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@yandere-killer003
Threaded in Fire - Part 2/3
The bond was only supposed to burn quietlyâbut it raged. And in the stillness between battles, your bodies, your fire, and your fate began to entwine beyond undoing.
Warnings: nsfw, smut, sacred smut intimacy, slow burn romance, mating ritual, soulmate themes, canon-typical violence, emotional manipulation, psychological trauma, emotional angst, found family, loss, survival, emotional trauma, emotional healing, hurt-comfort, lunarian headcanons, oda please let me write the lunarians
Word Count: 11000~
Pairing: King (Alber) x Female Lunarian!Reader
crossposted on AO3
Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3
Chapter 15: I see you
You took his hands.
They were rough and strong and warm in yours. You didnât let go.
Silently, you turned and began to walk, guiding him back along the narrow cliff path. His footsteps were heavy but soundless, wings tucked behind him. You led. He followed. Not because he had toâbut because he wanted to.
And every few steps, you looked back. Just to see his face again. Just to make sure it wasnât a dream.
When you reached the cave, the hush fell again. The seaâs distant thunder softened. The shadows welcomed you like an old home.
You turned. Faced him.
He was close. The cave walls brought you close. But it wasnât just the stone. It was the gravity between your bodies. The fire that whispered without flame.
Your hands lifted, rising to his face. You brushed his cheekbone, pushed his white hair back behind his ear. Let your fingers graze the braid he still wore. He closed his eyes at the touch, just for a breath.
Then you stepped back. And slowly, you began to undress. One piece at a time. Each movement calm. Certain. Eyes never leaving his.
You watched how his gaze changedâhow reverence overtook it, followed by want. Not hunger. Not demand. But want. As if he saw something sacred unveiled. As if he didnât dare breathe too loud and disturb the moment.Â
He began to undress too. Leather fell away from fire-darkened skin, and your breath caught when you saw the shape of himâbroad, carved like something ancient, his body a weapon and a temple in one. Muscle wrapped around his frame like fire made flesh.
And he was watching you. Only you.
Naked now, you stood before him. Your bodies almost touched. Heat shimmered between you. But it was not heat alone. It was the quiet. The care.
Your hands reached for him. And his reached for you. Fingertips met skin. Tentative at first. Curious. Worshipful. And then your mouths found each other again. This kiss was deeper.
His lips opened against yours. His breath mingled with yours. His handsâbolder nowâroamed your back, tracing each curve, each muscle, each line that had grown in hiding. When his fingers swept between your shoulder blades, just where your wings metâyou gasped.
His head lifted slightly, eyes searching. âDid I hurt you?â he asked, voice barely above a whisper.
You shook your head, breathless. âNo. I⊠I didnât know it would feel like that.â
His expression shiftedâsubtle but unmistakable. A quiet smile, born not of amusement, but discovery. He had found a place in you that hadnât been touched. That hadnât even known it could be touched. And he honored it.
He kissed you again.
His mouth trailed from your lips to your jaw, down the line of your throat. His tongue tasted your skin. His lips sucked lightly where your pulse danced. Every now and then, his fingers returned to that space where your wings met your bodyâeach touch making you shiver, ache.
You felt your knees weaken, and your hands clutched his shoulders, his hair. He groaned softly when your fingers threaded into the braid, when your body pressed closer, when you gasped again as his hardened length brushed your thigh.
You grew bolder too. Your hands mapped his chest, his ribs, his hipsâeach touch more assured. You wanted to know him. All of him. And he let you.
The cave was quiet, holding your bodies in a hush as sacred as prayer.
Kingâs breath was warm against your throat, each exhale brushing your skin like a secret. His lips moved slowly, mapping youânot with hunger, but awe. Your fingers traced the long, powerful line of his spine, feeling the heat of his flame pulsing softly behind him. His wings flexed once, then tucked close, as if he was afraid to touch too much at once. As if reverence made him cautious.
You leaned into him.
Let your body press fully to hisâbare, heat to heat. His breath caught when your curves slid against the ridges of his stomach and chest. His hands found your waist, then your back, trailing down the lines of your body like he was memorizing you through touch alone. You were strong, beautifulâand so was he.
When your foreheads touched, he stayed like that for a long moment. As if the contact steadied him. As if you did.
âI never thoughtâŠâ he whispered, voice low, unsure. âThat Iâd ever feel this.â
You cupped his jaw gently. âYou donât have to think. Just feel.â
And he did.
When he kissed you again, it was slower than beforeâdeeper. His mouth parted yours, his tongue stroking with quiet patience, coaxing. Not demanding. One of his hands lifted, fingers threading through your white hair, cradling the back of your head while the other slid down your spine, curved over your hip, and pulled you closer.
His arousal pressed firm and hot against your thigh, but he didnât push.
He waited.
You met his eyes.
Then nodded, once, silently.
Your fingers slid between you, guiding him gently to youâand his whole body shuddered at your touch. You gasped softly when he began to enter you, the stretch slow, deliberate, your bodies aligning like they had always been meant to. His hands trembled slightly where they held you.
He sank into you in silence.
No sharp movements. Just the closeness. Just the fullness of him inside you, your arms wrapped around his neck, your wings flexing once in a ripple of sensation. He groaned low into your shoulderâbarely restrained, like the sound itself was sacred.
The first movements were tentative. Barely a rhythm. Just a breath shared between two survivors, testing the boundary of a connection that had never existed before now. But your bodies remembered. Or perhaps they learned.
You tilted your hips gently. He answered with a quiet thrust. Every time his hips met yours, your flames surged, casting golden shadows across the walls. His mouth worshipped every inch of your throat, your shoulders, your chest. His hands splayed against your hips, your thighs, holding you like he would never let you go.
Your cries filled the cave. Soft, sacred, rising. His name on your lips. Over and over.
âAlber.â
And his mouthâon your lips, your neck, your shoulder. He whispered yours back.
The way your name sounded in his voice would haunt you forever.
Each movement became easier, smoother. Heat pooling low, your legs curling around his waist as he cradled you close, each stroke sinking deeperânot just into your body, but into the space youâd both buried for years. That place that ached for belonging. For softness.
His lips found your neck again. He licked, then sucked gently, his mouth warm and wet where it trailed over your pulse. His hand slid along your back again, brushing between your shoulder blades where feathers met skinâ
You gasped again. Sharper this time. He paused, lips still. His eyes met yours. You shook your head with a shaky smile.Â
âStill not pain. Just⊠sensitive.â
A flicker of a smile passed across his lips. Something rare. Soft. You felt it like sunlight. Then he kissed you again, deep and slow and anchoring.
The rhythm between you built gentlyânever fast, never rough. Just the sound of breath, the shift of skin, the quiet rustle of feathers and the soft clap of bodies moving in sync. Your hands cradled his face as he moved within you, your touch calming his fire even as it grew. His eyes never left yours, even as his jaw tightened and his thrusts deepened.
You pressed your forehead to his again, and you whispered, âI see you.â
That was when he broke.
His breath faltered. His movements grew ragged. But still he held youâhands splayed across your back, fingers brushing the base of your wings again, drawing another shiver from you. And thenâtogetherâyou trembled.
Your body arched, your voice a soft sound against his shoulder, and he followed you with a groan muffled against your skin. His release was full-bodiedâlike something being let go after too long held back.
For a long time, you stayed like that. Entwined. Silent.
He didnât pull away, and you didnât ask him to. His flame was steady now. Yours, too. The heat of both your bodies mingled like a shared memoryâlike a promise that you were no longer alone.
You held each other in the hush, naked and trembling, he lifted a hand to your cheek, thumb brushing beneath your eye and when your eyes found each other againâyou saw it.
The vow. The bond. The truth of who you were to one another.
It was not spoken.
It was known.
~~~
Chapter 16: Threaded in Fire
You slept.Â
Or something close to it.
Your limbs tangled with his, wings wrapped around one another like a sheltering cocoonâblack feathers layered, gleaming softly where the moonlight kissed them. The fire between your shoulder blades flickered low and calm, and his echoed itâyour heartbeats syncing in that primal, ancient rhythm only your kind could know.
You woke first.
Not from a nightmare. Not from fear. But from contentment. The kind so unfamiliar it startled you. You lay atop him now, your cheek resting on folded hands over his chest, your body stretched the length of his. His arms still around you. His face peaceful. Unmasked. The strongest man you had ever known... asleep beneath you, trusting you with his flame.
You smiled softly.
His scent clung to your skin. Your fire curled and purred with it. And the threadâgods, the thread still hummed between you, an invisible line of heat that pulsed in your belly and heart and wings. A pull, soft and constant, like gravity with breath.
Something stirred at the edge of memory, a distant echo carried in your blood. You searched for it like reaching into a dream, fingers brushing old warmth. Something about what came after the courtship. After the trust had been won.
Not a ceremony. Not a kiss. But a joining. Something older. Something sacred.
You frowned faintly, sifting through the half-remembered stories told in secret during your girlhoodâwhispers passed between elders on long-forgotten islands. The Lunarians had been a people of silence, of sacred rites passed through fire and hush. You remembered fragments: the cartwheel of trust, the way your ancestors had once chosen one anotherânot with rings or promises, but with fire. With body. With soul.
Only once in a lifetime did they choose. Like the bald eagles did. And when they did⊠they knew.
You looked at him again, your gaze softening. You felt it in your chest nowâno, in both your hearts, thudding quietly in rhythm with his. Your body had known him. Welcomed him.Â
Your wings had wrapped around him without thought, brushing his. He stirred but didnât wake. Not yet. You watched him. Memorized every line of his face. Trying to realize it.
He was not a lover. But a mate.
A bond for life. For soul. For fire.
You swallowed. Heart thudding.
Was that what had happened? Your body knew. Your fire knew. But the mindâthe part of you raised in hiding, in lonelinessâstruggled to name it.
So, you whispered, shy and low against the hush of his chest. âAlberâŠ?â
His eyes opened immediately. Not startled. But aware. Present. His hand slid up your back, splaying between your wings, grounding you in that instant.
You searched his face, heat brushing your cheeks. âIs this⊠what I think it is?â
He was silent for a moment. Not because he didnât knowâbut because he wanted the words to be true.
Then he nodded. Slowly. âYes.â
Your breath caught.
âThere is a bond now,â he said. His voice deep and rough with sleep and something more ancient. âThreaded in fire. Between you and me. Just as our people once did.â His hand cupped your face, thumb brushing the apple of your cheek. âItâs not something that can be broken. And even if it couldâI wouldnât survive trying.â
Your fingers curled around his wrist, your heart breaking and healing in the same breath.
âYouâre mine now?â you whispered.
He looked at you and said, simplyâwithout hesitation: âIâve always been yours. As much as you are mine. I just didnât know it.â
You laid your cheek to his chest, his heartbeat steady beneath your ear. And your wingsâthose great, dark wingsâtightened around him once more. As if your body already knew the truth your mind had just caught up to.
Not lovers. Not just partners. Bonded. One soul in two flames.
You closed your eyes, a quiet sound escaping your lipsâa hum, a sigh, something caught between relief and awe. His arms encircled you more fully, one hand splayed across your back, the other resting at the curve of your waist.
For the first time since you were a child, you felt wholly safe.
Whole.
~~~
You stayed like that until the first light of morning stretched across the cliffs, seeping slowly into the cave in soft gold.
The fire between your bodies had calmed, but it hadnât gone out. It never would now. You lay tangled together on the furs, your breathing matched, your wings brushing gently in the quiet.
Outside, the wind stirred. Not harsh. Not unwelcome. Just a reminder that he had to go.
He dressed in silence, the leather armor going back on piece by piece. You watched him, sitting on the furs, wrapped in his scent and yours. Neither of you wanted to say goodbye.
The mating thread pulled. Tight.
Every step away from you cost him something. His fire flared with reluctance. Your chest ached, as if a phantom hand tugged at your sternum. Your wings twitched, itching to follow.
He reached for the final pieceâthe mask. And stopped. Turned.
The pull was too strong.
You stood too, moving to him without thinking, caught in the same invisible current.
And then his hands were in your hair. His mouth was on yours. This kiss wasnât tender. It was hungry. Fierce. Deep enough to steal breath and thought and memory. His hands fisted in your white-silver strands, your wings spread in instinct, wrapping around his once more.
You gasped into his mouth, and he swallowed the sound like he was starving for it.
He kissed you like he might never again. Like the parting would rip something from him if he didnât take this with him. His fire surgedâhot, possessive, sacred. Your hands clutched his back, fingers curling against the leather as your mouths clashed and lingered. When he pulled backâbarelyâit was only to rest his forehead against yours, your fires catching between your bodies.
âI will come back,â he murmured. âI will always come back.â
You nodded, your breath still shaky. âI know.â
He kissed you once more, slow this time. Final. Then the mask came down. And King was gone. But the bond remained.
Unseen.
Unbreakable.
~~~
Chapter 17: Strengthened by the Bond
He soared back toward Onigashima, the wind whipping cold against his face, his mask locked tight once more. The armor was back on. The name King too. But the man inside it, Alber, was... shifting.
His wings, vast and black, cut through the sky with relentless rhythm. His expression, as always, unreadable. But under the steel, under the fire, something stirred.
You.
The bond throbbed like a second heartbeat in his chest, ancient and alive. It didnât fade with distance. It pulledâslow, relentless, sacred. Not a chain. A tether. A reminder.Â
He thought it would distract him. It didnât. It sharpened him. Yes, it hurtâdeep and dull, a hollow in his chest that only your fire could fillâbut it was pain with purpose. It kept his instincts honed, his senses alert, his soul lit with something no warlord could forge.
You were his mate now.
Chosen not by command, not by timing or circumstanceâbut by something older than breath. Something true. A Lunarian bond didnât ask for permission. It simply was.
He clenched his jaw behind the mask and fixed his focus on the fortress rising from the mistâOnigashima, iron and bone and fire. Kaido was there. And AlberâKingâstill believed in him. Still carried out every mission in his name. Still looked at him and saw the Pirate King, Joy Boy.
That hadnât changed. That would not change.
Kaido had pulled him from the wreckage of extinction. Had given him purpose. Fire. A reason to rise when heâd been half-dead in a lab cage. No one else had ever done that.
Until you.
But this bond didnât divide him.
It refined him.
Like heat through obsidian, shaping the blade sharper.
~~~
He entered the great hall, quiet as ever, footsteps echoing like thunder beneath the high arches. The usual chaos unfolded belowâJack muttering, Queen snorting, subordinates shouting over territory maps. And still, King said nothing. Just stood there, arms crossed, wings still, flame low and steady behind his mask.
Kaidoâs eyes slid toward him eventually. Slow. Sharp. A sip from the jug. A pause.Â
âYouâre quiet,â Kaido said.
King didnât move. âAlways am.â
âNot like this,â Kaido muttered, half amused. âYou disappeared. Came back burning hotter. Like you found something.â
King didnât deny it. Didn't confirm it either. But the silence was enough.
Kaidoâs grin was faintânot mocking, just knowing. âThere a woman behind that fire?â
Jack blinked. Queen choked on his drink. But Kaido just leaned forward, elbows on his knees, eyes steady.
âGood. Took you long enough.â
No mocking. No threat. Just quiet satisfaction.
âYou fight better when somethingâs at stake,â Kaido added. âKeep burning like this, I donât care what stoked the flame.â
King inclined his head once. Acknowledgment.
Kaido raised his jug again. âTreat yourself well, King. Youâve earned that much.â
~~~
That night, when the fortress finally quieted and the wind swept high through the rafters of Onigashima, he climbed to the tallest tower and stood at its edge, wings spread like shadows torn against the stars.
He said nothing. Did nothing. Just felt. Just burned.
And when the thread between you tugged againâfaint but steady, a heartbeat in the hollow of his chestâ He didnât resist it. Not this time.Â
Because it didnât make him weak.
It made him whole.
~~~
Chapter 18: The Hollow Sky
He was gone.
The world hadnât ended. The trees still whispered in the wind. The ocean still moved. The sky stretched wide and open. But everything felt wrong.
You sat in the mouth of the cave, wings folded close around your shoulders, knees drawn up to your chest. The horizon where he had vanished shimmered in the morning light, still empty. The fire between your shoulder blades burnedânot violently, not with pain, but with a steady, aching heat. A low flame. A hollow thrum. Like a nest without its mate.
You tried to ground yourself. Fingers brushing the stone. Toes curling into the soil. But nothing helped. Not when the tether between you was still so alive.
You had only just found himâanother Lunarian. The other half of a people erased from the world. And in that sacred, wordless courtship of fire and instinct, you had chosen each other. No rituals. No declarations. Just a bond forged in marrow. Threaded in fire.
It was supposed to bring peace. Instead, it brought this: a constant, quiet ache. As if half your soul had taken flight and the other half couldnât follow.
You had never known what mating truly meant. Not in the old way. Not in the Lunarian way. Youâd been too young when your people fell. But now, the bond had awakened something ancient in youâsomething buried so deep it had survived extinction.Â
Now every breath felt thin. Every gust of wind that didnât carry his scent made your pulse stutter in disappointment. Thenâsharp. A flicker. The fire between your wings pulsed once, sudden and bright. You gasped. Clutched your chestânot in pain, but recognition.
He was thinking of you.
He was missing you.
You could feel itâlike heat bleeding through stone. The pull of his longing. His restraint. His war with silence. He had returned to Onigashima. To Kaido. To the mask. But the thread between you didnât dim. It trembled. Tight and taut and alive. And he was burning too.
Your wings curled tighter around you as you pressed your forehead to your arms, breath shaking.
âAlberâŠâ you whispered.
His true name fell from your lips like a sacred vow, soft and trembling. And your body ached. Your soul reached. But stillâyou stayed. Because thatâs what the bond meant, too.
Not just instinct.
Not just fire.
But trust.
You trusted he would return. So you waited, flame flickering softly in the morning wind, eyes locked on the sky.
Watching.
Listening.
And when the tether in your chest pulsed againâstronger this time, like a heartbeat in the darkâYou closed your eyes. And let it burn.
~~~
Chapter 19: The Breaking Point
The pain had evolved.
No longer a dull ache. No longer a whisper under the surface. Now it pulsedâwild, primal, aliveâwith every breath he took too far from you. It wasnât a wound. It was a warning.
Something sacred inside him was tipping, demanding, burning. Not with weakness, but with need. The bond had waited. Endured. But Alber had pushed it too far. The distance, the silenceâit wasnât sustainable anymore. You were too far.
And every step he took inside Onigashima felt like defiance. Not against Kaido. Not against his captainâs orders. But against the fire stitched through his soul.
The thread had started as a quiet tether. Now it was a roar.
Still, he wore the armor. Fastened the mask. Fulfilled his duties like a ghost with a sword. To the Beast Pirates, he was unchangedâstoic, merciless, perfect. But Kaido had noticed. A breath too shallow. A movement a fraction late.
âYouâve been somewhere,â Kaido said the night before, low and amused. âOr⊠with someone.â
Alber hadnât answered.Â
Kaido didnât press.
But the suspicion curled like smoke between them. So he carried on. Gave orders. Flew patrols. Trained with steel and fire. Tried to burn out the tension. To prove to himself he still had control.
But the bond had grown teeth now.
It bit into him with every hour apart. Every night without your fire pressed to his. Every moment your scent didnât ride the wind. He felt it in his bones, in the marrow. In the way his hands ached when they werenât on your skin. In the way his flame stuttered.
He still believed in Kaido. Still trusted him. But belief was no longer the loudest voice in his soul.
You were.
You, who had touched the part of him Kaido never could.
You, who had called him Alber, not King.
And that made all the difference.
He tried discipline. Meditation. Flight until his wings went numb. Brutal sparring with Queen until his knuckles split open. But nothing silenced the hum of the bond now. It didnât want to be silenced. It wanted to be answered. And tonightâunder a too-bright moon and too-empty skyâit demanded everything.
He was alone in the high tower, perched on stone, fire low behind his shoulders, wings twitching with tension. He hadnât spoken all day. Hadnât slept in three. His heartbeat was a hammer. His flame, erratic. The pressure in his chestânot emotional. Instinctual. Sacred.
And thenâ The thread snapped. Not broken. Pulled taut. Alive. Screaming.
He doubled over with a gasp, eyes flashing behind the mask. His wings unfurled wide with a sound like a thunderclap. His hands trembled. His breath hitched once, sharp. He had pushed it too far. The bond wasnât asking anymore.
It was summoning.
Without a thought, without even conscious choice, he launched himself into the sky. The ledge vanished beneath his boots. The wind howled past his ears as fire exploded from his back.
He didnât think. Didnât plan. Didnât care who saw. All that mattered was the direction. All that mattered was you. Because whatever the world thought he wasâKaidoâs weapon, the Beast Piratesâ calamity, King of the skiesâhe knew the truth now.
He was yours.
And nothingânothingâwould keep him from you another night.
~~~
Chapter 20: Starved Flame
You felt him before you saw him.
It wasnât sound, or scent, or even the rhythm of wingbeats tearing through the sky. It was the bondâyour bond. A roar through your veins, a flare of heat along the sacred thread that tethered you to him. It slammed into your chest so suddenly your knees buckled, your breath catching in your throat.
Alber.
Your heart called his name before your voice could.Â
You stepped outside the cave where you had waited these long, heavy days. Nights had crawled across your soul like shadows, but none of it mattered now.Â
Because he was here.
He landed with the force of a meteor, wings snapping wide before folding behind him like twin shadows. There was no armor. No mask. Not anymore. Because the moment his eyes locked onto yours, he ripped the mask away.
And then he was on you.
No words. No hesitation. Just the crash of his mouth on yoursâhot, rough, relentless. It wasnât a kiss. It was a claiming. A furious collision of breath and soul and ache. His hands gripped your face, then your hips, then your ass, dragging you against him like skin contact was the only thing keeping him alive.
You gasped into his mouth, head tipping back as he kissed you deeperâtongue sweeping past your lips, devouring you like a man long starved. Your fingers speared into his thick white hair, clinging, trembling, your flame igniting up your spine in response.
His wings snapped wide, trembling with restraint, encasing you bothâand your own flared to meet them, feathers brushing his back. It was instinct. It was bond. It was biology screaming: now.
He carried you. Lips never leaving yours, hands locking beneath your thighs as your legs wrapped around his waist. You could feel the hard line of him pressed against you through his leathers, feel the way he shook from holding back.
He brought you into the caveâyour caveâlit only by firelight and need. Your back hit the wall with a gasp, stone cold against your skin, his body burning into yours like a sun pressed too close. His mouth moved to your throatâbiting, sucking, marking. Not gentle.
âNever again,â he growled into your neck, voice low and rough. âNever again this long.â
You nodded against him, panting, hips already grinding to meet his. âIt hurt, Alber.â
His grip tightened, fire flaring hotter. âI know. I felt everything.â
Then his hand slipped between your legs, fingers stroking you through soaked foldsârough, fast, no teasing. âAlready dripping for me,â he snarled.
âFor you,â you gasped, hips canting into his palm. âAlways you.â
He didnât wait.Â
He yanked his pants low just enough to free himselfâthick, hard, leakingâand aligned in one smooth, brutal thrust. He sank into you fully. Deep.
You cried outâhead slamming back into the wall, legs locking tighter around his waistâas he filled you in a single, devastating stroke. Your walls clenched around him, hot and pulsing, the bond singing with re-connection. Alber groaned against your collarbone, forehead pressed to your skin as he held still, shaking.
Then he moved.
No rhythm. No gentleness. Just raw need, hips slamming into yours, bodies crashing together with wet, filthy sounds and the scent of fire and sex thick in the air. His hand cupped your ass, guiding your body down on each thrust, making you take him to the hilt.
You moanedâopen, wild, desperate. âMore,â you breathed. âHarder.â
He gave it.
Your flames burst across your back, wings shivering as he drove into you like he could carve his name into your soul. His nameâAlber, Alberâfell from your lips like prayer. His teeth grazed your jaw, your throat, your shoulder, finding the spots that made you writhe and clench tighter around him.
Your nails raked down his back, dragging growls from him that were all animal. Each thrust knocked you harder into the wall, legs trembling from the intensity.
The cave lit with fireâyour fire, then his. Red and gold. Fever-bright. Sacred. The bond between you throbbed like a second heart.
Your orgasm slammed into youâsudden, blinding. Your body seized, walls fluttering around him, wings flaring wide as your flame burst across the stone in a wave of heat. You cried out, head tossed back, flame echoing in your voice. He felt it. Growled. But he didnât stop.
âNot done,â he rasped. âNot nearly done.â
He slammed deeper, harder, until the wet slap of your bodies echoed off the walls. Your body took him greedily, stretching, opening, begging for more. And when he came, he did it with a snarl, hips grinding deep as he emptied into you, forehead pressed to yours, fire exploding from his back in a halo of gold.
He shuddered, and then stilledâpanting, trembling, one palm pressed over the place between your wings.
The place no one touched beside him.
~~~
You werenât sure how long it lastedâhow many times you reached for each other, lost yourselves in each other. Time fractured. It was ancient. Primal. Not just pleasure. It was salvation. Soul-starvation fed.
And when it was overâwhen you collapsed into him, tangled and dazed, his forehead pressed to yours, your wings limp and twitching in the aftermath, clothes long goneâyou whispered the question that had haunted the silence between you.
âDo you think⊠our ancestors felt this too?â
His chest rose against yours. His hand found yours, lacing your fingers together, slick and warm.
âThey mustâve,â he murmured. âHow else would they have survived this madness?â
You swallowed, dazed. âThey mustâve known the moment they found each other.â
He didnât speak for a moment. Then, quiet. âSo did I,â he whispered. âFrom the second I saw you.â
The fire between your shoulders bloomed again. But even in the warmth of his arms, in the silence that followed the storm, something stirred. A question you hadnât dared to voice until now.
