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CHAPTER FORTY-SEVEN: Something Waking Deep Within These Depths Of Ruins

  The Pit – The Next Day

  The

  night stretches into eternity, a void where time dissolves like flesh

  in acid. Demons linger in the corners of Lucille's fractured

  mind, their forms shifting, now gaunt wraiths with hollow eyes, now

  bloated horrors with mouths lined in barbed teeth. They circle her

  prone body, whispering in voices that slither through her ears like

  worms.

  "Failure,"

  one croons, its claws tracing the scar on her arm without touch. "You

  let them die. Your family. Your friends. Abandoned because you were

  weak."

  Another

  interrupts, its laugh a wet rasp: "No, no, remember correctly.

  They betrayed you first. You were right to strike back."

  The

  first hisses correction: "Lies. The Horkosians say otherwise.

  You deserved it. You always deserved it."

  Memories

  flood in, twisted reels of bloodied battles, lost love, shattered

  oaths, each version clashing with the next until truth frays to

  nothing.

  She

  curls tighter on the cold floor, chains biting into wrists and

  ankles, whispering back: "Lucille... Lucille Domitian..."

  But the demons mock her, echoing "257" until it slips from

  her own lips, unbidden.

  The

  helmet's weight lingers in hallucination, its crimson comb dripping

  phantom blood down her skin, pooling in the muck that isn't there.

  Valroth Kyr's words loop endlessly: Suffer. Bend. Burn. The pits yawn

  wider, threatening to swallow her whole.

  Dawn

  means nothing in this abyss. But eventually, hours, days, eons later,

  the door grinds open.

  Light

  stabs in, harsh and red-tinged, flooding the cell like spilled gore.

  Three Horkosians enter, boots thudding in unison. One pushes the

  cart, its wheels squealing faintly over the concrete. Masks hide

  their faces, black garb swallowing their forms from head to toe. The

  speaking one leads, voice modulator humming to life as they approach

  her sprawled figure in the center of the room, unchanged, unwashed,

  unbroken yet unraveling.

  She

  lies there, hands cuffed behind her back, ankles bound in iron that

  has rubbed flesh to weeping sores. Her lips move in faint mumbles,

  voice a dehydrated croak: "Lucille... Domitian... Lucille..."

  A pause. "257." It escapes like a confession.

  One

  Horkosian reaches down, hauls her up by the armpits to her knees. She

  snaps instantly, teeth clacking on empty air, aiming for glove or

  flesh. He backhands her across the face, the slap echoing sharp. Her

  head lolls to the side, hanging limp. No yelp. No flinch. Just a dull

  throb joining the symphony of aches.

  In

  her drug-ravaged sight, they are no longer men. Monsters tower now,

  hulking demons with hides of shadowed leather, horns curling from

  masked brows, eyes glowing like forge embers. Larger than the

  night-haunts, scarier, their presence a weight that crushes the air

  from her lungs. The smaller demons scatter to the edges, cowering in

  deference.

  The

  speaking one tilts his head, modulator flattening his words to

  machine precision. "State your designation."

  Lucille's

  eyes, bloodshot, unfocused, stare through him. Her response comes

  weak, one word at a time, a mantra etched into her soul.

  "Suffer."

  "State

  your designation."

  "Bend."

  "Incorrect.

  Repeat."

  "Burn."

  The

  Horkosians exchange no glances, masks hide amusement, but the air

  thickens with it. Their strategy gnaws deeper, stripping layers like

  flaying knives. One produces a canteen, unscrews the cap.

  "Water,"

  the voice intones. "Compliance earns sustenance."

  She

  shakes her head once, feeble, defiant. Lips crack further, but no

  words form.

  They

  do not ask again.

  Two

  of them shove her backward onto the floor, spine jarring against

  concrete. She thrashes weakly, broken fingers scrabbling uselessly

  behind her. A rag, filthy, stained, is pulled taut over her face,

  molding to nose and mouth like a second skin. The third Horkosian

  tilts the canteen. Water cascades over the cloth in a slow,

  deliberate pour.

