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But beneath the supernatural fire, older mories stirred. Her fallen noble family, their estate seized by creditors and political enemies. Her father’s sha, her mother’s tears, her own desperate flight into the world of adventuring where bloodline mattered less than the strength of your sword arm. She had thought herself strong, had believed that skill and determination would be enough to reclaim her family’s honour.

How wrong she had been.

Every failure rose up to mock her, the contracts she couldn’t complete, the parties that cast her aside, the slow descent into working with people like Raiven who cared nothing for honor or justice. She had compromised herself piece by piece, telling herself it was temporary, that she would find her way back to the light eventually.

Yet sothing about Yomi’s presence, his quiet confidence, resonated with a part of her she had thought lost. When he spoke of rediscovering her sword’s true intent, it wasn’t just words, it was a promise that struck at the core of who she had once dread of being.

Rising unsteadily from the bed, Lirien retrieved her twin swords from where she had left them against the wall. The weapons felt different in her hands now, lighter sohow, as though they were eager to be used. She began moving through the forms her sword master had taught her years ago, the familiar patterns helping to center her chaotic thoughts.

But sothing was wrong, or perhaps, sothing was right for the first ti in years. Her movents were faster, more precise than they had any right to be. The blades sang through the air with a clarity that made her breath catch, and when she completed a particularly complex combination, she found herself standing in perfect balance despite the tremor in her legs.

What have you done to ? she whispered to the empty room, though whether the question was directed at Yomi or at whatever force had changed her, she couldn’t say.

The practice helped sowhat, burning away so of the supernatural fire that coursed through her veins. But it couldn’t touch the deeper current of anticipation that thrumd beneath her skin, the knowledge that whatever Yomi wanted from her tonight would change everything yet again.

****

In the kitchen, Aeloria ladled soup into two bowls, the simple act of providing nourishnt carrying more weight than it should have. The beast girl accepted her portion with a quiet nod of thanks, and they ate in comfortable silence as the last light faded from the sky.

"What’s your na?" Aeloria asked suddenly, the question surprising them both.

The beast girl looked up from her soup, her spoon halfway to her mouth. For a mont, Aeloria thought she might not answer. Then, in a voice barely above a whisper, she said, "I... I don’t rember."

The words hit Aeloria like a slap. Of course she didn’t rember. How long had she been enslaved? How many masters had she served before ending up in the slave market where Raiven had purchased her? The collar had marked her as property, but it was their indifference that had truly stolen her identity.

"We’ll find you a na," Aeloria said softly. "When you’re ready."

The girl nodded, returning to her soup, but Aeloria caught the brief flicker of sothing that might have been hope in her eyes.

As they finished their al, Aeloria found herself making silent promises. She couldn’t undo what they had done, couldn’t erase the mories of chains and cages and casual cruelty. But perhaps, in small ways, she could begin to make ands. Not for forgiveness, didn’t deserve that, but because it was the right thing to do.

The house settled around them as darkness fell, three separate struggles playing out in its rooms. In the kitchen, Aeloria confronted the weight of past mistakes she could never fully repay. In her room, Lirien battled forces beyond her understanding while glimpsing possibilities she had thought lost forever. And sowhere upstairs, Yomi waited with the patience of a predator, ready to collect on a promise that would reshape all their fates.

****

As the hours crept by, the house took on an almost living quality, creaking and settling as though it too carried the burden of its recent history. In the largest room upstairs, Yomi sat cross-legged on the bare wooden floor, his back straight despite the exhaustion that still plagued him. He had claid the space that once belonged to Raiven, a room that reeked of arrogance and casual cruelty even now.

The irony wasn’t lost on him. From slave to master of the very room where his chains had been forged. Yet the thought brought him no satisfaction. Power taken through circumstance was hollow compared to power earned through strength and will.

His Ki flickered weakly within him, still recovering from the chaotic energies he had channeled in the dungeon. The technique he had used—

Enman no Kizuna—

Always ca with a price. The deeper the bond forged, the more volatile the aftermath. Lirien’s untrained spirit had absorbed more of the chaotic energy than he had intended, and now they were both paying for it.

He could sense her restlessness from below, the way her energy spiked and cald in irregular patterns. She was fighting it, trying to master forces she didn’t understand. Admirable, but ultimately futile without proper guidance.

He exhaled slowly, closing his eyes.

With each breath, he began to center himself, drawing his Ki inward, guiding it like a steady stream through the narrow channels of his spirit. The corrupted fragnts pushed back, violent, discordant, like broken glass embedded in his soul.

He did not flinch.

Instead, he embraced the pain, welcod it like an old rival. Sweat beaded on his brow, then poured in rivulets down his face and chest, soaking into his shabby clothes. His hands trembled, fingertips glowing faintly as the Ki moved with greater force. His lungs tightened.

A low, guttural cough burst from his throat. Then another. He doubled over, spitting a thick stream of blackened sludge onto the wooden floor.

Corrupted Ki, expelled.

He gritted his teeth and returned to stillness. His breaths grew deeper, calr. The storm within his body began to settle.

With discipline forged in years of silent suffering, he rebalanced what remained, refined his center.

Seishin no Hadanugui.

The stripping of the spirit.

His Ki pulsed clean and smooth, no longer burning, but humming like the steel edge of a freshly sharpened blade.

Only then did he open his eyes.

The chaos was not gone.

But it was caged. Controlled. Owned.

For now.

You are reading EVEN AS A SLAVE, THE HEAVENLY DEMON'S MIGHT SHALL TAME THE BEAUTIES Chapter 35: THE STRIPPING OF SPIRIT on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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