Were you truly meant for each other⊠or had fate simply thrown you together because you were the last?
It dug into your ribs like thorns, and you knew he felt it. The bond flinched, rippling with the shadow of your fear. His hand rose gently to your cheek, thumb brushing your skin. His eyesâcrimson and unreadableâheld no anger. Only understanding.
You turned your face into his chest, not in shame, but in the quiet ache of doubt. Of wondering whether love had found you by choice⊠or because there was no one else left.
Still, you whispered it. âDo you think we only bonded because weâre the last of our kindâŠ?â
He didnât answer right away. Just held you tighter.Â
Then he shifted, pulling back enough to look into your face. He didnât force eye contactâhe waited. Patient, steady, his fingers threading through your silver-white hair like it was something sacred.
âNo,â he said softly. âI think the fire between us knows the difference.â
You blinked and he continued, voice low and sure.
âIf it were just biology⊠just survival⊠I wouldnât lose my mind every second Iâm away from you. I wouldnât crave your soul like this.â His gaze didnât waver. âThe bond didnât form because weâre alone. It formed because we found each other.â
A silence stretched. Full. Heavy. Then, quieter:
âI donât know what our ancestors called it. But this⊠this is real.â And then, nearly a whisper: âI chose you. Not because I had to. Because I couldnât help it.â
You stared at him. Breathless. Your heart burning wild in your chest. And in that moment, it didnât matter what fate had decided. Because he had chosen you.
And youâdespite the fear, despite the questionsâchose him back all over again.
~~~
Chapter 21: Morning Flame
The sun was just beginning to rise, soft gold filtering into the cave through cracks in the stone. Light stretched across the furs, across tangled limbs and fading embers, warming skin that still hummed with the echo of flame and bond.
You stirred slowly, breath deep, limbs heavy with satisfaction. Your body achedâbut not in pain. In memory. In fulfillment.
Alber was behind you, his chest warm against your back, one strong arm slung around your waist, the other tucked beneath your head. His wings were draped loosely around you both, black and soft and protective. You felt his face buried in your hair, breath ghosting over your neck in slow, contented rhythm.
The bond between you stirredâbright, content, steady.
You smiled.
He was still asleep, or at least somewhere between sleep and waking. His grip on you tightened slightly when you shifted, your bare skin brushing against his as you arched just enough to feel the heat of him pressing low against your spine.
A pleased sound rumbled in his chest.Â
You wriggled, slow and teasing, grinning when he groaned softly behind you. His hand at your waist flexed. You could feel him hardening already.
"Good morning," you whispered with a smile, twisting slightly in his arms.
You turned to face him, his eyes still half-lidded, hair tousled, lips parted with sleep. You gave him a playful nose nuzzleâyour grin brushing hisâand then pressed a soft, fleeting kiss to his lips.
But he didnât let you go. His hand came up fast, cradling your face with both palms, his eyes suddenly sharp and alive with mischief.
âNo,â he murmured, voice still thick with sleep and smoke. âCome back here.â
And then he pulled you in.
The kiss that followed was nothing like the one before. It was hungry. Deep. Slow. You gasped into it, your body melting against his as his mouth devoured yours like heâd been waiting all night for this moment. The bond flaredâwarm and vibrantâsparking through your chest and down to your toes.
You both moaned into the kiss, the sound shared, breathless.
When he broke away, it was only to shift you beneath him, his body sliding over yours with reverent ease. His hands exploredâslow this time. Worshipful. He kissed your neck, your collarbones, the top of each breast. His tongue circled one nipple, then the other, until your back arched and your fingers tangled in his hair again.
He growled softly at your response, lips moving lower, trailing kisses down your stomach, slow and deliberate. When he reached your thighs, he paused only to look up at youâeyes glowing, wings fluttering faintly behind him.
And then he buried his face between your legs.
Your gasp echoed off the stone walls, hips jerking as his tongue found you, slow at first, then deeper. His grip on your thighs tightened as he held you in place, devouring you with the same focus he gave to battleâlike this was the only war he ever wanted to fight.
You moaned his nameââAlberâŠââvoice breaking as the heat coiled in your belly. Your hands clutched his hair, guiding him, anchoring yourself to him as he worshiped you with his mouth.
When your climax hit, it was sharp and shaking, your thighs trembling around his head as your flame flared behind you, golden light dancing along the cave walls. He didnât stop until your moans turned to whimpers, until you were gasping his name through the aftershocks, limp and glowing beneath him.
And only then did he crawl back up your bodyâslowly, reverentlyâhis mouth slick with you, his expression dark with awe and desire. He kissed you again, deep and slow, letting you taste yourself on his lips, before guiding himself inside you once more.
This time it was different. No desperation. No frenzy. Just heat. Connection. Knowing.
His thrusts were slow, deep, his hands cradling your face, your hips, your wings. You clung to him, legs wrapping around his waist, gasping each time he pushed deeper, your nails trailing down his back. You breathed together, moved together, flames dancing between your shouldersâsteady, calm, content.
You were still burning.
But now you were whole.
~~~
Chapter 22: What Comes Next
You lay tangled in him, breath slowly evening, the fire in your chest soft and steady again. The heat between your bodies had cooled to something gentlerâwarm skin, lazy limbs, wings unfolded across the furs in messy, unguarded sprawl.
His arm was wrapped beneath you, holding you against his chest. The other hand stroked along your spine, fingers idling near the edge of your wingsânever too close to the center, just enough to trace comfort into your bones.
He was quiet. And you liked that about him. When he didnât speak, you didnât feel ignored. You felt watched. Considered.
Your palm rested against his chest, rising and falling beneath you, strong and steady. You closed your eyes and let yourself listen to the bond again, the way it curled around your soul now, no longer screamingâbut purring.
âThatâs⊠better,â you murmured against his skin.
He made a low sound of agreement.
You felt him shift slightly behind you, adjusting one wing so it curved protectively over your bare back, and pressed a kiss to your temple. His hand stilled against your shoulder.
You tilted your head. âYouâre thinking.â
âAlways,â he said softly.
You smiled. âAbout what?â
He was silent for a beat longer this time.
âWe canât be apart that long again.â
The statement was simple. Absolute. It settled in your chest like an anchor. You turned to look up at him, face warm with affection.
âYou make it sound like a command.â
His lips twitchedâjust barely. âNo. A fact.â
You huffed softly, amused, but his expression stayed serious. His gaze searched yours.
âDo you know how to fight?â he asked suddenly.
You blinked. Then let out a quiet, startled laugh. âAre you serious?â
His expression didnât change.
You propped yourself up on your elbow, smirking. âYou mean⊠aside from surviving extinction, dodging hunters, hiding for half my life, and setting traps on cliff faces?â
Still, he waited.
You rolled your eyes fondly. âYes, Alber. We learned the basics when we were kids. It was part of our schoolingâspear forms, aerial maneuvering, coordinated fire usage. Lunarian education was a little more intense than just books.â
His brow lifted faintly. âBut most of your life has been running.â
âHiding,â you corrected, not without pride. âThereâs an art to that too.â Then your smile softened. âIâve never been trained for open combat, but I know my fire. I know how to move. Iâm fast in the air.â
That made something in his face shift. The smallest smile tugged at the corner of his mouth. âYouâre faster than me.â
You raised a brow, surprised. âYou admit that?â
He didnât answer right awayâjust brushed his fingers down the curve of your wing, the gesture unexpectedly reverent.
âItâs rare,â he said quietly. âIâve never been out flown before. Until you.â
You blinked. The simple praise hit harder than you expected.
âWhy are you asking all that?â
His gaze settled on yours againâsteady, focused. âBecause I want you with me.â A pause. âAt my side. Not just here. There.â
âThere?â
âOnigashima.â
You stilled.
âYou want me toâŠ?â
âMeet Kaido. Join the Beast Pirates.â
Your breath caught. âAlberâheâsâŠâ You trailed off, swallowing. âHeâs the strongest man in the world. Would he even approve of me?â
He didnât scoff. Didnât brush off your fear. He let it sit for a moment. Then he nodded once.Â
âYes. He will.â
âYou sound so sure.â
âBecause Iâll vouch for you.â
You looked at him, wide-eyed. âYouâd do that?â
His voice was quiet. âYouâre my mate.â
The words fell like flame in still air. You exhaled slowly, overwhelmed, eyes searching his.
âWhat if Iâm not ready?â
âThen Iâll train you.â He paused. âSo you can assert yourself. No one will take you lightlyânot if I bring you in. But I want them to respect you.â
You swallowed around the knot in your throat.
He leaned in, brushing his forehead lightly against yours. His voice was lower now, but certain. âYouâre not just my bond, or my weakness. Youâre my equal. And if you walk into that world with meâŠâ His hand found yours, lacing your fingers together. ââŠI want them to see what I see.â
You didnât answer at first. Just breathed. Then: âAlright.â
His eyes flicked up, just barely, as if asking if you were sure.
You kissed his knuckles. âTrain me, Alber. Let them see what we are.â
And his smileâsmall, rare, genuineâwas answer enough.
~~~
Chapter 23: Flame Without Form
The sand was cool beneath your bare feet, sun casting long shadows from the cliff behind you. Wind stirred gently at the edges of your wings. The ocean rumbled far below, but up hereâon this stretch of flat stone and scorched earthâit was only the two of you.
Alber stood across from you, armored in black leather, sword sheathed at his back, his wings half-furled in a loose stance. His mask was gone, discarded beside your cloak. His flame flickered low and steady behind him.
You, for once, stood exposed. No cloak. No hiding. Just practical clothes clinging to your form, hair tied back, wings open and braced against the breeze.
His gaze moved over you, slow and deliberateânot with hunger, but with focus. The way a soldier assesses terrain. The way a warrior reads wind.
"Youâre faster than most," he said, voice even. "Faster than me. Thatâs rare. You need to use that. Turn it into your advantage."
You nodded, alert and listening.
"Opponents who rely on strengthâon brute speedâthey want you to stand still. To root. You donât."
He stepped forward, dragging a line in the sand with the heel of his boot.
"You stay moving. Let them chase you. Burn them when they try."
You exhaled, flame flickering faintly in your palms.
"But donât just run," he added. "Turn their momentum against them. When they overreachâ"
He lunged. You didnât think. You moved.
Your wings flared as you launched backward, your heel digging into the sand as you twisted and burst upward, fire kicking off your soles in a sudden flash of heat.
"âthatâs when you strike," he finished, now behind you.
You turned sharply in midair, evading the arc of his next blow with a breathâs grace. You landed with control, fire steady at your back. He didnât praise you. He didnât smile. He just nodded once, wings flexing.
"Again."
You launched forward, darting low, flames bursting at your feet in sharp propulsion. You feinted left, then twisted upward, circling, scanning. You didnât strike yetâonly dodged, read him, learned his movement. His rhythm was chaos, brutal and unpredictable. But even chaos had a pattern.
You moved without form. Without discipline. But not without purpose. And he noticed. Thenâhe caught you. A sudden pivot, his grip closing around your wrist, a sharp twist of his hips, and you hit the sand with a thud, breath knocked from your lungs.
"Youâre fast," he said from above, crouched beside you. "But not unpredictable. Yet."
You nodded once, swallowing your frustration.
"Again."
You stood. This time, you let your instincts take over completely. You didnât plan your next move. You didnât analyze. You just felt. The heat built in your chest. In your bones.
He rushed againâharder.Â
And you vanished.Â
A flash of fire burst from your soles and you disappeared from his path, reappearing behind him in a flare of heat. Before he could pivot, you released a sharp pulse of flame that scorched the ground in a perfect arc around him.
Controlled. Contained.
His coat stirred in the heat. The edge of one wing singed. He froze. So did you. His sword lowered. You stood across from him, breath ragged, fire fading at your fingertips. He stared at you. Unmoving. Unblinking.
And in that silence, something shifted behind his eyes. He didnât say a word. But he didnât need to. Because he saw it nowânot just your speed. Not just your fire. He saw you.
You werenât weak. You werenât small. You werenât delicate. You were restrained. Tamedâbut only by your own will. By necessity. By years of silence and survival that hadnât shattered you, but sharpened you into something fierce. Something worthy.
A low heat curled beneath his sternumâsomething between awe and pride. Not just for what you could do. But for who you were. His mate. The last of their kind. A reminder of what Lunarians had been before the world forgot.
He took a step forward, slow, measured, watching the rise and fall of your chest. His fingers brushed the edge of your jawâjust lightly.
âAgain,â he murmuredâquite, rough. And the reverence in his voice was all the praise you needed.
~~~
Chapter 24: Heat in the Air
When you moved, you didnât go for the same feint. This time, you danced.
You twisted away from him in a flash of heat, the sand beneath your feet igniting briefly as your wings flared and launched you skyward. Alber didnât hesitateâhe followed instantly, black wings slicing through the wind like blades, fire bursting at his heels.
You didnât fly fast. Not yet. You let him chase you. Circling the cliffs, wind in your hair, flame trailing from your palms in ribbons, you spun and dipped and rose again, just high enough to tempt. Just low enough to test.
He followed. And for the first time, you saw it: his smile. Small. Sharp. He was enjoying this. His fighting style had always been chaosâbrute strength and instinct sharpened by years of war. But here in the sky, with you ahead of him, there was no need for brutality. Only pursuit.
You twisted midair and dared him closer with a look.Â
"Try to catch me," you said, breathless.
His wings snapped out. His eyes narrowed.
You burst forwardâfaster than beforeâfire launching you through the air in a blur of heat and motion. He gave chase, growling low, his silhouette wild and dark against the sky. But you were quicker. You always had been.
You looped back behind him in a sudden arc, twisting around his flight path, then darted forwardâcatching him off-guard. Your hands curled around his shoulders as you passed, and you stole a kiss against the corner of his mouth before shooting ahead with a laugh.
He snarled. But it wasnât anger. It was hunger.
You heard his wings beat harder, the air behind you shuddering from his flameburst. He was closing in now, learning your rhythm, adapting.
You twisted again, dropped low over the cliffs, then swept back upâonly to find him there, waiting, one hand catching your wrist mid-air. But you twisted out of his grip and leaned in, laughing against his throat as your lips brushed the skin just beneath his jaw.
"Too slow," you whispered.
His hand caught your waist before you could shoot away again.
âEnough,â he growledâand then kissed you.
Hard. Mid-flight. Bodies pressed together, wings trembling in the wind.
You gasped into his mouth as your fire sparked between youâchest to chest, heart to heart. The heat of his grip seared into your hips as he held you aloft, wings beating in tandem with yours to keep you both suspended in the air.
The kiss deepenedâno longer playful.
His tongue claimed yours, mouth rough and needing. Your legs wrapped around his waist before you could think, your hands tangled in his hair as your body pressed against the hard line of his armor. Heat pulsed between your thighs as his hips rolled instinctively into yours.
The air stilled around you, the wind yielding to the fire now curling around your limbs like golden threads. His fire. Yours. The bond thrummed louder with each breath.
You moaned into his mouth.
His hands were on your thighs now, gripping tight as he adjusted your weight, one hand slipping beneath your shirt to press against the bare skin of your backâright between your wings. The sacred place.
You shuddered. And thenâyou didnât fly anymore. He held you, floating high above the cliffs, fire spilling from both your backs in quiet waves, wings spread wide as his body pressed yours against the empty sky.
âHere?â you whispered between kisses, dazed, lips swollen.
âHere,â he answered, voice hoarse, forehead against yours.
~~~
Chapter 25: Skyfire
There was no ground beneath you. No sky above. Only him. Only flame.
Alberâs arms held you tight, one beneath your thighs, the other wrapped around your back, fingers splayed between your wings where your bond pulsed strongest. Your bodies hovered high above the cliffs, the ocean wind sweeping beneath your feet, but you barely felt itâyour flame pushed against it, keeping you both aloft, suspended in a halo of heat and power.
He entered you slowlyâthick, deep, deliberate.
A moan spilled from your lips as your head fell forward against his shoulder. He grunted low in return, the sound vibrating through his chest, through yours. You tightened around him instinctively, your legs wrapping higher, wings twitching in rhythm with your pulse.
His cock filled you completely, stretching you, grounding you even as you floatedâan anchor made of fire and flesh. He paused for a breath, forehead pressed to yours, nose brushing against your cheek.
âFuck,â he rasped, his voice ragged with awe and restraint. âYou feel likeâŠâ He didnât finish the sentence. Didnât have to.Â
You moved your hips in a slow roll against him, gasping at the deep drag of friction as his breath caught. He held you tighter, his muscles tense beneath his leather armor, his wings shifting to adjust their balance.
And then he moved. A sharp thrustâcontrolled, precise.
You cried out, your voice lost to the wind as he began to fuck you in the air, each motion fluid, powerful. Your wings beat in time with his, not flapping, just holdingâguiding your suspended rhythm. His fire licked around your bodies, not burning, but glowing red-gold with each pulse of his hips.
Your hands buried in his white-silver hair, your nails dragging against his scalp. He grunted at the sting, thrusting harder. You met him with every movement, your body tuned to his, the bond between you vibrating nowâhot, thrumming, alive.
Your back arched, pressing your breasts against his chest, your shirt riding high around your ribs. Alber pulled back slightly to look down at youâyour flushed face, your parted lips, the way your body clenched around him.
And he snapped.
One arm wrapped around your lower back while the other grabbed your jaw, tilting your face toward his. He kissed you againâfierce and unrelentingâas he began to move faster, deeper. The wet sounds of your bodies colliding echoed faintly in the open air, drowned by your moans and his growls.
Your wings trembled as you began to lose rhythm, pleasure overtaking control.
âAlberââ you gasped.
âHold on,â he warned, low and primal.
Then he drove into you with a sharp thrust that had your head snapping back, your cry open and unrestrained.
Your orgasm hit like fire through your bloodstreamâsudden and full, your body clenching tight around him as your flame burst in a flash behind you, wings flaring wide in instinct. You shook in his arms, moaning his name over and over.
He held you through it, chest rising hard against yours, every muscle tight as he buried himself deep, letting you ride the wave out in the sky. And then he chased his own.
His wings beat twice, sharp and heavy, lifting you slightly as his grip crushed you against him. He pounded into youâthree, four more brutal thrustsâbefore he growled low against your throat and came inside you, deep and hot and overflowing. His flame exploded from his back in a brilliant arc that lit the sky behind him.
You clung to him, barely breathing. Floating. Entwined.
His forehead rested against yours, both of you panting in silence, your wings trembling, fire still simmering low around you like embers that refused to die.
You didnât speak. You didnât have to.
Because in that moment, high above the cliffs, midair and soul-deep inside each other, you were everything your ancestors must have dreamed ofâsurvivors, sacred, burning. Together.
~~~
Chapter 26: The Mask and the Cloak
The wind still carried your fire when you finally began to descend.
You hovered with him for a while, limbs wrapped tight, the bond still pulsing like a second heartbeat between your chests. Neither of you spoke. Words felt too small for what had just passed between you.
He brushed his lips against your temple before he pulled back, adjusting your weight in his arms. Together, your wings caught the air. You spiraled downward slowly, flames flickering gently in your wake. The sea stretched out below, cliffs waiting, the cave already etched into your memory like home.
You landed barefoot in the sand, the stillness between you warm and golden.
He didnât say we should train again.
He said, âTomorrow.â
And you nodded.
~~~
The next day, you returned to the cliffs with the same steady rhythm in your bones. Your cloak was gone again, folded at the edge of the stone. He waited for you in the sand, masked once more, flame low but focused.
You sparred. Again and again.
He tested you with sharp, brutal movementsâattacks meant to overwhelm, to force a mistake. But you never stayed still. You used speed like a weapon, agility like instinct. Every time he reached for you, you vanished in fire and reappeared behind him, forcing him to adapt. Again.
The day after, you trained again. Sweat coated your spine. Your wings trembled with exertion. Fire had scorched the sand in curling, sacred marksâevidence of who you were, of what you were becoming.
He didnât praise you. Not in words. But he watched you like he saw more each time. And when he finally lowered his sword, the silence between you was full of something final.
âYouâre ready,â he said.
You looked at him. His mask was in place, but you felt the weight of his pride behind it. You said nothing. Just reached for your cloak and draped it over your shoulders, hiding your fire once more.
He nodded once.Â
And you flew.
~~~
You followed him over the ocean, wings strong and certain now. The wind caught beneath you like a memory. AlberâKingâled ahead, a dark shape outlined in red-gold flame. Onigashima waited on the horizon, all stone and smoke and power.Â
Your pulse didnât quicken. You werenât afraid. Not anymore.
When you landed on the high ramparts, King gave you a single glance before turning to the guards at Kaidoâs chamber doors.
âI need to speak with Kaido,â he said. âPrivately.â
They hesitated. He didnât repeat himself. They stepped aside. You entered at his back, your hood drawn over your face once more. Kaido sat on his throne, a jug of sake in one hand, the other braced on his knee. The room smelled of smoke, steel, and heat. King stepped forward first, standing tall before the warlord.
âI want her to join the crew,â he said without preamble. âI vouch for her.â
Kaidoâs eyes narrowed slightly. âAnd who the hell is this?â
You stepped forward before King could speak. Your hands rose. And you pulled the hood back.Â
Your face met the firelight, calm. Strong. Your wings stretched slowly behind you, feathers gleaming dark and sacred. The flames rising at your back licked the air in quiet pulses, a signature written in your very blood.
Kaido froze. For a long breath, he said nothing. Then a sharp whistle. He stood, jug set down, towering as he stepped forward.
âAnother Lunarian,â he said, low. âAnd a pretty one, too.â His eyes flicked to King. âWhereâd you find her?â
âI didnât,â King said. âShe found me.â
Kaido grunted. His massive form moved closer, casting you in his shadow. Your fire rose behind you, instinctiveâbut you didnât flinch. You met his gaze.
âShe strong?â
âYes.â
âLoyal?â
âYes.â Kingâs voice was firmer now. Final. The air shifted.
Kaido looked you up and down again, but not like prey. Like something rare. Like something ancient. His gaze lingered on your wings, then on your eyes.
âShe yours?â
King answered without hesitation.
âShe is.â Then quieter: âAnd I am hers.â
Kaidoâs grin widenedânot in mockery, but in something like amused satisfaction. He let out a low chuckle, thick as smoke.
âShe is, huh?â he said, glancing between the two of you. âAnd youâre hers?â
King didnât flinch. He didnât repeat himself.
Kaidoâs tongue clicked behind his teeth, and then he let out a deep, pleased sound.
âGood.â His gaze shifted to you again, still measuring, still assessingâbut now with approval in his eyes. âThen sheâs safe under my wing.â He turned back to King. âIf sheâs yours, sheâs one of us. I wonât let anyone else have her.â
His massive shoulders rolled once as he stepped back toward his throne.
âTrain her. Test her. Let her earn her place. But sheâs got it.â
Then his grin curved wider, teeth flashing.
âLet the world see what they tried to erase.â
~~~
Chapter 27: Siren
You stood still in the high-ceilinged chamber, cloak pulled tight across your shoulders, hood drawn low over your brow. The weight of the fabric, the silence of the room, the tailorâs hesitant breathâit all pressed around you like fog before the storm.
Across from you stood a human. A tailor. Barely taller than your calves. He was staring up at you with a nervous smile, measuring tape clutched like a lifeline in his hand. You hadnât moved yet. Not because you were unsure. But because your mind had returned to himâjust hours earlier.
Kaido.
Still in his throne, still grinning from ear to ear with sake sloshing down his beard. You could see him clearly, as if you stood before him again.
âWhat the hell are you wearinâ, girl?â heâd said, squinting at your plain, practical clothes. âThose rags? That cloak?â He'd barked a laugh. âYou look like a ghost. A pretty oneâbut still.â He'd swayed slightly as he downed half his jug and pointed the rim in your direction. âYou want in this crew? Dress like it. Something fireproof. Sharp. Hell, pick anything. Whatever you want.â
No one had ever offered you anything like that before. And you had bowed your headânot because you feared him, but because for the first time, your voice had weight.
âThank you,â youâd said. âNot just for this. For finding him. For savingâŠâ Youâd caught yourself. Corrected: âKing.â
His gaze had darkenedânot unkindly. You had lifted your chin, voice steady.
âIf you hadnât, Iâd still be alone. And he might be gone. So my loyalty belongs to himâand to you.â
Kaido had stared at you for a moment. Then the laughter had returned in full, rich and wild.
âWororororororoo! She speaksâand sounds like a damn siren while doinâ it!â Heâd pointed at you, drunk and delighted. âThatâs your name now. Siren.â He took another big gulp. âNot just for the pretty faceâbut for the fire under it. Let her sing her songâand let the world fall in line.â
His words echoed through your chest now, not as memory, but as thunder still rolling through your bones.Â
You blinked back to the present, standing beneath the tailorâs measuring tape and tentative eyes.
"Miss?" he asked, voice thin. "What⊠would you like to wear?"
A simple question. But for the first time, you had the power to answer it freely. And your thoughts flicked to King. To the way he stood unbending in his leather armor, wrapped in shadows and fire. Untouchable. Iconic. Feared. The way the mask and suit hid everythingâbut never dulled the power of who he was.
The idea struck you cleanly. And when it did, it bloomed into joy.Â
Not vanity.
Not imitation.
But something closer to alignment.
âBlack,â you said quietly. âTight. Leather. Like his.â
The tailor looked up, nodding.
âPants. A fitted jacket. A white blouse underneath.â You paused, eyes narrowing behind your hood. âAnd a full mask. Like his.â
A breath. Then softer: âBut no spikes.â
The tailor scribbled furiously, stammering something about stitching and materials, and you stood still as stone, wings low, cloak tight.