  It

  seeps through instantly, cold, relentless. She inhales on instinct;

  liquid floods nostrils, throat, lungs. Panic surges: drowning on dry

  land. Her body convulses, chains rattling, heels kicking furrows in

  the grime. Seconds stretch to minutes. Black spots bloom behind her

  eyes. They stop, just long enough for her to gag, cough, suck in

  ragged air laced with water and bile.

  Then

  again.

  And

  again.

  The

  rag lifts finally. She gasps, chest heaving, water streaming from her

  face in rivulets mixed with snot and tears. The world spins, demons

  leering from the shadows.

  "State

  your designation," the voice repeats, calm as ever.

  "257,"

  she whispers, voice breaking. "To serve... the Order... complete

  objectives..."

  Correct.

  Drilled. Rewritten.

  But

  the rag descends once more. Water pours. Again. And again. And again.

  No mercy for accuracy. Only the grind, the erosion, the breaking.

  It

  stops when the laughter bubbles up.

  Not

  from humor. Not from joy. From the fractures spiderwebbing through

  her mind, cracks widening with each pour, each gasp, each twisted

  memory. It starts low, a choked giggle, then swells: ragged,

  hysterical, echoing off the walls like shattering glass. The demons

  join in, their chorus amplifying the madness. The helmet's comb drips

  heavier in her vision, blood cloaking her like a shroud.

  The

  Horkosians pause. The rag drops away. She laughs on, head thrown

  back, eyes wide and unseeing.

  The

  laughter fractures the air, sharp, unhinged, bubbling from Lucille's

  throat like blood from a fresh wound. It echoes off the walls,

  multiplying in the demons' chorus until the room vibrates with it.

  Not mirth. Not release. Just the sound of a mind splintering, shards

  grinding against one another in the dark recesses of her skull. Her

  body shakes with it, ribs protesting, broken fingers twitching behind

  her back. The scar on her arm burns hotter now, Valroth Kyr's mark

  pulsing with approval, whispering deeper temptations: Sacrifice

  more. Your blood was the oath. Now offer theirs. Souls for the pyre.

  Pain given, pain taken. Inflict it. Feel it. Feed me.


  The

  Horkosians freeze for a breath, masks impassive, but the air shifts.

  The speaking one tilts his head slightly, modulator humming a low

  note that might be calculation.

  "Progress,"

  he intones, flat and mechanical. "Expected, yet accelerated. The

  compound performs beyond projections."

  No

  alarm. No retreat. Satisfaction coils beneath the words, laced with

  clinical surprise at the swiftness of her unraveling. They have seen

  this before, subjects crumbling under the chemical tide, but not this

  soon, not with such raw, feral glee. The demons in her vision leer

  wider, nodding as if in agreement, their forms swelling to match the

  monstrous silhouettes of the men.

  One

  Horkosian steps forward, keys clinking.

  "Broken,"

  the voice confirms. "Test compliance."

  They

  uncuff her wrists first, metal grinding free from raw skin, her arms

  flopping forward like dead weight. She doesn't move at once, just

  laughs harder, the sound wet and ragged. Ankles next, chains

  slithering away. Freedom, of a sort. She stretches instinctively,

  shoulders popping, legs extending in the grime. Muscles scream from

  disuse, starvation gnawing deeper, but the movement brings a twisted

  relief. The Horkosians watch, batons idle, cart humming softly in the

  corner. They think her shattered. A puppet with cut strings.

  But

  they are not done. Confirmation demands more.

  The

  speaking one crouches before her, close enough that she smells the

  sterile tang of his suit through the hallucinations. "State the

  nature of reality," he asks, voice probing new depths, surreal

  edges sharpening the query.

  In

  her ears, it twists: Valroth

  Kyr's echo overlays it, demanding blood not her own, souls ripped

  free in agony.

  "More,"

  she rasps, eyes glazed, focusing on the demon-horn curling from his

  mask. Truth spills out, deranged and honest. "Blood... theirs.

  Pain... to feed Him."

  "Incorrect.

  State the purpose of pain."

  The

  god's temptation surges: Inflict it upon them. Send their screams

  to me. Bend them in the fires.


