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The soft press of Kairi’s lips against mine, the unexpected warmth of her body, should have been a mont of pure, unadulterated relief, perhaps even the burgeoning spark of sothing more tender. Instead, it was a discordant symphony, a jarring clash of emotions playing out against the frantic, erratic drumming of my own hear

I had engineered this scene, a masterful charade of near-fainting, a desperate theatrical performance designed to buy myself a precious few seconds of respite from a truth too heavy, too terrifying, to bear. My gasps for breath were real enough, a desperate, choking sound in the quiet room, but they weren’t born of oxygen deprivation. No, they were a desperate, futile attempt to regulate a system suddenly overwheld by a cacophony of conflicting emotions, a fragile dam threatening to burst under imnse pressure.

The absurd, almost humorous notion of dying from a kiss, no matter how intimate or passionate, flickered through my mind, a stark, bizarre contrast to the gnawing anxiety that truly gripped , tightening its icy tendrils around my very soul.

My eyes had fluttered shut for a fleeting mont, a brief surrender, savoring the warmth that seeped into my ribs from Kairi’s embrace, a faint echo of comfort in the encroaching dread. In that instant, a fragile calm descended, a brief, precious reprieve from the storm brewing within , a tempest of guilt and fear. But it was fleeting, epheral, like a wisp of smoke in a hurricane.

A sliver of disturbance, sharp and persistent, pierced through the fragile tranquility, stirring my heart into a restless, aching ss. It was the echo of an earlier conversation, a question left hanging in the air, a question I had deliberately, cowardly, ignored, pushing it down into the deepest, darkest corners of my consciousness.

So, how?

How, in the na of all that was sacred, was I supposed to explain it to Kairi?

This contract, this seemingly innocuous, benign agreent that now bound her, body and soul, was no trivial matter, no simple piece of parchnt to be easily dismissed. I knew its true weight, its terrifying, insidious implications, the monstrous shadow it cast over her unsuspecting life. But telling her the truth... it wasn’t as easy as simply forming the words, as uttering a few syllables that would unravel her world. What would she feel, what depths of horror and despair would she plunge into, if she found out that she had entered into a contract with—yes, with a monster? The very thought sent a chilling shudder down my spine, a shiver that had nothing to do with the cool air of the room, but everything to do with the icy tendrils of terror gripping my heart.

Perhaps the Kairi I had known before, the Kairi whose vibrant mories seed to have been swept away by so cruel, indifferent cosmic tide, might have understood. She might have possessed the resilience, the profound understanding, the sheer force of will to confront such a devastating revelation, to look the monster in the eye and not flinch.

But the Kairi now?

She seed to have forgotten everything, living under the blissful, terrifying assumption that it was all over, that the turbulent "season" of her life had concluded without a follow-up, without the crushing weight of consequences. In her own words, uttered with a heartbreaking innocence, it was as if there was "no new season after the shocking cliffhanger." And what made it infinitely worse, what truly isolated in this suffocating, terrifying secret, was that no one else knew about this—no one but .

Yes, this was sothing I had never told anyone, a truth I had guarded with a fierce, desperate secrecy. It was a burden I carried alone, a silent scream in the quiet, desolate corners of my mind, echoing only within the confines of my skull. And strangely, perhaps only the author of our convoluted, tragic narrative was even aware of this event’s existence, pulling the strings from so unseen, omniscient realm.

anwhile, the readers... they were probably still guessing, lost among the ticulously crafted pages, desperately trying to decipher the intricate plot, piecing together fragnts of information, not realizing that behind this story, behind every agonizing twist and every shocking turn, lay a hidden note, a secret Chapter, a truth deliberately obscured, woven into the very fabric of our existence.

I didn’t have the courage to say it outright, to articulate the monstrous reality that now entwined itself inextricably with Kairi’s fate, a dark thread in the tapestry of her life. So, what I did—in the sa way I had done when we unexpectedly ran into Helena, another mont of inconvenient truth demanding explanation—was create a closed channel of communication.