~~~
When the suit was ready, you returned to the cave to dress.
The leather was stiff at first, but softened the moment it touched your skinâmolding to your body like shadow given form. The pants clung to your legs with precision, hugging every line of muscle from thigh to calf. The blouse beneath was crisp and pale, the neckline open just enough to soften the edge of the jacketâs severity, creating contrast rather than weakness.
The way the cut cinched your waist, framed your chest, followed the curve of your hipsâit didnât hide you. It defined you.
Your breasts rose perfectly beneath the snug front, bold and firm. Your silhouette looked carved from something sleek and powerful, your thighs stretching the leather with every slow, deliberate step. Even the weight of the fabric felt goodâsecure, firm, chosen.
You pulled the gloves on last. Smooth. Tight. Seamless.
Not a single inch of skin remained visible. Your hands, your neckâeverything was masked, armored, fire-hidden. The mask slid into place like it belonged there, sealing over your hair, your features, your identity.
And still, when you stretched your shouldersâÂ
Your flames bloomed.Â
Controlled. Glorious. Free.
The suit had been made with care. Special design. A seam at the back parted when your heat flared, allowing your wings to spread without resistance. You felt the rush of flame pulse between your shoulder blades, the sacred fire of your people, alive.
And something in you lifted.
Yes, your face was hidden. Yes, the world wouldnât see your eyes or your flame unless you allowed it. But that was power, too. And it wasnât the kind of hiding youâd once known. This wasnât survival through silence.Â
This was a different kind of freedom.
You looked at yourself one last timeâmasked, armored, flames curling behind you. Not nameless. Not lost. You were Siren now. And you had never felt more like yourself.
Then you stepped out into the firelight.
~~~
When you stepped into the cave, the light caught on the slick black leather, highlighting every contour of your form. Alber turned toward you the moment you crossed the threshold. He stilled. Utterly.
His body didnât moveâonly his eyes, glowing red beneath the dark mask, followed your every step. Down the shape of your legs, up the curve of your hips, lingering at your waist where the jacket hugged you tight. Across your chest, where the white blouse beneath made the rise of your breasts all the more visible. Every inch of you was coveredâbut none of you was hidden.
And he felt it. Your flame. Your strength. Your bond.
You stopped a few paces in front of him, shoulders drawing in slightly, unsure.Â
âIs itâŠâ you hesitated, your voice quiet behind your mask. âIs it okay that I took inspiration from you?â You touched your side, gloved fingers brushing the edge of your jacket. âI just⊠I wanted to match you,â you admitted softly.
The silence that followed was sharp. Heavy. Then Alber stepped forward. His boots moved soundlessly across the stone, his broad figure closing the distance between you like a tide. When he reached you, he didnât speak. His gloved hands found your waistâslow, deliberateâand curled around it with quiet possession. His fingers flexed once, firm against your hips, the leather of his palms gliding over the leather of yours.
Still, no words. But your bond trembled.
The air between you grew thick, charged, your flames pulsing faintly behind your backs in perfect time. Then he looked into your eyesâmask to mask, flame to flame.
And you felt it. That raw, dark hunger.
Not just desire. Not just pride.
Claiming.
Your breath caught as the bond flared hot inside your chest, the want rolling off him like heat from a forge. Your thighs clenched instinctively, your lips parting just under the mask.
He didnât speak. He burned.
But thenâlow and deep, almost a growl, from somewhere behind his mask: âIt suits you.â Another pause. His thumbs stroked once along your sides, slow and reverent. âToo well.â
Your heart thundered behind the armor. Your fingers twitched at your sides, aching to touch him back, to close the last few centimeters between your masked faces. But you didnât move. Neither did he. And stillâyou were closer than breath.
The fire behind you purred in time with his. The bond surged, warm and whole. You didnât need to kiss. Not yet. Because you already knew:
In his eyes, you were fire made flesh. His equal. His mate.
And now that heâd seen you like thisâstanding strong, masked and burningâ he would follow you into any storm.
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Threaded in Fire - Part 1/3
He wasnât supposed to exist. But neither were you. And now, in the sky above Onigashima, your flames have found each other.
Warnings: slow burn romance, canon-typical violence, implied torture (punk hazard trauma, King's backstory), ptsd, flashbacks to genocide/cultural erasure, survivor's guilt, grief and loneliness, found family elements, hurt-comfort, angst, lunarian headcanons, oda please let me write the lunarians
Word Count: 9000~
Pairing: King (Alber) x Female Lunarian!Reader
crossposted on AO3
Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3
Chapter 1: The Spark of a Rumor
The tavern is dim, all flickering lamps and low murmurs drowned beneath the heavy coastal rain. The scent of sea salt clings to the air, blending with ale and wet wood. You sit in the farthest, darkest cornerâhunched low, hood drawn deep. Still, you can feel the eyes.
Youâre nearly six meters tall. You try not to stand out, wrapping your black-feathered wings tightly under your thick coat, letting the hunch of your shoulders fake the illusion of deformity. But even slouched and shadowed, you take up space. You always have. And people notice.
So you keep still. You listen.
At a table not far from you, a group of pirates is deep in drink and louder than they should be. One of them slams his mug on the table, golden liquid spilling across the wood.
âI swear on my life,â he says, swaying with every word, âKaidoâs got a monster in his crew. Wingsâblack wings like a damned bird. Bronze skin. Fire on his back. Saw it with my own eyes out by Wano.â
You donât move, but something in you stills.
His companion laughs, scoffing through crooked teeth. âYou were high on Sea Prism fumes, idiot.â
âI wasnât!â the first snaps. âI know what I saw. That thing looked like a god. No, a demon. One of them Lunarians.â
Your fingers clench beneath the table. Your wings itch under the coat, reacting instinctivelyâwanting to flare, to stretch, to rise. But you donât let them. Youâve trained your body to shrink, even if it never truly can. Youâve learned to fold yourself small despite your size. Even now, pressed into this corner, you know youâre too big for it.
âI thought they were extinct,â the second mutters, voice lowering. âDidnât the World Government wipe 'em out? You know theyâre still offering a hundred million Berries for any intel on one?â
You grit your teeth.Â
Yes. You know.
You know what it means to live hunted. To keep running, island after island, hiding your wings, your skin, your truth. You know what it means to wake up in cold sweat remembering flames, screams, the fall of your people. Youâve lived with the belief that you were the last. Alone in a world that wants you dead or dissected.
But now... this.
A rumor.
Another.
Your heart slams against your ribs like it wants out. You rise, quiet and smooth, towering over the rest of the tavern as you move toward the door. You hear the pause in conversation as your shadow passesâfeel the tensionâbut no one dares speak.
Outside, the rain soaks through your hood in seconds. The sea roars against the cliffs. You donât care. You vanish into the storm, your wings shifting restlessly beneath your coat.
If this rumor is trueâif one of your kind still breathes beneath Kaidoâs flagâthen you must find him. You will find them.
Even if it means walking straight into the empire of a Yonko.
Even if it means risking everything.
Because you are not the last.
And neither are they.
~~~
Chapter 2: Ashes and Sky
You move before dawn.
The sea still groans in its sleep, the clouds low and heavy like they remember the storms of yesterday. You pack little. Youâve learned to live lightâjust enough food and coin to get you to the next island. Youâve never had the luxury of more.
Your wings ache beneath the coat, pressing tightly against your back. They want to stretch. To remember the sky.
But not here. Not yet.
The docks are quiet as you board a modest cargo ship heading toward a cluster of islands near Wano. You pay double to be ignored. The sailors ask no questionsâthey can tell from your size alone that youâre not to be messed with. Good. You donât want words. You need the silence. Because in that silence, the past always comes back.
You were only a child when the fire stopped meaning safety.
You remember the screams first. Not the wordsâjust the sound of them. Your people didnât cry often, but that day, the sound was endless. Like the wind caught fire and turned into voices. The walls of the citadel burned, but no one inside did. You didnât know yet that that made you different.
What you remember most is runningâtiny legs, barely able to lift off the ground. Your wings weren't strong enough yet. You flapped, you tried, but the sky wouldn't hold you. You stumbled through ash and flame, your silver hair catching cinders, your skin blistering not from heat but from grief.
And when you looked back, no one followed.
They died. Or scattered.
Youâve been running ever since.
The ship rocks beneath your feet. You sit beneath the deck, hunched as always, eyes fixed on the grain of the wood. Sleep wonât come. It never does when your thoughts spiral.
What if the rumor is true?
What if it's real?
But deeper down: what if it isnât?
What if they lied? Or if the creature you find under Kaidoâs flag is nothing like you? What if they doesnât care? Or worseâwhat if they forgotten what you are? What you are?
You donât even know what youâd say to them.
"Hello, I thought I was alone."
"Do you remember what it felt like to fall?"
You imagine their face and can't picture anything. Just fire. Wings. A towering shadow that might mirror your own. You wonder if they ever dreamed of others like you. Or if Kaido has beaten that out of them. Controlled him. Branded him.
You know this: if Kaido has them, then they are not free.
And maybe neither are you.
The days pass slowly. You change ships twice. Each time, more eyes linger. More risk. You keep to yourself, never letting your wings breathe. Not yet. Not until you're closer.
You pass the nights tracing the lines of your arms, your shoulders. No scars mark your skinâyour body never held onto wounds. But memory did. Your hands remember every fall, every hunger, every night you faced the dark alone. You are strong, but not untouched. And every silent breath you take whispers the same thing:
You survived.
By the time the final island appears on the horizonâone step from Wanoâyour heart feels like itâs carrying your whole bloodline.
You stand at the edge of the ship, the wind catching in your hood. The skies feel heavier here. Charged. Like Wano is alive and watching.
You're almost there.
They are out there.
And no matter what you findâŠ
You have to see them.
~~~
Chapter 3: Wings Unbound
No ship would take you to Wano.
Not for any price.
The moment you askedâcarefully, discreetlyâeyes would sharpen, conversations would end. You knew what it meant: Wano wasnât just dangerous, it was closed. Sealed off like a tomb. The country rejected the world with swords drawn. Outsiders were hunted, cut down before they touched its soil. No port, no passage. No welcome.
So you wait.
For the moon to rise. For the sky to blacken into a sea of stars. And thenâwhen the coast is clearâyou shed the weight youâve carried for days.
You shrug off the coat. Your wings unfurl with a slow, aching stretch, each feather shaking from disuse. The span of them gleams in the dark like storm-drenched obsidian. And for the first time in weeks, you inhale like the air belongs to you.
You leap. And the wind catches you.
The sky embraces you like it remembers. You rise silently, skimming through clouds, the cold air sharp against your cheeks. Your white hair is tucked under a dark scarf, your flame dimmed to near nothing, hidden carefully between your shoulder blades. You are just a shadow in the night, passing over the sea.
The journey is longer than you thought.
But finallyâthrough breaks in the mistâyou see it. A chain of sharp islands, black cliffs rising from the water like jagged teeth. You slow your flight. Study the terrain. Then you see it: a separate islandâominous, carved with a massive oni face in its stone. It stares out over the sea with empty eyes and curled tusks, as if daring anyone to land.
You furrow your brow. That must be it. The base. The stronghold. The place they keep monsters.Â
Your wings fold slightly as you descend, circling silently toward a rocky landing spot near the edge of the cliff. And thatâs when you see itâ a flicker of orange lightâ
Instinct screams through you, and you twist in midair just in time to dodge the fireball. It explodes past you with a roar, searing heat licking at your side. You spin upward, feathers scorched at the tips, adrenaline flooding your limbs.
Whereâ?
You scan the darkness franticallyâ Then you see it. A massive form cutting through the sky, wings stretched wideâleather, not featheredâflames trailing from its back. A beast. A predator. A man. A pteranodon.
Your heart stutters. Heâs enormous, even at a distance, but heâs closing in fast. The flare of his wings glows with fury. You can see the glint of metal, leather armorâhis eyes locked onto you.
You panic. Youâve never fought something like this in the air. You donât want to fight at all. You try to fleeâpush higher, fasterâ But he follows.
No choice.
You let your flame ignite.
The heat floods down your spine. The fire erupts between your wings, not like a torchâbut like a warning. Your body surges with power as the flame shields you, reinforcing your back and bones, your core strengthening to withstand whatâs coming.
Let him try.
You twist through the sky, heart pounding. The wind howls around you as you dodge another strike, your wings banking sharply left, cutting through the darkness.
You're no longer hiding.
But youâre still alone.
And you're not sure what this winged attacker is yetâ Only that he's not the one you came for.
~~~
Chapter 4: The Sky Burns Twice
The guards on the night watch were shouting.
King heard the alarm just as he stepped onto the balcony that overlooked the sea cliffs. Onigashimaâs towering fortress loomed behind him, its walls lit by a dull, ever-burning flame. The wind pulled at his coat, cold and salty. He narrowed his eyes toward the horizon, his sharp gaze catching a flicker of movement above the dark water.
Something was in the sky.
âLarge shadow, moving fast!â one of the guards called. âToo big to be a birdâ!â
King didnât wait to hear more.
With a flare of heat and a rush of air, his body shifted mid-stepâmass expanding, limbs elongating into wings and talons. Flames erupted from his back as he launched into the air, his form fully shifted into the massive pteranodon granted by his Devil Fruit.
If something dares fly near Onigashima, he would be the one to tear it down.
The night wind howled as he soared, black wings cutting through the clouds. He spotted it quicklyâa shadow just ahead, matching his altitude, trying to move silently against the stars. Not a bird. Not a bat. Something⊠humanoid?
Without hesitation, he dove in for a strike, fire trailing in his wake as he launched a fireball toward the target. It spunâgraceful, deliberateâand dodged.
His eyes narrowed.
That kind of speed in midair wasnât human. But it wasnât another Beast Pirate either. He circled again, drawing closer, preparing to strike once moreâ
Then he saw it.Â
In the dark sky, the figure turned just enough for the moonlight to catch them.
Feathered wings. Not leathery like his pteranodon form. But vastâlong, black, glossy feathers catching the wind. And then the unmistakable flare of a flame between their shoulder blades.
He halted mid-flight, wings beating once to steady himself as shock struck him like a blade to the chest.
NoâŠ
It wasnât possible.
He was the last.
He had to be the last.
Yet before him, midair and burning like a phantom, was someone else. Someone with wings, with flame, with the ancient markers of the gods they used to be. Her body was massiveânearly his own height, easily towering over any ordinary human. A brief flash of white hair escaped her scarf, and brown skin caught the glint of firelight.
A woman.
He could tell from the form, from the frame. Powerful, but not like his own. Different.
His instincts screamedâquestions burned through his skullâbut his body refused to move. For the first time in decades, he faltered in the sky. Was this an illusion? A trap? A trick of his memory? But no hallucination would burn with that kind of flame.
His mouth went dry beneath the leather mask.
Sheâs Lunarian.
And that changed everything.
~~~
Chapter 5: Flame Meeting Flame
The sky was silent for a long heartbeat.
You hovered midair, your wings outstretched and burning with effort. The flame at your back flickered brightly, no longer hidden. Your lungs ached from the sharp dodge, your body taut with adrenaline. You could feel him watching youâthat monstrous presence that had nearly taken your head off. He was massive, all claw and fury and fire. And yetâŠ
He wasnât moving.
The pteranodon hovered, tail whipping in the wind, fire curling from his back just like yours. You saw hesitation in the tilt of his wings, in the way his body stopped short of another attack. The moonlight reflected against his leather uniform and mask.
You didnât speak first.
You couldnât. You didnât even know how.
Then, slowlyâdeliberatelyâhe began to descend.
He shifted as he landed on a jagged outcrop of Onigashimaâs outer cliffs, the transformation folding in on itself until the beast was gone and the man stood tall again. Almost as tall as you. Just as dark. His black wings flexed wide, like yours. His flame still burned behind him. The heat from it swept across the sky like a warning.
He raised his head, that mask unmoving.
ââŠWho are you?â
His voice was low. Guttural. Suspicious. And underneath it, something else. Shaken.
You hovered above him still, not daring to get closer. Not yet.
ââŠYouâre like me,â you managed, your voice hoarse with disbelief.
His flame pulsed slightly.
âImpossible.â He took a step forward, fists clenched at his sides. âThere are no others.â
You slowly descended, boots landing with a crunch against the stone. You stayed on the edgeâready to launch yourself away if he made another move. Your wings twitched, tense.
âI thought I was the last,â you said, eyes locked with the slits of his mask. âBut then I heard a rumor⊠about someone in leather, with wings and fire on their back, who fights for Kaido. And I couldnât ignore it.â
He didnât speak. He didnât breathe. You could feel the heat rolling off of him like a furnace. You didnât know what heâd do. You had no idea how heâd react.
âI needed to see if it was true,â you continued, barely above a whisper. âI needed to know I wasnât⊠alone anymore.â
His wings curled slowly in, not in hostilityâbut something else. Containment. Restraint. The silence stretched again. Finally, his voice came low, but steady.
ââŠYou were a child. During the purge?â
You nodded, a thick knot forming in your throat.
He tilted his head, unreadable. âAnd you survived.â
âBarely,â you said. âYou?â
âI was taken,â he replied stiffly. âExperimented on. Used.â A pause. He was still watching you like a hawk, but something inside him had shifted. That rigid tension⊠cracked. Even just slightly.
âYou have a name?â he asked, voice softer. Almost reluctant.
You gave it. Quietly.
He stared for a long second.
ââŠIâm King,â he said.
Your lips parted. You hadnât expected him to give it. But something about the way he said itâthe slight pause, the way his eyes didnât quite meet yoursâtold you that it wasnât his real name.
You didnât press it.
And you both stood there, strangers bound by fire and memory, at the edge of the Beast Piratesâ fortress. Two Lunarians. Both thought lost. Now staring at one another, uncertain what to do next.
But no longer alone.
~~~
Chapter 6: Smoke Without Sound
The night clung to the cliffs like a second skin. Wind swept across the jagged stone, whispering between the peaks of Onigashima, carrying the scent of smoke, sea, and something ancient.
You walked in silence behind him.
He said nothing. Just moved with purpose, wings tucked, stride long and sure. The only sound was the quiet scuff of your boots against the stone path and the occasional rattle of armor where his gauntlet brushed against his side. His flame dimmed slightly, though never vanished. Yours did the same in quiet response.
He led you through narrow ridges, behind a hidden outcrop high above the main encampments. A place shielded by the natural terrain. No patrols. No sentries. Just a quiet overlook lit only by moonlight and flickering embers.
âThis spot isnât watched,â he said simply, glancing behind him to make sure you followed. âNo one comes here.â
You nodded once, black cloak rustling as you stepped further in. The hood had fallen back during flight and remained off, your white hair catching pale light like frost in firelight.
You sat near the cliffâs edge, stretching your wings just slightly before folding them in. It felt like exhaling after holding your breath for hours. He stood for a long moment before slowly settling across from you, not too closeâbut not far either.
Silence.
His eyes hadnât left you. Behind the black mask, he stared. Still. Unblinking. As if he expected you to vanish if he turned away.
You didnât look away either. He was slightly taller and his frame was built for battle. Broad shoulders, long limbs, all wrapped in hardened leather and flame. His wings were larger than yours too, stronger. You watched the fire behind him burn quietly. Familiar. Sacred. And yetâŠ
You furrowed your brows, frustrated. That mask.
You didnât want to be ungrateful. You didnât want to question him, not after everything. But something in you twisted. You needed to see. To be sure. That he was real. That you werenât just losing your mind after years of loneliness and grief. That the one other Lunarian in the world wasnât just fire and wings, but him. Face and all.
Still, you said nothing.
Not yet.
He finally broke the silence.
ââŠYou donât hide your face,â he murmured, low and observant.
You tilted your head slightly. âDo you always hide yours?â
His jaw shifted slightly beneath the mask. âItâs easier this way.â
You didnât press. But your gaze stayed on him. You hopedâmaybeâthat heâd take it off on his own.
He didnât. But his wings twitched. Like he was⊠thinking about it.
And for a moment, the two of you just watched each other.
No threats. No questions. Just the quiet tension of recognition. Two people who had no words yet for what they were feeling. Two Lunarians in exile, staring across a forgotten cliffside as the night wrapped around them.
And for the first time in years, you werenât alone.
~~~
Chapter 7: A Flicker Before Flame
The quiet stretched.
You sat on opposite sides of the small outcrop, stone beneath you, wind curling between. He hadnât spoken since you landed. Neither had you. The weight of what youâd both seenâthe truth of each otherâstill pressed like heat between your lungs.
Another Lunarian.
Another one.
Your eyes never strayed far from him. Even as the stars turned overhead. Even as the fire between your shoulder blades softened to a calm, rhythmic pulse. He sat still as stone, save for the subtle shift of his wings adjusting to the wind. His flame flickered low but steady behind him.
You studied the curve of his shoulders. The way he satâalert, but not aggressive. Quiet, but not disinterested. You couldnât see his face behind the black mask, but somehow, you felt his eyes on you too. And for a while, that was enough.
There were too many things to say. Too much to ask. Too much you were afraid to voice, in case doing so might break whatever fragile thing had just formed in the space between your hearts.
Time passed. Minutes. Maybe longer.
Eventually, he looked awayâtoward the sky, wings folding behind him as if in thought.
âI have to return,â he said, voice low, like it pained him to say the words out loud. âTheyâll start asking questions.â
You didnât move. You didnât ask who they were. You didnât want to. He stood, the motion precise. Silent. His eyes lingered on you a moment longer, fire flickering faintly in the dark.
âStay here.â
It wasnât a command. It was something else. A request. A promise buried in a single line of certainty. You didnât understand why, but you nodded. Something in you trusted him. Trusted the flame you saw in himâone that echoed your own.
You said nothing as he turned. His wings spread, fire flaring, lifting him into the air. You watched him until he vanished into the sky.
You didnât sleep that night. You waited.
~~~
Alber had returned to Onigashima saying little.
âThe object was neutralized,â he told when asked. âNo threat.â
It was a lie. And yet, it was the only truth he could speak without giving anything away.
He told himself it was nothing. That it had to be a mistake. A ghost. A hallucination born from hope long dead. Another Lunarian couldnât just exist. Not after what the world had done to their kind.
But stillâhe didnât sleep either.
He couldnât.
And when the moon climbed the sky again, he was already in the air. A wrapped satchel clutched in his hand, filled with fruit heâd taken from the storehouse. He didnât know why. He hadnât planned to bring anything. He didnât even know if you were real.
But his fire stirred the closer he flew to the cliffs. And when he landedâthere it was again. Your flame. Your wings. Your brown skin and white-silver hair catching the night wind just like before.
You turned the moment his boots touched stone.
And he just⊠stared. No words.
He stepped forward and placed the satchel of fruit down between you, the leather soft against the rock. Then, without explanation, he sat across from you. Saying nothing.
You blinked once, your expression caught between surprise and something gentler. Slowly, almost cautiously, you reached forward and took one of the fruitsâa ripe persimmonâand bit into it.
The juice touched your lips. Sweet. Real. You ate slowly, your gaze never leaving his. And he watched you, flame low, silent.
And this time⊠he stayed.
~~~
Chapter 8: The Weight of Names
The silence between you stretched long. Not coldâjust heavy. Weighted with recognition. You sat across from each other beneath the outcropâs shelter, the hush of the sea distant beneath the cliffs, the night wind curling around you in soft, measured breaths.
You didnât speak for a while. Maybe minutes. Maybe more. Just⊠watched him. Watched the way his flame flickered low at his back, how it pulsed steady and quietâlike your own. You didnât know what to say. Or if you even should.
He didnât seem like the type to speak freely. His presence was vast and silent, like some stone carved by fire that had chosen not to crumble. But still, your gaze returned to him again and again. As if to remind yourself he was real. And thenâtoo fast, too suddenâyou spoke.
ââŠWhy are you with him?â
The words were out before you could stop them. You blinked, lips parting like you might take them back. But you didnât. You couldnât.
His eyes didnât move. He didnât flinch. Didnât answer.
Your stomach twisted. You stared at the shadows, your own voice echoing in your ears, sharper than you intended. You tried to speak againâto soften itâbut nothing came. Just the quiet hum of your flame.
A minute passed. Maybe more.
You thought he wouldnât answer.
Then, finallyâsoft and low, his voice cut through the hush.
âBecause he saved me.â
Your eyes widened slightly.
âI was held at Punk Hazard. A test subject. Since I was a child.â His tone was flat, factual. But something twisted beneath itâlike rusted steel beginning to bend under pressure. âThey tried to burn me. Over and over. In some kind of kiln. Testing how much heat a Lunarian body could take.â
His gaze dropped for a moment, jaw tight. âKaido broke in. Looking for power. He saw what they were doing. Destroyed the machine himself.â
There was a pause. The air around him seemed to grow heavier. âHe knew what I was. Knew I was Lunarian. Asked me if I wanted to come with him. Said he wanted to change the world.â
You stayed quiet, watching him.
âI said yes,â he said simply. âSo we fled. He gave me a place. Gave me a name.â
You tilted your head, studying him. âKing?â
âYes. So I could live free under his wing. So the world government wouldnât find me.â A soft, almost bitter sound escaped himâtoo sharp to be a laugh, too quiet to be anger. âI donât know why Iâm telling you that,â he muttered. âI never tell anyone.â
You didnât smileâbut inside, something softened. Because you had known. You had guessed it the moment he said it.
King. It didnât fitânot for a Lunarian. Not for your kind.
The names of your people had once been softer. Melodic. A contradiction to the harshness of their endurance. The cruelty theyâd survived. Names passed down like lullabiesâwarm even in fire. His was a title, not a name. Something placed upon him. Something that erased what came before. But also something that protected him all these years.
