Leona: Give me your hand.
Yuu: Why?
Leona: *sighs exasperatedly* Just give me your hand, herbivore.
Yuu: .... *narrows eyes suspiciously*
Yuu: but why?
Leona: I'm trying to ask you to marry me damn it! So just take my damn hand!
I missed drawing them man! Miss Sweet and mister Scary in situations together is my favourite! â¤ď¸ (but did it have to span 9 coloured pages I almost died?!)
(No I wonât do a part 2 đ!)
(I'm feeling angsty >:]) ((I kept crying while writing this))
Grim is the first one to notice.
They were bickering, as usual. Yuu told him not to wander off. He called them bossy and sauntered ahead. He thought Yuu was right behind him until he heard the rumble.
When Grim turns around, the mine is collapsing. He hears a screamâtheir screamâand then nothing.
At first, Grim is in denial. âTheyâre probably fine! Just hiding like a scaredy-cat!â he yells, ears flat, tail bristled. He digs at the rocks, paws trembling, not because heâs weak but because heâs scared. His tiny claws scrape until they bleed.
Later, when the truth settles in, Grim doesnât talk for days. No bragging. No yelling. He just curls up on the couch in Ramshackle, staring at the door like heâs waiting for Yuu to walk through it.
He starts blaming himself. Quietly. âI shoulda protected them⌠Iâm the Great Grim, right? What good is all this power if I couldnât save 'emâŚâ
Ace puts up a wall.
He makes some stupid comment at first. âThey seriously died that easily? WeakâŚâ
But his voice cracks halfway through. He avoids eye contact with Deuce and walks away before anyone can see him clench his fists.
Later, Ace returns to the mine alone. He just stands at the spot where the rocks fell, chewing on the inside of his cheek. âDumbass⌠you werenât even supposed to be here. What were you thinking, coming down here without magic?â
If anyone tries to talk to him about it, he brushes them off. But sometimes, when no one's looking, he stares at Ramshackleâs gate like he wants to go up and say somethingâbut always turns around.
Deuce takes it hard.
He was right there. He thought he was being responsible. He was supposed to look out for the magicless student, right?
âI failed themâŚâ âI shouldâve noticed something was wrongâŚâ âIf Iâd just reacted fasterâŚâ
He says things like that a lot. Grim wonât talk. Ace wonât listen. So Deuce just keeps repeating it to himself.
He visits Ramshackle and helps clean it up. Makes sure the firewood is stacked, the beds are neatâeven though no one lives there anymore. âI just⌠want to keep it ready. In case they come back. Somehow.â
Crowley is... complicated.
Publicly, he spins it as a âtragic accidentâââA rare, unfortunate incident during a school-sanctioned task! We shall honor our lost guest!â He uses big words and flashy speeches, and pretends like this wasnât his fault.
But when heâs alone in his office, he looks at the file with Yuuâs name and wonders if he ever even really tried to help them.
He sent a magicless teen to mine with unstable students and monsters.
He knew they were different. Vulnerable. And yet, he brushed it off.
Thereâs a note he writes but never sends, addressed to the mirror that summoned Yuu:
âThis realm took what it never should have touched. And now it has blood on its hands.â
He keeps the key to Ramshackle on his desk. Every time he sees it, he flinches.
He saw it happen.
He was right thereâhe saw the blast coming, and he tried to drag Yuu back, but they slipped from his grip.
âYuu?â he calls out, paw nudging at their arm. âHey. Hey, câmon, this ainât funny. Get up.â
He tries to laugh it off at first. Grim doesnât do death. He doesnât understand it. Not really.
But when the healers come and shake their heads, when no one responds, something inside Grim shatters.
His magic starts reacting wildly. He growls and sparks with unstable fire, yelling at Riddleâs unconscious body like itâs his fault. âYou ruined everything! Theyâre gone and itâs because of YOU!â
Afterward, he wonât eat. Wonât talk. He curls up in Yuuâs bed with their uniform jacket tucked under his chin, tail limp.
âThey promised weâd figure stuff out together... Now I gotta do it alone?â
Ace flips out.
Not right away. First, itâs disbelief. âNo, no, theyâre gonna get up. Right? Deuce? Tell me theyâre fine.â
Then, itâs anger. At Riddle. At Cater and Trey for not stopping it. At himself.
He slams his fist into a wall so hard his knuckles bleed. âI shouldâve pulled them out. I saw the signs. I knew something was gonna happen.â
He gets snappy. Bitter. Starts arguments with anyone who tries to sugarcoat it. âThey didnât âpass peacefully.â They got caught up in some overblot crap that wasnât even their fault!â
He avoids Ramshackle. Too many memories. Too much guilt.
But he keeps Yuuâs student ID in his jacket pocket.
Deuce cries.
He tries to hold it in, tries to be strongâbecause thatâs what he thinks Yuu wouldâve wantedâbut the tears come anyway. He sobs into his hands when no oneâs looking, shaking with the weight of regret.
âI promised to protect themâŚâ he whispers.
He keeps up their dorm. Keeps bringing food to Grim, even if the little guy wonât touch it. He visits Crowleyâs office demanding answers, demanding justice, yelling that this shouldnât have happened.
Deuce becomes the one who remembers the little thingsâhow Yuu liked their tea, the dumb jokes they told, the way they always said "I've got your back" even without magic.
And he makes sure everyone else remembers too.
When he wakes up from the overblot and hears the news, he goes silent.
He doesn't cry. Doesnât scream. He just⌠shuts down.
He asks to see the body. Crowley says no.
So Riddle walks to the rose maze himself, stands in the spot where Yuu fell, and just stares at the blood-stained petals.
âI didnât mean toâŚâ
He says it to no one. Over and over. A mantra. A curse.
He writes an apology note but tears it up. Who would it even go to?
Trey and Cater notice the shiftâRiddle becomes harsher on himself. More rigid. Less confident. Because deep down, he knows:
Someone died because he lost control.
Caterâs smile doesnât slip right away.
Heâs used to filtering his emotions. Used to staying âon brand,â even when heâs horrified. So when he sees Yuuâs lifeless form after the magic storm clears, he just⌠freezes.
âH-Haha⌠no way, right? This has to be a prank. Right, Riddle?â
No one answers. Grim is howling. Ace is screaming. Deuce is crying.
Caterâs hands start to shake.
Later, heâll post nothing. Not even a filtered picture. He'll ghost Magicam for a while.
He tries to visit Ramshackle once, to drop off a bouquet of marigolds and forget-me-notsâbut the door creaks open and he sees Grim curled up on the couch, and he just canât do it.
âI didnât even know them,â he murmurs to himself, âand it still hurts this bad⌠What about the ones who did?â
Trey stays composed. He always does.
He takes over when everyone else is falling apartâhelping stabilize the overblot aftermath, escorting Riddle away from the scene, offering Deuce a tissue, shielding Cater from seeing too much.
But when he's alone in the kitchen later, making a tart for no one, he lets himself break a little.
His knife pauses mid-slice. A cherry slips and stains the counter red.
âI shouldâve noticed Riddle was this close to snapping,â he mutters. âIf Iâd stopped him soonerâŚâ
Trey doesn't cry. But guilt clings to him like powdered sugar on a fresh cake. Yuu wasnât his responsibility, but they were in his dorm's garden. Under his vice-leadership. And thatâs not something he forgets easily.
He leaves a note at Ramshackle with a box of treats:
âFor Grim. I know they liked sweet things. âTreyâ
Crowley is the one who has to âmake it official.â
He stands before the gathered first years, his usual flourish gone. Thereâs no fanfare, no dramatic cloak-swoosh. Just a stiff, solemn tone.
âIt is with deepest regret that I must confirm⌠the Prefect of Ramshackle Dorm has passed, following the incident involving an overblot.â
He doesnât look anyone in the eye.
When the students leave, he stays behind in the hall, staring at the cracked mirror that once brought Yuu here.
âThey were never supposed to be involved in magic,â he mutters. âI was supposed to protect themâŚâ
He writes a formal report. Then another one. Then a third. None of them feel right.
Later, Crowley visits Ramshackle and sets down a key with a tiny raven charm beside their bed.
âI promised you safety. I failed. May this place remember you better than I did.â
Itâs live. NRC's Spelldrive match is being broadcast across Twisted Wonderland.
Leonaâs magic erupts like a sandstorm hurricaneâspikes of sand and flame. Yuu is running, dragging an injured Grim, trying to reach Jack.
Then comes the roar.
Then silence.
The sand settles. A figure lies limp in the wreckage.
Thereâs a gasp on the feed. The camera zooms inâ âand the world watches as the magicless Prefect, the one who stood beside overblots and chaos, lies still on the battlefield.
Grim doesnât even process what happens at first.
He sees the sandstorm. The explosion of magic. He hears Yuu screamâand then nothing. Just silence.
He claws at their body. âGet up! Hey! I said get UP!â
He tries to use his magic. Tries to warm them up with a fireball. Nothing works.
