The common area felt different now, stripped of the boisterous energy that had once filled it when the Ravager party gathered around the worn wooden table.
The flickering candlelight cast long shadows across the walls, dancing over the empty chairs where Thanir had once schemed, where Milner had boasted, where Raiven had commanded. Now only ghosts remained, their absence as heavy as the tension that settled over the four survivors.
Yomi sat at the head of the table, his storm-gray eyes studying the grain of the wood with the same intensity he might reserve for an opponent's weakness.
The beast girl pressed close to his side, her wide eyes darting between the three adults as though expecting another storm to break. Across from him, Lirien sat with her hands clasped so tightly her knuckles had gone white, while Aeloria perched on the edge of her chair like a coiled spring ready to strike.
The silence stretched until Lirien finally lifted her head, her voice cutting through the oppressive quiet. "You said you had business with me." Her words were steady, but Yomi caught the tremor beneath them, the uncertainty she was fighting to conceal. "What do you want?"
Yomi's gaze shifted from the table to her face, taking in the flush that had crept up her neck, the way her breathing seemed slightly uneven. His expression remained unreadable as he studied her for a long moment, weighing his words. When he finally spoke, his voice carried a quiet authority that seemed to fill the room.
"Come to me tonight. The largest room upstairs."
The words landed like stones dropped into still water, sending ripples of shock through the group. Aeloria's chair scraped against the floor as she leaned forward, her eyes blazing with indignation. The beast girl shrank back further, instinctively sensing the shift in the room's energy.
Yomi stood without offering any explanation, his movements deliberate despite the exhaustion that still clung to him from the chaotic Ki coursing through his system. His legs trembled slightly, a weakness he couldn't entirely hide, but his spine remained straight, his dignity intact. He didn't spare a glance for any of the three women as he turned toward the stairs.
"That's it?" Aeloria's voice cracked like a whip. "You just issue commands and expect..."
But Yomi was already walking away, his footsteps echoing hollowly on the wooden stairs. Each step seemed to reverberate through the house, a rhythmic reminder of his presence even as he disappeared from view. The sound faded gradually, leaving behind a silence that felt even heavier than before.
Aeloria turned to Lirien with desperate urgency, her voice dropping to a harsh whisper. "We need to leave. Tonight." Her hands gestured wildly toward the stairs where Yomi had vanished. "This lunatic Dra'kesh is..." She caught herself, glancing at the beast girl, then continued in a strained tone. "Can't you see what he's doing? He's manipulating you!"
Lirien remained seated, her gaze fixed on the table where Yomi had been sitting. Something flickered in her expression, not the fear Aeloria expected, but a strange mixture of determination and confusion that she couldn't quite name. When she finally stood, her movements were slow, deliberate, as though she were moving through water.
"I've already made up my mind," she said, more to herself than in answer to Aeloria's plea. Her voice carried an odd note, as if she were discovering the truth of her words even as she spoke them.
"Lirien..." Aeloria reached out, but Lirien was already moving toward the stairs, leaving her friend grasping at empty air.
Alone except for the beast girl, Aeloria released a breath that seemed to carry all her frustration and fear. She slumped back in her chair, running her hands through her hair as the weight of their situation pressed down on her. When she looked up, she found the beast girl watching her with those large, expressive eyes that seemed far too knowing for someone so young.
Forcing a smile, Aeloria reached out to pat the girl's head, a gesture of comfort she had offered countless times during their captivity. But the beast girl flinched away, her expression flickering with unmistakable fear before she caught herself and tried to hide it.
The rejection hit Aeloria like a physical blow.
Even if I was kind, she realized with dawning horror, she remembers being our prisoner.
The weight of that truth settled in her chest like a stone. All her small acts of mercy, her gentle words, her healing spells, none of it could erase the fundamental reality of what they had done. They had kept this child in chains, used her as bait, treated her as less than human.
The silence stretched between them until Aeloria cleared her throat, her voice coming out smaller than she intended. "Can you... can you cook?"
The beast girl shook her head, her movements hesitant.
"Would you like me to teach you?" Aeloria asked, surprised by the genuine hope that crept into her voice.
After a long moment of consideration, the girl nodded.
They made their way to the outdoor kitchen area, a simple setup behind the house where the Ravagers had prepared their meals. The evening air was cool against Aeloria's skin as she gathered ingredients, simple fare, but enough to make a proper meal. As she moved about, explaining each step in gentle tones, she found herself studying the beast girl's reactions.
The girl was attentive, her small hands carefully mimicking Aeloria's movements as they prepared vegetables and tended the fire. There was intelligence in her eyes, a quick understanding that spoke of a mind hungry for knowledge. Yet beneath it all, Aeloria could see the wariness that never quite left her expression, the way she positioned herself near the exits, the slight tension in her shoulders that suggested she was always ready to run.
We did this to her, Aeloria thought as she watched the girl tentatively taste the soup they were preparing. We broke something in her that kindness alone won't fix.
****
Upstairs, Lirien barely managed to slam the door shut before her legs gave out beneath her. She crumpled onto the edge of her narrow bed, trembling, panting, burning. Her breath came in sharp, ragged gasps, as if her lungs had forgotten how to function under the weight of whatever wildfire now ravaged her body.
Her skin felt too tight, too sensitive, every brush of fabric against her was torment, every shift of air an unbearable caress. She clutched at the sheets, twisting them between her fingers as she doubled over, pressing her thighs tightly together in a futile attempt to smother the inferno building low in her belly. But it only made it worse. The friction sent a jolt through her like lightning licking across soaked nerves, and she bit down hard on her lip to keep from crying out.
"Gods, what... what's happening to me?" she whispered, her voice hoarse with desperation.
Her heart pounded like a war drum, each throb syncing with the pulse between her legs. She was drenched in sweat, flushed to the point of delirium, and yet it wasn't sickness that consumed her, it was need. Violent, raw, unrelenting need. A hunger not for food or rest, but for touch. For heat. For him.
Yomi.
His name broke through the storm of her thoughts like a spell, and with it came an unbearable flood of memory: his fingers brushing her neck, the ghost of his breath against her lips, the charged silence before their kiss. The dungeon's shadows had barely contained the energy between them, and now it was in her. Corrupting her. Awakening her.
Something unnatural was coursing through her veins, slithering beneath her skin like molten silk. Whatever Yomi had done, whatever power he'd stirred, hadn't faded. It had latched on, igniting something ancient, something primal inside her that refused to be snuffed out.
She collapsed onto her side, body curling in on itself as waves of heat rolled through her. Her nipples ached, hard and sensitive beneath her shirt. Her thighs were slick, her core throbbing with need that refused to be ignored. Even breathing felt obscene. She clawed at the pillow, grinding her hips involuntarily into the mattress as shame warred with a desperation too powerful to resist.
"I'm losing my mind…" she gasped. But no, this wasn't madness. It was awakening. Her body wasn't betraying her. It was claiming something. Or someone.
And deep down, she feared, no, knew, that only Yomi could satisfy this hunger.
Or it would consume her whole.