âI knew it wasnât yours,â you said gently, watching his masked face. âIt doesnât sound like⊠us.â
He didnât deny it.
You let your eyes drift to the distant sky, the wind curling around the cliff.
ââŠIâm glad,â you whispered after a moment. âThat you werenât alone all this time.â
He turned slightly toward you, but didnât speak.
You hugged your cloak a little closer. âI was. After the purge. I ran. Hid. Moved between islands. Never stayed long. No one⊠no one knew what I was. Or cared.â Your voice caught slightly, but you pushed forward. âI thought maybe⊠I was some punishment. Or mistake.â
His wings shifted.
âI envied the ones who died quickly,â you added, quieter now. âThey didnât have to carry the ache. But I knew I had to survive. For their sake.â
Still no replyâbut his posture changed. A flicker of tension in his shoulders. Like your words had struck something deep.
âAnd then,â you said, âI heard the rumor. Someone with black wings. Fire. Untouchable. I thought it had to be a lie. But if it wasnâtâŠâ You looked at him again. âIf there was even a chanceâŠâ
His voice was low. ââŠYou came all this way.â
You nodded once. âBecause I had to know.â
King leaned forward, resting his arms on his knees. His flame flared once and then stilled.
âYou shouldnât be here,â he said, but there was no heat in it. âTheyâll kill you if they find out.â
You met his gaze, unwavering. âThen they wonât find out.â
The wind swept between you again, stirring the edges of your cloak, the ends of his long coat. The fire behind both of you burned quietly. Not hidden anymore. Not pretending to be human.
For a long moment, you both just sat thereâtwo survivors of a vanished race, finally face to face.
And for the first time since your wings had grown strong enough to flyâyou felt seen.
~~~
Chapter 9: Emberlight
The silence wasnât unwelcome.
It lingered between you, warm despite the wind, like a breath neither of you wanted to disturb. Strange, yes. But not uncomfortable. The kind of silence that lives between people who carry the same scars.
You sat across from him, knees drawn up beneath your cloak. The distance was smallâjust enough for the firelight to flicker in the space betweenâbut it felt more like a thread than a gap. The hood of your cloak had fallen back, exposing your face to the wind, and still, you didnât reach for it. You noticed again how he kept glancing at youâquick, subtle. Still disbelieving.
You didnât blame him.
You looked at him too, really looked. He was a little taller than you. Broad-shouldered, long-limbed, built like something forged to survive. His black wings stretched, settling behind him with a quiet rustle. That mask still covered his face, hiding the truth beneath. But the fire behind him⊠that wasnât hidden. Not from you.
You exhaled slowly, then spokeâtentative. âI remember a garden.â
King looked at you, but said nothing.
You let your mind drift. âThere was this old woman⊠She taught the children. All of us. Even when we were too wild to listen. She had this voiceâcalm, like the sea after a storm. And she always smelled like herbs and ash.â A small smile tugged at your lips. âI havenât thought about her in years.â
Kingâs head tilted. ââŠDari.â
You blinked.
âThat was her name,â he said. âShe had a crooked finger. Always used it to scold me.â There was a roughness in his voiceâsomething lighter, flickering. âShe made me memorize the stars. Said Iâd need them when I flew far.â
Your breath caught softly. âShe made me plant seeds,â you murmured. âEven when I was angry. Said it was good for the spirit to wait for something to grow.â
âShe gave me a carved stone. Said it was for strength. I lost it.â
You met his eyesâor what you could see of them through the mask.
âShe never raised her voice,â you said.
âShe didnât need to,â he answered.
The quiet returnedâbut this time, it was filled with something golden. Memory. Recognition. A shared thread of light from before the fire took everything. You hugged your knees to your chest, the warmth of his presence still so new, so unexpected. The ache of loneliness in your bones had dulled, just slightly.
But it didnât last. King shifted suddenly, wings flexing.
âI have to go,â he said. The warmth in his voice had cooled again, cautious. âTheyâll notice if Iâm gone too long.â
You nodded, understanding. âI wonât be seen.â
He rose to his full height, standing above you now. âStay here. For now.â
You looked up at him. âWill you come back?â This time you dared to ask.
A pause.
âYes.â
That was all he said before launching into the sky. His wings beat strong against the wind, flame trailing behind him like a comet. Within moments, he vanished into the shadows above Onigashimaâs jagged ridges.
You watched until the last flicker of fire disappeared. Then, slowly, you pulled your cloak back over your head. The warmth of the moment dimmed as the cold returned. You stood and walked to the wind-still side of the outcrop, where the cliff cradled the air like a quiet cave. There, you lowered yourself to the ground, using your travel bag as a pillow. The stars above were dim behind drifting clouds.
You stared at them anyway.
Exhaustion settled into your bonesâbut your thoughts moved in slow, circling patterns. Restless wings.
King.
The conversation. His voice. The way he never took off the mask. You understood why. He couldnât afford vulnerabilityânot as Kaidoâs right hand. Not in this world. And stillâŠ
You didnât know his name. Not the name from the scientists. Not the one Kaido gave him. But his name. The one given in fire and love, before the world turned cruel.
You wanted to know it. But you wouldnât ask. Not yet.
You closed your eyes. And for the first time in years, you dreamed of a garden blooming under flame-kissed skies.
~~~
Chapter 10: Ashes That Remember
He didnât usually think this much.
Not unless it involved tactics, terrain, or the fault lines in enemy ranks. Kaido didnât keep him for softness. He kept him because King executed. Without hesitation. Without question. But now, thoughts weighed down his chest like stones. And they all circled the same center.
You.
Even with Onigashimaâs walls humming with noiseârowdy crews, clinking cups, the thunder of Kaidoâs voice down the hallâhis mind wandered. Drifted. Pulled back to the cliffs outside the fortress, where fire still lingered in the stone. Where you waited.
You, with wings like his. With the voice that knew the songs of his people. With the scent of ash and home.
Heâd told you to stay hidden. Not knowing why he expected obedience. But you had. You listened. You trusted him. That trust unsettled him in ways no battlefield ever had.
His hand hovered over the untouched meal in front of himâroasted fish, bread, slices of citrus. Heâd sat through dinner without a word, Kaidoâs presence at the head of the long table like a stormcloud. He felt the older man watching him, but Kaido never spoke. Only grunted once or twice, assessing.
Now, alone in his quarters, King wrapped the food in cloth, his movements precise. Silent.
His wings stretched wide before he leapt from the balcony. His fire left a soft trail across the sky as he cut through the clouds, leaving Onigashima behind. The outcrop was hidden well, a carved overlook against the jagged cliffs. And when he landed, you were still thereâperched near the edge like a sentinel, your white-silver hair catching the moonlight. Your cloak tugged by the wind.
You turned before he made a sound.
âYou came back,â you said quietly.
He held out the bundle of food. Said nothing.
You blinked, surprise flickering through your features. âIs that⊠for me?â
He gave a slow nod.Â
You stepped closer and took it, fingers brushing against his gloved palm. Your warmth lingered longer than it should have. He felt it like a brand. You didnât open it yet. You only looked at himâlong, steadyâand then settled down on the cold stone again. A wordless invitation. He joined you.
The silence stretched. But it wasnât cold. Not anymore.
âI didnât think Iâd ever hear someone say her name again,â you said softly, your gaze fixed on the sea.
âNeither did I,â he murmured.
And so you talked. In low voices, slow and steadyâlike embers reigniting. You spoke of the old ones, of fire rites and cliff rituals, of stories passed down in firelight. You spoke of a childhood neither of you had truly left behind, only buried beneath survival.
He didnât laughâhe rarely ever didâbut something loosened in his chest when you imitated an old elder who always accused the children of stealing his walking stick. You laughed, though. And the sound made something deep in him ache.
He watched you more than he listened. Noticed everything.
The tilt of your head when you were deep in thought. The twitch in your wings when you remembered something painful and tried to hide it. The way you didnât flinch when silence fellâyou simply let it breathe. You didnât ask about his name. Or his mask. Or the things that weighed down his past. You didnât ask anything from him. That alone shook something loose in his chest.
Thenâ
PurururuâPurururu.
The Den Den Mushi at his side chirped, shrill in the stillness. He didnât curse aloud, but something in his jaw flexed. He answered it with steady hands.
Kaidoâs voice, deep and gravel-thick, rumbled through. âWhere are you, King? Come.â
Kingâs eyes flicked to you. Youâd gone quiet, gaze sharp now, instinctual.Â
âScouting perimeter,â he said. âIâll return shortly.â
A pause. Then Kaido grunted. âSomethingâs moving near the northern line. Be quick.â The line cut out.
He stood but didnât leave.
âYou should go,â you said gently.
âI know.â Still, he hesitated.
He owed Kaido everything. A name. A purpose. Freedom. No one had ever given him that before. But thisâwhat he found here with youâthis wasnât a rebellion. This wasnât disloyalty. It was instinct.
And Kaido hadnât seen what heâd seen. Yet.
King looked at you once more. Then stepped toward the ledge.
âBe careful⊠King,â you said, softer now.
He paused.
Then flew into the darkness, the fire trailing from his back dimmer than usualâbecause part of his flame stayed behind.
~~~
Chapter 11: The Space Between Fire
The fortress was noise and movement. Steel boots, laughter, cannon blasts echoing from practice drills, and Kaidoâs voice roaring through stone walls when someone disappointed him. It was normal. Familiar.
But ever since you appeared, it all felt distant. Off-kilter.
Like he was floating between two flamesâone scorching and loud, the other warm and quiet.
He moved through the fortress as he always had, his towering figure unreadable behind the leather mask, his presence enough to part the lesser members of the crew. No one dared question him. Not out loud. But they were looking. He felt it.
His silences had grown longer. His patrols stretched minutes into hours, and heâd started returning with dirt on his boots, wind in his feathers. And more than once⊠food missing from the stores.
He didnât know why he kept doing it. The extra food. The cloth he tucked into his leather armor and later left behind for you to use as a blanket. The small trinketâan old wind chime heâd found half-buried in the ruins near the mountain path. He hadnât even known if youâd like it, but when youâd turned it over in your hands with a strange softness in your eyes, something in him had settled.
Still, he didnât speak about you. Not to anyone.Â
Kaido hadnât asked. Not yet.
And if that day cameâŠ
He didnât know what heâd say.
~~~
The cave heâd found was nestled into the side of the cliffs, away from the patrol lines and air paths. No one from the Beasts Pirates ever came this far unless under ordersâand he made damn sure no such orders were ever given.
He didnât know why heâd brought you there the first night.
Maybe because it was the only place he knew that had room for silence.
And space to breathe.
~~~
When he landed this time, it was just past twilight. The sky bleeding gold and ink.
You were already thereâcurled at the edge of the overlook, your black cloak pooling around you like shadowed wings, your eyes cast toward the sea. The moment you turned to see him, his chest tightened. Every time, it happened. Every time, your face struck something in himâsomething soft and bone-deep.
You didnât speak. You didnât need to.Â
He handed you the wrapped food. Your fingers brushed his gloves, and his flame flared onceâfaint and fleeting.
You smiled like it meant something. And it did. Neither of you talked about what was happening. You didnât define it. You didnât dare. It was shy, but not awkward. Silent, but not hollow. Just sacred.
Some days, you asked questions. About the old ways. About the elder youâd both remembered. About the songs sung over fire in a tongue the world had long forgotten. You spoke of things that felt older than memory, yet etched into your bones.
Names were spoken with care. Not often. But when they were, they carried weight. Not for definition. But for remembrance.
One night, you asked if he ever missed themâthe others. He didnât answer at first. Just looked out into the dark. Thought of ashes.
Then heâd said, low and quiet, âEvery time I fly.â
You hadnât asked anything else. But your hand had moved close to his. Not touching. Just near enough to feel.
He hadnât moved it away.
~~~
Back in the fortress, whispers had begun.
One of the grunts muttered that âKingâs been off lately.â Another mentioned he hadnât yelled once during drills. Hadnât lit anything on fire in over a week.
He caught Kaido looking at him once during a strategy meeting. Just once. King held that stare. Neutral. Blank.
Kaido said nothing. He didnât ask where King disappeared to when the sky turned black and the world quieted, because he trusted him. And King was grateful. Because you were still there, waiting. Always cloaked. Always careful. Never flying near the fortress, never testing the borderlines. You moved like wind over still waterâquiet and cautious.
For his sake.
It made his chest ache. You trusted him without asking for anything in return. And that was becoming a problem. Because he wanted things. To see your face in the full light. To know your past, not because it mattered, but because it was yours. To hear your laugh again. To protect you from the world that hunted them both.
He didnât understand the depth of it yet, only that he couldnât stop thinking about you.
Even in battle. Even in silence. Even now, sitting beside you as the sea moved endlessly below, and you leaned your head against the cave wallânot touching him, but close enough that he could feel the heat of your presence.
He realized something terrifying.
You werenât his secret.
You were his sanctuary.
~~~
Chapter 12: A Flame That Waits
The days blurred when he was gone. Not from boredom. Not from despair. But from the strange, soft ache that filled the quiet between one heartbeat and the next.
You never knew how long he would be away. Sometimes it was a full day. Sometimes longer. The sun would dip below the cliffs and rise again, the wind shifting over the rocks like fingers threading through old memories. And still, you waited.Â
Not because you were trapped. But because you wanted to be here when he came back.
This placeâthis wind-bitten cave on the cliffs, shaped by time and silenceâwas not a prison. It was the first place you ever felt seen.
He never told you much, but he brought things.
Food wrapped in cloth, still warm. A smooth piece of volcanic glass shaped like a wing. A coil of soft rope, useful for climbing. A single carved piece of driftwood with a swirl etched into itâyour peopleâs symbol for âhome.â
And once, an old wind chime made of bone and scorched metal, rusted by the salt air but still able to catch the breeze. It didnât sing like it once did. But it made a soundâlow, hollow, gentleâthat reminded you of the skies your ancestors once ruled.
You hung it near the cave mouth, and when the wind blew just right, it whispered. Every morning, you ran your fingers over the carved driftwood. And every night, when the wind rose, you listened to the chime and remembered that someoneâheâhad thought of you enough to bring it.
He didnât have to say anything.
You understood.
~~~
You werenât sure when it started, but the humming crept in slowly.
Like warmth returning to fingers left too long in the cold.
At first it was just a sound in your throatâsomething your body remembered even if your mind had buried it. Then it became a lullaby, the old kind, with no true lyricsâjust syllables and fragments of feeling passed from voice to voice across generations now gone. Maybe your people were dead, but this song still remembered them. And you.
You didnât even realize you were singing until you felt the echo in your bones. Your voice was low. Barely more than breath. But it felt⊠right.
So you sang.Â
Eyes closed, your back against the stone wall. One wing extended slightly, the other curled tighter against your back like it always did. You werenât sure when that had become a habitâtucking one wing in close, making yourself smaller, quieter, easier to overlook.
You had learned young: wings drew eyes. And eyes brought questions. So you hid them. Over and over, until the motion carved itself into muscle memory. Until it no longer felt like hiding. Just surviving.
You didnât hear him land. But you felt him. You always did.
The shift in the air. The fire in your blood answering his like a quiet drumbeat. You opened your eyes and saw him, standing just inside the cave mouth, his figure framed by shadow and flame. His leather mask hid his face, as alwaysâbut you could feel his gaze like a hand pressed over your heart.
Heat bloomed across your cheeks as you realized he had heard you.
âI didnât know you were back,â you said quickly, voice smaller than you wanted it to be.
He stepped forward and placed the food down on the rock near you. Quiet. Careful.
âI didnât want to interrupt.â
You looked away, the blush still warming your skin. But something about his silence tonight felt different. Quieter. Softer. And when you glanced back, he was still looking at you. Not moving. Not speaking. Just seeing you. And something in your chest squeezed tight at the thought that maybeâjust maybeâyou were seen the same way you saw him.
His voice broke the silence.Â
âYou always press your wings in,â he said, low. âLike youâre hiding them.â
You blinked. A breath caught in your throat.
âIâve had to,â you admitted, your voice quieter now. âAll my life, Iâve had to hide everything. Wings catch eyes. Eyes invite questions.â
He was silent for a beat. Then: âThey were made to soar.â
You didnât answer. You couldnât. Your throat felt thick with unsaid things. You looked away, but not before you saw the way he said itâsoftly, without judgment. Then, he surprised you again.
âI want to show you something.â
You looked up.
âThereâs a route in the cliffs,â he said, glancing to the side of the cave. âA hidden path I use to train. No one else knows it.â
Your heart stuttered. Heâd never spoken like this before. And certainly never mentioned a place that was his. A sanctuary.
He turned toward the exit, then paused and looked back.Â
âI want you to teach me something,â he added. âA maneuver. One I saw when you glided near the ridge a few nights ago.â
You blinked, surprised.
âThat was justââ you hesitated, then smiled faintly. âSomething from when I was younger. Itâs nothing special.â
He didnât reply. Just waited.Â
And suddenly, your wings twitchedâalmost eager. And for once, you didnât press them in tight.
You let them stretch.
Just a little.
~~~
Chapter 13: Spiral
The path was narrow.
Too narrow for any normal being to cross. Jagged, steep, and curling along a cliffside that plunged straight into the roaring sea. Wind lashed at the rocks, the salt stung your eyesâbut your heart⊠your heart was beating with something else.Â
He was ahead of you. Silent, always silent, but his presence said enough. The path ended at a precipice, jutting out like the edge of the world. There was nothing beyond it but open sky.Â
And it was open. Endless. Untouched. You felt your breath catch in your throat. This was no ordinary overlook. No human could come here.
Only you.
Only him.
Your eyes found him. He nodded once.
It is safe.
You took a single step forward, and for the first time in what felt like forever, you did not hold yourself back. Your wings unfurled with a low, powerful sweepâdark, massive, long-restrained limbs that shuddered as they stretched to their full span. Wind curled beneath them as if the sky itself sighed in recognition.
Then you leapt.
The wind caught you instantly. It didn't resist. It welcomed you. You soared, heart breaking open like light through a cracked sky, flying fast, high, sharpâcutting across the open air like you'd been born for this. Because you had.
You laughed. Truly laughed, the sound ripped from your chest like fire being freed. Behind you, you felt him.
King launched off the cliff with a deep, thunderous push of his wings, rising to join you. His figure was powerful in the sky, steady, controlledâuntil you dipped low beside him, brushing close, the ends of your feathers just barely touching his. His fire rippled in response.
You showed him the maneuverâa sharp twist, a tight arc. He followed on instinct. Fumbled once, then mastered it with stunning speed.
You grinned, circling him, teasing.
Catch me.
And something in him shifted. You could feel it. His energy warmed, subtly, fiercely. And though his face was hidden, you knewâhe was smiling. Your giddy laughter echoed in the open sky as you flew faster, higher, dancing in the thermals with him.
And thenâinstinct moved.
You didnât think. Neither did he.
You reached.
Your right arm stretched out across the windâand so did his. Your forearms locked midair, fingers grasping tight. And togetherâyou fell.
The wind screamed around you as your wings folded just slightly, enough to spiral. Not panic. Not fear. JustâSurrender.
You were falling, but not alone. Not anymore. The air roared, your fires igniting from your shoulders and heels, streaming like twin comets hurtling toward the sea. Flames licked the sky behind you, red and gold and white.Â
A cyclone of feathers and fire. Of freedom. Of trust.
You clung to each other, spinning downward, faster, tighterâno fear, just gravity and instinct and something deeper that neither of you dared name yet.
And for a moment, the world stopped.
You werenât sure if you would pull out. Maybe it would end here. Maybe youâd crash into the sea, burned by beauty and longing. But thenâ
Snap.
Your wings flared. So did his.
The air caught you both with a thunderclap, lifting you just before the water kissed your heels. You rose againâhigh, high, wind and sea swirling below like applause. Together, you landed back on the cliff.
Panting.
Alive.
Scorchedânot by fire, but by trust.
You stood close. Closer than youâd ever dared before. So close that the heat from his skin, even through leather and armor, was all you could feel. Your chest rose and fell. So did his.
You looked into his eyesâwhat little of them you could see through the black and flame. Something unspoken passed between you. You both knew what had happened.
It wasnât just a stunt. It wasnât just instinct.Â
That spiralâ
It was ancient.
It was a ritual.
A courtship display once performed by Lunarian couples to show absolute trust. To fall together, not knowing if the other would save them. And choosing to believe anyway.
You had both chosen.
You lowered your gaze for just a breath, suddenly aware of what youâd done.
But when you looked back at him, he hadnât moved.
He was still there.
Still looking at you like you were sky itself.
~~~
Chapter 14: Alber
You didnât move at first. The wind still whispered around you, sweeping the last of the sea spray off your wings, but the sky felt utterly stillâheld in the space between your breaths.
His eyes hadnât left yours. Neither had yours his.
Your chest was still heaving, slower now, but enough to feel every breath pull you gently toward him. Closer. As if your bodies knew something your minds were still too stunned to say.Â
You stepped forward. Just one step. And your chest brushed his. The contact was subtleâbut not small. Not in the weight of it. Not in what it stirred in your belly and in your heart. The warmth of him, through leather and heat and fire, met yours, and neither of you flinched. Neither of you drew back.
You looked up at him, hands trembling slightly as you reachedâslow, reverent.
To his face. To the mask.
He didnât stop you. He didnât speak. He only looked at you with those crimson eyes, steady and unguarded, as you carefully slipped your fingers beneath the edge of his leather mask, just above the curve of his jaw.
The metal buckles gave a soft creak as you pulled. And the mask came down.
Silver-white hairâthick, long, and wavyâfell loose in a single slow cascade, tousled by wind and flight. A braid ran down one side, tight and worn with ritual care. The sides of his head were shaved, the cut sharp and purposeful, and the fire behind his shoulders pulsed in rhythm with your own.
Your breath caught in your throat.
His face⊠Sharp, beautiful, severe.
A straight, elegant nose, a square chin shadowed in stubble, strong cheekbones. His lips full and still slightly parted from exertion. And those narrow red eyesâpiercing, ancient, the kind you could fall into and never stop.Â
Your eyes traced the black tattoo arcing over half of his left eye, curling like a wreathâa symbol of his people. Your people.
Without thinking, your fingers rose and gently touched the mark. He didnât flinch. Your thumb swept along the line of it, memorizing its shape, its warmth. He watched you in silence, gaze softening at the edges like heat fading into ember. Your eyes shimmered, awe swimming in their depths.
You smiled.
Not a grin. Not something playful. Something quieter. Full of wonder. Full of recognition. You saw him. And he knew it. And then he leaned down. So slowly. Until your mouths met.
The kiss was soft.
No urgency. No hunger. Just⊠truth.
His lips pressed to yours, warm, firm, and full of all the things heâd never said. All the moments he stood beside you without touching. All the times he watched you and didnât speak. All the silent rituals building up to this breath.
Your fires ignited. Not in violence. In reverence. Flames poured from your backs in arcs of lightâstronger, brighterâintertwined in the air like red and gold silk streaming into the sky. You felt it down to your bones.
His hands hovered at your waist but didnât pull you closer. They didnât need to. You were already his. And he⊠he had already become yours.
The kiss broke slowly. Lips parted, breath mingled, and you rested your foreheads together. His hand came up then, cradling the side of your face. You closed your eyes, the warmth of him grounding you.
He whispered it then. A name. Not a title. Not a weapon. But his name.
âAlber.â
Your eyes opened. His were waiting.
The name settled in your chest like a spark finding dry kindling. Not explosiveâbut transformative. It was the name he was given in love, in trust, in the language of your people. And nowâhe had given it to you.
A vow without words.
A soul unmasked.
A fire shared.
And you understood.Â
You understood everything.
Taglist: @7wanne @kisechiii @iglb12 @spicy-gordita-crunch @itspronouncedshi-theed @lessie-oxj @thatanonymouschocolate @mellyrally @sagyunaro @celestedangelica @hunbunbumdum @i-love-cat-bitch @cryptip0wer-blog @haru-naechi @nin-dy-tro
Threaded in Fire - Part 3/3 + Epilogue
The war burned around youâbut the fiercest battles raged within: fear, loss, and the question of whether even love born in fire could survive a world made to erase you. And yet, through silence and surrender, you held each otherâand from that bond came something new. Not just survival. Legacy.
Warnings: nsfw, smut, sacred smut intimacy, body worship, slow burn romance, identy struggle/ loss of self, mating ritual, soulmate themes, canon-typical violence, mild angst, emotion distress, ptsd themes, emotional hurt/comfort, emotional healing, lunarian headcanons, pregnancy, oda please let me write the lunarians
Word Count: 13000~
Pairing: King (Alber) x Female Lunarian!Reader
crossposted on AO3
Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 + Epilogue
Chapter 28: Shadows and Fire
The gates of Onigashima yawned open like the mouth of a beast.
You stepped inside side by side with himâsilent and fire-forged. The hall stretched wide before you, lit by hanging braziers and filled with smoke, noise, and swagger. Pirates laughed, argued, threw dice, swapped weapons, and yelled over spilled drink.
But that chaos stopped the moment the two of you entered.
You could feel it. The way sound faltered. The way heads turned. Cups frozen midair. Words lost mid-breath. You were used to being invisible. Now you were anything but.
Leather hugged your frame in every place it matteredâlegs, waist, chest, shoulders. The mask veiled your face, your hair, your flame. But your size alone was impossible to ignore. Taller than most men. Broad-shouldered. Armored in black.
And walking beside him.
The silhouette alone said everything: two masked figures, black leather, shadow and fire. But no one could guess your face. No one could know what burned beneath the mask. And stillâthey stared.
Then came his voice.
âWell helloooo there, tall dark and terrifyingâŠâ
Queen.
You turned your head just slightly.
