace was clearly dying inside. In fact, it was making the tea taste better.
Meanwhile, Trey suffered.
He suffered so much.
You stepped on his foot. Again. You stepped on it without intent. Without malice. But with the weight of a hundred failed dance lessons.
“Ah, you’re getting there,” Trey said with the patience of a saint, even as he subtly tried to guide you away from his crushed toes.
Ace twitched.
The evening ended with you being marginally better at dancing and Ace looking like he had been force-fed an entire lemon tree.
The next day, you arrived at Ace’s estate with the singular goal of dragging him into town for shenanigans.
Instead, you were met at the entrance by his butler, who, with a knowing wink that immediately put you on edge, informed you that Ace was “currently practicing” and that you were "free to go in and see for yourself."
This, of course, set off all your mental alarms.
You pushed open the door just a crack, peeking inside, and what you saw nearly short-circuited your brain.
There, in the middle of the room, was Ace Trappola.
Dancing.
With a coat hanger.
He held it like a real partner, moving across the floor with surprising grace, his brows furrowed in concentration, his lips pressing into a frustrated pout whenever he missed a step.
You felt something unfamiliar rise in your chest. A warmth. A flutter. A sense of being deeply, irreversibly touched.
You immediately squashed the feeling. Crushed it under your heel like a bug. Incinerated it. You refused to let sentimentality win.
So, naturally, you cleared your throat and went straight for the teasing.
“Wow, Ace. I didn’t know you and the coat hanger were so close.”
Ace startled so hard he nearly dropped the poor inanimate object.
He turned to you, face flushing an almost adorable shade of pink, before scowling and attempting to play it cool.
“I—this—I wasn’t practicing for you or anything!” he scoffed, crossing his arms as if that would somehow erase the memory from your brain.
“Oh, of course not,” you said, nodding sagely. “You were obviously training to impress the coat hanger.”
He opened his mouth. Closed it. Rubbed the back of his neck. Refused to meet your eyes.
“…You wanna practice together?”
And that was how you found yourself dancing with Ace in the dim glow of the evening light, his hands warm against yours, the two of you laughing every time you stumbled.
It was awkward. It was messy. It was weirdly fun.
And somewhere in the background, Ace’s butler was already reallocating the estate’s budget for your wedding.
You had successfully survived the dance.
This was, by all accounts, a miracle.
There had been no toe-crushing disasters, no tragic falls, no wardrobe malfunctions that would have made the noble ladies clutch their pearls and whisper about you for decades. Not even a single case of you flinging your arms out too enthusiastically and smacking a duke’s son in the face.
You had defied fate.
And it definitely helped that your partner had been Ace—as much as that bruised your pride to admit. He was annoyingly decent at making sure you didn’t trip over your own feet, even though he kept smirking the entire time like he was waiting for you to say something ridiculous like "Wow, Ace, you're so talented and charming and handsome, what would I ever do without you?"
You would rather perish.
So, once the dance ended, you immediately excused yourself and found a nice, solid chair to collapse into. Ace, good little fake boyfriend that he was, offered to get you both drinks, which was a very convenient excuse for you to not be near him for five minutes.
And that was when the Genius Strategist Prince swooped in.
You did not see him approach. You did not sense his presence. It was as if he had teleported into existence like some eldritch being fueled purely by narcissism and misplaced confidence.
One moment, you were sitting peacefully, and the next—
He was there.
The cursed arm wrapped around your shoulders. The infuriating smirk. The unbearable arrogance wafting off him like overpriced cologne.
Oh, this was bad.
"You looked quite beautiful on the dance floor tonight," he murmured, his voice dripping with self-satisfaction. "Almost like a queen-to-be."
This man had the audacity—the sheer, unholy nerve—to look at you like you were supposed to giggle and blush at that line instead of chewing through your own tongue in an effort not to commit a crime.
You had one option.
You fled.
You simply stood up and walked away, directly towards the only person in this cursed ballroom who could save you from this richly perfumed disaster of a man.
Ace.
Ace, who had perfectly timed his return with two glasses of something that was hopefully strong enough to erase the last ten seconds from your memory. Ace, who took one look at your expression, saw the absolute horror trailing behind you, and immediately understood the assignment.
Without missing a beat, he wrapped an arm around you.
Possessive. Protective. The very image of a devoted fake lover.
You had never been so grateful for his dramatic streak.
The prince, who had followed you like a particularly persistent case of food poisoning, bristled.
"Remove your arm," he commanded, his voice low and sharp.
Ace did not remove his arm.
In fact, he pulled you closer, tilting his head just slightly in a way that perfectly balanced smugness and challenge.
"Why should I take my hand off my partner?" he asked.
You, who had spent your entire life developing a survival instinct specifically for escaping situations like this, felt the distant whisper of a self-preservation alarm. That was still the crown prince, after all. Ace was many things—irritating, reckless, an absolute menace—but he was not immortal.
Fortunately, before you had to say anything, help arrived.
Across the ballroom, Riddle nodded.