He sobs until his voice is hoarse. He doesnât leave their sideânot when the teachers show up, not when the sun sets, not even when Crowley tries to move him.
âYou said we were gonna leave this place together, remember? You promisedâŚâ
After that, he never says their name again. But he whispers it in his sleep, tail curled around their favorite pillow.
Ace punches Leona.
No questions, no hesitationâhe hauls off and decks him right across the jaw, shouting âYou bastard! You KILLED them!â
It doesnât matter that Leonaâs still recovering from the overblot. It doesnât matter that he gets dragged off. Heâs shaking with rage.
Aceâs grief comes out as fire. Loud. Angry. Messy.
Later, he sneaks into Ramshackle alone. He rifles through Yuuâs drawers, looking for somethingâa hoodie, a note, an old snack wrapper. Anything that still smells like them.
He finds a photo they all took before the Spelldrive match.
He keeps it in his wallet.
Deuce kneels beside Yuuâs body and doesnât move for a long time.
He holds their hand. Itâs still warm. He begs the healers to try again. Begs the staff to do something.
âThey canât be gone⌠Not them. Not YuuâŚâ
He starts blaming himself. âIf Iâd been faster. If Iâd trained harder. If Iâd just been strongerââ
He throws himself into becoming stronger after that. Pushing past his limits. Studying harder. Training until he drops.
But he never stops wearing the little Ramshackle pin Yuu made for him, safety-pinned to the inside of his collar.
Cater completely drops the act.
No more filters. No cute captions. No jokes.
He vanishes from Magicam for a full month. When he comes back, itâs quiet. Just a black square and one line:
âMiss u, bestie.â
He tries to keep smiling around others, especially Grim, but itâs clearly forced. His voice cracks sometimes.
âI never even said goodbye⌠How could I not say goodbye?!â
Cater leaves a bracelet at the edge of the Savanaclaw field where they fellâgreen and silver beads, their initials on it.
He comes back every week to make sure it's still there.
Trey becomes the one who takes care of everyone else.
He comforts Grim. Checks on Deuce. Calms Ace. Brings food even when no one eats.
He tries to be steady, reliableâbut even he has his moments.
Sometimes, late at night in the kitchen, when heâs baking and the scent of vanilla fills the room, he sees Yuu laughing by the counter and has to sit down before he breaks.
He brings a box of strawberry tarts to Ramshackle and places it on their bed, whispering, âYou always liked these⌠right?â
Riddle is devastated.
He stares at their body with wide, horrified eyes. His throat closes. He stammers somethingârules, overblot laws, consequencesâbut the words fall flat.
He visits their grave alone. He brings roses, red and white.
âI should have stopped Leona. I knew something was wrong. I should have said something. Done somethingâŚâ
He reads old messages Yuu sent him. Keeps rereading them, like they'll change.
When Heartslabyul hosts a tea party in their memory, Riddle personally makes sure itâs perfect.
âThey deserve nothing less.â
Jack grits his teeth.
He says nothing at first. Just watches in silence as the healers pronounce Yuu gone.
But later, he trains. Harder than ever. His knuckles split. His legs ache.
âIf Iâd been there a second earlier⌠I couldâve shielded them.â
He doesnât cry, but he starts carrying himself a little more respectfully. For Yuu.
At Ramshackle, he leaves a desert lily by their bedâa flower that survives in harshness. âYou were tough. Iâll honor that.â
Crowley looks⌠older afterward.
He gives a dramatic speech at the memorial. Everyone assumes heâs playing it up againâuntil he chokes up mid-sentence.
âThis school was supposed to keep them safeâŚâ
He writes a letter to the Headmageâs council, arguing that overblots are no longer ârare accidents,â but institutional failures.
He also writes one to Yuu.
It sits in his drawer, never sent.
âYou deserved better. From this world. From me. I only hope the next life is kinder.â
Leona doesnât say a word when heâs told Yuu didnât survive.
He just stares. At the scorch mark in the dirt. At the faces of the othersâGrim sobbing, Deuce shaking, Ace screaming at him. He says nothing.
He turns away.
No apology. No excuse. He doesn't even try to defend himself.
Later, alone in his dorm, he leans against the wall with a clenched jaw, grinding his molars. His overblot haze is gone, but the image of Yuuâburned into his memoryâwonât leave.
âTch... They were a nobody. Just some magicless brat...â
But heâs not saying it to anyone else. Heâs trying to convince himself. Because deep down, he knows thatâs not true. Yuu stood their ground. Faced him when even Savanaclaw students ran. And they died because of him.
The next day, Leona doesnât come out of his room.
The week after that, heâs quieter. Less sharp-tongued. Still dangerous, still smugâbut thereâs a heaviness in his voice now.
He doesnât go to the memorial. But he sends a small wrapped parcel to Ramshackle with Ruggie.
Inside: a faded Savanaclaw armband and a simple note.
They had guts. âL
Ruggie wasnât close to Yuu, but they helped him once.
Shared a snack. Laughed at his dumb jokes. Treated him like a person, not Leonaâs errand boy.
So when he sees their body, something shifts.
ââŚTheyâre really gone?â
He doesnât cry. Heâs too used to loss for that. But his stomach churns as he watches Grim howl and Ace get dragged away from Leona.
Ruggie knew this was gonna happen eventually. He just didnât think itâd be Yuu.
He feels the tension in the dorm, hears the whispers from other students, and suddenly everything feels too loud.
That night, he lights a candle in the Savanaclaw lounge. Itâs small, cheap, something from the Night Market.
He stares at the flame and murmurs, âRest easy, alright? Sorry we never got to hang out moreâŚâ
Then he turns and gets back to work, because someone has to clean up the mess.
But he steals food from the cafeteria a little more often now.
For Grim.
He canât even scream this time.
He runs to their body, but the waterâs still seeping away. He tries to drag them out. Shouts for help.
He sobs into their clothes, claws clenched around fabric, whispering over and over, âNo no noâcome on, come onâdonât do this, pleaseââ
He tries breathing fire, again and again, like maybe the warmth will bring them back.
Azulâs contracts burn around them. Grim doesnât care. He curls around their chest and doesnât move for hours.
Ace laughs.
Itâs a broken sound, too sharp to be real.
âNo way. No way theyâreâ They canât beâ This is stupid. They survived Leona. They survived Riddle. Theyâre Yuu.â
He looks at Azul like he wants to kill him, but then just⌠stops. He walks over to Yuuâs body and sits down beside them, knees to his chest, silent.
Hours later, he mutters to no one, âI didnât even get to say sorry⌠I called them annoying this morningâŚâ
Deuce falls to his knees.
He shakes Azul by the collar, shouting âWHAT DID YOU DO?!â before Jack pulls him back.
Then he kneels by Yuu and clutches their hand like itâs an anchor. He doesnât move for a long time, even when everyone else starts to leave.
He wears their Ramshackle pin on his blazer after that. Cleans it every morning.
When he does tests, exams, in a track race, he whispers under his breath, âWatch me. Iâll make you proud.â
Jack stands frozen in place.
His tail bristles. His claws dig into his palms. But he doesnât lash out. He doesnât cry.
He walks over and picks up the tattered scarf Yuu always wore, brushes the ink off it gently.
âThey were a good one,â he says quietly.
He trains harder after that. Says less. But anyone who enters the Savannaclaw training field will find a small stone marker in the far corner.
âTo the one who stood tall without claws.â
Ruggie curses.
âDamn it. Damn it all.â
He kicks one of the broken tables. Then another. And then he stopsâbecause he sees Grim, curled and shaking, and his chest aches.
He drops to a squat beside him, puts a hand on Grimâs back.
âThey were⌠They were somethinâ else, huh?â
He steals food from the Lounge that night. Loads of it. Drops it off at Ramshackle with no note.
He doesnât say it out loud, but he swears to himself: No one else from their circle dies on his watch.
Leonaâs the first to arrive after the overblot ends.
He sees the ink, the body, the shattered remains of the contractsâand doesnât speak. Not at first.
ââŚYou actually went and got them killed, huh?â he mutters to Azul.
Leona walks over to Yuu and crouches low. His tail flicks.
âShouldâve told you not to play hero again. Shouldâve made you stay out of this.â
He leaves a desert lily by their side and walks away before anyone sees his hands shaking.
Azul is catatonic.
He collapses when the overblot fades. The moment he sees what heâs doneâwho heâs killedâhis voice dies in his throat.
âNo⌠No, no, no⌠I didnât meanâŚâ
He vomits ink.
He sobs behind his hands.
He screams at the sea for days afterward.
He locks himself in his office and doesn't come out. Not for weeks. He canât even look at his own reflection.
Eventually, he stops using contracts.
He burns every single one.
Jade is⌠quiet.
Too quiet.
He kneels beside the body and closes their eyes. Straightens their sleeves. Brushes the ink from their lashes.
Then he looks at Azulâtorn, sobbingâand doesnât speak.
He doesnât smile after that. Not in the Lounge. Not in class.