  "Suffer,"

  she whispers, mantra returning. "To burn... anew. Souls for the

  helm."

  The

  questions deepen, surreal loops bending reality further. "Describe

  the color of obedience."

  "Quantify

  the weight of betrayal."

  Each

  one morphs in her fractured mind: How many will you kill for me?

  What torment will you endure to claim power?


  Valroth

  Kyr hovers in the periphery, robes billowing, hand extended

  eternally, urging her to embrace the offerings. Her answers grow

  wilder, laced with the god's desires: "Red as spilled oaths...

  Heavy as chains... Sacrifice them all... Feel the burn... Send their

  essences screaming..."

  The

  Horkosians note it all, modulator humming approvals. Amusement

  flickers unseen, her derangement a victory, the god's name on her

  lips a curious anomaly to dissect later.

  Then

  something snaps.

  Lucille

  lunges without warning, laughter cutting to a snarl. Broken fingers

  swing in clumsy arcs, nails, those remaining, raking across the

  nearest mask. Plastic shreds; skin tears beneath. Blood wells hot and

  real. She kicks next, bound no longer, heel slamming into a knee with

  a wet crunch. The Horkosian buckles, grunting human pain through his

  filter. She bites at the next, teeth sinking into an exposed wrist,

  tearing through glove and flesh in a spray of copper. Demons cheer in

  her vision, Valroth Kyr's scar flaring triumph: Yes. Offer this.

  More.


  They

  overwhelm her in seconds, three against one starved wraith. Batons

  crack down: ribs, thighs, shoulders. Electricity arcs again, seizing

  her limbs. She thrashes anyway, wild, primal, drawing more blood

  before they pin her face-first to the floor. Breath crushed out,

  laughter gone, replaced by guttural growls.

  "Restrain,"

  the voice commands, calm restored. "Adapt protocol."

  They

  bind her anew, not chains this time, but padded straps that loop

  wrists to a belt at her waist, ankles hobbled with a short tether.

  Movement allowed, enough to walk, to kneel, but attacks curtailed,

  limbs restricted to futile swings. Then the muzzle: a Vardengard's

  device, forged in cold steel and leather, covering from nose

  downward. It clamps over her jaw, locking it shut with a ratcheting

  click, straps buckling tight around her skull. No more bites. No more

  words unchecked. Her breath hisses through narrow vents, hot and

  confined.

  The

  muzzle clamps tight, steel biting into Lucille's cheeks, jaw locked

  in a vise that forces her teeth to grind against unyielding bars.

  Breath hisses through the vents in short, ragged bursts, hot,

  confined, tasting of her own blood and the lingering copper from the

  wrist she savaged. The Horkosians step back, assessing their work,

  but the air thickens with something new: not just procedure, but

  fury. The one she raked, mask shredded, cheek gashed open in three

  parallel furrows that weep red down his neck, clutches the wound,

  glove slick with his own essence.

  He

  snarls behind the filter, human rage breaking through the facade:

  "Bitch nearly took my eye."

  The

  bite victim flexes his mangled wrist, flesh torn to the bone, tendons

  exposed and twitching. "Look at this, bite force like a damn

  vise. Should've muzzled her days ago."

  A

  third, limping from her heel to his knee, joint swollen, cartilage

  crushed, mutters low: "Three weeks, no food, barely water every

  few days, and she still fights like a cornered beast. Whatever's in

  her... it's not breaking clean."

  The

  speaking one holds up a hand, modulator humming to silence them.

  "Valroth Kyr," he repeats, echoing her deranged mutterings

  from moments before. The name hangs in the air like incense in a

  temple, reverent, probing. "The God of Sacrifice. Intriguing.

  Cadets rarely invoke Him. Most cling to the brighter idols: strength,

  order, conquest. But you... influenced? Marked?"

  His

  head tilts, mask reflecting her muzzled form in distorted black. They

  know their pantheon; Valroth Kyr demands offerings of flesh and soul,

  thrives on the altar of agony. This is no coincidence. "The

  compound accelerates revelation. We probe deeper now. Test the

  vessel. See if He truly stirs within."