To your left, Deuce gave a subtle thumbs-up.
The plan was in motion.
Phase One
From the far end of the ballroom, Trey, the royal chef, emerged, balancing an enormous cake on a silver tray. It was a towering, masterful creation—a true work of art, layers stacked high, delicately sculpted sugar decorations shimmering under the chandelier light.
A cake that, in mere moments, would be used as a weapon of mass destruction.
Trey took one fateful step.
Tripped (As planned)
And the entire cake, in all its elaborate, multi-tiered glory, toppled over.
Straight. Onto. The. Prince.
Ace immediately shielded you from the debris. His hand was firm on your back as he turned you slightly away from the chaos, and when you glanced up at him, he was grinning.
Smug. Smug. Smug.
Something in your stomach did something.
You ignored it.
The prince, meanwhile, stood there in horrified silence, cake and frosting dripping down his very expensive, very now-ruined clothes.
And then came Phase Two
Deuce, moving with the "concern" of a man who absolutely knew he was about to ruin someone’s life, rushed forward.
"Your Highness," he said earnestly, holding out his own coat, "you should remove your clothes."
The entire ballroom went silent.
The prince, still picking fondant out of his hair, turned slowly.
"What?"
"You’re covered in cake," Deuce explained, voice so painfully genuine that you nearly choked.
The prince, who absolutely would rather die than undress in public, refused.
Which was unfortunate. Because Deuce, bless his heart, did not take no for an answer.
He grabbed the prince’s jacket.
And pulled.
The ballroom collectively inhaled.
Because underneath—where there should have been the broad, powerful shoulders of a “warrior prince,” where there should have been toned muscle sculpted by years of battle and strategy—
Was nothing.
Not just nothing—an outright betrayal of physics and expectation.
The prince was built like a malnourished Victorian ghost.
His coat—once the source of his so-called “strong, masculine presence”—had been heavily padded. Not just lightly stuffed, but outright engineered to create the illusion of bulging biceps and warrior-like stature.
Biceps, it was now evident, larger than his actual head.
The ballroom gasped.
The prince, red-faced and humiliated, did what any reasonable man would do when faced with public disgrace.
He ran.
You, Ace, Deuce, and your co-conspirators high-fived.
And the next morning, Cater, journalist extraordinaire, published an excruciatingly detailed article titled:
"From Brawn to Busted: The Prince’s Muscle Mirage!"
2 down. 3 to go.
It had been a regular morning. A peaceful morning. A morning where you had intended to do nothing more than descend the stairs like a normal, functioning member of society, have breakfast, and not make a complete spectacle of yourself before noon.
The universe had other plans.
One moment, you had been confidently stepping forward, and the next—
Betrayal.
Your foot had missed the step. Gravity, that treacherous, fickle force, had seized its chance. You had plummeted like a sack of potatoes launched off a moving carriage, limbs flailing, dignity abandoning ship before you even hit the floor.
And then you hit the floor.
Hard.
Ace, your beloved thorn in the side, had stood over you, blinking, until you groaned and weakly waved a hand to signal that you were probably not dead.
And that was when he had completely lost it.
He had laughed for ten minutes straight. A full, wheezing, tears-in-his-eyes, struggling-to-breathe kind of laugh, slapping his knee like an old man who just heard the funniest joke of his life. The servants had peered around corners in confusion. One poor maid had whispered, "Should we call a doctor?" Not for you. For Ace, because he was about to rupture a lung.
"You're fine," he gasped out eventually, still giggling like a goblin. "It's just a sprain, right? But your ego— oh, your ego is never coming back from this one."
And that was how you had ended up here.
Ace had decided—without your input, without even a semblance of human decency— that you were now a particularly large handbag.
He carried you everywhere.
There was no logical reason for this. You could still walk. You had one (1) slightly messed-up ankle, you were fine. But Ace, seeing the opportunity to be the worst person alive, had simply hoisted you up like a particularly unruly sack of flour and declared, "Guess you're stuck with me, huh?"
And he had not put you down since.
Which led to your current predicament.
You had planned to meet Riddle, Trey, and Cater for tea in the gardens, because you were a person of class and refinement, not some gremlin carried around like stolen treasure. But did that stop Ace? No. Of course not.
The three of them had been waiting peacefully in the garden, cups of tea in hand, enjoying their serene afternoon—
And then Ace had strolled in, with you draped over his shoulder like a particularly expensive piece of luggage.
Silence.
The kind of silence that one might expect after watching a clown cartwheel directly into the king’s court.
Trey looked concerned. Riddle looked like he was going to spontaneously combust. Cater, to absolutely no one’s surprise, looked entertained.
And you? You had given up.
"You could just let me down, you know," you muttered, swatting at Ace’s shoulder in what you hoped was a dignified manner, though it probably looked more like a dying fish flopping around.
Ace grinned, because of course he did. "Nah. Too late. You’re furniture now."
You scowled. "Then put me near the table so I can actually reach my tea, you absolute menace—"
Ace ignored you completely.
He dropped into a chair, still holding you.