When asked, he only says: âThey were⌠sincere. And brave. It's a shame. A true shame.â
He visits Ramshackle every now and then, leaving wild mushrooms at the doorstep.
Floyd doesnât take it well.
First, he laughs.
âEh? Seriously? Shrimpyâs dead? Just like that?â
Then his smile vanishes. Completely.
â...No fun.â
He walks into the Loungeâs VIP room and trashes it. Rips through furniture. Breaks the glass. Shatters the chandelier.
No one stops him.
After that, he wonât talk about it. If someone mentions Yuu, he gets quiet.
He goes out swimming in the ocean for hours. Sometimes all night.
When he comes back, heâs always more tired.
Crowley stands at the edge of the scene, looking like a ghost.
This is the third time now. Third overblot. Third time Yuu has nearly died. Except this timeâŚ
He pulls his hat down, voice tight. âI failed them. Again.â
He doesnât perform this time. No grand speeches. Just silence and shame.
He drafts a dozen letters to Yuuâs familyâthen throws them all out. What could he say? "Your child died in another world under my care?"
He declares a school-wide mourning period and cancels all contracts indefinitely.
But itâs not enough. Nothing is.
They were too close. Always too close.
In trying to protect Kalim, in trying to talk Jamil down, they stepped into rangeâand one of the snake-like braids struck. Fast. Precise. Poisonous.
No one noticed the bite at first. Not even Yuu.
But as the overblot fades, and the sand settles, they collapseâpale, lips turning blue, their breathing labored untilâŚ
It stops.
And the music dies with them.
Heâs the first to notice somethingâs wrong.
He shakes Yuuâs arm, pats their cheek. âOi, this isnât funnyâcome on, weâve gotta scold Jamil, right?â
But their chest doesnât rise.
Grim screams. His voice cracks.
âYUU?!â
He doesnât leave their side for the rest of the night, paws clutching their arm, growling at anyone who tries to move them.
When Ace and Deuce return, he nearly attacks them just to stop them from seeing.
He sees the bite. He knows exactly what it means.
He knows.
He drops to his knees.
â...No⌠no no noâŚâ
His voice shakes. His hands tremble. His overblot form may have faded, but its consequences linger like venom in his blood.
He killed them.
No tricks. No schemes. No brainwashing. Just murder.
He doesnât run. He doesnât speak. He just sits in the sand, staring at his hands, unable to move.
Heâs silent for hours.
When they drag him away, he doesnât resist.
He doesnât understand at first.
âYuu? What are they doing? Theyâre just sleeping, right? Right, Jamil?!"
But Jamil wonât meet his eyes.
And when Grim doesnât answerâwhen Grim starts sobbingâKalimâs smile falls. Shatters.
âNo⌠no, no, this isnâtâŚâ
He grabs Yuuâs hand and holds it like he can warm it back to life.
âPleaseâwake upâwe havenât even gone swimming yet! You promised!â
He cries hard. For hours. He tries to take the blame, keeps saying:
âIt shouldâve been me. I was the one he hatedâŚâ
When Azul sees the body, he goes eerily quiet.
He slams the lounge door shut, tells Jade and Floyd to cancel operations for a week. When they ask why, he just mutters:
âYuuâs dead. Jamilâs overblot.â
That night, Azul goes down to the sea and throws in a silver penâa token Yuu once gave him when he helped them with a contract.
He doesnât talk about it afterward.
But he never lets a client leave with a dangerous deal again.
Jade lowers his when he sees the body.
ââŚHow unfortunate.â
Heâs quiet for a long while. He plants a rare desert flower in a terrariumâa tribute. Waters it every morning.
When questioned, he only says, âThey were brave. It is a shame bravery rarely guarantees survival.â
But his smiles are smaller now. More thoughtful. Especially around Jamil.
He gets quiet.
Too quiet.
He doesnât laugh. Doesnât grin. Just tosses a beach ball into the ocean and watches it float away.
When asked, he mutters, âShrimpy was sâposed to come back. I was gonna show âem how to really swimâŚâ
And then, with no warning, he grabs Jamil by the collar and slams him into a wall.
âYou bit them, didnât you?â
He doesnât hit him. Just glares, then shoves him down and walks away.
He doesnât show up to class for three days after that.
He returns in high spirits, sunburned and hummingâuntil he sees the schoolâs flag at half-mast.
âWhat happenedâ?â
Grim hits him with a fireball before he can finish his sentence.
When Crowley sees Yuuâs name etched into the memorial stone, he drops to his knees.
He doesnât even try to justify himself.
He just whispers, âI left. Again. And they paid for itâŚâ
And for once, Crowley vanishes from public view.
Not even the staff can find him for days.
He bursts through the gate, duffel in hand, bragging to Deuceâuntil Grim tackles him, claws shaking.
âTheyâre gone,â Grim wheezes, âTheyâre gone, Ace!â
Ace laughs. âHuh? Quit messinâ with meâwhat do youââ
Then he sees Deuceâs face pale. And the memorial stone. And the empty Ramshackle doorway.
ââŚNo. No, noâthis is a joke, right?!â
He punches the wall until his knuckles bleed.
He drops his bag the moment Grim tells them.
âNo way⌠Noâthey were fine. They were fine when we leftââ
He clutches his stomach and falls to his knees. âWhy werenât we here? Why didnât we come back sooner?!â
He visits the grave every morning for a week. Leaves flowers. Doesnât say much in class.
His grades improve. His magic sharpens.
He swears it wonât happen again.
He stares at the nameplate on the stone.
ââŚThey died protecting someone else?â
He places a red rose beneath the inscription.
âThey never followed the rules⌠and still had the nerve to leave before I could thank them.â
His voice is brittle.
After that, he disciplines his dorm a little less harshly.
He gives Grim his leftover tarts in silence.
He sighs deeply, brows furrowed.
ââŚI shouldâve known something like this would happen.â
He helps Cater plan a quiet tribute in Heartslabyul. A tea party with Yuuâs favorite sweets. No rules. No scolding.
Just stories.
Trey keeps their seat open.
He cries in the hallway.
No selfies. No filters. No pretending.
Just raw, ugly crying.
âWhy didnât I get more pictures with themâŚ?â
He organizes a social feed in their memory. Posts their art. Their dumb selfies. Their best moments.
It goes viral within NRC. Students from all dorms comment:
âThey helped me.â âThey stood up for me.â âI miss themâŚâ
ââŚDamn snake.â
He growls low, tail twitching.
He doesnât yell. Doesnât threaten. Just walks out of the dorm and stares at the cliffs until sunset.
He was starting to respect them.
Now he never gets the chance.
Heâs pissed.
At Crowley. At Jamil. At himself.
He sneaks into the infirmary late at night and punches the wall onceâjust once.
Then he wipes his eyes and leaves, like nothing happened.
But he leaves offerings at the stone every week. Small things.
Bread. Buttons. A lucky toothpick.
He stands before the memorial with flowers in hand and says nothing.
Not a word.
But he starts training harder.
When he duels, he whispers: âHope youâre watching.â
VIL'S OVERBLOT
The air is thick with smoke and glamour. Vil's overblot form collapses, and the world finally breathes.
Everyone thinks it's over.
Until Yuu sways.
Until their lips tremble with blue.
Until they fall with no warning.
Grim reaches them first, and then all hell breaks loose.
Heâs laughing at first. âWe did it, right?! Right, Henchâ?â
He sees the foam on their lips.
âNo.â
He shakes them. âNoâNO! Donât you dare pull this crapâwake up! You said we were gonna get celebratory tuna!â
He shrieks when they stop breathing. He claws at his own face, trembling so hard he can barely speak.
When someone touches him, he bites them.
âDONâTâtouch themâdonât take them away!!â
He rushes to Yuuâs side, shouting their name. Shaking them like thatâll undo it.
He looks to Deuce. Then to Grim. Then to Vil.
âWHO DID THIS?!â
Heâs cryingâactually cryingâand itâs not cute. Itâs ugly. Angry. Messy.
âI shouldâve noticedâI shouldâveâwhy didnât Iâ?!â
He tries to do CPR. Tries to cast a healing spell. Anything.
None of it works.
He goes quiet. Stone-faced.
He tries to carry Yuuâs body like theyâre still breathing, like maybe warmth and motion will bring them back.
His voice is hoarse: âIâll take them to the infirmary. I can fix this. I can fix this.â
He doesn't stop walking until someone physically pulls him back.
When he finally lets go, he drops to his knees and sobs into his hands.
When he sees the foaming poison, the slow purple hue crawling over Yuuâs veinsâŚ
He knows.
ââŚVil used poison,â he mutters, numb. âAnd they were too close.â
He staggers back, staring at his hands like heâs watching it happen all over again.
âNot again,â he whispers. âNot again.â
He turns and walks away. Doesnât look back.
This time, he cries alone.
âYuuâŚ?â
He kneels beside them. Touches their cheek.
