The name of Terranexus was not just a word; it was a law of nature in this world. A faint, spiritual resonance vibrated through the cave, a sign that the oath had been heard and witnessed by a power far older than any of them.
Gilberto's hand, clutching his bone knife, trembled. He stared at Genevieve, his furious golden eyes searching for any flicker of deceit, any hint of a lie. He found none.
Dalvin stopped his begging, lifting his head from the floor, his face a mask of stunned disbelief.
Kameron's foxy eyes, which had been narrowed in suspicion, were now wide with a different kind of shock. He was the strategist, the one who weighed every possibility. An oath this binding, this absolute... it was not a move a liar would make. It was a move of utter desperation, or utter sincerity. And he couldn't tell which was more dangerous.
He glanced at the still-shaking Angelo, then back at Genevieve, who looked so fragile she might shatter, yet whose will had just bent them all.
He made a decision.
He reached out and firmly pressed Gilberto's knife-hand down.
"Kameron! Are you insane?" Gilberto hissed, trying to shrug him off. "You can't possibly believe her!"
"She's too weak to kill him, even if she wanted to," Kameron murmured, his voice low and for Gilberto's ears alone. "And if she tries anything, the Link will warn us. We'll be right outside."
It was a cold, pragmatic calculation. Not trust, but tactical observation.
Kameron turned, his gaze sweeping over Genevieve's face like the edge of a blade. "If you break that oath," he said, his voice a low promise of violence, "I will personally make sure your death is a thousand times more painful than what you're feeling now."
Then, he grabbed the still-seething Gilberto by the arm and dragged him towards the entrance. Dalvin and Jameel followed, casting one last, confused look over their shoulders before disappearing into the night.
The heavy sound of their footsteps faded.
Genevieve let out a breath she didn't realize she'd been holding. The tension drained from her, leaving behind a bone-deep exhaustion that was almost as debilitating as her wound.
The cave was silent now, save for the crackling of the fire and the soft, terrified whimpers coming from the darkest corner.
Angelo.
He was curled into a tight ball, his face buried in his knees, his body trembling like a leaf in a storm.
Genevieve tried to stand, to go to him, but her legs buckled. She caught herself on the wall, her head spinning. She settled for dragging herself, step by painful step, not to the corner, but to the main sleeping area. The nest of soft furs. The original's throne.
She sat on the edge of it, the plush pelts a stark contrast to the cold stone she'd been lying on. She patted the spot beside her, her voice softer than she intended.
"Angelo?"
At the sound of her voice, he flinched and scrambled even further back, pressing himself so hard against the cold rock wall it was a wonder he didn't phase through it.
He lifted his head. His eyes, the beautiful, vertical pupils of a snake, were wide with a desperate, pleading terror. He was a trapped animal, waiting for the killing blow.
Seeing his face, streaked with tears and dirt, seeing the raw fear in his eyes, Genevieve felt a pang of guilt so sharp it was a physical pain.
She wouldn't force him.
With a weary sigh, she pushed herself off the soft bed, abandoning the throne, and made her way to him. She moved slowly, deliberately, her every step a negotiation with her own screaming muscles.
She stopped a foot away from him and slowly, carefully, lowered herself to a crouch, bringing her eyes level with his.
Angelo squeezed his eyes shut, his long, silver lashes trembling. He was bracing himself for a blow, a kick, the familiar sting of a whip.
But it didn't come.
Instead, a warmth, scented with blood and ash, drew near.
Genevieve reached out her hand, her movements as slow and gentle as if approaching a frightened bird. She didn't grab. She didn't demand. She simply laid her hand over his, which was clenched into a tight, white-knuckled fist.
The contact was electric. Angelo's eyes flew open, his body going ramrod straight. He stopped breathing.
Her palm was rough, calloused from a life of work he couldn't imagine, but it was warm. The warmth seeped through his cold skin, a strange and unsettling sensation.
She didn't pull. She just held his hand, her thumb gently stroking his knuckles.
Her voice, when she spoke, was a low, rough whisper, full of an emotion he had never heard directed at him before. Apology.
"Don't be afraid," she said. "I just want to look at your wounds. I swore an oath. I will not hurt you again."
The words, the touch, the impossible gentleness of it all... it was too much. The dam of his carefully constructed defenses, built over years of pain and terror, didn't just crack.
It shattered.
A single, hot tear fell, then another. They splashed onto her hand, and then they were a flood, a silent, heartbreaking torrent as Angelo finally, finally broke.