This was your life now.
Trey, who had likely woken up hoping for a quiet afternoon, cleared his throat and asked, very diplomatically, "So… sprained ankle?"
"Tragic accident," Ace said, like he was recounting the tale of a fallen soldier. "There I was, just minding my own business, when—boom. Disaster. Absolute catastrophe. They will sing songs about this one for years."
"You were laughing," you deadpanned.
"And now I'm grieving," Ace shot back.
Riddle, who had quite frankly had enough of both of you, massaged his temples.
Meanwhile, Cater, who had pulled out his camera at some point, was taking photos.
"This is gold," he muttered, already plotting his gossip column.
And then, just as you were mid-swat, trying to smack the smirk off Ace’s face while he cackled like a heathen, Riddle sighed under his breath, voice heavy with exhaustion and despair.
"They're so obvious," he muttered. "Sevens save us all."
Trey nodded solemnly. Cater just grinned.
It had been a perfectly normal day.
Which, of course, meant disaster was imminent.
You were standing in the grand hall, sipping a totally normal, non-poisoned cup of tea (probably), when you felt it. That eerie, spine-chilling sensation. The distinct, unsettling awareness that you were being watched.
Slowly, you turned your head.
A pair of glowing eyes peered at you from behind an indoor potted plant.
You sighed. Loudly. "Viscount, I can see you."
"Tch," the Viscount hissed, stepping out of his entirely inadequate hiding spot. "So perceptive… as expected of my fated beloved."
As if to ruin the illusion entirely, he tripped on his own cape and had to grab onto the plant for support. The entire thing tipped over with a thunderous CRASH.
Silence.
A servant slowly turned to look at him, unblinking.
The Viscount, sprawled across the floor, cleared his throat. "Pretend you did not see that."
You rubbed your temples. "What do you want?"
He rose to his feet dramatically—or at least, he tried. His foot got tangled in his cape again, and he had to do an awkward little hop to untangle himself before he could finally regain his dignity (what little he had left).
"I have come to confess," he intoned, "the depths of my undying love for you."
A dramatic wind blew through the hall. (Despite the fact that all the windows were closed.)
You braced yourself. This was going to be painful.
"From the moment I first laid eyes upon you," the Viscount continued, stepping forward (but nearly tripping over a rug). "I knew that you and I were bound by fate."
He gripped his chest. "Your beauty, your grace, your ability to evade me every time I attempt to watch over you from the shadows… truly, you are like a rare and precious bird, always just out of reach!"
"You mean because I run away every time you try to talk to me?" you deadpanned.
"Exactly!" he said, passionately. "Such a clever game of cat and mouse we play!"
You stared at him. He stared back, completely serious.
Cater was, once again, taking pictures of this entire trainwreck. Deuce had just pulled out a chair, grabbed a snack, and was watching like it was a soap opera.
"But no more!" the Viscount declared. "Today, I shall break this cycle and claim my rightful place at your side!"
He took a bold step forward—
—and promptly slipped on the fallen leaves from the potted plant.
There was a moment of absolute silence.
Then—THUMP.
He faceplanted straight into the marble floor.
Cater wheezed. Deuce actually fell out of his chair. Riddle was muttering something about public executions. Trey looked like he was reconsidering his entire life.
But the Viscount?
He slowly pushed himself up, nose bleeding, expression unfazed.
"A minor setback," he rasped, wiping the blood off his face with his own cape like some kind of tragic war hero. "Love… is pain."
You exhaled deeply. "Alright, you know what?" You straightened your posture, voice heavy with overwhelming sorrow. "My dear Viscount… if only you had come to me sooner."
His breath hitched. "You mean—?"
"If only fate were kinder," you continued, placing a hand on your chest. "If only my heart were not already…taken."
Fake gasps echoed through the hall.
The Viscount staggered. "No… it cannot be!"
"I am afraid so," you whispered. "For I… I have already pledged my love to…"
You spun dramatically—and pointed straight at Ace.
Ace, who immediately choked on his drink.
Ace, who had agreed to fake date you but was now staring at you like you had just struck him with a bolt of divine judgment.
Cater’s camera zoomed in on his expression.
You turned dramatically, seizing Ace’s arm with a grip that could bend steel. "My darling fiancé, my heart, my sun and stars!" you declared, throwing yourself against him like a maiden in distress. "Forgive me for not introducing you sooner—this is my betrothed, Ace Trappola!"
Ace made a sound like a cat getting drop-kicked across a room.
"WHAT."
The Viscount looked like someone had just run him through with a broadsword.
"I know," you said, voice trembling with unspeakable woe. "It seems impossible. Unthinkable. But love, my dear Viscount, is a force beyond comprehension. Who are we to fight against fate?"
Ace was still making distressed noises. Riddle looked like he was five seconds away from committing homicide.
"No—no, this cannot be!" The Viscount staggered back, clutching his chest like he had just been mortally wounded. "You would choose him over me?"