âYuu? Come on, wake upâitâs over, we won! You said youâd teach me how to bake that cake, remember?â
He keeps babbling. Keeps smiling. Even as tears start to fall.
Even when they donât wake up.
ââŚThey were always smiling,â he whispers. âEven when things were scaryâŚâ
He starts shaking.
He was right beside them. Right beside them.
And he didnât notice.
âThey were fineâthey were still standingâthey were smilingââ
He screams into his hands. Then punches the ground until his knuckles bleed.
Vil tries to stop him.
Epel shouts, âDONâT!â
And turns away, teeth bared in grief.
The first thing he says is quiet. Reverent.
ââŚThey died beautifully.â
Everyone stares.
Then he kneels down and closes Yuuâs eyes gently.
âThey were a soul full of light. To burn out in such a theatrical, bittersweet way⌠itâs almost poetic.â
His voice breaks.
He looks at Vil.
âMon Roi. What have you done?â
He knew.
He knew what was in the poison. How fast it worked. How potent it was.
And stillâstillâhe let it happen.
When Yuu collapses, his voice fails. He runs to them, brushes their hair back.
He presses his forehead to theirs.
ââŚYou idiot,â he chokes. âWhy didnât you move? You should have stayed behind the curtain!â
He doesnât say much after that.
But he cancels his return to the stage.
Forever.
He returns to a somber, shattered NRC.
When he hears what happened, he doesnât speak.
Doesnât excuse himself.
He walks into Ramshackle dorm, sits in the dark, and whispers:
âI keep failing you.â
He shuts the dorm down for a week.
He leaves a golden brooch on Yuuâs old pillow.
Trey makes a cake and leaves it at Ramshackle. Says nothing.
Cater posts one last selfie with Yuu and doesnât log into Magicam again for a month.
Riddle reprimands Vil for daysâthen visits the grave in silence.
Leona grits his teeth, then throws a spell book across his room. Doesnât talk about it.
Ruggie mutters, âFigures someone like him would mess it up,â then wipes his eyes.
Jack makes a point to place wildflowers near their grave every few days.
Jade whispers, âThey died protecting others. Admirable⌠but costly.â
Floyd just says, âShrimpyâs really gone, huhâŚâ and doesnât smile for a week.
Azul throws himself into managing the lounge, late at night he stares at a framed picture of him and Yuu and cries.
Hornton
Heâs fixing the stage with his magic. Alone. Quiet. Restoring the ruins left behind after Vilâs rampage.
Then he sees itâYuuâs name on the memorial plaque. A candle burning low.
He stares.
His magic falters.
ââŚNo.â
His voice shakes.
â...No.â
He vanishes from the stage.
Later, students find the ruins of a blasted tree behind Ramshackle.
And Malleus is there. Silent. Still. Staring at Yuuâs favorite benchâthe one they sat on during night talks.
He places a glowing crystal beside it. It hums softly. Mourning.
âNo one else sat with me in the dark,â he whispers. âNo one else called me âHornton.ââ
He's inconsolable.
Screaming. Thrashing. Clinging to Yuu's unmoving form. There's soot on his fur and tear tracks down his face.
âThey were justâthey were just joking about food! We were gonna go home, we wereâthey PROMISED!!â
He tries to breathe fire in grief, but it sputters out into smoke. He curls into their chest and wonât let go.
âNo.â
He walks up. Stares. Backs away.
âNo. Noâno, this isnâtâthatâs not funny, Yuu. Get up.â
He turns to Deuce. His voice is cracking.
âTheyâre gonna sit up. Theyâre just messing with us, right?â
But no one laughs.
He kneels down and covers his face with both hands.
His entire body locks up.
âI shouldâveâgone in with them. I shouldâveâŚâ
His fists clench so tightly they bleed.
He kneels beside Grim and takes one of Yuuâs hands in his. Quiet.
âThank you⌠for everything.â
He has no words. Only a silent, thunderous grief.
He lowers his head respectfully. Closes Yuuâs eyes with trembling fingers.
He doesn't cry. But his voice is hoarse for days.
Later, he trains until he collapses. Trying to make sure no one else dies again.
ââŚSh*t.â
Thatâs all he says at first. He turns away.
Wipes his eyes before anyone sees.
But he leaves a meat pie at their grave later. Wrapped in a checkered cloth. No note. No message.
Just something Yuu said they always wanted to try.
He scowls. Says they were reckless. That it was bound to happen.
But the minute no oneâs watching, he storms off into the desert garden and roars so loud it shakes the windows.
When he comes back, heâs dragging an ancient herb said to revive the dead.
It doesnât work.
He finds Grim later in Ramshackle.
And quietly makes enough food for two, even though only Grim eats.
No one sees him cry.
But he starts baking a certain kind of cake more oftenâone that only Yuu ever asked for.
He doesnât post anything on Magicam for three months.
He tries to smile. He jokes. But his heartâs not in it.
He visits Ramshackle every week and leaves flowersâsunflowers, yellow and bright.
âYou always made things feel warm, yâknow?â he whispers.
He keeps it together at first.
But when heâs alone? He breaks.
He slams his fists into the desk. Screams into the void.
âThey didnât have magic! They shouldnât haveâshouldnât have had to go alone!â
He writes a law in Yuuâs honor: âNo student shall face a magical threat without backup.â
Azulâs hands shake when he sees Yuuâs body.
âThey gave me a second chance,â he whispers.
âAnd I couldnât evenâŚâ
He shuts down the Lounge for a week.
He orders every contract reviewed. Removes every dangerous clause Yuu once called out.
He leaves an ornate seashell at their grave. Etched with: âFor the one who believed in me.â
ââŚA tragedy.â
His tone is calm. But his eyes are not.
He takes off his gloves and places them over Yuuâs hands, folding them gently.
âI suppose I must find a new mushroom for mourning,â he murmurs.
He visits often. Leaves nothing but silence and prayers.
At first? Nothing.
Just blank staring.
Then: âShrimpyâs really gone, huh?â
He doesnât cry.
But he drags Idia by the collar and nearly kills him.
âYou owe them. FIX IT.â
It takes four people to pull him off.
He doesn't smile after that. Not for a long time.
At first, he thinks itâs a glitch.
Then he sees themâunmoving, burned at the edges, body limp in Grimâs arms.
He doesnât scream.
He just stares. A long time. And says:
ââŚI killed them.â
He doesn't resist when Floyd attacks. He wants to be punished.
Later, he shuts himself inside the lab. Ignores Ortho. Refuses food.
All he says, over and over, is:
âI didnât want this. I didnât want this. I didnât want this.â
âNo. No, no, noâplease wake up! I can scan youâI can rebuild you, I canââ
His voice distorts.
âPLEASE DONâT LEAVE NII-SAN BEHIND!!â
When Yuu doesnât stir, Orthoâs eyes dim.
He flies off.
And no one sees him for three days.
He was there. Watching from the surface. Powerless to go down with them.
When Yuu doesnât return, he collapses to his knees.
He says nothing.
But every night after, the gate to the Underworld glows dimly. Lit by a single enchanted candle.
Burning for the student who dared cross the River Styx.
He holds your hand as you fade, clawing at the thorns like they'll move.
âDonât go. Youâyou always saved everyone!! I was supposed to protect youâ!!â
Heâs wailing.
When itâs over, he curls into your chest and doesnât speak for two days.
Heâs the first to scream.
âWHATâS THE POINT OF WAKING UP IF THEYâRE DEAD!?â
He runs at the thorns. Punches them until his fists bleed. Until Deuce pulls him back.
He curses Malleus. Then curses himself.
Then, eventually, just sits on the floor. Staring.
He kneels beside your body.
His voice cracks as he says:
âI became a better person because of youâŚâ
Then, in a whisper:
ââŚI donât know how to be good without you.â
âNo⌠not them⌠anyone but themâŚâ
He sobs. No filters. No jokes. No posing.
His Magicam goes dark again. He locks himself in his room and cries into their old photos.
He canât breathe when he sees you.
He covers his face. Kneels.
âI shouldâve done more. Been there. Helped youâsomething.â
He leaves a tiny tart beside your grave, baked with your favorite flavor.
His voice is a whisper. Unsteady.
âThey were the only one who understood me... even after everything I did...â
He places a roseâred and thornlessâon your chest.
And kneels, head bowed.
He stares down at you. Quiet.
âI told you not to play hero,â he murmurs.
He sounds tired. Angry. Hollow.
But he watches over your grave when no one else will.
Silent. Guarding. For hours at a time.
"...Tch."
He turns his back. Walks away.
But hours later, someone finds a crumpled note by your bed.
"Thanks for feeding me."
He stands still for a long time.
Then salutes you with quiet reverence.
âYou had more heart than anyone Iâve ever met.â
He trains harder than ever after that. To live by your example.
He drops to his knees.
âThis wasnât part of the dealâŚâ
His voice breaks.
âI would've traded everything. Justâjust to keep them safeâŚâ
He cancels all contracts for a week. Shuts down the Lounge. Cries behind locked doors.
