Font Size
15px

Lilith’s laugh was one note, but it was real, the kind of laugh that carried sharpness without cruelty, like a blade tapped against glass just to hear it ring.

"You are asking to be well behaved," she said, and there was amusent in her voice, though the glint in her crimson eyes made it clear she wasn’t promising anything.

The Matron smiled, small and unbothered, as though she had heard that line a hundred tis already.

"I am asking you to be patient," she replied evenly, her tone soft but leaving no room for doubt. "You can misbehave after."

Elowen turned her head slightly toward the Ancestress, her silver-green eyes calm even in the half-light of the suspended arena.

"And you?" she asked simply, because she knew the older woman would never waste words on anything unnecessary.

The Ancestress didn’t hesitate. Her answer was as simple and as heavy as the earth itself. "Listen."

So they did. The four of them stood in that nded space, a world that had been torn by power only monts before, and instead of filling it with more words, they let the silence do the work.

The seal that had once scread with strain now humd softly, its tone lowered, steady, like it had finally found a rhythm it liked.

The broken mirrors that had bitten at the air no longer scraped against existence; instead, they hovered harmlessly, catching faint glimrs of light and reflecting them without malice.

The roots that had surged like spears and twisted like serpents lay still, patient, heavy but not reaching, content to wait until they were called again.

The rivers bent and curved in smooth arcs above them, glowing threads suspended in the dark, and though they seed restless by nature, even they chose to pause.

Waiting could be work too.

The Matron breathed in slowly, as if tasting the quiet, and at last she gave a small nod to herself, satisfied with what the space had beco.

"We are done here," she said, her words settling over the arena like a closing book. "For tonight."

The Ancestress lifted her hand then, not quickly, not with force, but with the grace of soone who had done this countless tis.

A fold opened in the air, a door that wasn’t truly a door but a seam in the fabric of the void, the kind of crease you only saw if you knew exactly where to look.

Through it drifted a wind that had no business blowing in such a place, yet sohow it carried the sll of morning—fresh, light, impossibly gentle in a space born of roots, mirrors, and storms.

"Walk with us to the edge," the Ancestress said. "Then go ho and drink your tea while it is still hot."

So they did. All four of them walked across the arena toward the soft threshold where the fold waited.

Their steps left no marks on the roots or the stone, because the arena didn’t need marks to rember. It already knew.

When they reached the line, the elders paused. The Matron lifted two fingers to her lips and blew into the air, but no sound ca, only a nothingness that shimred faintly.

That nothing hung there, and though it could not be touched, it beca a promise, the kind that cannot be held in hands but can still be kept in the heart.

The Ancestress pressed her palm against the living root beneath Elowen’s feet and against the shimr of Lilith’s fading veil.

She said nothing. And that silence was better than a blessing, because it was sothing that could not be broken.

"Rember," the Ancestress said, her voice carrying the gravity of soone who had seen too many battles. "Not every fight needs a stage."

"And not every stage needs a fight," the Matron added, smiling again, softer this ti.

Lilith and Elowen both gave small smiles in return. No warmth was wasted, no sharpness left behind—just a quiet understanding that was more solid than any oath spoken aloud.

The elders stepped through the fold and were gone, vanishing with the ease of a line ending in perfect rhythm.

The arena held the shape they left it in for one last breath before it too let go. Slowly, carefully, it set each piece back where it belonged, like a room tidied after a storm.

The mirrors drifted apart, turning into harmless shine. The roots pulled back into the floor and folded themselves into rest.

The rivers unwound, their glowing currents bending into soft arcs before drifting back into place.

Even the seal seed to sigh, settling into the hum it liked best, the one that sounded more like peace than struggle.

Lilith exhaled, her voice half-amused and half resigned. "They will hover," she said quietly, almost fondly.

"They will," Elowen agreed. "And we will let them pretend we do not see."

Nothing else needed to be said. The quiet had been earned, and neither of them chose to spoil it.

The door ho opened without being asked, and torchlight from the Nocturne courtyard leaned in through the seam like it had been waiting there all along, listening.

The table they had left behind still waited as well, its cups and stains and papers sitting untouched, the kind of stillness that belonged to rooms that knew exactly who belonged in them.

But they didn’t step through right away. They lingered, because the battlefield’s nded quiet had one more thing to say, and both of them were wise enough to hear it.

It spoke the way old places speak—by not breaking. By holding. By staying whole, even when it had every reason to shatter.

"Enough," the Ancestress had told them earlier. And now the room itself seed to echo the word in its own way.

Lilith glanced again at the settled space, her crimson eyes narrowing faintly. "We will finish that asure," she said, as though the arena itself was listening.

"After the gate," Elowen replied calmly.

"After the gate," Lilith echoed, the words carrying an unspoken weight.

Then, finally, they went ho together.

The courtyard accepted them back without fuss. The torches burned the sa way they had when they left, as if nothing at all had happened, and that was exactly how good wards behaved when they were proud of themselves.

You are reading Incubus Living In A World Of Superpower Users Chapter 408: I Am Asking You To Be Patient on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.