  They

  waste no time. Intensity surges, belief fueling cruelty, turning

  interrogation to vivisection of the spirit. The cart rattles forward,

  tools unveiled with deliberate slowness: floodlamps on articulated

  arms, sonic emitters shaped like twisted horns, vials of acrid

  essences stoppered in glass. Not just questions now. Tests. Torments

  disguised as science, designed to shatter senses, to flay the soul

  raw and see what monstrosity emerges.

  First,

  the eyes. A Horkosian positions the floodlamp inches from her face,

  blinding white arcs igniting without warning. Light stabs like knives

  through her pupils, searing retinas that already throb from the

  drug's haze. She jerks back, head whipping side to side, but the

  muzzle's straps hold her rigid. Demons in her vision explode into

  fractals of agony, the helmet's crimson comb dripping faster, pooling

  in phantom rivulets that burn like acid. Valroth Kyr's whisper rises

  above the hum: Sacrifice sight. Offer the burn. Feed me your

  torment.


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  "State

  your sensitivity threshold," the voice demands, clinical amid

  her muffled snarls.

  She

  chokes out through the bars: "Suffer... more... His hunger..."

  They

  amp it higher, light pulsing in strobes that mimic flashbangs,

  calibrated to overwhelm Vardengard senses, those heightened beyond

  human or Praevectus norms. Her corneas scream; tears stream hot and

  useless. Vision warps: the Horkosians swell into colossal demons,

  horns scraping the ceiling, eyes like molten pits. The scar flares,

  god's approval a cold fire in her veins. Bend in the light. Break

  for rebirth.


  Next,

  hearing. The sonic emitter whines to life, high-pitched, ultrasonic,

  a frequency that slices through eardrums like glass shards. To

  humans, it's a faint buzz; to Vardengard, it's torment incarnate,

  designed to rupture equilibrium, induce vertigo that crushes the

  will. The sound drills into her skull, vibrating bones, amplifying

  the demons' laughter to thunderclaps. She convulses on the floor,

  straps biting deeper, broken fingers clawing at concrete in futile

  escape. Blood trickles from her ears, warm, sticky, mixing with the

  phantom blood from Valroth Kyr's robe.

  "Quantify

  the auditory assault," the modulator presses.

  "Burn...

  souls... for Him..." Her voice mangles through the muzzle,

  mantra unbroken, deranged devotion spilling out. The god demands:

  Inflict this on them. Send their screams as tribute. Sacrifice

  their hearing, their essence.


  They

  escalate, pulsing the tone in waves, layering subsonics that rattle

  her guts, induce nausea that heaves against her empty stomach. Bile

  rises, choking her behind the bars. The room spins; memories fracture

  further, demons correcting one another in shrieking debates: "You

  failed Cain; betrayed him." "No, he abandoned you; offer

  his soul next."

  Finally,

  smell. A vial uncorks, acrid, chemical horror distilled from rot and

  venom, engineered to overload olfactory nerves, trigger primal

  revulsion. They force it under the muzzle's vents, fumes invading

  like poison gas. Her sinuses ignite; every breath a gulp of decay

  that twists her stomach, amplifies starvation's hollow ache into

  ravenous torment. Demons swarm closer, exhaling the same stench,

  whispering of feasts on flesh, of blood-oaths to sate the god.

  "Describe

  the olfactory response."

  "Hunger...

  of Sacrifice... any blood... any soul..."

  The

  Horkosians note it all, anger simmering beneath masks, but channeled

  now into precision. They've drawn first blood from her defiance; she

  from their flesh. The balance tips toward revelation. Valroth Kyr

  watches, His temptations coiling tighter: More. Give more. Take

  more.


  She

  endures, mantra looping, mind fracturing, body a vessel of unending

  grim. The tests grind on, breaking deeper, seeking the god's true

  mark.