You gripped Ace’s collar, pulling him until your foreheads nearly touched. "How could I not?" you whispered. "Look at him. Look at his—his, um. His face!"
Ace mouthed: WHAT THE HELL IS HAPPENING RIGHT NOW?
"His personality!" you continued, wildly grasping for reasons. "His—his unparalleled ability to be so Ace-like at all times!"
"I hate every single word coming out of your mouth," Ace muttered.
"And most of all," you gasped, voice hushed. "The way he carries me when I sprain my ankle. A true gentleman. A man among men."
The grand hall erupted into chaos.
Ace visibly short-circuited. "I— WHAT??"
Cater's hands visibly shook as he tried to keep taking pictures. Deuce had fully dropped his snack. The Viscount let out a dramatic, heartbroken wail.
"Engaged?!" the Viscount gasped. "But how? When?!"
You clutched Ace’s hand tighter. "Last night."
"LAST NIGHT??" Ace screeched.
You shot him a look. Ace, whose entire face was on fire, gulped and quickly switched tactics.
"Aha… aha… yeah, totally!" He threw an arm around your shoulders, grinning through his existential crisis. "We got engaged last night! Super romantic and all that! Just me and my beloved—" his voice cracked, "—who I love so much!"
You patted his chest reassuringly. "See? True love."
The Viscount staggered back. His entire world was shattering. The intensity of his emotional turmoil was so strong that he tripped over his own cape again and went tumbling down the nearby staircase.
It took twenty entire seconds for him to hit the bottom.
More silence.
Then, from below: "Love… is pain…"
Ace, still holding you, whispered, "What did you just do to me?"
You turned, smiling sweetly. "I just made you my fiancé, Ace."
Ace felt faint. His heart had been going a normal amount of fast when he agreed to fake date you, but this? This was illegal.
Meanwhile, Cater was already writing the next article.
The night had started so normally. Just you, your expensive, holy-grail skincare routine, and the unwavering determination to emerge from this ritual looking like a Renaissance painting come to life. You had your headband on, your fluffy robe wrapped around you, and the greenish-white sludge of your face mask setting into a crusty layer of beauty and self-care.
Then Ace Trappola happened.
He kicked the door open like he was the protagonist of a spaghetti western, took one look at you, and lost his entire mind.
"WHAT THE HELL IS THAT?" he gasped, immediately doubling over in laughter. "Oh my god, you look like a haunted doll."
You did not hesitate. You lunged at him like an apex predator.
And despite all his athleticism and street-rat reflexes, Ace had not been prepared for an attack from a fully masked-up, vengeance-driven individual armed with a whole tub of premium skincare.
"WAIT—NO—"
It was too late.
You straddled his lap, pressed his shoulders down onto your bed, and slathered the mask onto his stupid, laughing face with all the delicacy of an artist painting their magnum opus.
"See?" you said sweetly, coating his nose with a dramatic flourish. "Now we’re both glowing."
Ace wanted to talk back— wanted to make a joke, to tell you off, to do anything but sit here like a dumb, frozen idiot while you cupped his face, held his chin so gently, and smoothed the mask over his cheekbones like he was something precious and breakable.
And he was losing it.
Your legs were slung over his lap. His back was against your bed. Your hand was on his jaw, tilting his face however you wanted. And Ace, the very same Ace who laughed at every romantic in the kingdom for being cringe and stupid, was about two seconds away from throwing his dignity out the window and leaning into your touch.
Because all he could see, smell, and feel was you.
Your voice kept going, rambling about something stupid and inconsequential—some royal drama, a new gossip column, your thoughts on different brands of facial cleanser—but Ace couldn’t process a single word because his entire stupid, traitorous heart was screaming at him to just—just—
The revelation slammed into him like a meteor. A deadly, world-ending, history-changing impact that reduced his brain cells to rubble and left behind only the smoking wreckage of a man who was well and truly screwed.
This was not a platonic feeling.
This was the opposite of a platonic feeling.
And yet, instead of saying anything, instead of introspecting like a sane person, he just let you keep talking, let himself bask in the feeling of your fingers on his face, let himself sink into the sheer stupidity of his predicament.
By the time he could regain enough motor function to think about moving, it was too late.
You had both somehow, inexplicably, fallen asleep.
The morning arrived with the unmistakable sound of high-pitched giggles.
You cracked open a single bleary eye, your body heavy with sleep, and—oh.
Oh no.
Ace was snuggled up against your arm, his face relaxed in a way you had never seen before. His usual cocky smirk was nowhere to be found, replaced by something painfully soft and vulnerable.
His hair was a mess, sticking up in ridiculous angles, but somehow, it made him look even cuter. His cheek was squished against your shoulder, his arms curled slightly around yours, one leg lazily slung over yours like he had every right to use you as a makeshift pillow.
And the worst part?
It wasn’t even weird.
It felt… right.
And that was when it hit you.
Like a meteor. Like an act of god. Like the universe itself had conspired to wait until you were at your most defenseless before smacking you in the face with one singular, undeniable truth.
You were in love with Ace Trappola.