He gently closes your eyes.
And, for once, doesnât smile.
âEven rare orchids wither in the frost,â he says.
And places a white lily beside you.
ââŚShrimpyâŚâ
He pokes your cheek.
No response.
Then he howls. He tears up a hallway. Slams a wall with a fist that cracks stone.
He doesnât laugh again for a month.
âNo no noâyou were supposed to live!! You saved me!! Why didnât I save you!?â
He sobs into Jamilâs shoulder.
He lights candles in your memory every night.
He closes his eyes.
He doesn't speak. Just mutters a single word:
âUnfair.â
But later, he visits your resting place, presses a charm into the soil.
âI owed you more than I gave.â
He holds you like glass. Like something sacred.
âYour final act was... selfless. Poetic. Tragic.â
He speaks at your memorial.
And always leaves a pristine white rose.
His shoulders shake.
He refuses to speak at the ceremony. But he carves a tiny wooden charm for you.
He carries it in his pocket. Always.
Tears fall freely.
âAh, mon trĂŠsor⌠such beauty, such sacrificeâŚâ
He writes a ballad in your honor. He performs it in the forest, alone.
He stares at you with wide eyes. Whispering to himself.
âNo. No. Not again. Not another one. Not like Orthoâ!â
He curls into himself.
And when he reboots Ortho later, he hugs him like heâll disappear too.
He powers down for a full day.
And when he reactivates, he asks:
âWhy didnât I detect the danger? Why couldnât I save them?â
He makes a digital backup of your voice. It plays when heâs alone.
He lowers his head and whispers in old fae tongue.
âThey were brave.â
He sings an ancient lullaby only fae children know.
And your grave is tended by wild roses from then on.
He brushes your hair back.
âI thought weâd all wake upâŚâ
He places a dream charm on your chest.
âSo youâd never be afraid. Not even now.â
He yells.
First at Malleus. Then at the world. Then at himself.
âThey protected you, my lord! And now theyâre GONE!â
His voice breaks.
He kneels beside your grave.
âThey were⌠a knight.â
When he sees you fall, his world ends.
The thorns fade. The dreams collapse.
You lay still in his arms.
His voice is a whisper. A plead.
âNo. No no no. This isn't what I wantedâŚâ
He doesnât overblot again.
He just⌠disappears.
Some say he wandered into the thorns. Others say he turned into mist.
But on quiet nights, a low voice murmurs:
âI wanted eternity with you.â
For once⌠he takes responsibility.
He wears all black.
He lays a feathered mask at your grave.
And whispers:
âYou were the one good thing I never deserved.â
Step 1: Befriend the Demon King.
Step 2: Fall in love.
Step 3: Quit your hero job.
The first thing you learned upon being chosen as the hero was that the gods were, in fact, morons.
This revelation came to you as you stood in their grand celestial court, bathed in holy light, staring at the pantheon of divine beings who had just bestowed upon you a sword that actively whispered threats into your ear.
"Go forth, O Chosen One," boomed the god of war, his six eyes burning with sacred fire. "You must slay the Demon King who lurks in his cursed lair atop the Black Hills!"
You shifted your weight and cleared your throat. "Okay, so... question. Just a tiny one. What, exactly, has the Demon King done?"
The gods exchanged glances.
"He is evil," the goddess of fate offered.
"Uh-huh. Examples?"
"He... exists," the god of light said, waving a golden hand vaguely.
There was an awkward silence. You rubbed your temples. "Right. But, like, has he pillaged villages? Enslaved kingdoms? Kicked a puppy?"
"He has refused to die despite our many attempts to kill him," the god of judgment said gravely.
You squinted. "So you're mad that heâs alive."
"YES," they all said in unison.
Fantastic. You had been chosen to carry out a divine grudge match.
Still, you werenât in any position to argue. The gods had given you a bunch of ridiculously overpowered artifacts, including a holy sword, an indestructible shield, and a cloak that supposedly made you invisible but mostly just made you look like a very blurry ghost. They also kind of expected you to die like all the previous heroes, but that was a problem for later.
So here you were, standing at the edge of the Black Hills, staring up at the Demon Kingâs lairâa suspiciously well-maintained castle that looked less like a fortress of darkness and more like the summer home of someone who enjoyed gardening.
This whole thing reeked of bureaucracy.
With a deep sigh, you tightened your grip on your murderously sentient sword and marched forward, fully prepared to commit deicide if this entire mission turned out to be as dumb as you suspected.
You had braced yourself for a dark, ominous fortress filled with twisted creatures, rivers of lava, and at least one chandelier made of bones. Instead, you walked into what could only be described as a cozy study.
The room was warm, lit by a fireplace that crackled gently in the corner. Tall bookshelves lined the walls, filled with neatly arranged tomes, some of which looked suspiciously like romance novels. A tea set rested on the table, next to an open book. And sitting in an armchair, casually flipping through the pages, was a man.
A very tall, very elegant man with sharp green eyes and black horns curling from his head.
He blinked at you, clearly just as surprised as you were. "Oh," he said. "Hello."
You stared at him. "Uh. Hi?"
There was a long pause. He looked at your very dramatic hero attire, then at the glimmering, divinely blessed sword in your hand, then back at you. "I assume youâre here for a reason?"
You shifted uncomfortably. "Yeah, so, the gods sent me to kill the Demon King, but like⌠lowkey? I donât know what he looks like."
The man nodded, as if this was a completely reasonable statement. "I see." He gestured to the chair across from him. "Would you like some tea?"
You squinted at him. "I feel like youâre not taking this whole âassassination attemptâ thing very seriously."
"Should I?" he asked, pouring tea into a cup with unnerving grace. "You don't seem particularly invested in it yourself."
You couldn't exactly argue with that, so you sat down, placing your god-blessed weapon awkwardly on your lap. The man slid a cup toward you. The tea smelled⌠nice. Suspiciously nice. You sniffed it. "This isnât, like, drugged or cursed, is it?"
He looked amused. "Only if you consider chamomile a powerful sedative."
You took a cautious sip. It was delicious.
"So," he said, leaning his chin on his hand. "Tell me about the outside world. Itâs been a while since I last left these hills."
You shrugged. "Nothing much. The gods are idiots, as usual."
His lips curled in interest. "Oh?"
You leaned forward conspiratorially. "Okay, so get this. When they summoned me, they gave me this holy sword, right?" You tapped the weapon resting on your lap. "Only problem? It wonât shut up. The gods literally forgot to turn off its voice function, so now it just screams battle cries at all hours of the day. I had to wrap it in three layers of cloth just to get some sleep."
He let out a chuckle, eyes gleaming. "That is⌠incredible."
"Right? And thatâs not even the worst part. The god of wisdomâactual title, by the wayâaccidentally set fire to their own temple last year because they miscalculated a lightning spell. They blamed it on âmystical forcesâ but everyone knows they just got their math wrong."
The manâwho, now that you were really looking at him, was ridiculously attractive in a dark-and-mysterious wayâlaughed. It was a rich, deep sound, the kind of laugh that made you feel like youâd just told the best joke in the world.
You grinned, feeling oddly comfortable. "Oh, and donât even get me started on the god of fate. She got into a brawl with the god of harvest because she made a prophecy that all the wheat fields would burn down, and then the god of harvest was like, âYou know thatâs literally my job, right?â and cursed her with hay fever. Now she sneezes every time she tries to predict the future."
Your new tea-drinking companion actually had to cover his mouth to stifle his laughter.
You took another sip of tea, feeling very proud of yourself. "Anyway," you said, stretching your arms. "By the way, have you seen the Demon King? Because, like, technically, Iâm still supposed to be doing that job."
The man calmly pointed to himself.
You stared at him.
He stared back.
You blinked. "I'm sorry. What."
"Malleus Draconia," he said, setting his teacup down with the kind of elegance that made you feel like an unwashed peasant. "And you are?"
You were still reeling from the realization that you had spent the last half hour drinking tea with the exact person you were supposed to kill, so it took you a second to answer. You introduce yourself. "Hero chosen by the gods. Here to, you knowâŚ" You made a vague stabbing motion.
Malleus nodded, completely unfazed. "Ah. Yes. That would explain the weaponry." He glanced at your holy sword, which had mercifully remained silent for the past few minutes. "Though, I must say, you donât seem particularly enthusiastic about your mission."
You sighed and set your cup down. "Yeah, well. I donât really get why the gods have it out for you. I mean, do you actually do evil stuff? Are you stealing souls? Raising the dead? Kicking puppies?"
Malleus tilted his head, considering. "No, no, andâwell, I suppose there was one incident with a puppy, but in my defense, I was trying to return it to its owner, and it misunderstood my intentions."
"Thatâs a really vague way to say 'I accidentally terrified it.'"
He sipped his tea, saying nothing.
You squinted at him. "So youâre telling me the gods declared a holy crusade against you for⌠what? Vibes?"
Malleus shrugged. "I assume so. They donât seem to like my existence very much."