He stood near a table piled with meat and tankards, goggles glinting, grin wide as always. His eyes raked down your body in a way that wasnât exactly subtle.
âWhoâs this snack, King?â he purred. âDid we finally get a female commander? Because damn, you can command me any day.â
You blinked behind your mask. You had no idea what to say. No one had ever spoken to you like that. Ever. You just stared. Silent.
Queen laughed awkwardly, trying again.
âCâmon, Iâm just sayinâ. Whoever you are, you wear that suit likeââ
He didnât finish.
Because thatâs when Kingâwithout a wordâplaced his hand on your lower back. Low. Firm. Right beneath your wings.
Your eyes widened slightly behind your mask. The hall froze even harder. You didnât need to look to know Queen saw it. His voice pitched.
âWaitâwait, whatâ?â
He blinked rapidly, goggles fogging slightly as he pointed between you and King like his brain couldnât keep up.
âHold on. You? Youâve got a girlfriend?!â He threw his hands up. âSince when do you haveâwhat is this?! Who is she?!â
No one answered.
You and King kept walking.
Queen sputtered behind you, half choking on his meat, half whispering in disbelief.
âNo. Freakinâ. Way. The guy who lights people on fire for fun and never says a wordâhe gets a woman before me?â He flailed. âDoes Kaido know about this? Is this allowed?â
Still, you didnât react.
But you did feel Kingâs fingers shift slightly at your back. A subtle pressure. Protective. Reassuring.
It was the first time youâd walked through a room fully armored⊠and not alone.
And though your face was hidden, your fire stayed steadyâstrong beneath your mask.
You didnât need to respond.
Because the bond between you said everything.
~~~
Chapter 29: The Fire They Feared
It happened a few days later. You didnât speak when he called you out.
The wind shifted across the training grounds, hot with the stink of ash and sweat. Below the cliffs, the sea crashed somewhere in the distance. But hereâon the scorched stone of Onigashimaâs battle terraceâthere was only silence.
Until his voice broke it again.
âWhat I donât get,â the pirate said, loud enough for everyone to hear, âis why some masked tower of a woman whoâs never said a word gets to outrank the rest of us.â
He was lean, fast-looking, his jacket open to show off muscle and scars that clearly meant something to him. His crew jeered from behind him, half-drunk and too confident.
âWhatâjust âcause sheâs six meters tall and walks around with King?â He laughed. âCâmon. Letâs see if sheâs earned the fireâor just borrowed it.â
You stood still. Tight leather clung to your frameâjacket and pants sharp and sleek, a white blouse beneath softening none of your edge. A smooth, spike-less mask covered your face, echoing his. Your flameâalways steady, always burningâflickered higher behind your shoulders in quiet warning.
But still, you didnât move. Your body tensed, every instinct screaming, but you turned your headâjust slightly. Alber was there. Close. A few paces behind you. Wings folded tight. Flame low but alive. His presence like stoneâsolid, unmoving. Watching.
You couldnât see his face behind the mask. But you didnât need to. Kingâs chin dipped onceâbarely more than a nod. A silent answer: You have to.
A silence passed. Heavy. Waiting. Then the pirate lunged. He was fast. Sloppy. He struck low, a wide swing meant to sweep your legs. You didnât move until the last secondâthen stepped over it, calm, effortless.
Your fire didnât flare. Not yet.
He snarled, spun, brought his fists up. Another strike came high this timeâaimed at your throat. You caught it. Just his wrist, mid-air. Stopped it like it was nothing. Your head tilted slightly, the only question you allowed yourself to ask: Is this really what they fear?
He tried to twist free. You didnât let him. You didnât speak. You didnât hesitate. You burned. Flame exploded from your back, your wings flaring open. Fire shot down your arm, through your hand, and into his chest in a burst of heat that lit the sky above the terrace gold.
He screamed and flew backâhardâinto the far wall, where he hit the stone with a sound like meat on metal. Then slid down. Smoking.
The crowd went still. Dozens of Beast Pirates stared at youâsome wide-eyed, some stepping back. Othersâmore dangerousânodded slowly, watching like predators scenting blood. And above them, at the edge of the balconyâ
Kaido leaned forward in his throne like seat. He drank from his jug of sake, let out a long exhale, and rumbled, loud enough for all to hear: âSheâs one of us now.â
Queen let out a low whistle. âHot damn. Remind me not to flirt again.â
Jack just grunted.
You stood over the scorch mark, your breathing steady. Your flame still crackled behind you, wings half-furled. The pirate was still alive. But the challenge was over. The silence that followed wasnât empty.
It was respect.
~~~
They didnât challenge you anymore.
You rarely spoke. You rarely needed to. One gestureâone nodâand Beast Pirates twice your age leapt to obey. You had your own squad now. Men who would follow you into hell. Who called you Siren not because they knew your nameâbut because they feared what might happen if you ever sang.
Some said you were mute. Others claimed your voice was cursedâso beautiful it drove men mad. A few whispered that King had brought you from a ruined sky island where gods used to live, and that your flames were a sign you werenât entirely mortal.
None of them knew the truth. And you didnât correct them.
~~~
Chapter 30: Burn It
Six to Twelve Months Later
The sky burned orange above the island.
Smoke curled thick across the hills, coiling through the jungle trees as fires spread from the harbor to the central fort. Explosions sounded in the distanceâdeep, rhythmic thunder as powder stores ignited, sending ships splintering into flame. The ground shook with every blast.Â
Screams echoed through the ravines.
You stood on the cliffâs edge, wings folded at your back, your silhouette black against the light of the inferno below. Your flame flickeredâcontrolled, steadyâbetween your shoulder blades. Your mask gleamed in the firelight.
Your squad waited behind you. Silent. Armed. Eager.Â
They looked to you nowânot just for orders, but for purpose. For the spark that would finish this rebellion, drive the last knife into the islandâs throat.
No one spoke. Because you rarely did.
But when you finally turned your headâjust slightlyâand looked down toward the enemy stronghold, your voice came low. Quiet. Clear enough to cut through the screams and the crackling fire:
âBurn it.â
That was all. Just two words. And the world moved.
Your men erupted forward with roars and laughter, igniting their weapons, charging down the slope with wild, loyal glee. Flames bloomed where they ran, the sounds of slaughter rising like a song. Some charged too fast and were taken downâothers lit the way for the rest.
But none questioned the order. None hesitated.
Behind you, one younger pirateâbarely seventeenâstared at you in stunned silence, eyes wide behind soot-smeared goggles.
âShe spoke.â he whispered.
Another crewmate elbowed him hard in the ribs, hissing: âDonât talk about it. Just go.â
Still, they all felt it. The heat in your voice. The weight of it.
You stayed on the ridge as the flames spread across the island. You didnât move. Didnât draw your weapon. Didnât need to. You were already fire. And no one could tellâbeneath the leather, behind the mask, under the weight of silenceâhow much it cost you.
Because this wasnât instinct. It wasnât joy. It was survival. You had followed his footsteps. Too closely. And in doing so, you had become a shadow of his myth, not the full truth of your own.
You watched the fortress burn.
And didnât flinch.
~~~
The island was still burning behind you when you landed.
Smoke trailed up into the sky like a second atmosphere, blotting out stars. Your boots hit the stone balcony of the forward outpost with a soft thud. The leather of your coat creaked as you straightened.
You didnât look back at the flames. You were used to the sound by nowâof fire, of screaming, of men following your commands without ever hearing your name.
Your wings folded close. Your mask stayed on. And you stepped into the darkness of the inner keep without a word.
~~~
Chapter 31: Not a Reflection
He was waiting.
You felt him before you saw himâjust a flicker through the bond, the low hum of presence. Familiar. Steady. But sharp now, with something that hadnât been there in weeks.
Concern.
Alber stood at the far edge of the room, half in shadow. His wings were folded behind him, arms loose at his sides. He hadnât taken off his mask. Neither had you. But heâd been watching. He always did.
The door clicked shut behind you. The silence stretched long between you, heavy as iron.
You didnât speak. Neither did he.
You couldâve walked past him. Said nothing. Maintained the silence that had become your shield. But you didnât. Because he moved first.Â
One gloved hand reached outânot to stop you, not to command you, but to touch. Barely. The tips of his fingers grazed your wrist, slow and careful, like he was checking to see if youâd still let him in. And when he touched youâreally touched youâthe bond surged.
Hot.
Heavy.
Worried.
Your fire flickered unevenly between your shoulders.
âYou burn like me,â he said quietly, the first words heâd spoken to you all day. His voice was rough, low. Not accusing. Just⊠knowing. âBut your fire doesnât come from rage.â
You didnât look up. Your chest felt too tight.
âWhy are you trying to be something youâre not?â he asked, barely above a whisper now. âWhy are you following my shadow?â
You opened your mouth. Then closed it.
You didnât know how to lie to himânot when the bond was already speaking for you. It had been pulsing with strain for weeks. Heâd felt it every time you forced a command. Every time you burned because you should, not because you felt it.
The silence stretched again. Until something broke. Your hand lifted and pushed your mask up. For your lips to breathe, for him to see the crack forming in your armor.
âBecause I thought it was the only way,â you whispered. âTo stay here. To stand beside you. To belong.â
Alber didnât interrupt.
You swallowed. âBecause softness doesnât survive here. Sorrow doesnât survive. And I didnât want to be the reason you fell.â
Your voice trembled at the endânot with weakness, but with exhaustion.
âI thought if I became more like you⊠Iâd be safe.â You looked up at last, and even through the dim, you could see the flicker in his eyes. âThat youâd be safe.â
Alber stepped closer. Not all the way. But enough. Enough that the heat of him pressed into your space. His wings shifted slightly. His mask already gone. His hand lifted againâthis time to your jaw. Gloved fingers brushed under your chin. Soft. Anchoring.Â
He didnât kiss you. He didnât need to. The bond spoke instead. And through it, you felt something riseânot anger, not command, but ache. An ache so deep it made your knees threaten to give.
He hadnât wanted a reflection. Heâd wanted you.
Even if you still didnât know what that was.
~~~
You stood still, his fingers cupping your jaw, your lips parted just enough to breathe. Just you and him.
Alberâs eyes searched yoursâred and endless, full of something older than language. He didnât speak. He didnât have to. The bond was already pulsing steady between you again, no longer fraying, but aching in another way now.
The kind that came with closeness. The kind that said: youâre safe.
He touched your cheek. His thumb brushed the line beneath your eye where the firelight had softened your exhaustion into something delicate. Then lowerâtracing the curve of your jaw, your throat. Reverent.
Like he was re-learning you. Like he wanted to. You didnât stop him when his hands moved to your leather armor.
He undid the front slowly, his fingers precise, pulling the fastenings loose one by one. The jacket peeled back, leather sighing against leather, until your blouse came into view. His hands paused thereâjust for a secondâas if seeing the simple white linen over your heart meant more to him than fire ever had.
You helped then. Your fingers brushed the edge of his collar, his leather jacket, undid it with practiced ease. His chest rose beneath your hands, slow and controlledâbut the heat in his skin betrayed him.
He burned for you.
You were shaking slightly by the time his shirt fell to the floor, your leather armor joining it piece by piece. When his hands finally returned to your waist, bare now, your breath caught. He touched you like he always didâwith quiet awe, as if your body had been forged in the same fire as his, and he was only now learning how deep it ran.
You whispered his name.
âAlberâŠâ
It broke something.
He kissed you thenânot rough, not ravenousâbut slow and deep, his lips moving over yours with a kind of reverence that made your knees soften. His hands slid around your back, pulling you gently against him, your breasts flush to his chest, your flame pressing into his.
âYou donât have to be like me,â he murmured, his forehead resting against yours. âYou never did.â
You nodded. Eyes wet. But smiling now. Barely.
He kissed you againâdown your throat, over your collarbones. His hands eased lower, slipping beneath the band of your pants, drawing them down as you stepped out of them, heat flushing over your skin as the firelight touched all of you.
His gaze dropped and stayed. He looked at you like you were holy. And then he knelt. Not to worship. But to care.
He kissed your hip first, then your stomach, then lowerâslow, so slow, his hands warm at your thighs as he nudged them apart. You gasped softly when his mouth brushed your inner thigh, the scrape of his breath against you making you tremble.
You opened to him. And he took his time.
His tongue flicked gently over your center, slow at firstâtesting, tasting. Then deeper. His lips closed around you, his tongue working soft circles, dragging pleasure from you in quiet, breathless waves. His grip on your thighs never tightened. He didnât force. Didnât rush.
He devoured you like he meant to rebuild you.
And when you cameâhips twitching, back arching, his name falling from your lips in a shudderâyou felt the bond between you pulse brighter, hotter, surer.
He rose to his feet, hands steady at your hips, his mouth shining with the proof of your surrender. You pulled him down to kiss you again, and he sank into youânot with hunger, but with purpose.
When he entered you, it wasnât claiming. It was coming home.
You wrapped your arms around his shoulders, legs around his waist, fire curling at your spine. His movements were slow. Deep. Each thrust carved out the shape of him inside you. You werenât being taken.
You were being held.
His mouth brushed your temple, your cheek, the corner of your lips. His voice broke onceâyour name whispered like a promise.
âYou are not weak.â
âYou are not lost.â
âYou are mine. And I am yours.â
You cried then, quietlyâyour tears caught on his skin, between kisses.
And when the two of you finishedâtangled and burning, your breath shared and your bodies slick with heatâit wasnât exhaustion that followed.
It was peace.
At last.
~~~
The room was quiet now.
Only the soft crackle of the low-burning firelight filled the space, flickering across the stone walls and the two bodies tangled together in the furs.
You were asleep, at last.
Your body curled toward his, one arm tucked under your cheek, your breath slow and even. The tension you carried like armor had finally eased, unwound from your shoulders, loosened from your brow. Your mask was gone. Your flame still flickered faintly behind you, low and warm.
Alber watched you.
He lay on his side, propped slightly on one elbow, his face bare in the glow. The shadows licked at the sharp angles of his jaw, the long white strands of his hair falling forward around his cheekbones. His eyesâdark, deep, blood-redârested only on you.
He didnât speak. But the bond stirred gently between you, soft and unguarded now. Full. Quiet. Certain. His hand reached for you, slow. Careful. Reverent.Â
He touched your hair firstâjust a brush of his knuckles along the strands that had fallen across your cheek. Then lower, to your shoulder, tracing the curve of it down to where the blankets slipped beneath the small of your back.
And then, finally⊠your wings.
His fingers ghosted over the black feathers at their base, barely there, a caress that was more breath than contact. He knew how sensitive that place was. How sacred it was.
And stillâhe touched you there with nothing but tenderness. A man who had once been made to kill, now barely breathing, just to hold you like this.
You didnât wake. But he knew you felt it. The pulse of the bond was calm now. Centered. Whole. Alberâs jaw clenchedâhard. Not in pain. Not in fear. In awe.
Because somewhere in the long, brutal line of his life⊠this had happened. You had happened. And now he couldnât imagine a world where you werenât beside him. He didnât know if that made him strongerâor more vulnerable than heâd ever been.
All he knew was this:
He would never survive losing you. So he watched you breathe.
And in that rare, quiet moment between fire and dawn, the King of the Wildfire let himself love.
~~~
Chapter 32: The Sirenâs Song
The sky above Onigashima held no sign of a storm. And yet you felt it. So did he.
You stood in the open court, surrounded by the Beast Pirates' ranksâhundreds of them milling, drinking, sharpening blades and shouting over the usual racket of chaos and steel. Kaido sat high above, a massive silhouette on his throne, lazily watching it all with a jug in his hand. Queen and Jack were off to the side, bickering over logistics, insults, and a stolen roast boar.
But thenâ You stilled. So did King. He was across from you, just far enough that no one would notice how your flames flickered in unison. But his head tilted. Yours did too. And the bondâtight, ancient, silentâtwisted.Â
Not with threat. But with tension. The kind that came before something shifted. He looked at you. You looked back. No words passed at first.
Just the quiet understanding of two creatures cut from the same fire. Mates. Wings. One soul in two bodies. You stepped closer, your breath slow beneath your mask. And thenâquietly, gentlyâyou spoke.
âYou feel it too.â
Kingâs head dipped a fraction. His eyes never left yours.
âSomethingâs changed.â
His voice was low. Unreadable. But the bond between you surgedâtighter than usual. Like a thread being seen.
You stepped closer still, your hands brushing at your sides like they wanted to reach for him. You werenât aware of the silence that had begun to ripple across the crew. Werenât aware that dozens of conversations had died mid-laugh.
âWhat changed?â you asked, voice softâbut carrying.
He paused, then said:
âYou.â
And that was when chaos broke loose. A pirate near the armory dropped his sword with a clatter so loud it echoed. Another staggered backward into a barrel of water. Someone shrieked:
âSHE TALKED!â
Another: âA WHOLE SENTENCE! TWO SENTENCES!!â
Someone else screamed and passed out on the spot. One poor soul near the back tilted sideways with a nosebleed so powerful it hit the dirt.Â
Queen spun around mid-bite, the meat still in his mouth as he choked and tripped over his own feet. With a strangled yelp, he toppled backward into a clattering pile of weapons, limbs flailing like a beached boar. He sat up, hair askew, eyes wild.
âSHE SOUNDS LIKE A DAMN GODDESS IN DOLBY SURROUNDâWHAT THE HELL?!â
His voice echoed through the room as he pointed dramatically in your direction, mouth agape.
âDonât look at me like that, King! You heard it too! That wasnât normal! That was some high-frequency, soul-meltingâwhat is she made of?!â
You froze.Â
From somewhere behind Queen, a sword thunked to the floor. Your flame flickered higher in shock, panic blooming behind your ribs. You turned to King, horrified, whispering.
ââŠThey heard me?â
He said nothing. But he was smirking. Even through the mask, you felt itâlike a blade sheathed in silk, biting back laughter he would never let anyone else hear.
From above, Kaido leaned over the balcony, blinking with mild surprise. Then his booming voice echoed down.
âShe could conquer seas with that voice alone.â
You buried your face in your gloved hand, mortified.Â
And someone in the crowd whispered: âItâs the Sirenâs Song.â
Another: âNoâjust The Voice of Sirenâ
And then they were chanting it. Half-serious. Half-stunned. All awed.
âSiren. Siren. Sirenââ
You spun on your heel and marched toward the barracks, smoke curling at your shoulders. King followed, steps slow, unbothered. His hand brushed your lower back as you walked. Quiet. Steady. Affectionate. And though he didnât speakâyou knew.Â
He had never been prouder.
~~~
The courtyard had long since emptied, but the sound of your voice still echoed somewhere in the stone. Theyâd stopped chanting eventually. But the silence that followed wasnât peace. It was weight.
You sat now in the upper tower again, where the wind licked over Onigashimaâs jagged peaks, and the last red embers of the sun dipped into the sea. The firelight caught on the curve of your maskâset aside beside you. Your leather had been loosened. So had his.
Alber sat at your back, wings folded behind him like the arms of some ancient statue, keeping out the wind. You leaned into him quietly.
âI didnât mean to say that much,â you murmured.
âYou did,â he answered.
âBut not for them.â You shook your head. Sighed. âThey looked at me like I was magic.â
He didnât say it aloudâbut you felt the bond stir.
You are.
His hand slid over your hip, resting there without pressure. Just presence. You tilted your head toward him, and he bent slightlyâhis lips brushing the side of your temple, slow and sure.
For a moment, you could breathe.
~~~
Far below, in the great hall, Kaido drank.
The firelight caught his tusks as he laughed, low and half-drunken. âWorororororoo⊠Wordâs spreading, King. Seems weâve got two monsters now.â
Queen sputtered into his cup. âThree, if you count my charm.â
Kaido ignored him, tipping back another long pull from his jug. âSiren, huh? Canât say I expected her to rise that fast.â
Jack grunted. âThe crew practically worships her.â
Kaido's grin widened as he turned his gaze toward the sky outside. âHmph. Let them. Just means sheâs doing her job.â He paused, then muttered almost to himself: âLet the world keep guessing what kind of fire burns under that maskâŠâ
~~~
Chapter 33: Skybound
The path was still a secret.
Worn into the cliffside behind Onigashima, carved by memory and flame. Only two souls knew of itâthose who bore the bond.
You stood at the edge of it now, leather still warm from the sun. The wind curled through your wings as you peeled back your gloves one by one, letting your fingers breathe, your pulse exposed.
It was always here, in this place, where the mask came off first.
You slipped it free now, careful, reverent, as if the motion itself could unmake the myth youâd become. You felt the heat of your own skin, the pressure easing from your jaw, your face, your fire.
And stillâbeneath it allâyou wondered.
Was there anything left of you under the armor?
You had followed in his footsteps. Adopted his silence. Hardened your edges to match the weight of the world he carried. The same leather, the same fire, the same ghosted movements in the air. Even now, your armor was an echo of his.
But you werenât him.
And the longer you wore the image of a weapon, the harder it became to remember that you hadnât always been forged for war.
âThinking again?â Alberâs voice broke softly behind you, quiet and sure.
You didnât turn right away. You closed your eyes to the wind, the sound of his footsteps approaching.
âI wonder,â you said. âIf I disappear behind it. The mask. The silence. If Iâm becoming⊠something else.â
Alber stopped just behind you. His warmth brushed your back. His hand ghosted over your waistânot possessive, just there.
âYouâre becoming stronger,â he said. âThatâs not the same thing.â
You tilted your head toward him. âBut is it still me?â
He didnât answer. Just leaned in close enough to rest his forehead against yours, his hand at the side of your face. The touch was slow, grounding.Â
And then, like an answer, he murmured: âShow me.â
You smiled. And stepped back. The jacket slipped from your shoulders. Beneath the rising sun, you stood with your wings bared and the fire at your back catching light.
And then you moved.
Wings cutting wind. Fire tracking behind you in narrow bursts. You darted past him, forcing his pivot. He slashed sideways, fast, a blur of steel through airâand you twisted just under it, your knee clipping his side on purpose.
He grunted, wings twitching to stabilize.
Your heart kicked.
You were faster than him. You always had been. You just hadnât let yourself enjoy it until now.
He came againâthis time from above. His foot shot toward your shoulder in a dive-kick, fire-flared and brutal. You dipped, spun, caught his momentum with your forearm and used it to roll past, wings folding mid-air, flame bursting behind you in a spiral.
Alber growled.
You laughed.
It startled even you. The sound. You hadnât heard it in so long. Real, light, instinctive. It bubbled out of your chest without permissionâand you saw the exact second he felt it through the bond. The way his body froze for half a breath. How the heat between you surgedânot in hunger.
But in joy.
You looped wide, arcing toward the cliff edge, then doveâjust to feel the wind scream around your bones. He followed. The two of you spiraled together, fire and speed and light and motion, until the cliffs blurred and the sky cracked open andâ
You laughed again. Louder. Free.
And suddenly, everything inside you that had been clenched for months unspooled. The grief. The pressure. The loneliness of pretending to be something hard, something exact. The armor youâd forged to survive melted in the warmth of his presence.
You didnât have to be quiet here. You didnât have to be anything but you. You twisted sharply and appeared behind himâyour hand brushing the edge of his collar.
âToo slow,â you said, voice bright.
You dove again, this time straight for him. He dodgedâbarelyâhis smirk sharp as blade-edge. You werenât training for real. You were playing. Testing. Tasting speed. Your wings flared wide, sharper than wind. The heat of your fire shimmered in the space between you as you passed.
He followed.
And suddenly, the world narrowed to two bodies in the sky. Flashstep. Clash. Aerial feint. Your instincts burned through your limbs, reaction meeting motion before thought could catch it. You werenât thinking anymore.
You were simply flying.
He caught your wrist mid-swoop and you twisted out of it, wings tucking, only to appear behind him in a ripple of heat.
He spun.Â
âStop laughing,â he said, breathless and smiling.
You laughed louder.
âYou love it,â you teasedâvoice unfiltered, unmasked, glowing.
And he did. It struck him all at onceâhow alive you were like this. Fast. Agile. Glorious.
You werenât weak. Not small. Not delicate. You had been restrained. Tamedâby survival. By solitude. By the cage of years spent hidden. But not anymore.
He met your eyes in that split-second mid-air, your wings haloed by the sunâand he was already flying toward you before you even moved.
You collided, lips first.
The kiss was breathless, firelit, fast. Your bodies twisted together mid-air as the wind tore past you, wings brushing, feathers catching heat. And then you broke apartâonly to crash down together in the mouth of the cave.
You stumbled back inside, half-laughing, half-kissing, bumping into the wall with a thud as Alberâs mouth found yours again, hands at your waist, your hips, your back.
âEvery time,â you giggled against his throat, breath caught between gasps and heat. âWe always end up like this.â
âLike what?â he murmured, grinning into your skin.
âNaked,â you said, laughing as you unfastened the last clasp of his jacket. âAfter every training sessionâwhat are we even pretending to do?â
Alber growled softly, fingers already under your blouse, pulling it free.
âNot pretending,â he whispered. âJust⊠finishing.â
The laughter melted into moans as your back hit the cave wall again, the weight of his body pressing flush against yours. Your legs gripped around his waist, breath tangled in his hair as his mouth devoured yoursâhungry and hot, no trace of restraint left in him.
Your hands fumbled with the last clasps of his jacket, shoving it down his shoulders in frustration. He pulled your blouse over your head in one smooth motion, barely breaking the kiss, both of you gasping as skin met skinâfire meeting fire, bare and burning.
Clothes fell in pieces. Gloves tossed. Buckles undone. Leather sliding from limbs and landing in careless heaps near the furs. Neither of you could stop touchingâfingers sliding, mouths seeking, breath catching in the low, smoky light of the cave.
