Chapter 1. A Tedious Terminal Life (1)
âWhatâs so great about a tyrant male lead?â
That was the thought I had after finishing the main story of [The Tyrantâs Queen].
It was a love story between Lotte, a queen with a dark past, and Llewellyn, a tyrant who suffered under the shadow of his half-sister and could never escape it.
No matter how difficult it must have been for him as the child of a concubine⊠was there really any need for him to become that twisted?
In the end, he was going to inherit the throne anyway.
âHmm.â
If anything, the truly pitiful one was the sister who lived a terminal life and diedâElia.
Since the story centered on Llewellyn and Lotte, Eliaâs story wasnât explored in much detail. Still, she was described as intelligent and broad-minded, someone who earned the trust of those beneath her.
But that was only when she was healthy.
Once she was stricken with an incurable illness of unknown origin and began to waste away, her position gradually diminished. Llewellyn stepped forward to build his standing, while Elia could no longer participate in social or political affairs.
The very people who once looked down on him for being a concubineâs son immediately switched sides once the future of the princess seemed uncertain.
âLike parents whoâll buy you anything you need, but never come to see your face.â
I couldnât help but feel for Elia. Her situation was too similar to mine.
I had once lived in a warm, loving family. Now, I had become someone no one came to visit. All the support that had once been directed toward me shifted entirely to my younger sibling, and nothing was left for me. I remembered my motherâs cold voice over the phone, saying that even the private room, the treatment expenses, and my âunproductive hobbiesâ were more than enough support.
She said it was a privilege I could only enjoy because I was born into this family.
Even without her saying it, I already knew. I knew how many people died without ever receiving treatment. How many couldnât even get into a six-person hospital room and died without proper care. How many, even when hospitalized, could do nothing but stare out the window.
But why didnât they understand that losing my parentsâ love hurt more than all of that?
âElia must have felt the same way as she slowly diedâŠâ
Lotte, who lost her parents at a young age and rebuilt the nation in their place.
Aaron, who had to watch the person he loved fall for someone else.
And Llewellyn, who struggled desperately to overcome the invisible wall that was Elia.
All the characters were tragic in their own ways, but Lotte and Llewellyn at least had a happy ending, so they didnât weigh on me as much. The one who bothered me most, after Elia, was Aaronâthe man who lived solely for Lotte.
A man that devoted and pure would have made the perfect male lead!
I couldnât understand why he had to remain trapped in Lotteâs shadow until the very end.
âA man whoâs incredibly kind and steadfastly protects you from your side⊠whatâs not to love?â
Just imagining it made me smile. Aaron was exactly my ideal type. Even the small silhouette on the cover and the brief descriptions of his appearance in the novel sparked endless imagination.
If Elia and Aaron had met⊠wouldnât they have been a little happier?
Neither Elia nor Aaron was deeply explored in the story, but it was clear they had lived upright lives without shameful pasts. Most of their presence came through mentions by those who followed and were loyal to them. Though their direct appearances were few, they were referenced here and there in conversations.
Still, the fact that they both met tragic ends left me with a sense of regret.
âAm I the only one who stans Aaron? Why is there nothing but Llewellyn fan art?â
With my laptop open, I browsed fan art of The Tyrantâs Queen on social media. Everywhere I looked, people were obsessing over Llewellyn.
Was this the sorrow of liking a second male lead?
There wasnât much information about Aaron in the original work, so it seemed people just werenât that interested. It was disappointing. Even in his brief appearances, I thought he made quite an impact.
âTime for your blood draw.â
Pulled out of the novel, it was time to return to realityâthe life of a terminal patient with an incurable illness that didnât even have a name.
The familiar scent of disinfectant and medicine filled my nose, mixing with the damp yet cool mist from the humidifier.
âShall we use this hand today?â
âYes.â
Both my arms had grown thin, bruised countless times from needles inserted for blood draws and IVs. Today, it was the back of my left handâwhere the bruising had finally begun to fadeâthat was chosen again. Each day, as soon as the bruises lightened and veins became visible, another needle would pierce through.
âHow are you feeling today?â
The nurse asked as she transferred the drawn blood into a vial. The same question, every time. And my answer was always the same.
âThe same.â
âNo improvement? No new pain anywhere?â
âNo.â
Perhaps my end was truly approaching. There were days when the pain was so unbearable that all the lights in the hospital would be turned on in the dead of night. But now, I had grown so numb that even the sting of the needle barely registered.
âDonât stay up too late reading today. Try to sleep early.â
âBut thereâs still the side storiesâŠâ
I knew a regular routineâsleeping early and waking earlyâwas better for my health. I used to live like that before I got sick. But I loved the quiet emotions of dawn. I didnât want to fall asleep. I would resist my heavy eyelids, reading novels until I drifted off without realizing it. And when I woke up, sunlight would already be filling the hospital room.
âThen how about thisâsleep early today and wake up earlier than usual to read?â
âReading feels better at dawn.â
âThe moments just before sunrise, and right as the sun comes upâthat feeling is nice too.â
It seemed she had come prepared to persuade me today. I wanted to resist more, but she looked like she wouldnât leave until I agreed. Reluctantly, I nodded. I couldnât keep her from tending to other patients any longer. Only then did the nurse leave the room.
âLetâs just sleep a little.â
When the promised bedtime arrived, I decided to be a good patient for once. I turned off the lights and lay down. It was rare for me to go to bed at a time when some rooms were still lit, the night view visible outside.
I should sleep quickly and wake up to read the side stories.
Murmurs of voices filled the air.
In my hazy state, I couldnât make out what people were saying. It felt unfamiliarânever before had I heard such noise just before waking. What could possibly disturb the usual silence of my hospital room?
It didnât sound distant, like from beyond a doorâit was close.
âUghâŠâ
I let out a small groan to signal that I was waking up. Instantly, the room fell silent.
âYour Highness!â
âŠWhat?
My heavy eyelids snapped open at the shout, and I found countless gazes fixed on me.
There shouldnât have been any unfamiliar facesâIâd been confined to the hospital long enough to recognize everyone. Even if new staff had arrived, at least one familiar face should have been mixed in.
âIâll fetch the physician!â
âYou collapsed so suddenly, we were all so worried. Are you feeling unwell anywhere?â
Looking closer, the women surrounding me werenât wearing nurse uniforms, but maid outfits. They addressed me with honorifics, calling me âYour Highness.â
This is a dream.
Ignoring the chattering maids, I closed my eyes again.
I mustâve read too many fantasy romance novels. Iâm no royaltyââYour Highnessâ and maids? This is one extravagant dream.