  The

  Pit – Three Weeks Later

  Three weeks bleed into one

  another like open wounds, endless cycles of torment, the drugs' grip

  unrelenting, weaving hallucinations into the fabric of her shattered

  reality. Lucille lies sprawled on the cold stone floor, slick with

  congealed blood and layers of filth that reek of sweat, urine, and

  decay. The muzzle still clamps her jaw shut, vents hissing with every

  labored breath; her arms strap loosely to a belt at her waist,

  allowing minimal motion but no real reach; ankles hobble together in

  iron that has worn grooves into bone. They stripped her to underwear

  days, or weeks, ago, leaving her skin to pebble against the

  unrelenting chill, every shiver reopening scabs. From neck downward,

  her body maps a chronicle of agony: burns blistering in ragged

  patches from heated irons, lashings crisscrossing her back and thighs

  in weeping lines, lacerations carved precise and deep across her

  abdomen and legs. Treated just enough, salves slapped on, bandages

  changed sporadically, to stave off infection, but never to heal. Pain

  is the point. Preservation, a cruel mercy.

  The

  hallucinations claw at her edges, demons manifesting as twisted

  amalgamations of shadow and flesh, leering faces with too many eyes,

  bodies contorted in eternal anguish. They circle her prone form,

  whispering degradations that sink like hooks: "Worthless vessel.

  Abandoned whore. You'll devour your own heart before He claims you."

  One prods at her scar with spectral talons, amplifying Valroth Kyr's

  distant hunger.

  She

  thrashes weakly, muffled snarls escaping the muzzle: "Shut...

  up..."

  The

  words garble into animal growls. Frustration boils over. She rears up

  as much as bonds allow, then slams her forehead against the concrete.

  Once. Crack. Skin splits. Again. Blood wells hot and immediate. Over

  and over, thud, thud, thud, the rhythm a desperate bid to

  drown the voices, to fracture the skull that cages them. Blood pours

  down her face, stinging eyes, pooling beneath her cheek. She doesn't

  stop. The pain is clean, self-inflicted, a fleeting control in the

  void.

  The

  door grinds open then, metal screeching like a demon's wail. Light

  spills in, red and harsh, silhouetting the Horkosians as they enter.

  Three of them, as always: one pushing the cart with its clinking

  arsenal of tools, the others hauling something between them. A

  kicking, struggling form, shouting curses that echo human defiance.

  They hurl him to the ground in front of her, his body

  crumpling with a wet thud. Hands cuffed tight behind his back, one

  leg twisted at a grotesque angle, bone shattered weeks ago, never

  set, leaving him unable to stand or kick without agony ripping

  through him. He fares only slightly better than her: skin gaunt over

  protruding ribs, wounds less prolific but no less brutal, bruises

  blooming purple across his torso, a few teeth missing, eyes hollowed

  by starvation and the lingering haze of his own chemical nightmares.

  Hallucinations plague him too, but he clings to humanity, to words,

  to reason. Exhausted, broken, barely alive by any sane measure, yet

  not reduced to the feral thing she has become.

  Lucille

  doesn't stop. Forehead meets floor again, blood spraying in fine

  arcs.

  The

  Horkosians bark commands, "Cease. 257, comply." The

  modulator flattens their urgency to procedure.

  But

  it's Cain's voice that pierces the red fog, "Lucy? Lucy, stop!

  What the hell—" Confused, startled, laced with horror. He

  didn't expect this, didn't expect her alive, let alone here, worse

  than the ghost he last glimpsed three weeks past. His words snag like

  hooks; she freezes mid-motion, head pressed to the stone, blood

  dripping in rhythmic patters.

  Slowly,

  she lifts her gaze, eyes wild, unfocused, rimmed in crimson. Through

  the drug's veil, Cain shimmers: not flesh and ruin, but a beacon, a

  radiant light cutting the gloom like a blade through shadow. Hope

  incarnate, a reason to endure. But the demons swarm him too, clinging

  to his form, hissing lies: "He'll betray you. Weak link.

  Sacrifice him first. Feed the god his soul."

  Valroth

  Kyr's scar throbs in agreement, temptations coiling: More blood.

  His, if need be. To prove devotion.


  The

  Horkosians do not intervene yet. They stand sentinel, masks

  impassive, watching with clinical hunger. Cain is no gift, no

  reunion. A test of bonds frayed by weeks of

  isolation and torment. Does care linger? Love, twisted and starved?