You. Loved. Ace.
How unfortunate.
You had half a mind to violently shake him awake, make him take responsibility for making you feel this way—but then he muttered something in his sleep, something unintelligible, and shifted closer, pressing his nose against your arm.
You stopped breathing.
The maids were still standing at the door, watching, waiting for you to react.
You slowly raised a hand.
And, with the elegance of a queen issuing a decree, you waved them away.
Five more minutes wouldn’t hurt.
The Duke of the North was an annual disaster. Like a migrating bird that exclusively flew south to be annoying, he only visited the capital once a year—and every single time, it was to do one thing: propose to you.
This would have been flattering, except for the fact that you had been rejecting him since the dawn of time. Yet, for some reason, he was deeply convinced that, one day, you would simply change your mind upon seeing him standing there, brooding dramatically in his tailored, imported-from-a-country-that-doesn’t-even-exist coats.
He did not take rejection well.
Of course, you never answered his letters. Why would you? His correspondence was a tragic novel in real-time, each letter trying and failing to sound aloof, with absolutely zero success.
"I suppose you are busy, as I am also very busy, thinking about extremely important things, such as war and finance and not at all about why you have not replied to me in the last six months." "Should you choose to acknowledge my existence, I will, of course, consider taking time out of my incredibly packed schedule to respond (though I have already cleared next Tuesday for you, just in case)." "It is of no consequence to me whether you reply. However, I have sent my fastest courier, so you may want to respond before he breaks his legs trying to reach me before nightfall."
Pathetic.
And now, as expected, here he was again.
And as always, he came prepared.
This time, he had doubled down on his "love can be bought" philosophy.
A solid gold chair—because “only the finest furniture is worthy of your presence.”
An entirely new breed of horse, bred specifically for you, because "standard horses are beneath you."
A fleet of ships. Why? No one knew. You were not a sailor. You had never even been on a boat.
Riddle, who had been an unfortunate witness to this entire spectacle, had been slowly turning redder and redder, not out of anger, but out of sheer secondhand embarrassment. He looked like he was debating whether to intervene or let natural selection take its course.
Meanwhile, the villainess, who had been throwing you dirty looks since the Duke’s arrival, stood nearby. It didn’t take long for you to realize why—she liked him. She wanted him.
You turned to face her. Slowly. Deliberately.
Your expression said: “Lady, I don’t even want him.”
Her expression said: “You lying harlot.”
And before you could even think of clarifying that you had no interest in this walking gold reserve, the situation somehow got worse.
Ace appeared out of nowhere, grabbed your hand, and, with the audacity of a man who had never once in his life considered the consequences of his actions, declared with full confidence:
"Oh, sorry, we already got married."
Riddle choked on air.
The Duke froze, mid-proposal, like a glitching NPC in a poorly coded game. His mouth opened, then closed, then opened again, as if he were about to say something but his brain was actively refusing to process the information.
"You," he said hoarsely, like someone had just stabbed him in the chest. "What?"
You nodded solemnly, forcing yourself to look as heartbreakingly sincere as possible. "We even have a dog," you said.
Ace, who had waited his entire life for a bit like this, effortlessly raised the stakes.
"Two dogs," he added, gripping your hand even tighter.
You smiled sweetly, as if recounting precious memories of a long and happy marriage. "Three, actually."
The Duke’s breathing audibly shortened.
Riddle buried his face in his hands and muttered, “Oh my god, make it stop.”
"WHAT?!"
Ace sighed, the weariness of a devoted husband weighing down on him. "We also have six kids."
The Duke, who had already been dangerously close to a stroke, seemed to visibly glitch.
"SIX?! BUT IT HASN’T EVEN BEEN A YEAR!"
Ace, seeing an opportunity and deciding to go all in, dramatically gestured at a group of stray cats on the street.
"There they are," he said, with the utmost conviction.
The Duke followed his gaze, slowly, hesitantly, as if he already knew he was about to regret it.
There, on the sidewalk, were six very dirty, very chaotic stray cats.
One of them, making full eye contact with him, immediately started hacking up a hairball. Another was biting its own tail, because it had seemingly forgotten that it was attached to its body. A third was somehow climbing a wall upside down, defying both gravity and logic.
The Duke completely lost his mind.
"YOU—YOU HAVE—YOU’VE BIRTHED FELINE OFFSPRING?!"
Riddle made a strangled noise. His entire body convulsed with the effort of holding back laughter.
Ace did not hesitate. "Yeah, we just love them so much," he said, as if this were a completely normal and factual statement. "Fatherhood changes a man, y’know?"
"Don't forget our youngest," you added helpfully, pointing at a cat stuck in a flower pot.
Ace wiped an imaginary tear. "That's little Gregory. He's the smart one."
At this point, Riddle was not even trying to stop laughing anymore. He had completely given up, his usual decorum shattered beyond repair.
The Duke, however, looked like he was experiencing all five stages of grief simultaneously. His face twisted into pure devastation. He opened his mouth to say something, then immediately closed it, shaking his head in silent agony.
