LOGIN“What in the bloody hell are you doing here?” Luz’s voice emerged rougher than intended, betraying both anger and something deeper he couldn’t quite name. His grip tightened on the hilt until his knuckles turned white against the black veins crawling up his fingers. “Luz?” Amelia asked softly, her voice laced with doubt. The single word, spoken with such fragile hope, struck Luz harder than any blade. His sword lowered another inch, the tip resting against the ground. The carefully maintained mask of the Commander of the Corrompido army cracked completely, revealing the man beneath, with a flicker of amber in his left eye. “Don’t,” he bit out, though his voice lacked its usual commanding tone. “Don’t call me that name.” he placed his sword on the table alongside his gauntlets once more.
His crimson gaze locked onto hers, searching her face as if trying to memorize every detail before reality crashed back in. “You should not be here. This place is death for anyone stupid enough to follow.” Outside the tent, distant shouts and clanking armour reminded him they were not alone. “Then what should I call you?” Amelia asked, her brow furrowed with confused anger. The question hung in the air between them, charged with years of unspoked grief and betrayal. Luz’s jaw clenched beneath the dark stubble that had grown since he abandoned his old life. His crimson eyes searched her face desperately as if seeking permission to speak openly– or perhaps warning her not to press further.
“Commander… you can call me Commander,” he said finally, his voice dropping to a dangerous whisper. “Or General. Or traitor. Any title that reminds you that I am no longer the man who promised you a safe return.” He took a step forward, closing half the distance between them. The black veins on his neck pulsed visible with his rising emotions. “Because that man died six years ago on the battlefield. He sacrificed himself so thousands wouldn’t have to die.” His hands flexed at his sides, fighting the urge to reach out and confirm she was real. Amelia took a deep breath and for a long time she seemed speechless. “So, if you are dead, does that mean you… you didn’t miss me?” she asks hesitantly.
Luz’s breath hitched audibly at the question, his crimson eyes widening almost imperceptibly. The carefully constructed wall of detachment threatening to crumble entirely. His hands clenched into fists at his side. “I missed you every damn day,” he confessed, his voice dropping to a raw whisper that barely carried beyond the tent walls. “Every battle I fought, every village I destroyed, every moment I spent rotting in this Corrompido armour– I thought about you.” The amber flicker in his left eye intensified as memories flooded his mind– her laughter echoing through the village square, her stubborn determination when she insisted on helping him train despite her smaller stature. Things he had long tried to bury under layers of guilt and hatred for his own survival. “Of course I missed you!” he continued more harshly, taking another step forward until only a few feet separated them.
Amelia took a few steps forward, until she stood right in front of him and she leaned her head against his armoured chest. “Why… why didn’t you come back?” she asked sadly. The instant her head pressed against his armoured chest, something inside him snapped. His bare hand, which had been clenched tightly at his side, shot out to rest against her back. The touch was hesitant at first, as if testing whether this was real or just another cruel illusion. “Why didn’t I come back?” he repeated her words slowly, his voice cracking with emotion he had suppressed for years, “Because coming back would have gotten you killed! Do you think the villagers could have welcomed me? Or the Santo’s? They would have executed you for associating with me!”
His fingers curled against her shoulder blade, the warmth of her living form searing through the cold steel of his armour. The black vein on his arm pulsed violently in response to his rising emotions. “Their official records called me a traitor who sold his soul willingly,” he continued bitterly. Amelia moved back slightly and looked up at him. “You could have come back for me. You… you could have saved me,” she said, struggling to hold back tears. Luz’s bare hand instinctively reached out, fingers brushing against her cheek with a gentleness that contradicted everything he has become. “Saved you?” his voice was rough, raw with years of suppressed anguish. “You think I haven’t dreamed of saving you every night? Of riding back to that village and sweeping you away before the Corrompido arrived?”
He stepped closer again, invading her personal space until his armoured chest nearly touched her forehead again. The crimson sigils on his armour pulsed erratically as his control frayed under the intensity of seeing her so sad. “So why didn’t you?” Amelia asked softly, a single tear rolling down her cheek. “Why didn’t you do it today? Why didn’t you take me with you?” The single tear tracing down her cheeks seemed to pierce through Luz’s remaining defences. His hand, still resting on her back, trembled slightly as he found the urge to wipe it way. “Today?” his laugh was hollow, devoid of humour. “Today I was supposed to burn that village to ash like every other we have passed. Taking you with me would have meant sentencing you to a life worse than death.”
His crimson eyes blazed with a mix of frustration and desperate protection. “Do you have any idea what happens to humans captured by this army? They are either enslaved or killed for sport.” The black veins on his neck throbbed visibly as he struggled to maintain his composure. “I gave you one hour to run,” he said through gritted teeth. “And I did. I ran. But…” Amelia hesitated. “I have to know why? Why you keep leaving me. You are the commander. You could have found a way, couldn’t you?” The accusation hit Luz with the force of a physical blow. His face contorted, the carefully maintained mask of the Commander shattered and for a moment, the man Amelia once knew peeked through– the young knight who once swore oaths of honour.