  Or has the savage in her, or him, eclipsed it? Will she lunge, teeth

  seeking throat despite the muzzle? Will he recoil, strike first in

  hallucinated fear? The outcome dictates their path: if a thread

  remains, they will sever it. Amp the agony, tools sharper, questions

  crueler, pains layered until one snaps fatally. Break the bond, even

  if it claims a life. Until no fight breathes in either chest. The

  cart hums softly, promising escalation: pliers, brands, syringes

  refilled with fresh venom.

  Cain

  drags himself closer, inch by agonizing inch, broken leg trailing

  useless. "Lucy... what did they do to you?" His voice

  cracks, eyes searching her muzzled face for the woman he knew.

  She

  stares back, beacon flickering amid the taunts. The demons laugh

  louder. The god waits.

  Cain

  inches closer, dragging his shattered leg behind him like a dead

  weight, every scrape against the filth-smeared stone sending fresh

  jolts of agony up his spine. His breath comes in shallow, ragged

  huffs, eyes locked on her muzzled face, searching for the flicker of

  recognition that once defined them. "Lucy," he whispers

  again, voice cracking like brittle bone. "It's me. Cain. Come

  on, look at me, really look."

  He

  glances sidelong at the Horkosians, towering shadows in their black

  garb, masks reflecting the dim red light like empty voids, and

  glares, a flash of raw hatred twisting his gaunt features. "You

  bastards... what have you done?"

  But

  he turns back to her, dismissing them, focusing everything on the

  broken woman before him. "We survived worse than this. Remember?

  That night in the ruins, you pulled me out. You didn't let go. Don't

  let go now."

  Lucille

  stares silently, unblinking, her polychromatic eyes, one blue as

  fractured ice, the other green like poisoned depths, glistening with

  unshed tears or drugged haze, pupils blown wide into black abysses

  that swallow the light. The beacon she sees in him pulses erratically

  now, a false glow amid the swarming demons that claw at its edges,

  hissing temptations: Liar. Illusion. He'll drag you back to

  weakness.
Valroth Kyr demands rebirth; pure, untainted by

  bonds. Sacrifice him.


  Her

  scar throbs in rhythm with her heartbeat, the god's hunger a low roar

  in her veins, urging her toward the pyre of absolute surrender.

  Cain

  edges nearer still, too close, breath mingling with hers through the

  muzzle's vents.

  She

  snaps.

  A

  snarl rips from her throat, muffled but feral, vibrating the steel

  bars. She rams forward, forehead crashing into his with a sickening

  crack, blood from her self-inflicted wounds smearing across his brow.

  Cain reels backward, eyes widening in shock and pain, body collapsing

  onto his side as his broken leg twists beneath him. He chokes out a

  gasp, stars exploding behind his lids.

  Lucille

  half-lunges after him, straps straining at her waist, hobbled ankles

  scraping furrows in the grime, another snarl bubbling up, wet and

  savage. "Fake," she hisses through the muzzle, words

  mangled but venomous. "Liar. Not real. Trying... to pull me

  away."

  The

  demons crow in triumph, their forms swelling around Cain's glowing

  silhouette, tearing at it with spectral claws. This is no bond, no

  hope, only a hallucinated snare, conjured by her fracturing soul to

  tempt her from the god's forge. Valroth Kyr's voice echoes louder:

  Burn the illusion. Offer his light as fuel. Rebirth demands

  isolation.


  The

  Horkosians watch, unmoving, the cart's tools glinting in silent

  promise. The test unfolds. The bond teeters.

  Cain

  keeps trying. He drags himself forward again, broken leg trailing a

  smear of fresh blood across the stone, voice hoarse but steady,

  refusing to crack. "Lucy, listen to me. It's not them talking.

  It's not the drugs. It's me. Remember the ridge above the black

  river? You said you'd die before you left me behind. I'm still here.

  We're still here." His words come slow, deliberate, each one a

  lifeline thrown into the storm raging behind her dilated eyes.

  "Just... look at me. Look."