And then, without another word—he left.
Ace, smug beyond words, turned to you, grinning. "That went well."
Riddle, who had just witnessed a full-scale psychological takedown using nothing but sheer absurdity, wiped a tear from his eye. "You two are insane," he muttered, shaking his head.
Ace didn’t let go of your hand for the rest of the evening.
Ace doesn’t know what the hell is going on.
He’s always liked you. A little.
A manageable amount. A totally ignorable amount. The kind of dumb little crush that normal people have. The kind you lock in a box, throw into the ocean, and then blow up the ocean for good measure.
But then you woke up from your fainting accident and became his worst nightmare.
Because somehow, in that brief unconscious state, you became ten times more interesting. More chaotic. More fun.
You met his sarcasm with even faster comebacks. You encouraged his bad ideas. You had absolutely no self-preservation. You went from exasperatedly tolerating his nonsense to actively participating in it, and it was the worst thing you could have possibly done to him.
Because now?
Now he’s the one barely keeping up.
You match him perfectly—step for step, disaster for disaster. If he’s instigating, you’re escalating. If he cracks a joke, you one-up him. When he nudges you in the ribs, you shove him into a bush.
And when you grab his arm, lean in close, and whisper, "Hey, let’s cause some problems," his brain just shuts the hell down.
He’s so ruined.
And the thing is?
Ace has done this to himself.
Because when he suggested pretending to be your lover, he genuinely thought it was a great idea. A genius plan, even.
He’d fake it, get it out of his system, and then tragically move on once you found someone else.
Except now he’s holding your hand in public.
Now he’s whispering in your ear just to make you laugh.
Now he’s calling you ‘sweetheart’ and ‘darling’ and ‘my love’—and you play along like it’s a game, and every time, his heart detonates like an unstable potion.
At this point, if you actually fell for someone else?
Ace thinks he might literally die.
No, really. He would simply perish. Collapse. Expire. He would crumple to the floor like a puppet whose strings had been violently severed and haunt the castle as the world’s most bitter, lovesick ghost.
Cupid was somewhere, rolling on the floor, wheezing.
The other day, you smiled at him for too long, and he forgot how to walk and almost tripped.
You called him ‘Acey’ once, and he almost bit through his own tongue.
One time, you said, "I feel safest when I’m with you," and he blacked out for a full thirty seconds.
You took a sip from his drink the other day, and he had to go lie down.
And now you’re standing beside him at some stupid jewelry stall, pointing at a necklace with that gleam in your eyes, and Ace is staring at you like an absolute idiot.
He can’t stop thinking about how pretty you look under the market lights.
How he’d buy you every single piece of jewelry in the damn kingdom if you asked.
How his entire soul is in shambles because he’s standing next to you thinking, "Oh no. I actually, genuinely, idiotically am in love."
Ace Trappola, Ace ‘Fake-Dating-Was-A-Good-Idea’ Trappola, is staring at you thinking:
"Oh, Trappola. You absolute dumbass. You’re in love."
And then you turn to him, all bright-eyed and smiling, and ask, "Ace, do you think this would suit me?"
And he almost chokes on his own tongue.
Because yes.
Yes, it would suit you.
So would every other necklace in existence. So would a crown. So would the title of Supreme Ruler of the Universe, if he could somehow get that for you.
But instead of saying that, he just shoves his hands in his pockets, tries to look normal, and mutters, "Yeah, yeah, whatever. If you like it, just get it already."
And you laugh.
And Ace Trappola is never going to recover from this.
The worst of the lot finally appears.
You had dealt with the Brooding Duke who thought love could be purchased, endured the Prince who wept into his lace handkerchief at every rejection, and even managed to shake off the Yandere who believed true love was an elaborate chess game. But nothing—nothing—could have prepared you for the Drama King Knight.
He stood before you in the garden, his impractically long cape billowing in the completely windless afternoon, because he had, no doubt, hired a peasant to stand just off-camera fanning him.
His sword—which was capable of splitting mountains but had only ever been used to dramatically point at celestial bodies—glinted in the sun. He looked at you with eyes that had definitely rehearsed this exact expression in the mirror for three hours.
"Fairest of all," he said, already halfway through a monologue you did not want to hear. "I have braved the perils of—"
You sighed dramatically, cutting him off. "A single brush of your hand might shatter my frail mortal bones."
The Knight visibly trembled. His gauntleted hand hovered in the air like he was about to faint. "You’re right… I must protect you. From myself."
Riddle, standing beside you, pinched the bridge of his nose. "Yes. Do that. From very, very far away."
And for a moment, it seemed like that would be enough. The Knight turned away, his cape swishing dramatically. You could practically hear the imaginary background music swelling, the curtains closing, the credits rolling.
Then he whirled back around. God, why do they always whirl back around?
"But if I cannot be with you in body," he declared, voice shaking with raw emotion, "then I shall remain by your side in spirit. Our souls, forever entwined. Our hearts, eternally wed!"
You blinked. "What."