The humidity inside the cave was thick, pressing against their skin like a warm blanket. Estrela led the way, holding a flickering lantern aloft. The light danced off the damp walls, revealing slick surfaces and jagged formations that dripped with slow, rhythmic water. “The river is deeper than I expected,” she said, her voice echoing slightly off the low ceiling. She stepped carefully over a cluster of smooth stones, her boots squelching in the shallow water that pooled around their ankles. “But the markings her– the match the ones in the northern corridor perfectly.” She paused, holding the lantern high to illuminate a series of carvings etched into the cave wall just above the waterline. They were fresher than the ones in the ruins, almost as if they had been maintained. “Escuro, look,” she whispered, beckoning him closer. The carvings showed an image of the river flowing into the cave. The lines were detailed and artistic. There was
Mestre Escuro stood on one of the watchtowers near the burned and collapsed cathedral. He looked out at the city below, the smoke still lingering in the air. As the sun set, the lights coming from some of the houses and the embers from burned down houses became clearer to see. His gaze was distant and unfocused, as he recalls the past.“You must be Escuro,” Estela Astuta said cheerfully. “It is very nice to meet you.” She shook his hand. Escuro smiled shyly at her cheerful tone and shook her hand. “Thank you, I am glad to be here,” he said with equal friendliness. “I look forward to working with you.” She pulled her hand back, her hazel green eyes bright with excitement as she gestured toward the crumbling stone pillars surrounding them. Vines snaked around the weathered masonry, and the air smelled of damp earth and old dust. “I have already made some progress with the eastern corridor,” she said, stepping close
Luz moved around the tub, kneeling in front of Amelia so he could look directly into her green eyes. The steam curled between them, softening his features, but the hardness in his jaw remained. “No one touches you,” he said, each word measured and final. “Not while I am breathing.” He reached out, his large hands framing her face, his thumbs brushing over her cheekbones with a tenderness that contrasted sharply with the steel in his voice. “I know,” she said with a steady look. “So, we are even. I treat you like a person and you do the same for me.” Her hand moved to his chest. “Now will you join me in this tub already? There is plenty of space.”Luz let out a short, huffed breath– something close to a laugh, though his expression remained soft. He looked down at Amelia’s hand resting against his chest, his heart eating steady and strong beneath her palm. “Even,” he repeated, the word tasting
A decorative tapestry hangs on the far wall. Its heraldic design suggests the bath chamber might have belonged to a wealthy merchant, or noble family. The tapestry also helps insulate the room by covering the cold stone surface. “There,” Luz said, turning to face Amelia. He wiped a bead of sweat from his forehead and looked at her, his amber eyes softening. “Thank you very much,” she praised with a genuine smile and pocked up one of the buckets with cold water standing against the wall and poured it into the tub. She used a wooden spoon to mix the water in tub. He leaned against the stone wall, watching her work. The way she moved– so domestic, so normal– was almost painful to witness.It was a world Luz had forgotten how to live in, yet here Amelia was, rebuilding it with wooden spoons and buckets of cold water. “You are very efficient,” he remarked, his voice low and warm. He stepped closer, reaching out to take the wooden spo
Luz pulled Amelia closer, his arms wrapping around her as if he could shield her from the very world, he was a part of. His fingers brushed against the greyed white ribbon on his wrist. “But we can’t,” he murmured into her red hair. “Mestre Escuro… he is not patient. And I have things have to do. Things I have to finish.” He opened his eyes, and for a moment, the amber flickered– just once– before settling back into a steady, warm glow. He kissed her temple, a lingering, aching touch. “I know,” she said understandingly. “But one day maybe, right?” he did not answer immediately. He just held her, his chin resting on top of her head, his breathing finally levelling out into something steady and calm.The room was quiet, the only sound that occasional crackle of the dying fire and the distant, muffled echoes of the Corrompido army outside. “One day,” Luz finally said. He said it like a promise,
“I am the only one,” Amelia repeated her hips grinding against Luz, so his hardness rubbed against her thigh. His amber eyes blew wide, the friction of her thighs against him sent a violent jolt straight through his spine, and he let out a sound that was half-growl, half-sob. “Amelia,” he choked out, his fingers digging into the mattress beside her head. “You have no idea what you are doing to me.” He could not hold back anymore. He surged forward, his body pressing into hers with a sudden, heavy urgency. His hands slid down her sides finding the curve of her waist and pulling her up to meet him, his hips rolling against hers in a slow, agonizingly perfect rhythm.Every point of contact– the heat of Amelia’s skin, the scent of her hair, the way she moved against Luz– was a strike against his remaining willpower. “I know exactly what I am doing,” she said seductively. “I want you.” His head fell back
“Gods help me. I have been wanting you here since the moment I saw your face in the crowd.” Luz’s crimson eyes burned with desperate intensity, searching hers for any sign of doubt or fear. “Every time I ride into battle, every time I order executions I do not believe in– part of me hopes you wil
“Don’t,” Luz snarled, the word sharp and dangerous. “Don’t ever repeat what he said to you. You have no idea what you are inviting.” His voice dropped to a dangerous whisper, his face inches from Amelia’s. “Mestre Escuro is not fighting for anything noble or honourable. He is fighting to break th
As Luz left the tent, Amelia quietly moved to get dressed, putting on the grey button-up shirt and the brown trousers she wore the night before. She heard talking coming from outside the tent and listened closely to what they were saying. Then she suddenly heard a click beside her and when she tu
“Well, if you do die, I don’t want to live on,” Amelia pleaded softly. As Luz picked up the pauldrons and fastened them to his shoulders one at a time, his crimson eyes widened slightly at the fervent declaration, the raw conviction in her voice striking him with unexpected force. The idea of som