  Lucille's

  gaze flickers, polychromatic irises catching the red light, pupils

  swallowing everything, but the response is mechanical, feral. The

  demons swarm thicker around Cain's form in her vision, their claws

  raking at the beacon, dimming it. Valroth Kyr's scar pulses harder:

  Cain

  edges closer still. She snaps.

  Another

  lunge, forehead slamming into his cheekbone with a dull crack. Cain

  reels sideways, blood blooming from a split lip, but he doesn't

  retreat. "Damn it, Lucy! Stop!" He tries again, voice

  rising in desperation. "This ain’t you. They want this. Don't

  give it to them."

  She

  snarls through the muzzle, muffled, guttural, animal, and rams

  forward once more, shoulder clipping his chest, driving him back. The

  straps at her waist groan; her hobbled ankles scrape uselessly. The

  demons howl approval, tearing at the fading light in her mind: Fake.

  Temptation. Sacrifice the illusion.


  Cain

  coughs, blood flecking his chin, but he still doesn't strike back. He

  only stares, eyes wide with grief and horror, searching for the woman

  buried under layers of torment and hallucination.

  The

  Horkosians have seen enough.

  The

  speaking one gestures once, sharp, economical. Two of them move in

  unison.

  One

  seizes Cain by the hair, yanking his head back to expose his throat.

  The other drives a stun baton into his ribs, short, controlled burst.

  Electricity arcs; Cain's body locks, muscles seizing, a choked scream

  tearing free before it cuts off into a wheeze. They drag him upright,

  broken leg dangling useless, positioning him directly in front of

  Lucille, close enough that she can smell the copper on his skin.

  They

  turn the focus to her now, using Cain as living bait.

  One

  Horkosian kneels behind Lucille, grips the back of her neck, gloved

  fingers digging into the base of her skull, and forces her head up,

  forcing her to face Cain fully. Another steps to the cart, retrieves

  a fresh syringe, clear fluid gleaming under the red bulb, and plunges

  it into the side of her neck without preamble. The plunger depresses

  in one smooth motion. A new wave crashes through her veins, hotter,

  sharper, amplifying the existing haze into something apocalyptic.

  Colors bleed violently; the demons swell to monstrous proportions,

  their laughter deafening. Valroth Kyr's presence looms larger, robes

  billowing, hand extended in eternal demand: Offer him. His pain

  will be sweet tribute. Burn the last tether.


  Cain

  struggles weakly against the hold on his hair. "No, stop! She's

  already—" His words choke off as they force his face closer to

  hers, noses almost touching through the muzzle's bars. "Lucy,

  fight it. Please."

  But

  the drug surges. The beacon in her vision flickers, gutters. The

  demons tear at it with renewed frenzy: He is weakness. He is the

  lie keeping you from the helm. Sacrifice. Sacrifice.


  Lucille's

  body trembles, straps creaking, muscles coiling. Her eyes lock on

  Cain's, but what she sees is no longer him. Only a false light, a

  cruel temptation conjured to derail her rebirth.

  She

  snarls again, louder, rawer, and lunges with everything left in her

  starved frame. Forehead crashes into his face once more; this time

  the impact splits skin over his brow, blood spraying across her

  muzzled cheeks. She twists against the grip on her neck, trying to

  bite through steel, trying to reach throat, trying to end the

  illusion.

  Cain's

  head snaps back. He doesn't fight her. He only whispers, broken,

  fading, "I'm sorry... Lucy..."

  The

  Horkosians release her neck just enough to let the lunge play out,

  then haul her back, straps tightening, batons ready. They watch Cain

  slump, blood streaming down his face, eyes still fixed on her with

  something that refuses to die.

  "Fracture

  confirmed," the speaking one states. "The bond persists,

  therefore it must be eradicated." He nods to the cart. "Prepare

  the next escalation. We will force the transition in both. One will

  break the other. Or both will burn."

  The

  demons in Lucille's mind roar in triumph. Valroth Kyr waits, patient,

  eternal.

  The

  Horkosians move with calculated precision, masks impassive, but the

  air hums with anticipation, like predators circling a fresh kill. The

  speaking one nods once, modulator clicking softly. "Release

  them. Remove the muzzle. Observe the fracture's depth. See if the

  bond dissolves in blood."