"Wow. Must be nice not giving a shit."
"It is quite freeing," he agreed. "Would you like a tour?"
You blinked. "A tour? Of your evil lair?"
"My home," he corrected, as if you were the unreasonable one. "I assume you have never seen it before."
"You assume correctly." You rubbed your chin. "Eh. What the hell. Show me around, mighty Demon King."
And so, instead of assassinating him, you spent the next hour wandering through the halls of his "evil lair" (read: very fancy castle), learning about his book collection, admiring the admittedly cool-looking stained-glass windows, and getting distracted by a particularly fluffy cat lounging on one of the rugs.
Somewhere along the way, you had fallen into easy conversation, sharing more absurd stories about the godsâ incompetence while Malleus listened with increasing amusement. You barely even noticed how natural it felt, how quickly you forgot the whole "mortal enemies" thing.
It wasnât until you were about to leave that you remembered why you had come in the first place.
"Ah, right," you said, gripping the hilt of your holy sword. "The whole⌠uh, slaying thing."
Malleus lifted an eyebrow.
You exhaled and held the sword out to him. "Here. Take this."
He looked at you, then at the sword, then back at you. "You are giving me your divine weapon?"
"Look, man, I donât know if you can tell, but I am very bad at this job."
Malleus took the sword, examining it with mild curiosity. The moment his fingers curled around the hilt, the weapon, which had remained blissfully quiet all day, suddenly came to life.
"FOUL BEAST! UNHAND ME AT ONCEâ"
Malleus flicked his wrist, and the sword immediately went silent.
You gaped at him. "You can do that?!"
He hummed. "It appears so."
You put your hands on your hips. "You know what? Yeah. You can keep it. I donât want it anymore."
Malleus smiled. "How generous of you."
You waved him off and turned toward the exit. "Anyway, this has been fun and all, but I should probably get going before the gods smite me for treason. Iâll, uh⌠Iâll get the job done next time."
Malleus watched you with that same unreadable expression, something like quiet amusement playing at the edges of his lips. "Of course. Next time."
You nodded, totally believing yourself, and left.
The gods were getting suspicious.
You could tell by the way they kept summoning you more frequently, their celestial faces lined with divine skepticism, their glowing, omnipotent eyes narrowing just a little more each time you gave your mission report.
So you did what any responsible, chosen-by-the-heavens hero would do: you doubled down on the lies.
âIâm gathering intel on the enemy.â
A few gods murmured in approval, nodding at your strategic foresight.
(The truth? You had spent the last four days sprawled across an absolutely sinful couch in Malleusâs absurdly cozy castle, debating whether a dragon could, theoretically, play the lute. Malleus had very strong opinions about claw dexterity and string tension. You were just trying to figure out how to smuggle the couch home.)
âI need to study his weaknesses.â
More nods. One god even stroked their beard, looking impressed.
(The reality? You were currently studying how many cookies you could consume before he started looking mildly concerned for your well-being. The number was high. Concerningly high. You were probably committing a sin against your own digestive system, but that was Future Youâs problem.)
âHeâs probably planning something evil, so I need to keep an eye on him.â
Now the gods were practically glowing with approval. One clapped you on the back, nearly knocking you off your feet.
(Meanwhile, in the demon kingâs lair, Malleus was sitting in his massive library, sipping tea like a distinguished nobleman who had never even considered jaywalking, much less world domination. At one point, he sighed dramatically and looked out the window, the very picture of a wistful poet pondering the meaning of life. You had watched him do this for ten whole minutes, waiting for a sign of villainy. Nothing. The man was the least demonic demon king you had ever seen.)
The gods, thoroughly convinced that you were hard at work, dismissed you with a vague warning to âstay vigilantâ and ânot fall for any demonic tricks.â
You barely made it back to the castle before collapsing onto your new favorite couch with a groan. âThey think Iâm doing such a good job,â you mumbled, stuffing another cookie into your mouth. âI could probably ask for a raise.â
Malleus looked up from his book, amusement dancing in his emerald eyes. âA raise? What exactly would they be paying you for?â
âFor my noble heroism,â you said around a mouthful of cookie. âMy unwavering dedication. My strategic mind. Myââ You gestured vaguely. ââefforts.â
Malleus hummed, setting his book aside. âAh, yes. Your valiant efforts. Lounging on my furniture. Eating my desserts. Entertaining me with tales of divine incompetence.â
You wagged a finger at him. âYou say that like it isnât an important job.â
He smirked. âOh, I quite enjoy your company. But I do wonder how long you plan to keep up this charade.â
âAs long as I can,â you said without hesitation, grabbing another cookie. âAt this point, I think I deserve an award for Best Hero in the Field of Procrastination.â
Malleus chuckled, resting his chin on his hand as he watched you with what was definitely, absolutely, 100% not fondness. Probably. âIndeed.â
Getting Malleus out of his lair was easier than expected. Getting him to wear the disguise, however, was a battle of wills.
âIt is absurd,â he said flatly, staring at the comically large hat in your hands.
âAbsurdly effective,â you countered.
âIt looks like it belongs to aââ
âFashion icon?â
âA cursed scarecrow,â he finished, unimpressed.
âOkay, rude. But listen, if you walk into town looking like thatââ you gestured vaguely at his horns, ââpeople will either think you're about to declare war or host a very dramatic poetry reading. The hat helps.â
Malleus gave you a long, contemplative look, then, to your eternal delight, sighed and took the hat. It sat atop his head with the solemn dignity of a royal crown, though the sheer size of it made him look like he was about to start selling potions out of a roadside wagon.
âVery well,â he declared. âLet us proceed.â
Thus began the grand adventure of sneaking the Demon King into town.
Turns out, no one even noticed.
Which, to be fair, was kind of expected. This was a town where a man once tried to pay his taxes in live chickens and where the local bard wore sunglasses at night âbecause it added to his mystique.â Some guy in a huge hat? Not even in the top ten weirdest things people had seen this week.
Still, you felt an odd sense of pride as you dragged Malleus through the bustling streets. The Demon King, who had spent untold centuries isolated in his ominous gothic estate, was now watching a juggler toss flaming batons while a street vendor tried to sell you âcursed amuletsâ that were clearly just painted rocks.
He was fascinated.
His first stop was the bakery, where he became personally and spiritually invested in the concept of croissants.
âThese are quite remarkable,â he murmured, carefully inspecting the flaky layers. âIt is as if the very essence of light and air has been woven into dough.â
âYouâre making it sound way fancier than it is,â you snorted. âItâs just bread.â
âA divine bread,â he corrected.
âYouâre literally a demon.â
âI can still appreciate divinity when I taste it.â
Next, you took him to the bookstore, where he spent an unreasonable amount of time debating which tomes to purchase. At one point, you caught him flipping through something called One Hundred and One Curses to Ensure Your Enemies Remember You Fondly, which felt both deeply specific and incredibly on-brand.
While he was distracted by a book of poetry so dramatic it might as well have been personally written for him, you slipped away for a moment. A nearby flower stall caught your eye, and on impulse, you picked up a delicate bloom, its color strikingly similar to Malleusâs eyes.
You returned just as he was still deep in thought over which book to buy. Without a second thought, you reached up and tucked the flower behind his ear.
Malleus froze.
His expression didnât change immediatelyâhe just stared at you, his usual unreadable gaze flickering with something⌠complicated. His fingers hesitantly brushed against the petals, and for a moment, he looked genuinely baffled, as if no one had ever done something like this before.
You grinned at him. âLooks good on you, Your Evilness.â
Malleus exhaled a short, amused huff. âI must admit, I do not often receive accessories from my sworn enemies.â
âSounds like a you problem,â you said, already dragging him towards the next store. âNow come on, I still need to introduce you to the single greatest achievement of human civilization.â
He tilted his head, intrigue sparking in his expression. âOh?â
âFried food.â
For the first time in centuries, the Demon King of Darkness, Terror of the Gods, Eternal Wielder of Unholy Power⌠was genuinely excited.
You were not bringing Malleus more books because you liked him. Obviously. That would be ridiculous. You were simply executing a strategic maneuverâan information-gathering mission, if you will. The more books he had, the more he would talk, and the more he talked, the more you learned.
This was all very professional. A tactical decision. Absolutely nothing to do with the way his eyes lit up whenever you brought him something new or the fact that you may or may not have started associating his lair with peace instead of doom.
So, with arms full of books that were definitely not handpicked to match his interests (including one on celestial phenomena, which was coincidental and not an attempt to make him happy), you strolled into his lair like you owned the place.
And that was when you met him.
Lilia Vanrouge.
You knew the name. Youâd heard it whispered in the temples, spoken with the kind of reverence usually reserved for plagues and natural disasters. The Scourge of the Battlefield. The War Demon. The Dark General Who Consumed Kingdoms Whole.
You had also heard it from Malleus, who described him as eccentric, mischievous, and one of the few people he respected.