"Yes!" He threw an arm toward the heavens, pointing at the sun like he was about to challenge it to a duel. "We shall be together in spirit! No matter where you go, I shall always be watching! Always waiting! Like the moon follows the tide, I shall—"
Alright. You had tried to reject him normally. You had been reasonable. But clearly, reason had no place here.
Riddle sighed. "Do whatever you're about to do. Just… make it quick."
You nodded grimly. If this was how it had to be, then so be it.
You squared your shoulders, took a deep breath, and clutched your chest like a woman stricken with a terrible, unknowable curse.
"No," you whispered. "You don’t understand."
The Knight faltered. "Understand… what?"
You threw an arm over your eyes. "I am cursed! Any man who loves me shall be turned into a… a… a goose."
Silence.
The Knight blinked at you. He opened his mouth. Closed it. His sword, which had been dramatically trembling in his grip, clattered to the ground.
"A… a goose?" he repeated.
You solemnly nodded.
And then, as prearranged, Deuce rushed off to fetch the goose.
The Knight looked between you and Deuce’s retreating figure, his expression one of dawning horror, like a man realizing he had proposed to a person who was actually an eldritch horror in disguise.
Deuce returned, struggling slightly because the goose had absolutely no interest in being part of this nonsense.
But this was not just any goose. This was the Emergency Goose.
Ace, hiding behind a tree like the gremlin he was, gave you a solemn nod.
Deuce carefully lifted the goose, revealing the final touch—the little red heart painted onto its cheek.
Riddle rubbed his temples. "I hate that you were prepared for this."
"This," you declared gravely, "is Ace."
The Knight reeled. "No. That… That cannot be!"
The goose honked.
"Yes," you continued, "he loved me once. And this was his fate."
A perfect beat of silence.
And then, from behind the tree, Ace whimpered, "Save me."
The Knight—a man who had once stood before a charging wyvern and laughed in the face of death—let out a shriek so bloodcurdling it startled every bird within a five-mile radius.
And then, cape billowing, he turned and ran.
Not a noble retreat. Not a dignified exit. No. Full-speed sprint. He shoved a confused maid out of the way. He leapt over a market stall. A small child pointed and laughed as he fled, but the Knight did not slow down, because his heart—once so full of love and poetry—was now full of terror.
Terror of you.
Terror of your goose.
Terror of the idea that at any moment, he too might sprout feathers and begin honking at the moon.
You, Ace, Deuce, Riddle, and the goose watched him vanish into the horizon.
A long silence followed.
Deuce set the goose down. The goose, finally free from its obligations, pecked him on the shin and waddled off.
Ace emerged from behind the tree, cackling. "Did you see his face?! Bro really thought I turned into a goose!"
Riddle sighed the sigh of a man who was simply too tired for this nonsense. "You two are the worst people I have ever met."
"You love us," you said.
"I do not."
Ace slung an arm over your shoulder. "You totally do."
Riddle turned on his heel and stormed off in the opposite direction.
But you saw it. You absolutely saw it.
A single, fleeting twitch of amusement at the corner of his mouth.
Freedom. Sweet, unshackled, unburdened freedom.
No more men in capes dramatically reciting poetry at you. No more gold furniture being delivered to your doorstep. No more wild-eyed knights trying to prove their devotion by fighting literal bears in your honor. No more deranged suitors appearing at your window like particularly uncoordinated bats.
You were free.
And yet—
As you stood in the gardens, bathed in the golden glow of your well-earned peace, you felt… unsettled. Uneasy. Almost—upset.
Which made no sense. You had spent months rejecting these lunatics. You had faked engagements, lied through your teeth, orchestrated elaborate hoaxes, and weaponized a goose. You had done everything in your power to be rid of them, and it worked.
So why, in the face of your glorious victory, did you feel like you'd lost something?
And then, like a lightning bolt to the brain, it hit you.
Ace.
This meant no more holding hands in public to “convince” people. No more cheek kisses for the sake of believability. No more stupid, infuriating, wonderful Ace, grinning at you like you hung the damn moon.
It was over. Your fake dating/marriage/engagement (depending on the day and the level of your theatrics) had served its purpose.
And now it was gone.
The realization hit like a carriage crash.
You were an idiot. A complete, utter idiot.
Because somewhere between the first fake kiss in front of a suitor, the first time he laced his fingers through yours, the first time he winked at you like you were his favorite person in the entire world, you had fallen for him.
And now, standing in the wreckage of your successful campaign of repelling suitors, you realized that it was either confess right now… or take this to your grave.
Your horribly embarrassing, entirely unavoidable, painfully obvious feelings for Ace Trappola.
Ace is happy for you. He really, really is.
You’re finally free. No more unhinged declarations of love from men who have the self-preservation instincts of a lemming. No more dodging elaborate marriage proposals like a rogue in a dungeon raid. No more looking over your shoulder, expecting some cape-wearing lunatic to be reciting poetry in your honor.
Most of them think you’re taken. One thinks you’re cursed.
It worked. You’re safe. You’re free.