  One

  steps to Cain first, keys scraping against cuffs that have bitten

  deep into his wrists. The metal falls away with a clatter; Cain's

  arms flop forward, broken fingers curling instinctively into useless

  claws. He winces, breath hitching, but his eyes stay locked on

  Lucille, hope flickering faint amid the ruin.

  They

  turn to her next. Straps unbuckle from her waist, hobbles unlocking

  from ankles that weep pus and blood. The muzzle comes last, ratchets

  releasing with a metallic sigh, leather peeling away from skin raw

  and chafed. Her jaw unlocks; teeth grind free, tasting freedom laced

  with copper. She doesn't move at first, just stares, breath rasping

  wet through cracked lips.

  The

  Horkosians step back, batons idle but ready. The cart looms silent in

  the corner, tools glinting like promises of escalation.

  Lucille's

  vision swims, Cain's beacon gutters lower, demons tearing at its

  edges with frenzied glee: Valroth

  Kyr's scar ignites, hunger surging: Offer his blood. Feed the

  rebirth.


  She

  lunges like a starving beast, raw, primal, fingers splaying into

  broken talons, aiming for his throat.

  Cain

  reacts on instinct, arms raising despite the grind of shattered

  bones. "Lucy, no!" He doesn't strike to wound; he twists

  aside, her fingers raking his shoulder instead, peeling skin in

  bloody strips.

  She

  snarls, wordless, feral, slamming a fist into his ribs. Something

  cracks inside him; air explodes from his lungs in a wet cough. He

  staggers on his good leg, the broken one buckling, but he grabs for

  her, pleading even as pain whites out his vision. "Stop, please,

  it's me. We're getting out of this. Together."

  She

  doesn't hear. The demons drown him:

  She

  headbutts him square in the chest, forehead splitting open anew,

  blood spraying hot across his face. He reels, broken ribs screaming,

  but he lunges back, not to harm, but to hold. His arms wrap around

  her waist, pulling her close despite the agony ripping through his

  fractured hands. "Lucy... listen... Fight

  them, not me."

  She

  thrashes, elbows driving into his sides, knees slamming upward into

  his gut. A rib gives fully; he chokes on blood rising in his throat.

  But he holds on, twisting her around, arm snaking up to lock around

  her neck. Not to kill. To subdue. To force the air from her lungs

  until the fight ebbs.

  "I'm

  sorry... so sorry..." His voice breaks, tears mixing with blood

  on his cheeks. Her body bucks against him, starved muscles coiling,

  broken fingers clawing at his forearm, drawing fresh lines of red.

  The

  demons howl in rage: Valroth Kyr's whisper

  fades to a distant thrum, the beacon flickering one last time before

  her vision tunnels.

  She

  goes limp, airway constricted, darkness swallowing the hallucinations

  in a merciful rush. Cain holds on a heartbeat longer, ensuring she's

  out, then releases, gasping, collapsing beside her prone form. Blood

  pools between them, mingling on the stone.

  The

  Horkosians don't intervene yet. They watch, noting every twitch,

  every plea.

  But

  Lucille stirs too soon, drugs fueling a unnatural resilience, scar

  pulsing like a second heart. Her eyes snap open, wild, unfocused, and

  lock on the nearest shape: a Horkosian, looming close to haul Cain

  away. She surges upward, silent, savage, fingers hooking into his

  mask, yanking it askew. Teeth bare; she bites down on exposed neck,

  tearing through fabric and skin in a spray of arterial red.

  The

  Horkosian roar, human pain shattering the facade, as two others pile

  onto Cain, batons cracking down to pin him flat. One drives a knee

  into his broken leg; he screams, high and broken. The bitten one

  wrenches back, blood gushing from the wound, but Lucille clings,

  clawing, kicking, drawing more crimson before a stun baton slams into

  her spine.

  Electricity

  arcs; her body locks, then crumples.

  The

  speaking one steps forward, voice calm amid the chaos. "Fascinating.

  The bond resists. Escalate. Break it fully, or let one end the

  other."

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