Emma was my everything in my past life.
The thought ca unbidden as I stared up at Alyssara’s jade eyes, mories flooding back with painful clarity. Emma had been the one who brought color into a life that had been nothing but shades of grey. She taught how to live, not rely exist—showed that there could be joy and warmth and connection in a world that had seed cold and chanical.
That was why she had been irreplaceable. Unique. Sacred.
When I first suspected that Emma had co to this world in the form of Alyssara, it had caused imnse internal panic. Not hope, not joy, but terror—because this twisted creature straddling now was everything Emma had never been. Where Emma’s love had been gentle and nurturing, Alyssara’s was possessive and consuming. Where Emma had encouraged my growth and independence, Alyssara sought to cage for her own satisfaction.
Alyssara manifested her love through her desire to own completely. She wanted in a cage, all to herself and herself alone, with my every whim subordinated to hers and all my desires and thoughts focused solely on her. She didn’t want to share with anybody—not my family, not my friends, not even my adopted daughter.
She wanted to break utterly and call it love.
That was the twisted emotion Alyssara spoke of when she claid to love .
"I don’t love you anymore," I said simply, eting her jade gaze with steady resolve.
Her face paled as if I’d struck her physically, her grip on my chest loosening for the first ti since this confrontation began. For a mont, I saw sothing crack in her perfect composure—a flash of genuine hurt that might have belonged to the girl I’d once known.
"I have five wonderful fiancées, two loving parents, my sister and my adopted daughter and all my friends now, Emma," I said firmly, letting the na carry weight that made her flinch. "I don’t need you in my life. You don’t color my life anymore."
Because it was true. My life wasn’t grey like it had been in my past existence. I didn’t need a single point of color to make existence bearable—I had a whole spectrum of relationships and connections that filled every day with aning and purpose. And I certainly didn’t need her like this, in this obsessed form that was a perversion of everything Emma had represented.
"Good," Alyssara said after a long mont, though her voice carried undertones that made my blood run cold. "Your love for was wrong anyway."
"What?" Alarm bells began ringing in my head as her expression shifted from hurt to sothing far more dangerous.
"You loved Emma," she continued with clinical precision that made each word feel like a blade. "The weak little Emma who gave up her mission for teenage emotions she felt for her target—you. The sa weak Emma who couldn’t even protect you or do anything of value to help you when it mattered."
Her jade eyes blazed brighter as she leaned closer, her voice dropping to a whisper that sohow carried more nace than any shout. "I am not Emma. No... I am far beyond her. In the past four years, after leaving Earth, the only thing I focused on was getting stronger. Strong enough that even when you reach your absolute peak, you won’t be able to kill ."
The casual certainty in her voice was more terrifying than any threat could have been. She wasn’t boasting or trying to intimidate—she was stating her life’s mission with the kind of absolute conviction that had apparently driven her to transcend every known limitation.
"Are you that confident?" I asked, though part of already knew the answer. Alyssara was certainly much stronger than right now, operating on levels that made my recent breakthrough seem like a child’s first steps. But I could catch up eventually. I had to catch up, for the sake of everyone I cared about.
"That is my very goal," she said, placing a hand over her heart. "Just like you have to get strong enough to kill , I have to get strong enough to break you at your peak. I will make you beg for my obsession, Arthur Nightingale."
The way she spoke made it clear this wasn’t just about power or control—it was about proving sothing fundantal about the nature of love and strength and dominance. She had turned our relationship into a philosophical battleground where only total victory would be acceptable.
"That will never happen, Alyssara Velcroix," I said with as much conviction as I could muster while pinned beneath soone who could casually suppress my most transcendent abilities.
She chuckled at my defiance, the sound carrying notes of genuine amusent mixed with anticipation. "I do admit, you’re stronger than I expected. That Grey energy is very impressive indeed. The way you killed Gideon was... beautiful."
Her hands moved to my shirt, beginning to unbutton it with casual intimacy that made my skin crawl. "What are you doing?" I asked, unable to keep the tension from my voice.
"This is your weak point, isn’t it?" she asked with clinical interest, her palm pressing against the lower part of my stomach.
"Stop, Alyssara," I said, trying to shift my weight and finding that her position made aningful resistance impossible.
"I’m just getting a bit excited, is all," she replied with the kind of breathless enthusiasm that made her seem almost human for a mont. "You must have plenty of experience in this world already, right? Five fiancées... I imagine they’ve all been very... educational."
The implications in her voice made my jaw clench with anger. I tried to channel astral energy through my Sword Heart, hoping to access enough power to at least attempt escape—
Alyssara’s fingers pressed into my chest with surgical precision, and I felt my Sword Heart simply stop beating.
"What?" I whispered in shock, the absence of my Sword Heart’s rhythm leaving feeling hollow and disconnected from every source of power I possessed.
"Control," she whispered, her jade eyes reflecting satisfaction that bordered on ecstasy. "With you so close to and so weak, I can manipulate every part of your body exactly as I wish. Stopping your Sword Heart is child’s play for soone of my level."
The casual demonstration of dominance was more effective than any torture could have been. She could kill right now, or worse—she could keep alive and helpless indefinitely, a trophy in whatever twisted collection she was building.
Alyssara leaned closer, her pink hair falling around us like a curtain that blocked out the rest of the moonlit garden. I could feel her breath against my lips, could see my own reflection in her jade eyes as she prepared to claim whatever symbolic victory this kiss would represent.
Just before our lips touched, she froze.
Her head whipped around with predatory alertness, jade eyes scanning the garden’s periter with the kind of focus that spoke to genuine threat detection. For the first ti since this confrontation began, I saw sothing like wariness in her perfect composure.
"How annoying," she said, though her voice carried undertones that suggested whatever was approaching was more than rely irritating. "I was just getting to the fun part."
The air around us began to shift, reality warping in patterns that spoke to power operating on scales similar to Alyssara’s own capabilities. Soone—or sothing—was coming, and they possessed enough strength to make even the Crimson Dancer consider retreat.
"Fine, I’ll withdraw for now," she said with obvious reluctance, rising from her position with fluid grace while my Sword Heart suddenly resud its normal rhythm. "But this isn’t over, my Arthur. Next ti, there won’t be any interruptions."
She leaned down to whisper directly into my ear, her voice carrying promises that made my blood freeze. "I’ll be watching. Always watching. And when you’re ready—when you’ve reached the peak of what this world considers possible—I’ll be there to show you that even gods can be broken."
Then she was gone, vanishing into whatever dinsional space she used for travel, leaving alone in the moonlit garden with only the scent of her perfu and the mory of absolute helplessness.
But I wasn’t truly alone. As I struggled to sit up, still shaken by the demonstration of how completely outclassed I currently was, a familiar presence manifested at the garden’s edge.
A woman stepped from the shadows between the glowing trees, her form radiating power that had challenged even Alyssara’s overwhelming capabilities. Dark hair caught the moonlight as she approached with asured steps, her expression carrying maternal concern mixed with the kind of protective fury that had apparently been sufficient to make the Crimson Dancer reconsider her plans.
"Thank you, Mother," I said quietly, understanding finally arriving like pieces of a puzzle clicking into place.
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