And the moment you laid eyes on him, you realized once again that the gods were complete and utter morons.
Because standing before you was not a nightmarish harbinger of destruction. No, the man currently floating upside down in the air, cheerfully snacking on something, looked more like an impish uncle who would absolutely teach children how to commit tax fraud for fun.
He looked at you. You looked at him. He grinned. You immediately braced for impact.
âWell, well! So youâre the fabled Chosen Hero,â Lilia chirped, righting himself mid-air and landing gracefully before you. âHow fascinating! I was wondering when youâd show up.â
âIââ you began.
âI must say, this is not what I expected!â he continued, completely ignoring you. âFrom what Iâve heard, heroes usually barge in with righteous fury, divine proclamations, and very little self-preservation! Yet here you are, standing in the Demon Kingâs domain, casually handing him books.â
You turned to Malleus, who looked completely unbothered, still examining the latest tome you had brought him. âYou told him?â
Malleus, without looking up: âHe asked.â
You turned back to Lilia. âAnd youâre not freaking out?â
Lilia tilted his head, amused. âShould I be?â
âI donât know, I just assumed one of Malleusâs generals would take issue with me being, you know, the divinely ordained slayer of your king?â
Lilia snorted. âOh, please. Do you have any idea how many so-called âheroesâ Iâve seen storm in here? Youâre already my favorite.â
ââŚThanks?â
âOf course! Itâs just so refreshing to see one of you actually using your head for once.â He floated up again, upside down, resting his chin on his hands. âThough I must admit, I was expecting something a little more⌠impressive.â
You blinked. âWhatâs that supposed to mean?â
Lilia smirked and gestured to the table where you and Malleus had been previously engaged in very serious discussions. Your stomach dropped. You had left out your papers.
Specifically, the ones where you had been doodling different armor designs and asking Malleus for his fashion advice.
Malleus, the traitor, casually picked one up. âI am partial to this one,â he said, holding up a particularly elaborate sketch. âThe embroidery detailing is quite striking.â
Lilia laughed.
You buried your face in your hands as the War Demon, the Living Nightmare of the Battlefield, the Eternal Scourge of Kingdomsâwiped away tears of laughter over the fact that instead of slaying the Demon King, you had apparently made him your personal stylist.
It was, all things considered, not your proudest moment.
It had been months since you first stepped foot into Malleusâs lair, and, well⌠things had progressed.
Not in the way the gods wanted, obviously. If they had their way, Malleusâs severed head would be mounted on a sacred altar by now. Technically, you were still on your holy mission to vanquish the Demon King. Technically, you were gathering information. Technically, you had every intention of fulfilling your duty.
But, if one were to take a completely unbiased look at your current situation⌠it might appear that you were just hanging out.
A lot.
Like, a lot, a lot.
Malleus now made your drink exactly the way you liked itâsometimes before you even asked. You didnât even have to tell him anymore. Youâd wander into his lair after a long day of doing absolutely nothing related to demon slaying, and heâd already have your favorite drink ready, at the exact right temperature.
And you? You, the so-called âDivine Champion of Justice,â the god-appointed warrior of destiny? You had, against all logic and reason, started bringing him gifts. It wasnât even a conscious decision at first. But every time a merchant came through town, you found yourself idly picking up little trinkets or books that looked like theyâd interest him.
You told yourself it was just diplomacy. A strategic bribery effort. It had absolutely nothing to do with how much you enjoyed seeing his face light up whenever you presented him with something new.
You werenât even sure when the shift had happened.
One day, you were the brave hero, standing before the terrifying Demon King with divine orders to smite him. And now? Now, you were practically living in his lair. Casually.
Youâd gotten comfortable here, a fact that you refused to acknowledge out loud. Malleusâs lair was peaceful, quiet, andâto your horrorâpleasant. The enormous gothic windows, the soft candlelight, the bookshelves stacked high with ancient tomes⌠It was all just so much nicer than the godsâ temples, which were always cold, sterile, and filled with divine bureaucrats who asked too many questions.
And worseâworseâwhen you werenât here, you were usually thinking about what to do for Malleus next.
Should you bring him something from the next merchant caravan? Maybe take him to another festival? He liked those. Maybe introduce him to the weird little bakery in town that sold those oddly-shaped pastries you kept seeing. He might find them amusing.
You were planning surprises for him.
Like a friend.
No. Not just a friend.
A best friend.
You slammed your head onto the nearest table with a thud.
The gods could never find out about this.
You were having an existential crisis. A real one. The kind that made you stare at your reflection in a soup bowl and wonder if you had any meaningful purpose in life beyond being the divine equivalent of a glorified errand runner.
Lilia, of course, noticed. Because he was an agent of chaos and probably fed off emotional turmoil like some sort of tiny, ancient demon bat.
âYou seem troubled,â he had said, watching as you slumped dramatically over Malleusâ very fancy dining table, exhaling the worldâs most pitiful sigh. âWhy donât you and Malleus spar?â
Your head lifted slightly. âWhat?â
Lilia smirked, clearly pleased that he had successfully baited you out of your misery. âItâs been months, has it not? If the gods ask, you can tell them youâve been honing your skills, preparing for the final battle.â
That⌠actually wasnât a bad excuse. The gods had been getting nosy again, demanding updates. Maybe you could make this work.
Which was how you ended up here.
Standing in the grand, sprawling courtyard of Malleusâ lair, stretching out your limbs while he calmly removed his cloak, draping it over a bench like he was about to have a casual stroll instead of engaging in combat.
âYou sure about this?â you asked, gripping the hilt of your sword.
Malleus tilted his head, looking amused. âWhy wouldnât I be?â
You smirked. âJust saying, if I win, I demand tribute.â
Malleus chuckled. âAnd if I win?â
â⌠Letâs cross that bridge when we get to it.â
Lilia was off to the side, grinning like this was the best form of entertainment heâd seen in centuries.
You inhaled deeply, grounding yourself. Okay. This was it. You were going to fight the Demon King, and it was going to be serious. No more cozy tea parties. No more lighthearted book shopping trips. It was time toâ
âWould you like me to go easy on you?â Malleus asked.
You scoffed. âPfft. No. Give me everything youâve got.â
Malleus hummed, looking almost pleased at your confidence. âVery well.â
And then, without warning, he disappeared from sight.
You barely had time to register the movement before a gust of wind slammed into you at full force, sending you flying backwards like a poorly thrown ragdoll.
You crashed into a bush.
For a moment, you just lay there, staring at the sky, contemplating every choice that had led you to this moment.
Then, groaning, you rolled out of the shrubbery, shaking off the twigs as you picked up your sword. âOkay,â you muttered, adjusting your grip. âThat was just a warm-up round.â
Malleus was still standing in the same spot, looking entirely unbothered.
And his hands were behind his back.
You narrowed your eyes. âAre youââ You took a deep breath. âAre you fighting me with your hands behind your back?"
âOf course,â Malleus said pleasantly. âYou told me not to go easy on you.â
You could hear Lilia choking on laughter in the background.
You squinted at Malleus, wondering if you should feel honored or insulted.
Fine. You could work with this. You charged again, ducking low, aiming for his legs. A flicker of green magic intercepted you, sending a harmless but powerful shockwave that knocked your weapon out of your hands.
You stared at your empty hands.
Malleus looked mildly impressed. âGood attempt.â
You retrieved your sword. Tried again. And again. And again.
Malleus never used his hands. Never lifted a finger. He just sidestepped your attacks with casual ease, occasionally flicking his magic at you, like you were a mildly annoying housecat trying to pounce on a much larger, much more powerful predator.
Somewhere along the way, you stopped trying to win and just started having fun.
And then, eventually, your energy gave out. You collapsed onto the ground, spread-eagled, arms outstretched, staring up at the sky as you caught your breath.
Malleus stepped closer, looming over you with an expression you couldnât quite read.
âI do believe youâre my favorite hero,â he mused.
You groaned and slapped a hand over your face.
The gods were going to kill you if they ever found out about this.
You couldnât sleep.
Which was fine. Heroes probably werenât supposed to sleep. Heroes were supposed to lie awake at night, tormented by the burden of their destiny, haunted by the weight of their mission, plagued byâ
"What if I let him win?"
You bolted upright so fast you nearly knocked yourself unconscious on your headrest. You slapped a hand over your mouth like you had just spoken a heresy so foul the gods would strike you down immediately.
That was not a normal thought for a hero to have. That was the most absurd, blasphemous, outrageous, morally reprehensibleâ
"Am I technically dating the Demon King???"
NO. NO NO NO NO NO NOâ
Your hands went to your temples. You squeezed your eyes shut. Maybe if you just thought hard enough, you could physically remove this thought from your brain. Or maybe, if you focused, the gods would finally smite you like they had always threatened to do.
You flopped back down onto your mattress, dragging a pillow over your face, as if that would smother the absolute nonsense your mind was generating tonight. But the problem was, now that the thought had entered your brain, it had built a home there. It had a mailbox. It was paying taxes. And now it was decorating with even worse thoughts.