It was a ntal construct, a sort of soundproof space within the labyrinthine confines of my own mind, a sanctuary where I could speak to myself without fear of being overheard, without the terrifying possibility of revealing the unspeakable truth to Kairi.

It was a space only I could enter, a confessional booth for the soul, where the darkest secrets could be aired without judgnt, without consequence.

And in that space, in the echoing silence of my own thoughts, a voice, chillingly familiar, echoed once more—the voice of Dellaetrix. His words, tinged with a cynicism so profound, so deeply ingrained, that I knew I could never hope to imitate it, recounted a past that gnawed relentlessly at the fragile fabric of our present, tearing it apart thread by agonizing thread.

"You think monsters and demons are just old fictitious tales?" His voice, though only a whisper in the echoing chamber of my mind, was laced with an almost tangible bitterness, a raw, festering wound that ti had failed to heal.

"Try standing in the middle of a burning city and watch your little sister get dragged away by a demon child who ripped your father’s throat. Then you’ll know... these stories are real. Terribly, horribly real."

A pause, heavy with unspoken horrors, hung in the ntal air, a suffocating silence pregnant with the weight of unspeakable tragedy.

Then he continued, his tone flat, utterly devoid of emotion, as if he had recounted this horrific tale countless tis, each repetition stripping away another fragile layer of his own pain, leaving him hollowed out and desolate.

"They ca from the cracks in the sky. Children. No older than twelve or thirteen. They were unard. But they laughed. They destroyed everything."

His words painted a vivid, horrifying picture of a few years ago, a ti when the once-proud Kingdom of Ains Ein Doa was plunged into massive, incomprehensible chaos. Murder, rape, unspeakable cris—all committed with a horrifying, detached glee by young teenagers of the demon race, their youthful faces masks of terrifying malice. The small, unassuming town of K’vkavsha, a quiet border settlent nestled on the edge of the kingdom, was razed without rcy, reduced to nothing more than smoldering ashes and congealed blood, its inhabitants slaughtered like sacrificial lambs.

Dellaetrix—the mage I despise the most, despite, or perhaps because of, our shared burden of this hidden knowledge—was an eyewitness to this unspeakable tragedy.

His eyes, haughty and piercing, couldn’t lie.

The mory, imprinted upon his soul, was undeniably real.

Dellaetrix stood in the ruins of K’vkavsha. Smoke, thick and acrid, billowed from the scorched remains of buildings that had once been hos, shops, lives.

Corpses were strewn about like broken dolls, discarded and lifeless, mute witnesses to the horror that had unfolded. And in the blood-soaked streets, a female demon, young and terrifyingly gleeful, dragged Dellaetrix’s sister, her laughter a chilling counterpoint to the screams that had surely filled the air monts before.

With a single, swift, brutal motion, she tore out their father’s throat.

Dellaetrix didn’t cry that day. The raw, primal grief that should have erupted was frozen, replaced by a profound, terrifying numbness. He just froze, staring with eyes that couldn’t blink, unable to tear himself away from the grotesque tableau before him.

Only his heartbeat was audible, a frantic, thunderous rhythm, like a hamr pounding against the walls of consciousness, each beat a stark reminder of his terrifyingly alive state amidst the death and destruction.

He saw everything.

The demon children rampaged uncontrollably, their youthful faces contorted by a terrifying, inexplicable malice. One of them, the sa one who had slaughtered his family before his very eyes, then casually asked him to co along, as if nothing had happened, as if inviting him to a picnic instead of the aftermath of a massacre.

That demon girl, with a smile that chilled to the bone even as I heard it in my mind, turned to him.

"Alone, aren’t you?" she had said, her voice light, almost playful, in stark contrast to the death she had just inflicted.

"Good."

And then, she reached out her hand, a gesture of perverse invitation, as if nothing had happened, as if the blood on her hands was rely dust.

It all started a hundred years ago, in the Kingdom of Ains Ein Doa.

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