He laid you down gently onto the furs, his hands spanning your waist like he needed to feel all of you just to believe you were real. But before he could settle over you, you movedâquick and fluid as flight.
You rolled him beneath you.
Alber grunted as his back met the furs, stunned for only a breath before his eyes snapped to yoursâheat blazing, lips parted.
You straddled him slowlyâknees pressed to either side of his hips, your thighs slick against his skin. The heat of him beneath you thrummed through every nerve, but you didnât rush. Not this time.
Not when everything in you wanted to feel.
The furs beneath you were soft from use, warmed by firelight. His flame flickered at his back, casting golden arcs across the stone. Your own rose to meet it, burning brighter now that nothing held you back.
You were bareâwholly, gloriously bareâabove him. Your wings unfurled behind you, wide and proud, feathers stretching toward the ceiling like shadow and light made flesh. You didnât try to hide them. You wanted him to see.
Alber was already watching.
His hands were on your hips, fingers splayed wide, reverent. His red eyes roamed the length of youâyour breasts, your stomach, your flame, your wings. He looked wrecked beneath you. Not from lust. From awe.
âYou look like a goddess,â he murmured, voice hoarse, breath catching. âLike something carved from fire.â
You leaned down, pressing your chest to his, your mouth to his ear. âIâm yours,â you whispered. âNot because I have to be. Because I choose to be.â Then you reached down, guided him to you, and sank onto himâslow, deep, all the way.
The breath left his lungs in a ragged gasp, his hands tightening at your waist.
Your wings flexed once behind youâglorious, instinctiveâas your body adjusted around him. You were slick with need, full with him, every inch of you wrapped in heat. When you rolled your hips, slow and measured, you both groaned.
It wasnât desperate. It was worship.
You rode him in rhythm with your own heartbeatâsteady, sacred. His hands slid up to your ribs, your back, brushing the base of your wings where skin met feather. That touch made you trembleâsensitive, alive.
Your hands braced on his chest, feeling the power beneath them. Every muscle tensed, held back for you. His lips parted, but he said nothing. Just watched. Let you move. Let you take.
âYou feel like home,â you whispered.
Alberâs brow furrowed, jaw clenchedâhis eyes shining.
âDonât stop,â he rasped.
You didnât.
You moved above him with strength, with grace. Your moans grew breathier, his thrusts rising to meet yours from beneath. You leaned forward again, your breasts brushing his chest, your lips dragging over his throat, tasting sweat and fire.
He wrapped his arms around your waist, held you closer, buried his face in your neck as your pace deepened.
The sound of skin on skin echoed soft in the caveâwet, rhythmic, full of heat.
Your climax built slow, then sharp, coiling low in your belly like flame ready to burst. And when his thumb brushed just beneath your wing again, you broke.
You came with a cry muffled in his hair, body shaking above him, your flame bursting bright behind you like a sun igniting.
He held you through it, groaning against your neck, hips thrusting harder now, chasing his own end.
You stayed straddled, trembling, letting him use your body the way it was meant to be usedâtrusted, sacred, full.
When he came, it was with a shudder that rocked him to the boneâhis hands locked on your hips, his fire roaring high, his seed spilling deep inside you as your wings spread wide once more.
Then silence.
Only your shared breath. Your chests heaving in sync. You stayed above him, lips barely apart, foreheads touching. Still joined. Still burning.
And when his hands slid from your hips to your back, pulling you down into the cradle of his chest, you let yourself collapse thereâsafe, whole, and no longer pretending to be anything else.
~~~
Chapter 34: Still Burning
You lay half-sprawled across his chest, one leg slung over his hips, the backs of your fingers trailing lazy patterns over the center of his chest where his heart beat slow and sure. His hand rested along your spine, broad and warm, thumb stroking the space just beneath your wings.
The cave had gone quiet again, save for the slow crackle of your fading flames and the sea wind whistling faintly outside. Your bodies had settled. Wrapped around each other. Breathing the same air.
Alber let out a slow exhale, one hand brushing your hair back from your face. You looked up at him, cheek pressed to his shoulder, lips still swollen from the last kiss.
"How..." you began softly, almost wondering aloud, "after all this time... we still canât seem to keep our hands off each other?"
His fingers paused, then resumed their path along your spine. "It's been nearly a year."
âAlmost every day,â you murmured, smiling now with a blush. âEvery night. Every moment we can.â
âSometimes more than once,â he added quietly.
You huffed a laugh and lifted your head, eyes warm. âYou say that like itâs a problem.â
âItâs not.â He looked at youâtruly looked. His expression unreadable but full. âItâs just⊠strange. Iâve never wanted someone like this. Never⊠needed.â
You knew what he meant. It wasnât just hunger. It wasnât novelty. The bond didnât flare and die. It stayed. Grew. Sometimes so quietly, so gently, that it terrified you more than any fire ever could.
âIt never fades,â you whispered.
âNo.â He touched your cheek with the backs of his fingers. âIt just deepens.â
You lay there, wrapped in furs and flame and warmth, and for a while, neither of you said anything.
Until you did.
âDo you remember the first time you brought me here?â Your voice was quiet, filled with something between memory and disbelief. âYou didnât say a word. Just dropped that bag of food and sat down like you hadnât spent the last day trying to convince yourself I wasnât real.â
âI thought Iâd imagined you,â he admitted. âEven when I saw you again. Your flame. Your wings. Your face. I kept thinkingâif I blink, sheâll vanish.â
You smiled, chin resting on his chest. âI thought youâd never take your mask off.â
âI didnât mean to. You just⊠kept looking at me like you already knew what was underneath.â He paused. âNo oneâs ever looked at me like that before.â
âThen they were blind,â you said simply.
Alber didnât respondâbut his fingers tightened gently at your waist. He leaned up just enough to press a kiss to your brow, then touched the center of your wing where it met skin with his fingers. You sighed at the contact. That place always made you melt.
âI like this place,â you said eventually, eyes closing. âIt still feels like itâs ours.â
âIt is.â
You nestled closer, the heat of his body like a hearth.
âIt scares me sometimes,â you whispered. âHow easy it is to love you.â
He didnât answer immediately. But when he did, his voice was lower. Rougher. âI think about that too.â And he kissed you againâslow, steady. Like a vow you never had to speak aloud anymore.
You mightâve stayed there all night. But duty, as always, had a way of finding them.
~~~
By the time the sun dipped toward the horizon, you both knew it was time.
You dressed in silence, though not unhappily. Just with the quiet focus of people who had shared something sacred and now had to return to a world that didnât understand what they were.
You fastened your leather jacket. Pulled your mask back into place.
But this timeâit didnât feel like hiding.
Alber stood behind you, wings tucked, his own leather gleaming faintly in the setting light. You glanced over your shoulder as you tightened the last clasp.
âBack to pretending,â you murmured.
He stepped closer, pressing a hand to the small of your back.
âNot pretending,â he said. âSurviving.â
You nodded.
He would fly ahead. You would follow. Slipping back through Kaidoâs ranks like nothing had happenedâlike you hadnât just spent the afternoon wrapped around each other, lit from within by something the world had tried to destroy.
But the fire in your bones said otherwise.Â
The bond said otherwise.
You followed him out of the cave. Silent. Steady.
And even as Onigashima loomed aheadâsteel and stone and ordersâyour heart was still full of that small, hidden sky youâd carved together.
Because even nowâafter all these months, after all the fireâyou still burned for him.
And he for you.
~~~
Chapter 35: Ashes of Obedience
Onigashima had changed.
So had you.
The fortress bustled now with new bloodâpirates from distant isles, mercenaries seeking power, fresh recruits with sharp blades and sharper mouths. But none of them challenged you anymore.
Not after what theyâd seen. Not after what they whispered.
You moved through the stone halls of the Beast Piratesâ stronghold clad in full black leather. Tight, sleek, precise. Mask in place. Gloves drawn high. Not a single inch of skin visibleâbut the flame between your shoulder blades always burned, silent and steady.
They called you Siren.Â
They didnât know your name.Â
Didnât know your face.Â
Only the stories.
And now, as you stood near the edge of Kaidoâs war hall with your squad behind youâyour squadâyou felt the tension build like storm clouds on dry earth.Â
Kaido stood with his back to the room, gazing out toward the sea, his coat draped over his shoulders like a banner of conquest. A new map lay unrolled on the table beside him, marked in blood-red ink.Â
Territory. Another kingdom. Another rebellion to snuff out.
His voice boomed as he turned, jug in hand. âWe move at dawn. Wano isnât finished. Not yet.â
No hesitation. Just war.
His eyes scanned the roomâQueen, Jack, King. Then you. He pointed with the jug, sloshing sake as he grinned.
âSiren. You take the southern front.â
The words landed like stone in your gut. Not because of the responsibility. But because KingâAlberâwas assigned to the northern flank. The map had divided you. Your bond flickered sharply, like a flame disturbed. You didnât move. You didnât speak. But he looked at youâacross the war table, behind his own maskâand he felt it.
A shift.
A strain.
He held your gaze for just a second longer than was necessary.
And that was all it took.
~~~
You stood alone on the southern cliffs that night. Your squad moved around youâloyal, obedient, already prepping for dawn. They didnât question your silence. They never did. But your thoughts⊠They wouldnât quiet. You had followed orders. Burned ships. Crushed resistance. Reduced towns to black earth with a single word.
âBurn.â
And you were good at it. Too good. But nowâthis order, this village marked for conquestâit wasnât a base or a port. It was home to families. Civilians. Not warriors. Not soldiers.
You stared at your hands. Fire flickered faintly in your palms. And for a moment, you hated it. You hated how easy it had become. How natural. But softness didnât survive here. Sorrow didnât survive.
And you⊠you couldnât be the reason Alber fell.
Youâd watched him carry his fire like a sword together. Watched the scars it carved into him. Youâd promised yourself you would not make it harder for him to be what Kaido demanded. You would not be his weakness.
You would be worthy.
Even if it hurt.
Even if it burned.
~~~
Far across the cliffs, in the opposite direction, King stood beneath a stone outcropping, the wind curling around his cloak, fire crackling faintly at his back. His thoughts were sharp. Strategic.Â
Until they werenât.Â
Until you bled through the bond.
You didnât speak. You didnât cry. But the fracture was there. A pulse of sorrow buried beneath restraint.
His jaw clenched.
He remembered your wordsââI thought if I became more like you⊠Iâd be safe.â
He remembered his own replyââYou donât have to be like me.â
But he hadnât stopped it. He had let them split you apart. Let Kaido draw the lines on the map. Let you carry fire to places that didnât deserve to burn. Because this was the world they lived in. And rage, not sorrow, survived.
StillâŠ
Your flame had dimmed just slightly.
And that, more than anything, scared him.
~~~
Chapter 36: The Fracture
The battlefield was burning.
Smoke curled in thick ropes above the southern cliffs, broken by the flash of cannon fire and the rise of flame. Your squad had moved in swiftlyâjust as trained. Efficient. Brutal. No hesitation.
And neither did you.
You didnât have the luxury of doubt now. Not here.
Not when everything youâd worked forâevery rumor, every ounce of respectâcould vanish the moment you faltered. You had become legend not by accident, but by necessity. The myth of Siren was armor now. Unbreakable.
So you stepped into the fire like you were born of it.
Leather clung tight to your body, the heat coiling at your back as your wings flared wide and caught the wind. You shot upward, a blur of motion and pressure, flame trailing in your wake like a divine strike.
The enemy below barely had time to shout.
Your first attack cracked the earth openâa whip of fire arcing from your palms, slicing into the line of resistance like a godâs hand. Men scattered. Screamed. Your squad advanced behind you, covering the ground you carved.
But thenâ
Movement.
Fast.
A blur from the opposing sideâlarge, quick, armed with a twin blade that glinted too cleanly through the smoke.
You turned mid-air just in time to block the strike with your forearm, flames bursting in defense. The clash sent you tumbling backward, momentum staggered.
You recovered. Pivoted in air. Launched a kick that sent the attacker skidding through the dirt.
He grinned. He was strong. Stronger than the others.
Your wings flared.
You dove.
The sky broke in your wakeâfire spiraling from your heels as you attacked again, dodging, twisting, striking. A dance of light and speed. Your fire cut through the fog like a scythe, and for a momentâyou were alive again.
This was instinct. This was truth. You didnât have to think. You didnât have to feel.
Untilâ
Your breath caught. Mid-motion, your wings locked for half a beat too long. The world spunâsideways. You hit the ground hard, knees buckling as a wave of nausea punched through you like a gut strike. Your fire flickered.
You staggered. The attacker saw it. He advanced.
You raised a handâbut your vision blurred. Your head swam. A pressure bloomed in your core, deep and hot and wrong. Not like pain. Not like injury.
Something else.
Something alive.
And far awayâ
Alber felt it.
~~~
The battlefield blurred before him.
He had been commanding the northern front. Wings flared, sword drawn, his flames cutting through enemy formations with brutal precision. His fire hadnât waned once.
Until you faltered.
Until the bond flared like a scream through his chestâsharp, urgent, wrong.
His heart seized. His wings snapped wide.
Without a word, without a command, he launched into the skyâhis body morphing mid-flight in a violent burst of flame and scale. Horns stretched. Wings tripled in span. The air cracked as the Pteranodon roared across the sky.
He flew faster than he ever had in his life.
~~~
You were surrounded now.
Still standing, barely. Your hand trembled as you threw another burst of fireâbut it was weaker. Incomplete.
The attacker came again. Closer. A strike aimed not to test you this timeâbut to kill. And thenâ The sky broke.
A scream of wings. A shockwave of flame.Â
Alber slammed into the earth like a meteor, his massive form crashing into the center of the enemy line. The shockwave knocked bodies back. His roar shattered bone. Fire erupted in a halo around himâscorching. Divine.
He didnât speak.
He didnât need to.
He tore through them like they were made of paper.
And thenâhe shifted.
A whirl of smoke and fire as his form shrank back into flesh. King again. Masked. Tall. Burning with something no one around him could name. He strode through the wreckage. Found youâslumped to one knee, breathing hard, blinking slow. Your hand reached for him.
But he was already there.
He lifted you gently. Carefully. His arms wrapped around you like theyâd always been made for it, one beneath your knees, one behind your back. His flame surged around youânot in fury now, but in protection.
You sagged against him.
And for the first time in days, you let yourself close your eyes.
Safe.
~~~
Chapter 37: The Hollow Cave
The wind howled against the cliffs.
Somewhere far below, the fires of war still burned. But they felt a lifetime away nowâmuted. Distant. Like smoke behind glass. Here, there was only the cave. And you.
He carried you the entire way, silent, jaw clenched behind his mask. His wings were scorched at the tips, his arms covered in ashâbut his grip on you never wavered. You were pressed close to his chest, your flame still flickering faintly between your shoulder blades.
Alive.
Burning.
But too faint.
Too quiet.
He laid you down in the cave with a reverence that didnât belong to the battlefield. His hands, still gloved, shook once before he reached upâslowlyâand removed his own mask. Then yours. The leather peeled away from your face, and he saw you again.Â
Your real face. Eyes closed. Brow furrowed. Lips parted slightly with each shallow breath. A fine sheen of sweat at your hairline.Â
His hand came upâtremblingâand brushed your cheek.
The bond screamed at him.
It hadnât stopped since heâd felt your body weaken mid-battle. Since his fire had flared in agony, not from an enemy, but from you. He knew it wasnât injury. Heâd felt injuries through the bond beforeâsharp, slicing, immediate. But this⊠this was something deeper.
The bond wasnât fraying. It was changing. Evolving.
âTalk to me,â he whispered, eyes locked on yours, even as they remained closed. âWhat are you trying to tell me?â
The bond pulsed. It wasnât pain. It was a signal.
He inhaledâdeep, slowâand listened. Not with ears. With flame. With instinct. With the thread that had always existed between you, binding you, winding through your bones like sacred fire.
And thenâ He felt it.
A second pulse.
Smaller. Fainter.
New.
He froze.
Blinking once, as if disbelieving what had stirred beneath the tether.
Again.
Another flicker. Another flame.
Inside you.
His breath caught in his throat. The cave tilted around him. For a moment, he didnât know what to feel.
Shock.
Confusion.
And thenâ
Awe.
His palm hovered over your abdomen, not yet touching. The bond inside him sang.
âYouâŠâ he whispered, voice cracking as his forehead lowered to your shoulder. His other hand cradled the back of your neck. âYou werenât weak. You wereâŠâ
A beat.
A breath.
ââŠcarrying.â
~~~
You stirred in his arms with a soft groan, the sound catching in your throat. You blinked slowlyâvision still blurry, skin damp with sweat, the scent of smoke and Alber all around you.
âAlber?â you rasped, voice hoarse.
He leaned over you, shadows flickering across his bare face. His hand cradled your cheek, calloused and warm.
âYouâre safe,â he said quietly. âIâve got you.â
You sat up too quicklyâstill lightheadedâbut panic surged through you before reason could.
âThe battleââ you gasped, hands pressing against his chest. âThe men, the missionâwhat happened? Kaidoâs going toâheâll punish youâbecause of meâyou left your positionââ
âStop.â He caught your wrists, firm but steady.
You kept talking, trembling, breath picking up. âIâve ruined everything. IâveâAlberâwhat did I do?â
âBreathe.â His voice softened. He let go of one hand and cupped your face again, thumb brushing your cheek. âLook at me.â
Your chest hitched, but you did. Your eyes locked with hisâbright red, steady, full of something you couldnât name yet.
Then slowlyâcarefullyâhe took your trembling hand and guided it down to your lower stomach. He placed his own over it, palm splayed.
âThereâs another flame,â he murmured.
You blinked.
âWhat?â
âInside you.â
His voice cracked on the last word. You stared at his hand, pressed to your belly.
And thenâ Then you felt it.
Not with your body at firstâbut through the bond. A second warmth. Small. Fragile. And yet impossibly ancient.
ââŠNo,â you whispered. âNo, thatâsâhow?â
You sat there, frozen. One heartbeat. Two.
Then your thoughts snapped together, and you laughedâbut it was jagged, almost a sob.
âOf course,â you said breathlessly. âOf course.â
Your hands gripped his shoulders, pulling yourself up into his chest.
âWe barely kept our hands off each other,â you muttered into his skin. âWe were together every nightâevery morningâAlber, it was only a matter of time...â
He held you, arms wrapped fully around your back. His hands trembled slightly where they pressed to your spine, as if he was trying to memorize you again.
When he finally spoke, it wasnât with fear. It was awe.
âI felt it in the bond,â he murmured. âBut I didnât believe it. Not until I saw your face just now.â
You pulled back slightly to look at him.
His eyes were shining. Not with tears, but with reverence. That quiet kind of wonder that felt older than language.
âYouâre carrying my child,â he said, voice low and sure.
You swallowed, didnât know what to say.
It was terrifying.
It was impossible.
And yetâit was yours. And his. A child. Born of flame. Of bond. Of war.
Alber kissed you. Just once. Slow and soft. Reverent.
You turned to him, still tremblingâunsure if what swelled in your chest was fear, joy, or something impossible between.
âWhat do we do?â you whispered.
He didnât answer right away. He only pulled you closer, pressing his forehead to yours. When he finally spoke, his voice was barely a breath:
âWe survive.â
You curled into him again, letting the moment hold you. Letting the truth settle like ash around a flame. But in this momentâthere was no battle. No fire. No war.
Just you.
Just him.
And the quiet spark of something new.
~~~
Chapter 38: The Space Between Flames
The cave had gone quiet again.
Only the wind moved now, sweeping faintly across the stone floor, stirring ash and broken leaves. Your fire burned low and steady at your back. Not like before. Not sharp. Not wild.
It pulsed now with something deeper. Softer. Another flame.
You sat in his lap now, leaned back against his chest, his arms wrapped around you tightlyâalmost too tightly. Like if he let go, youâd vanish. Like if he blinked, the fire would go out. His wings curled loosely around you both, forming a dark cocoon that shielded you from the world outside. The wind couldn't reach you here. Nothing could. You were safeâat least for this moment.
His presence at your back was steady as ever, grounding. But he hadnât spoken in several minutes. Not since the bond confirmed what neither of you had expected.
Pregnant. You were pregnant.
You didnât even know when it had happened. Maybe it had been that night in the cliffs, that quiet, reverent moment after you had found laughter again. Maybe it had been during one of the nights that followedâwhen your hands had trembled against his and heâd held you like you were holy.
Your palm moved instinctively over your stomach, flat and unchanged. But everything had changed. Alber shifted beneath you.
âI have to tell Kaido,â he said at last, voice low.
You turned your head slightly toward him, still curled against his chest. His mask lay forgotten beside him on the stone. So did yours.
His expression was unreadable, but his eyesâdeep crimsonâburned with conflict.
âI know,â you said quietly.
A beat.
âBut will he understand?â
Alber didnât answer.
Of course he wouldnât. Kaido was an emperor. A weapon of legacy and power. He didnât askâhe took. Heâd raised the Beast Pirates from ruin and shadows. And he had given Alber more than a second chance. He had given him a reason to keep breathing. But thisâ This was different.
You looked down at your hand, still resting over your abdomen. Your voice, when it came, was softer than flame. âI didnât think Iâd ever be a mother.â
Alber turned his head slightly.
âI didnât let myself think about it,â you continued, still watching your own fingers. âIt felt like a myth. Something that belonged to people who were safe. Who werenât hunted. Who didnât live in the shadow of fire.â
Silence.
âI always thought⊠if I ever had something like this⊠it would mean the end. Of fighting. Of surviving.â You exhaled. âBut this doesnât feel like the end.â You leaned further into him. âIt feels like the beginning.â
Alberâs jaw tightened. His hand reached up slowly, sliding from your waist to your stomach. Not pressingâjust resting. Sharing that space.
âI donât know what comes next,â he admitted. âNot this time.â
That made your heart twist. Because Alber always knew. Always had a plan. A countermeasure. A way forward. But not now. Because this wasnât a weapon to protect. It was something else entirely.
âItâll look like betrayal,â he said. âWe left the battlefield. We disobeyed orders. Kaido might think we turned.â
Your breath hitched. You knew what the punishment for desertion was.
Alber continued, voice flat.
âBut I wonât lie to him. He gave me my freedom. Pulled me from the lab. Let me live in his shadow without chains. Weâve never needed words to understand each other.âÂ
He exhaled, slowly. The heat of his body against your back was steady, unwavering. âBut this is something else. And if I donât tell him⊠if I let him hear it from anyone else firstââ
âHeâll think itâs mutiny,â you whispered.
Alber nodded. Then he looked down again. At you. At the fire he now felt blooming inside you.
âIâll take the risk.â
You shook your head, resting your hand atop his where it curled protectively at your stomach.
âNo. We will.â
For a moment, the silence held like a breath. Then his arms tightened, gently. One around your waist. The other still over your stomach.
âI never imagined it,â he murmured. âNot for me. Not after what Iâve done.â
You closed your eyes and leaned your head back against his shoulder. âItâs not about what weâve done,â you said. âItâs about what we protect now.â
He was silent.
Then, with a rare gentleness, his hand rose from your stomach to rest between your wingsâthe place no one touched but him. A silent promise. A vow.
Your flame flaredâjust slightlyâand the bond hummed.
There were still battles to come. Still Kaido. Still the impossible weight of the world they served. But for now, in this cave, with no one else watchingâ
There was only the fire.
And the new one growing inside you.
~~~
Chapter 39: The Third Flame
The storm had passed.Â
But the silence that followed was heavier than thunder.
You stood at the mouth of the cave, the horizon still flickering with the last dying glow of battle. Onigashima waited thereâdistant and darkâlike a mountain too proud to fall. Behind you, the stone walls still held the echo of the words youâd shared. The fire still lingered on your skin.
But Alber hadnât moved for a long time. He sat in silence, one knee bent, his arms resting heavy across his thighs, wings curved forward like a wall. He hadnât put his mask back on yet.
You stepped toward him slowly, the heat of your palm pressing to his shoulder.
He looked up.
You didnât speak. You didnât have to. The bond between you was still too loud, too raw. The pulse of it throbbed between your ribsâunsettled and bright. Not from pain now, but from weight.
Three flames.
Yours. His. And now⊠something more.
âI can come with you,â you said, though your voice was quiet. âI should.â
Alberâs eyes locked with yoursâsharp, dark, fire-bright.
âYou stay here,â he said.
You opened your mouth, but he was already rising.
âIâll handle Kaido.â
You followed his movement instinctively, hands flexing at your sides. âYou canât face him alone. Heâll think weââ
âI know what heâll think.â
He turned to you fully now. Towering. Still scorched from battle. But there was something else behind his maskless face nowâfear. Not of Kaido. Never of Kaido. But of you. Of what might happen if he brought you back into that storm.
âHe wonât see this as a child,â Alber said, voice low. âHeâll see it as a liability. A distraction. Heâll question my judgment. Maybe yours.â
Your heart ached. âSo what? We hide it forever?â
âNo,â he said, shaking his head once. âBut not now. Not when every eye on that island is watching for a reason to doubt you.â
His gaze droppedâbrieflyâto your stomach. His hand twitched at his side, like he wanted to touch it again but couldnât let himself.
âThis is more than just ours now,â he said. âItâs a legacy. A rebirth. The last of our tribe. We are the last Lunariansâand this childâŠâ His jaw tightened. âThis child is the fire they didnât erase.â
That truth hit you like a wave. You stepped toward him, close enough that your flame brushed his.
âI donât want you to go alone.â
âI know.â
âI donât want you to face him alone.â
âI know.â
You stared at him, the bond pulsing louder. And thenâyou felt it.
The third flame. The one tucked so softly into your core. Still faint, but growing. Still new, but alive. You breathed in, and for the first time since the discovery, you didnât resist. You nodded.
