Chapter 393: Little Chaos Enabler: The Incoming Chaos
Chapter 393: Little Chaos Enabler: The Incoming Chaos
The only currency she possessed that might actually carry weight.
But then that thought—the one she couldn’t let finish—rose anyway.
If he’d frozen her. If the Void-Ice had claimed her faster than his consciousness could catch up. If the dragon had killed the woman it loved because the woman’s daughter had finally pushed the last wrong button—
What would that do to him?
What would waking up to that do—?
The question snapped off like a guillotine blade before it could complete, too vast, too dark, too permanent to hold in one breath.
Before the horror could metastasise, Maya Scarlett had materialised like smoke given purpose and made the entire hypothetical irrelevant.
Melissa exhaled once—shaky, ragged—and began cataloguing the night’s lessons the way she catalogued everything: methodically, ruthlessly, each new truth another brick mortared into the wall she was building between herself and the chaos trying to swallow them all.
One; Phei was a living bomb. Not poetically. Literally. His emotions were the trigger mechanism; proximity to the blast radius was the only variable.
Tonight the casualty had been Victoria. Tomorrow it could be a Legacy brat who sneered wrong, a stranger who jostled him, a memory that surfaced at the exact worst second. The Void-Ice didn’t care about intent or innocence.
It answered pain with impartial annihilation.
Two; Victoria was a loaded chamberin that bomb. One of many. The full list of people who’d hurt Phei was long enough to wallpaper a war room—Danton, Brett, Anderson, Marcus, every Legacy heir who’d participated in the machine that crushed him.
They were all walking around with their names already pencilled
onto tombstones they couldn’t see yet.
Marcus Heavenchild sat at the very top like a crown prince waiting for his coronation in absentia.
Three; Phei was vulnerable. Not weak—Christ, weak was the last word anyone would ever use—but naked to his own power. The Void-Ice was unstable, chaotic, barely leashed. It could let him joke one heartbeat and freeze a room the next.
He could still smile. Still laugh. Still be the boy she loved. (They hadn’t tested whether he could still fuck her without icing her pussy from inside, but the minefield was there.) He wasn’t whole.
Not since the awakening.
Four; He needed help. Not Melissa’s arms, not Maya’s voice, not the collective desperation of every girl orbiting him like moons around a gas giant.
He needed someone who understood Void-Ice. Someone who knew dragon blood. Someone who could teach him control before control became irrelevant and the dragon wore the boy like an afterthought.
But help like that carried a butcher’s bill.
Because retrieving it meant unearthing secrets. Secrets Phei didn’t know existed. Secrets about lineage, parents, the real weight of his name—the truths Melissa had buried so deep the dirt still remembered screaming.
Digging them up now, while he was this raw, this volatile, this close to fracture, would not enlighten him. It would detonate him. Shatter the last human fragments. Leave only the dragon: cold, perfect, magnificent, emotionless.
An ice emperor wearing a boy’s face. Safe from himself. In absolute command. And empty. The eyes that looked back at her would never smile again.
They’d regard her with glacial curiosity—why does this woman keep touching my cheek like it should matter?—and she would die a little more each time she saw it.
What the fuck could she do?
Her sister was unreachable. Had been for days. Encrypted line → voicemail. Emergency channels → dead air.
Whatever black hole her sister had vanished into, it wasn’t answering Melissa’s summons.
The living shadows moved under Melissa’s skin—worry made corporeal, gnawing from the inside like termites in wet wood.
Every breath pulled splinters deeper. Every heartbeat reminded her how close she’d come to losing both of them in the same frozen instant.
She laughed again—soundless, bitter, the laugh of someone who finally understood the punchline:
The same hands that could make goddesses fall—thighs parting like scripture, slick heat blooming under divine frost—had nearly turned her daughter into art tonight.
And the only other person she could ask for help was—
“Little chaos enabler.”
A voice. Behind her. Low, amused, carrying the exact brand of warmth that belonged to someone who’d been leaning against the corridor wall for the past five minutes—arms crossed, ankles casually crossed, watching her quietly unravel and finding the whole performance mildly hilarious.
You’ve got to be fucking kidding me. Melissa didn’t turn around.
She didn’t need to. She knew that velvet drawl the way she knew her own pulse—slow, teasing, edged with the kind of affection that could slice you open with surgical precision and then kiss the wound while it bled.
The voice that had once taught her everything crazy she knew and later taught her how to hide bodies (metaphorically, mostly). The voice that belonged to the one woman on earth who could make Melissa feel simultaneously twelve years old and terminally adult in the same heartbeat.
****
At the exact same moment, out on the terrace, Phei’s phone buzzed.
Not the Samsung. Not the one still cluttered with group-chat notifications and memes.
The other one.
Encrypted to levels that would make intelligence agencies weep with envy.
The phone that held exactly three numbers: Melissa’s, Maya’s, and one contact he’d named with the bleak, self-aware precision of a man who’d long since mapped every fatal weakness in his own armour.
He fished it from his pocket without looking down.
Maya’s fingers paused mid-stroke in his hair—the gentle, steady rhythm she’d been using to coax him back from the edge for the last twenty minutes.
She felt the change before she saw it: the sudden lock of his shoulders, the way the drowsy, almost peaceful haze she’d so carefully rebuilt drained from his expression like blood from a slashed artery.
What replaced it wasn’t fear. Wasn’t anger. Wasn’t anything she had a clean name for.
It was dread. Pure. Undiluted.
He stared at the screen.
He’d hoped—stupidly, against every pattern his survival instincts had tattooed into his nervous system—that it would be Melissa checking in. Or Maya texting from her regular phone because she’d forgotten something trivial.
Or a glitch. A wrong number.
A cosmic clerical error.
Anything but this.
But he knew. He always fucking knew.
The message glowed up at him in merciless white text:
Chaos I Should Avoid:Bratt! What have you done?! That’s it! I am coming!
Phei shivered.
Not the Void-Ice bone-deep cold that now lived inside him like a second skeleton waiting to wear his skin.
This was older. Primal.
The full-body shudder of a boy who’d just received official notification that the one unstoppable force in his universe—the one he couldn’t outrun, couldn’t outfight, couldn’t charm or threaten or vanish from—was en route.
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