The hot tears splashing onto her hand felt like a brand. Genevieve didn't pull away. She tightened her grip, a silent promise, and slowly rose to her feet, gently tugging him up with her.
Angelo followed, pliant and boneless with shock, his gaze fixed on the ground as if he were being led to the gallows.
She led him to the main bed, the throne of furs that had once been his personal hell. She pressed down on his shoulder, a clear gesture for him to sit.
The moment his skin touched the soft pelt, he recoiled as if he'd been electrocuted, scrambling to stand back up. This was a forbidden zone. A place he was only allowed near when he was being punished.
Genevieve sighed, a sound of pure exhaustion. She put her hands on his shoulders again, this time with more force, and looked directly into his terrified, reptilian eyes.
"Sit down," she said, her voice intentionally firm, falling back on the tone of command he understood. "That's an order."
The word "order" was magic. His body, conditioned by years of abuse, obeyed instantly. He sat, stiff and straight, on the very edge of the fur-covered ledge.
Genevieve turned back to the fire. She picked up a flat stone she had placed near the embers to warm and a clean, albeit ragged, piece of cloth.
When she turned back, holding the items, Angelo's face drained of all color. The hot stone. In his mind, it could only be for one thing. A brand. A new mark of ownership and pain.
He scrambled backward on the bed, his hands flying up to shield his chest. "No," he shrieked, his voice high and thin with terror. "Please, Mistress, don't! Don't burn me!"
Genevieve froze. The hot stone slipped from her numb fingers and clattered to the floor. She dropped the cloth. She stared at him, at his frantic, panicked eyes, and her heart felt like it was being squeezed in a fist.
She immediately raised her hands, palms open, showing him she was unarmed.
"I won't burn you," she said quickly, her voice laced with an urgency that surprised even herself. "I won't. I'm not doing anything."
She moved back to the bed and sat beside him. He flinched away, but she was faster, her hands closing around his wrists, gently pulling his arms away from his chest.
The firelight illuminated what he had been hiding.
Her breath caught in her throat. His torso was a roadmap of pain. Crisscrossing whip marks, some old and faded white, others new, red and angry, still oozing blood.
"Does it hurt?" she whispered, the question torn from her. Her fingers hovered over the brutalized flesh, trembling, afraid to touch, afraid to cause even a fraction more pain.
Angelo stared at her, his panicked breathing hitched. The question didn't compute. In his entire life, no one had ever asked him that. They were the cause of the pain; they were not concerned with its effect.
The simple, impossible question broke the last of his composure.
A gut-wrenching sob tore from his throat, and he doubled over, his face buried in his hands, crying like a lost child. He cried for the pain, for the fear, for the years of silent suffering.
Genevieve didn't speak. She just moved closer. Gritting her teeth against the agonizing, tearing sensation in her abdomen as she leaned forward, she wrapped her arms around his shaking, bony frame, pulling him into a hug. It was awkward and clumsy, but it was real. Every shuddering sob that wracked his body pulled at her cauterized flesh, sending spikes of white-hot agony radiating through her core. She swallowed back a groan, refusing to let go. She let him soak her dirty tunic with his tears and snot, holding him, anchoring him despite the physical torture it cost her.
"Why... why did you pull out my scales?" he choked out between sobs, the words muffled against her shoulder. "I was good... I always listened..."
She squeezed him tighter, resting her cheek against his silver hair, feeling the sharp knobs of his spine through his thin shirt.
"I'm sorry," she whispered, her voice thick. "I'm so, so sorry."
She repeated the words over and over, a mantra against the darkness of his past. The apology, something he'd never heard, never expected, seemed to have a magical effect. His frantic sobs slowly subsided into shuddering gasps.
He pulled back, just enough to look at her. His eyes were red and swollen, but through the tears, a fragile, complex light was beginning to dawn.
"Mistress..." he asked, his voice trembling with a desperate, hopeful vulnerability. "You... you really won't hit me anymore?"
Genevieve met his gaze, her own eyes fierce and unwavering.
"I swear it," she said, her voice like iron. "Unless I am dead, no one will ever hurt you again. Not even me."
Angelo's vertical pupils dilated, widening until they were huge, black pools. Something shifted in their depths. The fear was still there, but it was being rapidly consumed by something else, something new and terrifyingly intense.
He leaned forward, and before she could react, his forked tongue darted out, a snake's instinct, and flicked against the back of her hand, tasting the drop of blood from her self-inflicted wound.
His eyes, when they met hers again, were no longer just afraid.
They were possessive.