So why does Ace feel like he’s the one who lost?
He was kind of hoping it would take longer. Just a little bit. A few more weeks, maybe. Another month, if he was lucky. Because every day you had to pretend to be his meant another day you were in his arms. Another day he got to hold your hand in public and call it necessity. Another day he could press a kiss to your cheek without consequences. Another day of you being his.
And now? Now it was over.
And he doesn’t know how to go back.
How is he supposed to just… be your best friend Ace again? How is he supposed to look at you and not wonder what it could’ve been? How is he supposed to stand beside you like nothing has changed when everything has changed for him?
Because now, every time he looks at you, he just wants to grab you and kiss you until you’re the only thing he can taste. He wants to pull you close, whisper all the things he never let himself say. He wants everything.
But most of all, he knows—knows deep in his bones—that if you ever fall for someone else, it will destroy him.
He has to confess right now or take it to his grave.
You’re running like a madman. Like some kind of deranged romantic heroine who’s just realized she’s been in love with her childhood friend all along. Your dress is catching on every stray branch, your hair’s a mess, and you probably look like you’ve barely survived a war. But none of that matters.
Because Ace is running too.
You see him, just as wrecked as you, his coat unevenly buttoned, his hair windswept, his face flushed and frantic like he’s been sprinting for miles. And maybe he has. Maybe you both have—metaphorically and literally.
You skid to a stop, panting, staring at each other like two idiots who have finally realized the answer to a question they should’ve known all along. Ace looks at you, his breath shuddering, his eyes wide and teary like he can’t believe you’re actually here. And maybe it’s the exhaustion, maybe it’s the fact that you’re both half out of your minds with feelings, but you throw caution to the wind.
You’ve survived up till now on sheer audacity. Maybe it can take you further.
So you kiss him.
And for a second, there’s nothing. Just the stunned stillness of the world as you close the distance, pressing your lips to his.
And then he’s grabbing you, pulling you in like he’s afraid you’ll disappear if he lets go. His hands are tangled in your clothes, your hair, desperate, shaking, like he’s trying to memorize the shape of you through touch alone. He kisses you like he’s been waiting for this moment forever, like he’s terrified it’s all a dream and any second now, he’ll wake up.
You pull away for air—and he chases after your lips, stealing another kiss before you can even take a full breath.
This one is deeper, slower, but just as desperate. It’s like he’s pouring everything he’s ever felt into you, like he’s afraid to stop, like he’s trying to tell you everything he never could with words. And you get it—because you feel the same way.
When he finally pulls back, breathless and shaking with emotion, you press one more soft kiss against his lips, and then you say it.
“I love you.”
Ace lets out a watery laugh, his forehead dropping against yours as he grins like a fool. His eyes are shining, and he cups your face like he can’t believe you’re real.
“What took you so long?”
And then he kisses you again.
The morning after your dramatic, borderline cinematic love confession, you and Ace walk into the usual meeting spot grinning like absolute fools.
You’re both trying to act normal, like the world hasn’t completely shifted on its axis, like Ace hadn’t kissed you breathless under the stars, like you hadn’t confessed to each other in a moment so romantic it could’ve been a grand finale scene in a novel. But normalcy is impossible because the second you walk in, hand-in-hand, everyone immediately knows.
Riddle, the most composed of the group, simply pinches the bridge of his nose, exhales sharply, and mutters, “Great Sevens, finally.” His tone is not congratulatory—it is the tone of a man who has suffered for far too long, who has borne witness to the sheer idiocy of your mutual pining and is just relieved that he no longer has to endure it.
Trey, ever the calm and collected one, gives you a small, knowing smile and nods. “Congrats,” he says simply, because Trey has probably seen this coming since the very beginning. He is the type of man who could predict the weather based on the way the wind blows and has likely bet money on this exact outcome.
Cater, on the other hand, reacts as expected.
“LET’S GO, MY MAN!” he hoots, high-fiving Ace so hard that Ace actually staggers backward. “Finally out of the friendzone, huh? This is a historic moment. A certified win.” He’s already pulling out his camera, preparing to document this for the masses, and you barely manage to swat it away in time.
And then there’s Deuce. Sweet, exhausted Deuce.
He doesn’t cheer, or exclaim, or even try to congratulate you. No, Deuce just sits there, staring at the both of you like he’s just been freed from an unspeakable burden. Like he’s been carrying the weight of Ace’s obliviousness and denial on his shoulders for so long that he no longer knows what to do with himself now that it’s over.
“I don’t have to hear him deny his feelings anymore,” Deuce whispers, voice thick with emotion. “I’m free.”
Ace shoves him.
And as your friends start heckling you, teasing you, yelling at you to get a room, you turn to Ace, grinning at him as he grins right back.
And in that moment, you can’t help but think back to the mysterious, rollerblading grandma who is the reason you even ended up here. The woman who defied all logic and physics, who sent you hurtling into this world with nothing but sheer willpower and questionable urban transportation.
You close your eyes, sending a silent thanks to her.
She was a real one.
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