âThen go.â
He exhaled, long and low, as though a chain had just released.
You reached up, fingers brushing the edge of his collar, the side of his face. You didnât kiss him. You didnât dareânot now. But you leaned close, and let your forehead press against his.
âIâll wait for you.â
Alberâs voice was so soft it barely reached your ears.
âIâll always come back.â
~~~
When he stepped out of the cave again, his mask was in place. His wings stretched wide with a slow, deliberate force. But nothing felt the same.
Not in his body.
Not in his bond.
And not in the fire that now burned for more than vengeance, more than loyalty.
He launched into the sky without a word. No one saw him leave. No one would see the way his hands trembled as he flew toward the island he called homeâtoward the man to whom he owed his life.
But for the first time since that life had been granted to himâŠ
He didnât know if it would be enough.
~~~
Chapter 40: The Flame Lives On
The sky above Onigashima churned with the last remnants of smoke.
Ash drifted like snow along the wind. The fortress loomed, carved into stone and bone, its halls still echoing with the aftermath of battle. Inside, the Beast Pirates drank, shouted, cleaned blood from their blades. Victory had been hard-won.
But their highest commander had vanished.
And now, King returned.Â
No one saw him land. His steps were slow and deliberate as he made his way through the corridors, black leather and armor creaking with each breath. The fire at his back burned cold and controlled, but it shimmered in an uneven rhythm. Tension rippled in the air around him.
When he entered Kaidoâs war hall, the doors shut behind him like a tomb sealing closed.Â
Kaido sat on his seat. The Beastâs silhouette was massive against the torchlight, his jug of sake balanced in one hand, mouth set in a heavy line. His kanabo leaned against the side of his seat, untouched.
He didnât rise. Didnât speak. Just watched.
Alber stepped forward, the sound of his boots ringing out like thunder in the silence. He stopped halfway across the floor. Thenâwithout a wordâhe reached up and pulled off the mask. The leather fell away with a hiss of breath. His face was bare beneath it. His eyes were steady.
Kaido still said nothing. But his grip on the sake jug tightened. And thenâ
âWhere is she?â
His voice was gravel. Low. Laced with something coiled and dangerous.
Alber didnât flinch.
âSafe.â
Kaidoâs teeth bared. âYou left your post. Abandoned the battle. Risked the entire operation.â
âI know.â
âThen give me one goddamn reason I shouldnât crush your skull myself.â
The air burned.
Alber took another step forward. His hands didnât move to his sword. His wings didnât flare. He simply stood, flame flickering behind him, his voice like obsidian cracked in half.
âBecause the bond pulled me to her. Because she is my mate.â
Kaido stilled.
Alber didnât stop.
âAnd she carries our blood.â
Silence.
The kind of silence that cracks walls. That turns tension into violence. Kaidoâs eyes didnât narrowâthey focused. A bead of sake rolled down the side of the jug, forgotten in his hand.
ââŠMate,â Kaido repeated, voice like smoke. âThatâs what this is?â
Alber said nothing. He didnât need to.
Kaido leaned forward now, his massive form looming, elbows braced on his knees. His eyes were locked on Alberâs, sharp and unreadable.
âYouâve never said that word to me before,â Kaido growled.
âBecause it didnât exist before her.â
Another silence stretched.Â
Kaidoâs jaw worked, grinding together for a moment as he thought. Really thought. He wasnât a fool. He knew what Alber had been. What he still was. Kaido had seen him kill without blinking. Had pulled him from the lab himself, offered him freedom in the shadow of a new empire.
But he also knew Lunarians werenât like other creatures. Their instincts, their bondsâthey were older than words. Older than the sea. They were known as a tribe of gods while they dwelled on top of the Red Line.
He leaned back slowly into his throne, the jug still clutched in one massive fist. His expression unreadable. And thenâ
A deep, guttural laugh rose from his chest. âWorororororoooâŠâ It echoed across the hall like thunder crashing through clouds. âYouâre telling me the last Lunarian just lit a new one?â
King didnât flinch.
Kaido looked at him for a long moment. His eyes werenât softâbut they werenât angry anymore. Just sharp. Studying. The weight of decades behind them.Â
Finally, he took a long pull from his jug. âLooks like the flame lives on.â Another pause. Thenâhe offered the jug forward.
King stared at it. Then stepped up one level of the dais and took it without a word.
Kaido let out a breath.
âThis war... this life... you think that child will survive it?â
King didnât hesitate.
âI will make sure of it.â
Kaido watched him closely. His face was dark, but something flickered beneath itâsomething harder to name. Of debts and survival.
âYouâve always burned with vengeance,â Kaido said. âBut this... this is different.â
He nodded slowly.
Then, quietly: âYouâll still fight?â
âUntil the last breath,â King answered.
Kaido smirked.
âGood. Canât have my right hand getting soft.â
He raised his jug again, drinking deep.
âShe staying hidden?â
âFor now,â Alber answered. âUntil we know what comes next.â
Kaido nodded once. âSmart.â Then, a pause. His eyes burned like coals in the dark. âYou owe me nothing for what I gave you,â he said. âBut what you are now⊠thatâs yours to carry.â
King met his gaze. Held it. But said nothing.
Kaido took another drink. âFine. Keep your mate hidden. Raise your fire.â He leaned forward again, grin savage and pleased.
âBut when the time comes⊠I want to see that kid fly.â
~~~
Chapter 41: Stillness, and Flame
It had been weeks since that night.
Weeks since Alber returned from Onigashima with the smell of Kaidoâs sake on his breath and not a single scar to show for the gamble he'd taken. He hadnât spoken of the conversation in detail, and you hadnât asked.
But when heâd knelt in front of you in the cave, pressed his forehead to your stomach, and whispered, âHe knows. And we live,ââyou had let yourself cry for the first time in years.Â
Now, time passed differently. Not slower, but deeper.
You spent your days in the hidden cliffs, far beyond the outer watch of Onigashimaâwhere the sea crashed endlessly and the sky stayed wide. Alber came and went, always returning, always bringing flame-warmth with him. And you trained when your body allowed it. You flew. You burned. You breathed. But everything was different now.
Because you were no longer alone.
Your belly had grownânot enough to hinder your movement yet, but enough that your clothes fit differently. Enough that Alber looked at you longer, touched you slower. The fire at your back had changed too. It flickered now in an unfamiliar rhythm. A second heartbeat. A second soul.
Three flames. One bond.
You sat now just outside the cave, the sun dipping into the horizon, your wings stretched behind you in the last warm light of day. You had discarded your jacket for the first time in a whileâkept the mask off, too. There was no need for armor here. You were bare to the wind, the sea, the flame. And for once, you werenât afraid of being seen.
You felt him before you heard him.Â
The heat in your chest shifted, answering something familiar. You turned your head just before Alber landed behind you, flame trailing his descent. His boots touched down with quiet precision, wings folding in tightly. And when he walked toward you, the bond inside your chest hummed like it was sighing in relief.
âYouâre back early,â you said.
He didnât speak. Just walked toward you until the air between you warmed. Thenâhis fingers ghosted down your arm, brushing your elbow, sliding across your waist. His palm curved around the swell of your belly. Reverent. Still. He never touched you there without intention.
âIâm trying to be,â he said quietly, almost into your neck.
You blinked. âTrying to be what?â
He stepped closer, so close his front pressed against your back.
âBack sooner. Every time.â
You let your head fall lightly against his chest.
âI can still fight, you know.â
âI know.â
âIâm not delicate.â
âI know.â
But he was still holding you tighter than he had to. Still wrapping himself around you like armor. Still shielding you from wind that couldnât hurt you.
You reached up and laced your fingers through his. His glove was warm. Your hands smaller. Stronger now, but still cradled in his with quiet care.
âI feel them,â you whispered. âEvery night. Like a flutter under my ribs.â
He didnât speak. You felt him lean down behind youâand then, with slow devotion, he knelt. One hand still on your hip. One pressed flat to your belly. And thenâhis voice. So soft it barely reached your ears:
âYou still burning in there, little one?â
Your breath hitched. A smile curled behind your lips.
And just as he said itâthe tiniest flutter struck beneath your skin.
You gasped softly.
Alber froze.
Thenâagain. A flick. A pulse. Tiny feet or fists shifting inside you. Not pain. Not even pressure. Life.
His eyes went wide. He pulled back just enough to look at youâreally look at you. And for a man like himâso often unreadable, masked, eternalâhis expression now was something close to shattered awe.
âAgain,â he whispered. âI felt that.â
And thenâanother spark. The baby moved again, pushing directly into his palm.Â
His lips parted, but no sound came out. You took his hand in yours and pressed it there. The baby moved againâfluttering, like a flick of flame. Alber exhaled, unsteady. Then he leaned in again, voice rough.
âYouâve got your motherâs fire, donât youâŠâ
He stayed there for a long time, one palm cupped gently over your stomach, the other wrapped around your thigh as you leaned back into him.
You ran your fingers through his hair, slow and soft.
âI didnât think it would feel like this,â you murmured. âLike Iâm carrying something ancient. Something holy.â
His breath was rough. He was sitting on one knee before you now, wings curled gently behind him like arms reaching for the sky.
âYou are,â he said, voice low.
The silence settled warm between you.
âWould you have imagined this?â you asked. âBack then⊠when you were King.â
âNo.â
âDo you think weâre ready?â
A pause. Then:
âWe have to be.â
You tilted your head, one hand resting over his where it cradled your waist. âI didnât think Iâd make it this far,â you whispered. âLet alone become... this.â
His eyes found yours again, and you saw it: the storm. The tenderness. The fear. The ferocity. The ache of unspoken hopes.Â
You werenât used to being loved like this.Â
He wasnât used to feeling safe like this.Â
You bent slightly at the waist as he leaned forward, and his forehead touched your belly with aching reverence. A moment passed. And thenâhe pressed his lips to your belly. Reverent. Silent. Certain.
âYouâll fly,â he whispered. âBoth of you.â
His voice shook with something fierce and fragile. A vow made not in warâbut in wonder.
~~~
Later, you sat together beneath the sighing wind.
He drew you into his side, and the curve of his wing shielded you like a cathedral vault. His arm held you firm, but not tightânever tight. As if you were flame. As if you were sky.
His chin came to rest lightly atop your head.
The world beyond still bled steel and smoke. Kaido still carved ambitions into the sea.
But in this momentâthis hour of stolen sunâ
You had peace.
And beneath your ribs, another flame stirred. Quiet. Waiting.
A future neither of you ever dared dreamâ
but one you now held between you.
~~~
~~
~
.
Epilogue: The Flame That Remains
Onigashima had changed.
The bones of it were the sameâstone halls, towering cliffs, fire-lit skiesâbut something softer threaded through the shadows now. A hum. A warmth. The sound of light footsteps and crackling flame followed by a high-pitched laugh that echoed through the stronghold like wind off the sea.
And thenâ
âWheeeeeeee!â
Queen shrieked as the tiny shape landed hard on his stomach for the third time in under ten minutes.
âNOT AGAINâ!â
Thump.
âWhy is your daughter using me as a trampoline?!â
You didnât need to turn to know what was happening. Queenâs voice was unmistakable, and so was the booming thud of his belly being turned into a launch pad.
Alber stood beside you, arms folded, fully armored in his leather pants and jacket, fire gently smoldering behind him. Unbothered.
âSheâs got good form,â he said dryly.
âSheâs got no discipline!â Queen barked, now flailing dramatically as the small white-haired whirlwind giggled and bounced again, wings flaring just enough to soften her landings.
âLittle one,â you called calmly. âBe kind to Uncle Queenâs internal organs.â
Your daughter looked back at you with wide crimson eyes, the same as her fatherâs, glinting with mischief.
âBut heâs so squishy!â she chirped, flopping onto Queenâs stomach like it was the worldâs largest feather bed.
Queen groaned theatrically. âThis is what happens when you let him parent. Catastrophe. Chaos. Sheâs feral, Siren!â
Alber didnât flinch. âSheâs five.â
âSheâs five and faster than most of my crew! Andâdonât you dareânoâ!â
She turned on him again.
He didnât stand a chance.
But then she pausedâstood tall on his belly with her tiny fists on her hips, flames flickering gently at her back, feathers soft and wildâand gave him the sweetest smile.
âThank you for being my trampoline, Uncle Queen!â
Queen froze. Squinted. Scowled. Thenâmelted. With a strangled groan and a hand over his chest, he collapsed flat on his back.
ââŠI hate kids,â he muttered to the ceiling. âEspecially cute ones.â
Not far away, Kaido sat on a stone ledge, enormous jug in hand, gaze tracking the girl as she darted through the air like a comet. Her fire shimmered gold in the fading light, her wings sharper now, more sure, flicking instinctively to catch drafts and rise again.
She looped around him once. Then again. On the third pass, she swooped lower, giggling.
âUncle Kaidoooo!â she called. âCan I touch your horns?â
He didnât answer. Just grunted.
And she landed squarely on his shoulders anyway.
Little fingers grasped the base of one of his massive, curved hornsâthe ones that jutted sideways like crescent moons. She hung there like a feathered ornament, legs kicking gently, chin resting on his head.
Kaido closed his eyes. Let out a long, long sigh.
This, he remembered, is what I get for saying I wanted to see her fly.
And now she did. Every day, but he hadnât meant this. Not as in âfly circles around my headâ And he certainly hadnât been talking about becoming a jungle gym for a Lunarian child. Let alone the personal perch of a feathered five-year-old who giggled every time she tugged on his horns.
No. Heâd meant power. Glory. Fire.
But he didnât move her. Didnât tell her to stop. Didnât roar or grumble or flick her off like a fly.
He just sat there.
Grumbling under his breath.
âSomeone get this kid off me before she braids my hair.â
Whichâof courseâshe did.
Tiny fingers working away, humming to herself, completely unbothered by the fact that she was weaving an emperor's horn like they were ribbon.
Kaido let out a long, suffering sigh. But his hands stayed still. And the tiniest smile ghosted beneath his mustache. He didnât say it aloud. But he accepted his fate.
From across the courtyard, Queen choked on his sake and bellowed:
âWHAT THE ACTUAL HELLâWHEN DID WE BECOME A DAYCARE?!â
You nearly laughed.
Alber didnât flinch.
And the little one kept braiding.
After watching your daughter braid the hair of Kaido of the Beasts, you turned with a smile.
You stood at the edge of the court, the wind lifting your white-silver hair, leather still fitted tight across your frame. But your jacket was open now. Your posture, looser. At ease.
Beside you stood Alber. Still stoic. Still masked in public. But his shoulders had softened. His fire burned low and steady. His eyes never left her.
He had become more than a weapon.
You had become more than a shadow.
Together, you had created a spark that refused to go out.
You didnât speak. But your hand found hisâyour gloved fingers lacing through his without hesitation. His grip tightened gently.Â
Together, you watched her fly. Laugh. Live.
And in your mind, you returned to a conversation from long agoâwhen you had asked him if you were even allowed to be happy. If it was right to feel joy, being one of the last of your kind. The one who still carried the legacy of the Lunarians in your blood, in your bones.
He had held your hand then.
âWe survived fire,â heâd said, gazing toward the sky. âWe made our own.â
And then, that little fire came into the world with a cry.
Tiny fingers. White hair. Soft black feathers glued to her tiny back, twitching in the candlelight as she drew her first breath in a world that once tried to erase her.
You remembered the silence in that cave after her first cry. The way Alber had held her to his bare chest, his hand splayed protectively over her tiny spine. The way you had cried againâthis time in quiet, aching awe. Your body trembling, radiant, changed forever.
We survived fire.
We made our own.
And now, she flew above the sea with wings of flame. A child born from ruin. A daughter of fire and wind. A Lunarian. Not the last. Not anymore.
And as her laughter echoed across the cliffs and into the sky, something inside you settled.
The Lunarian race, once reduced to ash, now burned again.
And this timeâ
it would never go out.
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đ©ž; â Do you even realize that youâre cryingâŠ.? â
had a thought process about how much the poly boys were working on making sure Ramie's plan went perfectly... and i ended up drawing a lot laughs
please read from RâL!
Day 13: Stargazing đ đ
[EPISODE] 78. Venus Minakoâs Nurse Mayhem.
Series: Bishoujo Senshi Sailor Moon R
Kana: ăŽăŁăŒăăčçŸć„ćăźăăŒăč性éšć Romaji: Viinasu Minako no Naasu Dai Soudou
Original Air Date: December 18, 1993
Director:Â Noriyo Sasaki Writer: Katsuyuki Sumisawa Animation Director: Masahiro Ando
Plot: A flu epidemic hits the city, leaving most of the Sailor Senshi out of commission. However, Minako is still healthy, and she takes it upon herself to nurse her friends back to health.
TRIVIA
Minako was able to leap up to Usagiâs balcony while in her civilian form. Normally, she would need to be transformed in order to perform such a physical feat.
It was revealed that Chibiusa has a fear of needles.
In the opening narration, Sailor Moon referenced Japanese bacteriologist Hideyo Noguchi. He is known for his contributions to the study of syphilis.
FIRSTS
Makotoâs hair was seen out of its trademark ponytail for the first time.
OTHER VERSIONS
DiCâs English dub (titled âNo Thanks, Nurse Venusâ): Most references to Christmas were removed. The subject matter of Usagi/Serenaâs fever dream was changed. In the original, the girls were telling Usagi that she was too young for this kind of date with Mamoru/Darien. Whereas in the dub, the others basically told Serena to stop dreaming. Even though Minako was called âMina,â her Japanese name written in romaji was still on her apron.
PLACES
Makoto Kinoâs residence
Hikawa Shrine
The Tsukino Residence
Juuban Medical University Hospital
The Aino Residence
There Are No Winners With Revenge
000 | Sonic the Hedgehog x OC x Shadow the Hedgehog
âââââââââââââ
THERE ARE NO WINNERS WITH REVENGE "the action of harming someone in return for a wrong suffered at their hands"
âââââââââââââ
âWould you like to hear a story,â Cyril, a village elder, wondered to the snow leopard cub who raced to keep up with him, reaching a hand out to her so she could latch onto it. Instead of receiving a verbal response, Cyril was met with eyes wide and full of wonder. âOf a warrior named Saâtari?â
A soft gasp escaped the small leopardâs lips as she came to a sudden stop, dragging Cyril back with her. An amused smile began to tug at his lips as he turned to stare down at the cub, excitement and confusion flickering across her face. âBut thatâs my name?â
âThatâs right,â Cyril agreed, bemused at the cubâs reaction before he was bending at the knee to scoop her up into his arms and continue their short walk to the edge of the village. Saâtari put up no fight, too stunned to do so as she waited for him to continue the story. âYou, my little Saâtari, will be this villageâs last hope when the time comes.â
âDoes that mean Iâm going to be a warrior like Papa?â Saâtari whispered as if the idea of it was too good to be true.
âOf course, it does,â Cyril said as they finally broke away from the village and wandered on a trail through the snow and thick forest-covered mountains, continuing until they reached what seemed to be an old, overgrown temple. âBut thatâs many, long years away.âÂ
âBut I want to be a warrior now,â Saâtari whined, one of her paws digging into Cyrilâs shoulder as her claws made contact, the cub not yet used to controlling the pointed weapons.
âPatience, child,â Cyril warned with a chuckle, used to seeing such enthusiasm. His words didnât do anything to quam Saâtariâs excitement though, not as she rocked out of his hold and raced towards the temple, as if crashing through its walls would make her the warrior she was destined to be. A sombre expression passed over his features as he watched her go. âLetâs not rush the inevitable.â
â đđđđđđđ đđđĄđ... â
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Fall Into Me
(Set after Sonic 3 - Alternate Ending)
Defeated, world-weary, and impossibly lost, Shadow allows himself to be taken back into G.U.N custody. While they decide his fate, he is housed in a secret facility hidden deep in the heart of one of the country's National Parks. Still reeling from the heartbreaks that have shaped his life, Shadow never expected to find the closest thing to a home he'd known in over fifty years.
Pairings: Shadow the Hedgehog x Original Female Character
//
Chapter Three
It took all his strength to open his eyes.
Shadow immediately knew that something was wrong, but his thoughts were scattered and impossible to retrieve. He even had to remind himself to breathe.
Time seemed to slow as his consciousness coagulated, and all the while he stared at the floor, just trying to remember who he was, where he was, what he was doing there.
Slowly, his senses came back to him, one at a time. The burning heat beating down on his back. The taste of copper under his tongue. The roar of bullets all around him.
Shadow was bent double, kneeling against cold, hard metal. Finally, instinct kicked in and he tried to move, but his wrists were bolted to the floor. The bracers heâd been shackled with were stuck fast to the ground, as if magnetised.
The noise was deafening now, gunfire and screaming, shattering glass and sparking metal. Shadow tried in vain to pin his ears to his head to block it out but nothing helped.
He tried to move again, groaning with the effort, but he was trapped. He wanted to raise his head but the position he was stuck in meant he could only see a foot or so in front of him. The gnawing in his muscles was starting to grow painful.
Teeth bared in a frustrated growl, Shadow tried to push up, tried to raise his chin to at least see where he was, but his arms were thrust out in front of him, keeping him pinned. His back ached, his muscles searing. And still, that awful noise, screaming and screeching, pain and endless tragedy.
âShadow!â
His heart dropped in his chest, then surged forward, pushing against his ribs.
Shadow forced his head up as far as he could. In the distance, he saw a familiar flash of pale blue.
âShadow, help me! Theyâre almost here! Help, please! I donât know where grandpa is. Sha-â
A gunshot split the air in two.
Shadow shot up in bed, scrabbling at the sheets. He gasped, pulling in a sharp breath, but the air was so cold, it made his lungs contract.
Panic muddled his thoughts. He practically fell out of bed, staggering like a fawn on unsteady legs. He could still hear gunfire crackling all around him.
Shadow clutched at his chest, trying to ease a pain he still wasnât used to, and stumbled to catch his balance.
âMaâŠâ He tried to form the word but it caught in his throat, choking him. âMariâŠâ
Still gasping for air despite the shocking pain, he shot out his arm and grabbed onto the nearest solid thing, the back of a chair. It was so dark, Shadow could hardly see his own hand in front of him.
It had felt so real. It still felt real.
Pulling in another deep breath, Shadow found a spot on the wall in front of him and fixed his gaze there.
Just a dream. Just another bad dream. But Mariaâs voice still echoed in his ears. If it wasnât real, then why did it hurt so much?
Shadowâs grip tightened on the back of the chair.
His body had reacted as if he were really in danger. He could feel the adrenaline coursing through his blood, awakening every muscle, preparing him to stand his ground or run for cover.
That was twice heâd drifted off now. It was more sleep than heâd gotten in his entire life thus far. Heâd never felt the need before. The slow creep of fatigue had always been completely foreign to him. If this was the new normal, he didnât want it.
Shadowâs gaze dropped to the band around his wrist, outstretched in front of him.
âBracersâ. Thatâs what the fox had called them. A neat solution to cut him off from his powers.
Shadow turned his wrist over, studying the brassy ring that completely covered his own.
They were heavy and clumsy. He still hadnât got used to the weight of them. They threw off his balance, and the dull static that rolled through his body from their mechanism was starting to make his jaw ache.
The fox had them on her own wrists. So these people, whoever they were, controlled her powers too.
Heâd never seen anyone with that kind of telekinetic control before. The strength in her movement, the flash of fire behind her eyes, was formidable. The fox was a force to be reckoned with. She seemed to mean him no harm, but then, people never did at first.
Shadow slowly unpicked his fingers from the back of the chair. The room had stilled at last.
He took a step back, then another, until the backs of his legs hit the bed.
It was so quiet. How could a base packed full of humans be completely silent? Even the ARK used to reverberate gently with the sound of the engines, a low hum of a lullaby for all onboard.
With a sickening lurch, Shadow wondered if the bracers had dulled his senses permanently. There was a time he could feel the planet turn. He could hear whispered voices as clear as a bell and anticipate the moves of others before they themselves had even thought to make them.
Now, he felt as if he were underwater, several feet below the churning surface, reaching and grasping but never getting anywhere. If he didnât focus, the world felt distant and fragile, like everything was blanketed in a thick layer of snow.
Never had he been so grateful for the power instilled in him at his conception. Now that Shadow knew what it was like to live without it, he would never forsake that gift again. If he ever got it back.
Slowly, Shadow straightened up. His heart had finally fallen into a steady rhythm again.
Still fighting to take control of his breathing, he sat on the edge of the bed. The mattress was firm and hardly gave way as he sank down. A bed fit for an army base.
But the fox, Kit, she said this was a research centre. A labyrinthine laboratory hidden within the heart of a national park, miles from any towns, or people, or a way off this awful planet. It didnât make sense.
With a sigh, Shadow lay down on his side and stared into the darkness.
Outside, thunder rolled across the sky, growling and clawing at the walls of his room. There were no windows, but he could practically feel the rain beating the ground outside, churning up the earth as well as his dreams.
Dreams. Heâd hadnât dreamt for such a long time, not since the ARK. On the rare occasion he did drift off, it was beside Mariaâs hospital bed, or while she read aloud from one of her many, many books.
Back then, his dreams left him with a warm feeling of belonging, the safety of family. They were all gone now. He was the only one left. And now that his body craved sleep, there were only nightmares to fill the void.
Shadow gazed around his new room. His eyes had finally had time to adjust, so now he could pick out the squarish shapes of the furniture and a slight sheen off the spines of the books theyâd given him.
Know your enemy.
Shadow slipped off the bed and tucked his fingertip over the edge of one of the books. If he was going to be stuck here indefinitely, he should learn all he could.
He flicked on the lamp, then sat down at the table in the corner and began to read.
