They stood in silence, both looking out over the damaged city, both carrying darkness they couldn’t fully share with anyone else.
"Damien, can I ask you sothing personal?" Lyristae’s voice was quiet.
"Go ahead."
"The High Priestess and Guard Commander – your anchors. Do they know about the corruption’s full extent? About how much it costs you to maintain humanity?"
"They know I’m corrupted. They know the shadow magic affects my emotions and decision-making. They don’t know – " He stopped.
"Don’t know what?"
"Don’t know how easy it’s becoming to kill without feeling. How the corruption makes lying to them feel tactically appropriate. How sotis I look at them and have to consciously rember why I care, because the darkness makes everything feel... hollow." The admission ca easier than it should have. Maybe because Lyristae understood in ways they couldn’t.
"Do you think they’d still love you if they knew?"
"I don’t know. Maybe. They claim they want all of , including the corrupted parts. But there’s a difference between accepting corruption in theory and seeing what it actually does in practice."
"There is." Lyristae was quiet for a mont. "I’ve hidden my shadow magic for six years specifically because I was afraid of that. Afraid that if people saw what I was becoming, they’d stop seeing as their queen and start seeing as a threat."
"You revealed it to ."
"Because you’re the first person I’ve t who might actually understand. Who carries the sa burden and hasn’t let it destroy them completely." She turned to face him. "That’s rare, Damien. Finding soone who understands what you’re fighting without judgnt or fear. I want you to know I value that. Value you."
The mont felt charged with sothing beyond simple alliance. Damien recognized the pattern – this was how connection deepened, how professional relationships beca personal ones.
This was how Lyristae was pursuing him, using the sa techniques he’d used on Elara. Shared vulnerability, genuine understanding, strategic honesty creating emotional bonds.
He should pull back. Maintain distance. Rember his commitnts to Seria and Elara.
Instead, he heard himself say, "I value you too. What we’re building here – shadow wielders working together – it’s important."
"Yeah? Just shadow wielders working together?"
Before Damien could answer, another knock interrupted. Seria’s voice ca through the door.
"Damien? Are you in there? We need to coordinate on defensive improvents for Thornhaven."
The mont broke. Lyristae stepped back, professional mask sliding into place.
"I should prepare for the council eting anyway," she said. "We can continue this conversation later."
She left through a side door as Seria entered through the main one.
Seria took in Damien’s expression, the lingering tension in the air, and her tactical mind clearly processed implications.
"Interrupted sothing?" she asked carefully.
"Planning. Reviewing demon intelligence."
"Right. Planning." Her tone suggested she didn’t entirely believe that but wasn’t going to press. "Elara and I are arriving back in the capital tomorrow morning. We need to coordinate long-term defensive plans as a unit."
"Agreed. How’s Thornhaven’s situation?"
"Stable for now. But Damien – " She moved closer, her voice dropping. " – the soldiers I talked to while coordinating evacuation, they said sothing strange. They said the demons seed to know exactly where squad camps were. That they targeted them specifically, like they had maps."
"You think there’s local collaboration?"
"I think soone gave them intelligence about military locations. Either there are traitors in Valdara’s governnt, or – " She hesitated.
"Or what?"
"Or the demons have access to information they shouldn’t. Information that suggests deeper infiltration than we’ve been assuming." She looked at him seriously. "We need to be careful here. Valdara just suffered massive casualties from an attack that was too well-coordinated to be random. Soone orchestrated this. Question is who and why."
Damien thought about the Archdemon’s words, about tiline acceleration and forcing the catalyst’s growth. Thought about intelligence docunts that knew too much about him personally.
Thought about how convenient it was that this crisis had brought him to Valdara specifically, forced proximity with Lyristae, created circumstances for their connection to deepen.
Almost like it had been planned that way.
"You’re right," he said. "We need to be careful. Trust carefully verified, information closely guarded. Until we know who orchestrated this, we assu everyone could be compromised."
"Including the Queen?"
"Including everyone."
Seria nodded, satisfied with his caution. "Good. I was worried you might be getting too close to the situation. Too personally invested."
"I’m maintaining appropriate distance."
"Are you?" She studied him. "Because from where I’m standing, you look like soone who’s been spending intense crisis ti with another shadow wielder who understands you in ways we can’t. That’s emotionally dangerous."
"I know what I’m doing."
"Do you? Because the corruption makes emotional manipulation feel like genuine connection. Makes strategic positioning look like real intimacy. You’ve told that yourself." She took his hand. "I’m not saying the Queen is manipulating you. I’m saying be careful not to confuse shared burden with shared commitnt."
"I understand the difference."
"I hope so. Because Elara and I – we’re your anchors...your foundation. Whatever you’re doing with Lyristae, it shouldn’t compromise that. We need you too much, just as much as you need us."
"I know. You’re right." He squeezed her hand. "I’ll be more careful. Maintain appropriate boundaries."
"Good." She kissed him briefly. "Now co help plan defensive improvents. Elara’s already drafting evacuation protocols, and I need your tactical input on fortification placent."
They spent the next few hours working together, and the familiar partnership helped ground Damien.
But later that night, alone in guest quarters Lyristae had provided, Damien reviewed the demon intelligence again.
And found sothing he’d missed before.
A reference to "fate changing" and "preventing convergence failure."
Language the Archdemon had used. Concepts Lyristae couldn’t possibly know about unless –
Unless she knew more than she was revealing.
Unless she was part of sothing larger than she’d admitted.
Unless this entire crisis had been orchestrated specifically to bring him here, create the circumstances for whatever the demons – actually wanted.
Damien stared at the crystal, his mind churning through implications he didn’t want to accept.
Then he destroyed it. Crushed it to powder with shadow magic, eliminating the evidence.
So truths were too dangerous to share. Too complicated to explain.
He’d keep watching. Keep gathering information. Keep trying to understand the ga he was caught in.
But for now, he’d play along.
Because the alternative was confronting Lyristae about potential manipulation, and he wasn’t ready for that conversation.
Not yet.
Not until he understood what was really happening.
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