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The corridors of the Imperial Palace were wrapped in silence, cloaked in the suffocating stillness of midnight. Beyond the towering stained-glass windows, the capital slumbered beneath a blanket of storm-torn clouds. Thunder rolled in the distance, a low growl echoing through the bones of the ancient citadel, and every flickering candle cast shadows that danced like specters along the stone walls.

Selene stood before a silver-frad mirror, its polished surface warped slightly with age. Her reflection stared back—familiar, yet foreign. Her armor, once the pride of the Radiant Order, glead under the dim light, pristine and immaculate. A perfect symbol of duty.

But now, it felt like a costu. A hollow echo of a woman she no longer was.

She had been Selene, the Radiant Heroine. The Sword of Light. The one people knelt for and children dread of becoming. A savior. A protector. A champion of the innocent.

Now?

Now she was sothing else. Sothing that should’ve been shattered by guilt, crippled by the weight of her own fall from grace.

But she wasn’t broken.

And that terrified her more than anything.

Her golden eyes searched the mirror for answers, but only ghosts stared back—faces of the fallen, victims of her blade, people who once believed in her.

Her hands were stained with their blood.

She had betrayed them all.

And yet, she felt nothing.

The silence was broken not by sound, but by presence. A disturbance in the air, a subtle warping of space behind her.

No footsteps. No breath. Just a presence so tangible, so overwhelming, that it pressed against her like a second skin.

She didn’t turn.

"You’re late," she said softly, her voice carrying no anger—just exhaustion. Just truth.

A low chuckle answered her, smooth as silk and just as dangerous.

"I was never summoned," Kael replied.

Selene inhaled slowly, letting the breath shudder through her. His voice sent a chill down her spine, but it wasn’t fear she felt. It was sothing worse.

Familiarity.

Addiction.

"Then why are you here?" she asked, still not facing him.

Kael’s reflection erged in the mirror, joining hers like a shadow swallowing light. He stood close, yet did not touch her. A dark figure robed in black and crimson, his presence coiling around her like smoke.

"You tell ."

Selene’s fingers curled around the edge of the vanity. Her knuckles turned white.

"You haunt ," she whispered. "Even when you’re not here."

Kael’s eyes were unreadable, bottomless pools of night that saw through the lies she clung to. He didn’t speak, didn’t move. He waited.

That was what made him so dangerous.

He didn’t force.

He allowed.

And that made her betray herself.

"I don’t know who I am anymore," she admitted, a crack in her voice betraying the battle within.

"Is that so?" Kael tilted his head, as though examining a curious puzzle piece that had just begun to shift into place.

Selene’s lips trembled. "I should feel regret. Sha. For everything I’ve done. For the people I’ve turned my sword against. For the oaths I’ve broken."

"And do you?"

His question was calm. Almost gentle. But it cut deeper than any accusation.

Silence fell like a guillotine.

She wanted to say yes. To believe she was still capable of remorse. That the hero within her still breathed, even if barely.

But she couldn’t.

"No," she confessed.

The word fell from her lips like ash.

Kael’s mouth curved into the faintest smile—not triumphant, not mocking.

Understanding.

Selene finally turned to face him. Her golden eyes t his, defiant and terrified.

"I should hate you for this."

"Do you?" he asked, as if genuinely curious.

Her throat tightened. Her breath ca shallow.

No. She didn’t.

How could she hate the one who had shattered her illusions and shown her what lay beneath? How could she despise the one who saw her fully and didn’t flinch?

"You turned into this," she said, her voice low.

Kael stepped closer, and the space between them shrank to a breath.

"I didn’t turn you into anything," he said. "I simply revealed what was already there."

His hand lifted slowly, brushing the edge of her shoulder plate before gliding down to her bare arm. The touch was barely there, but it burned like fire.

Selene didn’t pull away.

"You’re lying," she said, but it sounded hollow.

"Am I?" Kael whispered, his eyes locked onto hers.

"You manipulated . Broke down. You turned my ideals into dust."

"No," Kael said softly. "You did that. I just helped you see the truth hiding behind them."

Selene’s fists clenched. Her breathing was ragged now.

"I was supposed to be better than this," she said, almost pleading. "I was supposed to be untouchable."

"No one is untouchable," Kael replied. "Not even you."

Her heart thundered in her chest. Her entire life had been a lie—a mask forged from duty and polished with praise. And now it was gone, stripped away by the one man she had once sworn to destroy.

And the worst part?

She didn’t want it back.

"You don’t understand what you’ve done to ," she said.

Kael’s expression darkened. "I understand exactly what I’ve done. I’ve given you freedom."

She shook her head. "You’ve made into sothing… wrong."

"No, Selene. I’ve made you honest."

She looked away, trembling.

Kael stepped beside her, his voice now at her ear. "You’re not broken. You’re reborn."

Selene’s eyes brimd with sothing she couldn’t define. Not sadness. Not joy. Just… release.

"You make it sound so easy," she whispered.

"It is," he said. "When you stop pretending."

She turned to him again, this ti slowly. Her eyes burned with defiance and longing.

"Then tell , Kael. What am I now?"

Kael’s hand found her chin, lifting it gently. His gaze bore into her.

"You are mine."

The words weren’t a claim.

They were a truth.

Selene didn’t move. Didn’t speak.

Because in that mont, she knew.

She was.

A knock shattered the mont like glass.

"Lord Kael," ca a voice from the hallway. "Urgent summons from the Outer Court. The Veiled Ones request audience."

Kael exhaled slowly. His gaze lingered on Selene as he stepped back.

But he didn’t turn away just yet.

"When you're ready to stop running from yourself," he said, voice low, "you know where to find ."

Then he was gone.

The door shut quietly behind him, leaving Selene alone once more.

But it wasn’t the sa silence.

Sothing inside her had shifted. Sothing irreversible.

She stared at her reflection again.

She saw the sa face.

But it was no longer the face of a hero.

It was the face of soone who had fallen.

And loved it.

Her fingers touched her lips, rembering the ghost of Kael’s hand, the way his words clung to her skin like ink staining parchnt.

She had always feared the fall.

But now that she had fallen, she realized sothing chilling.

She had never been more alive.

To Be Continued...

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