The first book contained a map of the area. With aching eyes, Shadow studied the landscape, the rocks and the trees, the mountains and the deep blue rivers that snaked through the forests. There was nothing for miles, just endless, empty woodland.
The next book offered information about the history of the border between this country and its neighbour. The next was a heavy tome listing all the flora and fauna that could be found in the National Park.
He drank it all in, absorbing all the information he could. Shadow read all night long, while the storm raged outside.
/
When morning finally rolled in, Shadow heard muffled movement in the room next to his. His neighbour was getting ready to start their shift.
Shadow could hear footsteps in the hall too, scientists, cooks, guards, all on their way to work. He ignored them, and returned his attention to the passage before him about the history of the park.
The knock at the door shouldnât have surprised him. Shadow grimaced. He was having trouble getting used to the dullness of senses. He should have heard his visitor coming long before they got close to the door.
There was another knock. Then a voice called out,
âShadow? Iâm here to take you to breakfast.â
Kit.
He waited with his ears flicked towards the door, his gaze still on the open page before him.
Kit knocked again, louder this time. She was right, she was persistent.
âShadow?â
He waited in silence, not moving, hardly breathing.
âCâmon, Shadow. Weâre not so bad. I just wanna show you around the base. You can come back to your room right after.â
Finally, after a wait that seemed to stretch on for hours, he heard Kit sigh and walk back down the corridor.
Shadow hesitated to relax just yet. Perhaps sheâd gone to get a couple of guards to break down the door.
He waited there for a few moments, listening intently for any sign that he was about to be hoisted roughly from his room, but nothing came. Sheâd left him alone, for now.
/
This went on for three days.
Shadow stayed in his room, in the dark. To keep his mind active, he devoured every book on the shelf, and searched his room from top to bottom for cameras or microphones, but came up empty-handed. He read the books again, from cover to cover. Anything to stave off the creeping, awful lure of sleep.
Sleep meant nightmares. Sleep meant letting his guard down. Sleep was unnatural and unusual to him. He didnât want it, he knew in his core he didnât need it, and Shadow would use every last ounce of his remaining strength to keep it at bay.
Every morning, at around the same time, Kit knocked on the door. She called his name, told him it was time for breakfast, waited and waited, then gave up and left.
On the second day, she came back in the evening to tell him that dinner was being served in the dining hall.
Shadowâs stomach growled at the thought, but he stayed silent. He would not give in so easily.
At night, he lay in bed shivering. Shadow had never felt anything like it. Growing up on the temperature-controlled ARK meant heâd never felt the cold before. He was sure heâd still be freezing even if he did have his powers.
Shadow tried and tried to resist getting under the covers. So far, heâd managed to keep sleep, and the nightmares, at armâs length, but the pull of the warm blankets soon grew too strong.
On his third pale, bleak morning, Shadow opened the wardrobe theyâd given him. Inside, hanging from a rail, were a number of different clothes in every colour imaginable, as if whoever had left them for him hadnât dared to guess what he might like.
Shadow huffed. How embarrassing, to be reduced to this.
He pulled down a navy blue shirt, then changed his mind. He pulled down a deep red sweater and slipped it over his head, adjusting and pulling at the material until it sat comfortably over his quills.
He threw the shirt over the bulky, grey box that sat on his bedside table. It had two wide, staring eyes, and a series of buttons at its heart. He couldnât imagine what it must be for, communication, security, perhaps both. All he knew was that if they were going to plant a camera somewhere, it would be right between its round sockets.
Feeling utterly defeated, Shadow climbed back into bed and stared at the ceiling. The blankets and sheets theyâd provided barely warded off the cold, but it was better than nothing.
Shadow tucked his nose under the collar of his sweater and closed his eyes, willing morning to come soon.
/
On his fourth day at The Hill, Shadow watched the door, waiting.
Reliable as ever, he heard the sounds of his neighbour stirring, then the endless drum of footsteps out in the hall.
At last, beneath it all, he heard the distinctive step of Kitâs boots.
Shadow opened the door a fraction of a second after she knocked.
He must have surprised her because Kit froze, her hand still high in the air, her knuckles edged towards him.
She recovered quickly though. With an easy smile he recognised from their first meeting, Kit lowered her arm.
âHe lives!â
She took him in with a glance, the raw exhaustion in his eyes, the way hunger arched his back, then finally, the sweater heâd pulled on to keep himself warm.
He thought he saw the briefest flash of concern in her face before she plastered a smirk over it.
âWell, donât you look handsome.â
Shadow stayed silent. Not that it mattered. Kit seemed to have a talent for guessing what he was thinking. That, or she didnât care, and barrelled on regardless.
âSee, I think there must have been some kind of miscommunication,â Kit raised her eyebrows. âI said, âIâll come by tomorrow to show you aroundâ. And you heard âlock yourself in your room and starve yourself for three daysâ.â
Still, Shadow said nothing. Kit was more than capable of filling the silences unaided.
She waited, hoping for a rebuttal, a bit of fight from the most fearsome force in the galaxy, and seemed disappointed when she came up empty.
âEasily done, I guess,â she said quietly.
Shadow let his gaze slip away from her to watch a human emerge from the room opposite his. The man, an engineer by the look of his uniform, merely spared them a cursory glance before heading off to work.
Shadow looked back at Kit when he caught her looking him up and down. She was clearly as curious about him as the scientist that had examined him when he first arrived. He was curious about her too, though where Kit found amusement, he found only exasperation and fear.
âYou seem to be under the impression that youâre funny,â he said at last.
Surprised to hear him speak, Kitâs large ears flicked, twitching in his direction.
They truly were ridiculous. Shadow found it hard to hold her gaze, his eyes kept drifting upwards.
âI do, donât I.â Kit crossed her arms, bunching up the oversized T-shirt she wore to keep herself warm. âNow youâre here, I can give you the tour.â
She turned and headed up the corridor, towards the hubbub of life heâd been avoiding for four days.
Shadow stayed in the doorway, obstinate and calm, though beneath the surface, his patience was already wearing thin.
âI donât want a tour.â
Kit looked back at him over her shoulder, annoyingly confident, completely at ease.
âOnly Santa Clause cares about what you want, Shadow.â
âWho is-â
He stopped, his mind turning over and over as memories sluggishly rose to the surface.
In the last month of the year, Gerald would always make sure to bring seasonal festivities to that tiny corner of the ARK that felt like home. He vaguely remembered a big, jolly man in a red suit through the haze of his early years, and Mariaâs wide, excited smile.
Shadow brushed the sickening mist of nostalgia from his vision.
He had to focus, though hunger and exhaustion clawed divertingly at the back of his mind. He needed to eat, he needed a better understanding of his surroundings, and he needed his questions answered. Time to figure out just how much danger he was really in.
Shadow drew in a breath, then closed the door to his room and followed after Kit.
She showed him to the cafeteria first, where she grabbed them both some breakfast. Kit pointed out which foods she generally avoided and which, despite appearances, were actually rather nice. Shadow decided to trust her experience.
The cafeteria was enormous. At least a hundred neat rows of tables and chairs filled the room, and the air was thick with sleepy chatter.
Somehow, he still managed to be the centre of attention. Shadow could feel a thousand pairs of eyes on his back wherever they walked. Kit seemed to pass through without much reaction though. Some of the humans even greeted her warmly by name.
Food in hand, Kit led Shadow through the base, pointing out any areas of interest along the way.
The base consisted of seven floors, all hidden deep within the heart of the mountain.
Ground level, where they were, housed the cafeteria, the mess and some of the sleeping quarters. The floor above, Kit said, was for storage. Beneath their feet was another floor of dormitories, then below that were four levels of laboratories, work spaces, and more storage for all the equipment needed to keep such a large base running smoothly.
Kit spoke easily as she showed him around, enthusiastic and relaxed, as if she really were his tour guide and sheâd made the same spiel a hundred times.
Shadow couldnât get a read on her. Confident and unafraid, Kit spoke to him as if she thought they might soon be good friends.
Shadow said nothing. When in doubt, keep silent. Only speak when absolutely necessary. That was the best way to survive.
But was that something he really needed to worry about? He was always watchful, but Kit had assured him that he would be safe here. No one wanted to harm him, sheâd said. She seemed to believe it. But heâd been lied to so many times before.
Shadow thought he might be allowed to slip off back to his room after the tour but instead, Kit led him outdoors, through the same entranceway they brought him through when he first arrived.
In the daylight, the scene was completely different. Once a sparse, black wilderness, the clearing that surrounded the foot of the great mountain range was now glowing with life.
Above him stretched the bluest sky Shadow had ever seen. There wasn't a single cloud. Warm golden light streamed down like water, soaking the grass and warming his still aching muscles.
The air smelt clean and sweet. No acrid smog, no sparking metal, no fear. Just a soft breeze floating through the trees and the smell of flowers he couldnât name.
He looked round to find Kit had sat down against the mountainâs flank, resting her back against the mossy rock.
Shadow hesitated before joining her. He crossed one leg over the other and carefully sank to the ground, his fingers splayed at his sides.
His heart thumped in his chest as more memories rose in his mind.
One of Mariaâs wishes had been to lay in the grass again, to run her fingertips over feathered seed pods and dig her nails into sun-warmed soil.
Shadow found himself thinking, not for the first time, that it should be her sitting here instead of him. It didnât even occur to him that it was the first time heâd ever felt the grass beneath his feet.
âHere.â
Kit passed him one of the pastries sheâd chosen for them, holding it aloft in the centre of her palm. When Shadow barely acknowledged it, she sighed.
âPlease. For me.â
Shadow could have laughed. He watched Kit rethink her strategy.
âFor yourself, then.â
Shadowâs stomach growled. Though a voice in the back of his mind screamed at him to not give in, to just wait it out a few more days, he knew that the only way to stay strong and keep his wandering mind sharp was to eat.
Begrudgingly, he took the pastry, making sure that his fingers didnât brush Kitâs hand. He took a tentative bite, ignoring the enormous smile that broke across his keeperâs face.
Satisfied, Kit relaxed back against the rock and tilted her chin up to the sky.
She truly seemed not to fear him. Kit had said in their first meeting that sheâd read all about him, and seen all available footage of the chaos he caused after he was taken out of stasis, but she wasnât afraid. Perhaps she thought she was stronger than him, and Shadow supposed she was while his bracers were switched on, but her arrogance could be his advantage.
Kit nodded towards the tree line.
âItâs beautiful, isnât it. Lisa says there are hundreds of National Parks across this country, some are twice as big as this one. Once youâve been here a little longer, I think sheâll let you come out on patrol with me.â
She took a bite of her own breakfast, then nudged his arm with her elbow, encouraging him to keep eating.
Shadow scowled, but did take another bite.
The raspberry danish sheâd chosen for him was so sweet, he almost couldnât bear it. Sickly and chewy, it stuck to the roof of his mouth, and he had to poke it at it with the tip of his tongue to free it.
âThereâs a huge river a few miles that way that ends up in a waterfall. Iâve never gone that far but maybe we could hike out and see it sometime. And thereâs this meadow I like to go to. The flowers start to die around this time of year but thereâs still grass, taller than me. Even with these ears.â
She grinned at him, but Shadow found her irreverence aggravating.
âPatrol?â he repeated
âMm?â
âYou talked about going on patrol.â
âItâs part of the work we do here. The park is home to hundreds of different species, thereâs fish in the lakes, bears, deer, birds, lynx, everything you could think of. But the humans have ruined their own climate. You wouldnât think it but this ecosystem is dying. Reversing that is part of Lisaâs work.â
Shadow watched a pair of soldiers tramp through the grass in their big, heavy boots. They spoke in hushed voices, stealing glances at him, but didn't dare to meet his gaze. They didnât seem like conservationists.
âLisa. Sheâs a scientist?â
âYeah, sheâs worked here for years. Theyâve been studying the biodiversity in the forest. The soldiers work as fire watchers too.â
The sun was still steadily rising through the sky, bathing them in warm orange light.
Kit pushed her arms up above her head, stretching and basking in the sunlight, and Shadow fought the urge to do the same.
âWildfires are very common in Glacier. I left some books about the park in your room, did you find them? I thought you might like to learn about where youâll be staying. Thereâs only one main road in the park but the woodland is dense. People get lost out here easily. We help them get back on the right track. A lot of important work goes on here. This is a good place.â
Shadow couldnât resist sneering at that.
Of course, Kit noticed immediately.
âYou donât trust scientists.â
âI canât trust anyone.â
âWell, you can trust Lisa.â
âShe made these?â
He held up his wrists. The bracers still buzzed unpleasantly, a steady, uncomfortable shockwave that turned his stomach and made his head swim.
Kit nodded, her hand coming up to absentmindedly rest against one of her own bracers.
âHer and her colleagues.â
Shadow scoffed.
âThis is environmental science?â
âI think we count as âenvironmentalâ.â
Kit smiled again. She was always doing that. It was infuriating.
Shadow didnât like the implication that they had anything in common. Just because they were both alien on this planet, it didnât mean that they were anything alike, just like with Sonic and his friends. There was no âweâ. Only âhimâ and âthemâ. The fox needed to decide whose side she was on.
Shadow huffed and tucked his index finger under one of his bracers, trying to ease the ache that it sent shooting through his bones.
âYou said Iâm free here, that there are no bars and no handcuffs. What would you call these?â
Kit shrugged.
âA precaution.â
âAnd youâre okay with that?â
âI understand it. Weâre allowed wherever we want. Weâre given food and warmth and safety. In return, they just ask that our powers are under control.â
âI can control mine just fine.â
A soft breeze swept through the clearing, pooling at the foot of the mountain and rolling over them.
Shadow watched the wind play with Kitâs short hair.
Something seemed to pass between them. Shadow had bared his teeth, metaphorically and literally. Kit could either step back or stand her ground.
Unsurprisingly, she seemed unfazed. Kit just smiled again, though perhaps that was her way of hiding how nervous she really was.
âI knew youâd come round, eventually,â Kit said, sounding almost smug as she deftly changed the subject. âYou couldnât stay in your room forever.â
âIâm surprised you didnât send your soldiers in after me.â
âTheyâre not my soldiers. And anyway, I knew you were okay. I could still hear you moving around.â
Shadowâs scowl deepened.
âWhat?â
Kit flicked her left ear, drawing attention to them again.
âI could hear you.â
Shadowâs teeth clenched together, tightening his jaw till it ached.
Indignity upon indignity. It wasnât bad enough that they were keeping him here or that they watched his every move and controlled his body, he had been assigned a keeper with hearing so acute, she could pick out his movements from three rooms away.
She really was an odd sort of creature. She was all out of proportion. Kit was shorter than him but her long ears technically made her taller, balanced out by her long, foxâs tail that swayed from side to side as she walked.
A fennec, sheâd said. He supposed heâd heard stories of the different species across the galaxy, but Shadow couldnât remember ever hearing about a tribe like hers.
Inside the base, heâd thought her fur was black like his, but now in the sunlight, he could see it was actually deep purple, apart from the whitish spots that freckled up her nose, between her eyes, to her forehead. Heâd seen the same colour in the books sheâd left for him, in hyacinths and blackcurrants, violets and figs.
Her eyes were like lavender, bright and expressive, and Shadow found it hard to hold her gaze for too long without feeling like she could see right into him.
Instead, he looked back at the tree line. The pines reached so high, they seemed to brush the turquoise sky. The woodland stretched back until it disappeared into a dark smudge on the horizon. The mountain range they had their backs to was just one of many in the park; he'd read about them in another of the books Kit left for him.
âListen, I know itâs strange,â Kit went on, her voice much softer now, to the point of earnestness. âBut donât worry about the soldiers. They arenât always the most trusting but the scientists here are all very kind. They just want to work. And theyâre curious about other worlds like mine.â
Foreboding pushed its long, cold fingers into Shadowâs stomach and slowly closed into a fist, gripping him tight.
âAre they curious about me?â he asked, though he dreaded the answer.
âWe all are,â Kit shrugged again. âWho wouldnât be?â
It was an unsettling thought. Shadow still didnât know what he was doing here. A part of him was too afraid to ask. Heâd never backed down from a fight before, but these people had him over a barrel. He was powerless, completely lost, and guarded at all times by someone incredibly powerful but unabashedly interested in him, a worrying combination.
If they wanted his powers, they wouldâve taken them already. If they wanted him dead, he wouldnât be sitting here, eating breakfast and enjoying the sunshine. It was much more likely that they needed him for something, and Kit was their ambassador. But what would she gain from that?
âIt really is safe here, Shadow. I know it must be scary but nothing can hurt you here. You could have a purpose. You could use your skills and your power to help people.â
âWhy should I?â
His words held more venom than he intended but he didnât care.
Human beings had brought only pain and suffering to his life. What had they ever done for him except take away the only things heâd ever cared about, the only home heâd ever known? Their selfishness and their greed would be their undoing, why should he stop them tearing themselves apart?
Kit tilted her head at him. She had the audacity to appear confused.
âIsnât that why you were created?â she asked. âTo help people?â
Something sharp twisted in Shadowâs gut. With a low, rumbling growl, he thrust out his hand and grabbed her wrist.
Kitâs other hand instinctively rose up as fire flashed in her eyes, but she did not summon her power to her. She kept it under the tips of her fingers, her whole body shaking with the effort.
Shadow pulled Kit close, her body twisted in towards his, until his nose was mere inches from hers.
âDo not,â Shadow seethed. âPresume for a single second that you know anything about me.â
He could barely get the words out from between his bared teeth. He chewed them up, spat them out, his fist tightening around Kitâs wrist.
She felt so small and snappable in his hand. The perpetual look of self-assured snark was gone, as was her irritating smile. Not so confident now.
âYou will never know me. Thatâs mine. There are some things even humans will not and cannot take from me.â
Kitâs ears flattened against her head, her mouth falling open in surprise. She tightened her free hand into a fist, her eyes beginning to burn with purple fire, but her powers remained beneath the surface, broiling and trembling, but restrained.
âIâm not human,â Kit said, her voice low.
Her warm breath brushed his cheek. Shadow could feel her pulse hammering under his fingers.
He snarled.
âIf you help keep me here, you may as well be.â
Shadow tightened his grip on her wrist, curious as to what she would do, but Kit still didnât summon her powers. What was she waiting for? He was right, he was too valuable to damage. Kit was obviously under strict instructions to not be too rough with him.
His own power lay out of reach. He tried to stretch out to it, call it to him, but the connection had been broken.
Shadow felt a chill seep up his back, making his fur stand on end and his chest tighten. He felt lost and angry and frightened, there wasnât a safe place for Kit, for anyone, to stand.
But then the fire in Kitâs eyes died, and he felt her muscles go slack under his hand. She lifted her head back, moving away from him, and Shadow decided to let her go, allowing her to sit with her back against the rock again.
Her eyes never left him though, wary and watchful, but still not fearful. What would it take for her to finally understand the danger she was inflicting upon herself by trying to get close to him?
Feeling suddenly worn out by the day, Shadow rose to stand. He tapped the toe of his right shoe against the ground three times in quick succession, drawing attention to the battered old sneakers heâd dug out of the closet.
âI want my shoes back,â he said. âAnd more books.â
He felt Kitâs eyes on his back as he turned to leave but she didnât rise to follow him.
âWhat, really?â she called out, and that irreverent lilt was back in her voice. âYouâve read them all already?â
Shadow didnât respond. He just kept walking, his head bowed to avoid catching the gaze of any soldiers who passed him by.
Kit was right about one thing, he did appear free to move around wherever he liked. No one stopped him, or spared him more than a second glance as he headed back inside the base, through the winding corridors to his room.
He locked the door behind him and curled up on his bed, tucking his knees up into his chest.
Shadow pulled in shaky breath after shaky breath, his lungs shuddering and flitting like a hummingbirdâs wing, until finally, he couldnât stand it any longer. He began to cry.
Shadow lay there, his body shaking and trembling uncontrollably, until night fell.
/
Kit watched him go.
Her heart was still pounding like a bass drum, in her wrists, her ears, her neck. She could feel her blood pumping round her body, adrenaline pooling in every nerve. More than anything, she could still feel Shadowâs hand around her wrist.
Kit pulled in a long breath and slipped her hand around the ghost of his. The leather of his gloves had rubbed her fur uncomfortably. She wouldnât be surprised if she had a bruise there tomorrow. Even without his powers, Shadow was strong, and a disquieting presence to be close to.
His eyes. Kit couldnât get them out of her head. Every time she closed her own, she could see scarlet burning through the darkness, the hot glow of a collapsing star, a power unlike anything the galaxy had ever seen.
When she finally felt strong enough to stand, her legs felt uncertain beneath her, and Kit thought she might stumble if she didnât have the mountainside to lean against.
Not so bad for a first day, Kit thought, trying to keep positive. There was plenty of time for Shadow to warm up to her.
She followed his path back towards the baseâs main entrance, but headed for the elevator rather than the sleeping quarters.
Kit travelled down two floors to Lisaâs favourite workspace, a huge array of research labs that filled the entire storey.
Each room was enormous, and consisted of enough stations that everyone had the freedom and the space to work without getting in someone elseâs way.
Microscopes, boxy computers, sheets and sheets of research pinned together in files, shelves and shelves of equipment, and an all manner of brightly coloured chemicals filled the room.
Kitâs nose immediately wrinkled. Even after all this time, she couldnât get used to the sharp scents of disinfectant, charred metal, and latex gloves.
She found Lisa at her usual workbench, tying up her long brown hair to keep it out of her face.
When she saw Kit, she smiled, and pushed her round glasses further up her nose.
âAny luck today?â
Kit twisted her mouth, unsure of how to answer.
She hopped up onto one of the stools and leaned over the workbench, propping up her chin on her hand.
She supposed in a lot of ways, today had been a success, but she still had so much work to do. Shadow seemed more out of reach than ever.
âI finally got him to eat,â Kit offered. âAnd I showed him where everything is so hopefully heâll start wandering around on his own soon. He asked a lot of questions, Lisa.â
âWell, thatâs okay. So long as you were careful.â
âI was, donât worry.â
Kitâs gaze dropped to her left wrist.
Shadowâs words rang like a bell in her head. Heâd pulled her so close to him, she could feel every ragged rise and fall of his chest, and the power that lay dormant behind his eyes.
He could have snapped her wrist. He could have pinned her down, knocked her out or worse, and run off into the woods, but he didnât. Instead, Shadow had warned her to back off, and sharply reminded her that she had no idea what she was dealing with. Not quite the monster he was made out to be, then.
âHe wants his shoes back,â Kit said.
Lisa frowned.
âHe wonât be able to use them. Without his chaos energy, theyâre just shoes.â
As she spoke, she took a large white box from under the counter and carefully prised off its lid. Lisa pulled out yards and yards of stark black electrical wire and velcro pads, and began organising them on the bench.
Kit studied the hypnotic movement of her hands, her mind still turning and turning, over and over.
âIt might make him more helpful.â
âWeâll see.â
Lisa raised a circular black harness, loosening the buckles between her deft hands. When she thought sheâd got it to the right size, she held it above Kitâs head, waiting for permission.
âReady to start?â
Kit stared at the headset, and considered Lisaâs question.
She felt tired today. Waiting four days for Shadow to emerge had taken a toll on her. Every morning she worried about him, every night she had to explain why she still hadnât made any progress. And now sheâd actually had a conversation with him, she felt as if all the energy had been sapped from her body.
A small part of her wondered if sheâd be able to say ânoâ if she wanted to, but Kit brushed the thought away. That was ridiculous. Lisa just wanted to help her. And if Kit could do anything to repay the kindness she and the other scientists had shown her, she wouldnât miss a beat to do it.
Kit forced a smile and nodded, lowering her head so that Lisa could place the harness over her head.
âSure.â
//
Next Chapter
Master List
Can you do Shadow X reader, please? (romantic relationship)
A/N: YES?? OMG, I LOVE SHADOW UGH. ILL BE MORE THAN HAPPY TO!!
Warnings: Fluff, small angst, reader is GN
Romantic or Platonic: Romantic
Oneshot or Headcannon: Headcannon
SHADOW THE HEDGEHOG X READER
Shadow isn't very good at shoeing his love, though there are plenty of signs that he does truly care and love you!
Shadows' love language is quality time and gift giving (mainly quality time).
Although it may not seem like it, he's listening to every little thing you want and what your interests are so that he can buy those things for you!
His favorite quality time is riding the motorcycle with you (at night). It's weirdly a calming moment for the both of you...
Though he will never admit it, he loves it when you two cuddle up together and your kisses too? UGH, it's like heaven to him.
Mans has had a ROUGH trauma. You might (you will) need to reassure him that you're not leaving and that you're safe.
Speaking of being safe... PLEASE let this man protect you! He has lost so much. Let him protect you and make sure you're safe at all times.
He's not the BIGGEST fan of PDA, though he does very mild PDA; Hand holding, hand around the waist, hugging him whilst on you guys go on motorcycle rides.
I dont see Shadow as a MAJORRR jealous type, though when he's jealous... he has his way of showing that he is.
If the person who keeps flirting with you won't back down, shadow will mosey on over to you and wrap a hand around your waist and give them a menacing glare. It usually always works.
If they DONT back down, Shadow WILL make himself clear that he's your partner. This is the ultimate life form we're talking about here, ain't no way they will be messing with him after that!
Master List
Fall Into Me
Shadow the Hedgehog x Original Female Character
(Set after Sonic 3 - Alternate Ending)
Defeated, world-weary, and impossibly lost, Shadow allows himself to be taken back into G.U.N custody. While they decide his fate, he is housed in a secret facility hidden deep in the heart of one of the countryâs National Parks. Still reeling from the heartbreaks that have shaped his life, Shadow never expected to find the closest thing to a home heâd known in over fifty years.
you can read on AO3 if you prefer!
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Coming soonâŠ
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