Because now you were remembering the way Malleus had smiled when you let him talk for two whole hours about gargoyles. How his eyes had lit up like you were the first person to ever listen. The way he carefully, deliberately made your tea exactly how you liked it, as if he had memorized it from the very first time. The way he always tilted his head when he listened to you, genuinely fascinated by even the stupidest things you said.
The way he let you exist in his space. Not as an enemy. Not as a hero. But asâŚ
⌠oh no.
OH NO.
You slapped a hand over your mouth again. Your other hand clenched into the sheets like you were physically trying to hold onto your sanity.
You were NOTâthis was NOTâ
You rolled over, kicking your legs violently under the covers. Maybe if you shook your entire body hard enough, you could dislodge this thought from existence. Yeet it into the void. Purge it from reality. But all that happened was that you pulled a muscle in your back and now you were lying there, in agony, emotionally and physically, because you were starting to realize something terrible.
You werenât just fond of Malleus. You didnât just enjoy his company.
You liked him.
You LIKED him.
YOU LIKED THE DEMON KING.
You sat up again, legs crossed, hands clasped together in front of you. âDear gods,â you whispered, voice trembling, âplease smite me where I sit. I have failed you.â
Nothing happened.
ââŚCowards,â you muttered.
You flopped back down, staring at the ceiling in pure despair.
You were going to bed. You were going to sleep, and when you woke up, you would not be in love with the Demon King. You would be normal. You would be reasonable. You would be a good hero.
You closed your eyes.
Five seconds passed.
You opened them again.
Gods help me.
Literally.
You were having the time of your goddamn life.
Malleus' lairâagain, as usual. You were halfway draped across his lap, leisurely popping fruit into your mouth while Lilia spun some absolutely deranged tale about the time he tricked a king into believing he was a vengeful forest spirit. Malleus sipped his tea, vaguely amused, and you? You laughed so hard you nearly choked on a grape.
The atmosphere? Immaculate. Life? Good. Everything? Perfection.
And then the door SLAMMED open.
You flinched so hard you nearly tumbled off Malleusâ lap. The tea cups rattled. The roomâs easygoing tension evaporated as you stared at the figure in the doorwayâsome guy, just some guyâstorming in with his sword drawn, looking like he was about to say the most dramatic thing youâd ever heard in your life.
âI HAVE COME TO SLAY YOU, DEMON KINGââ
He stopped.
Because youâthe actual heroâwere very much not slaying the Demon King. You were, instead, sprawled across him like a spoiled house cat, eating his fruit and giggling like an idiot.
A horrifically long pause followed as this budget heroâwho was not chosen by the gods, by the wayâtook in the scene.
Scrambling upright, you waved your hands frantically. âThisâthis is not what it looks likeââ
âIt is exactly what it looks like,â Lilia corrected, taking a dainty sip of tea. âPlease, continue.â
Budget Hero looked insulted. Absolutely offended. âYouâyouâre supposed to be a hero! Youâre supposed to be fighting him, notââ He gestured at you and Malleus with a face of pure betrayal. ââwhatever this is!â
Panic surged. âI am fighting him!â
Budget Hero squinted.
You cleared your throat. âItâs justââ A vague gesture at Malleus. âA mental battle.â
Lilia snickered. Malleus lifted a brow, deeply entertained.
Budget Hero wasnât buying it. His face hardened with righteous fury as he turned his sword back on Malleus. âNo matter! If the gods will not choose a proper hero to strike you down, then I shallââ
And thatâs when it happened.
Before Malleus could even think about obliterating him, you moved first. Instinctively. Violently. Viscerally.
Budget Hero never saw it coming. His weapon went flying in a single fluid motion, and before he could process it, he was done. Just absolutely demolished.
Silence.
Then:
Lilia. Wheezing. âOh, that was brutal.â
You stared down at Budget Heroâs crumpled form, still gripping your weapon, stunned.
Because hereâs the thing. That wasnât a calculated attack. It wasnât self-defense. It wasnât even to protect Malleus, exactly.
It was pure, unfiltered spite.
Who did this guy think he was? Marching in, sword drawn, acting like he was Malleusâ sworn enemy? That was your job. Your dynamic. The thought of anyone else trying to take that placeâtrying to take any place in Malleusâ life that wasnât yoursâwas so disgusting, so offensive, that your body moved before your brain did.
âŚOh no.
Quickly sheathing your weapon, you coughed into your fist. âWelp. Thatâs enough murder for today! I should get going!â
Malleus blinked at you, unbothered. âYou only just arrived.â
Lilia, still recovering from laughter, wiped a tear from his eye. âStay! We havenât even finished discussing your new armorââ
âNope!â You laughedâtoo forcefully. âNooope! I justâI have to, uhâcleanse myself. Spiritually. From, um. Todayâs events.â
Malleus tilted his head, intrigued. âYouâve killed before, havenât you?â
You sweat. âYeah, but this one was just, uh, really emotionally charged. You know how it is.â
Liliaâs grin was so knowing it made you ill. âDo we?â
You needed to leave immediately.
âAnyway, see you later, besties!â Backing toward the door, you threw up a hand. âMalleus, youâre great, Lilia, youâre also great, Iâm normal, and definitely not in any sort of crisis! Bye!â
And then you fled. Like a coward.
You had been avoiding him.
Technically speaking, you had only been gone for a week. But considering you usually barged into his lair dailyâarms full of books, or pastries, or some weird trinket you thought heâd likeâit was an absence that did not go unnoticed.
After all, you had never run before.
Even when you first met him, when you had been sent to kill him, you had walked right up to him and said, "Hey, so the gods told me to kill you, but honestly, I donât feel like it." And he had smiled, slow and intrigued, and offered you tea. That had been the beginning of everything.
You had stayed. You always stayed.
But yesterday, after that absolute disaster of an encounter with that third-rate hero, after watching yourself cut him down before Malleus could even lift a hand, after realizing with gut-wrenching horror that you had reacted viscerally to the mere idea of someone else claiming that they were destined to fight him, to be his rival, you had fled.
Because what the fuck did that mean?
Because why had your stomach turned in disgust at the thought of someone else standing in your place?
Because you had looked at Malleus, and something inside you had snarled mine, and the weight of that realization had nearly knocked you off your feet.
So you ran.
Cowardly. Embarrassing. You, the so-called chosen hero, the one who had spent months dragging Malleus through town, shoving hats over his horns, feeding him sweet treats, listening to him ramble about gargoyles with the fondest expression on your faceâyou had panicked and run away like a flustered maiden in a fairytale.
You didnât even have the excuse of battle wounds. The only wounds were entirely self-inflicted, entirely emotional, and entirely stupid.
So today, after daysof pacing and telling yourself to get it together, you forced yourself to return.
You spent the entire week gaslighting yourself into thinking nothing happened.
That reaction? Not weird. You were just⌠caught off guard! Maybe a tiny bit possessive. Maybe incredibly deranged about Malleus to the point where you instinctively obliterated someone for even thinking about taking your role as his arch-nemesisâbut that was normal. That was just healthy rival dynamics!
So when you walked into Malleusâ lair the next week, it was with the confidence of someone absolutely not having a mental breakdown over their supposed mortal enemy.
âYo,â you greeted, hands in your pockets, a casual whistle leaving your lips. âWhatâs up, big guy? Ready for some classic, good old-fashioned, not-at-all suspicious hero vs. villain conflict today?â
No answer.
It was silent. Too silent.
Usually, Lilia was there to greet you with some teasing remark. Usually, Malleus could sense you the moment you entered his territory, and youâd be met with a soft âYouâve returned.â Usually, there was some kind of warmth, a quiet hum of life in these ancient halls.
But today, there was only cold stone.
Your stomach twisted as you searched for him.
You found him by one of the enormous windows, hands clasped behind his back, staring at the sky with an expression youâd never seen before. His shouldersâusually poised with an almost arrogant regalityâwere slack. His jaw, tight. His eyes, distant.
For the first time since you met him, he looked exhausted.
ââŚMalleus?â
Your voice came out softer than you expected. Almost hesitant. As if part of you already knew what he was about to say.
He didnât turn, didnât shift, didnât react right away. Just stood there, gazing out at the vast horizon like he was searching for something.
Finally, after a long, slow exhale, he spoke.
ââŚI thought you werenât coming back.â
Your breath caught.
You had been gone for a week. You figured skipping a few visits wouldnât matter much. That you could collect yourself, sort out whatever this was, and return once you werenât a flustered disaster.
But standing here now, staring at him, it hit you just how much he had felt your absence.
His fingers curled a little tighter behind his back. His voice, barely above a whisperâ
âIf someone were to kill me,â he murmured, âI think Iâd rather it be you than anyone else.â
The breath whooshed out of your lungs.
Because suddenly, you understood.
He wasnât just speaking in hypotheticals. He wasnât musing about battle. He wasnât challenging you, wasnât provoking you, wasnât setting the stage for a dramatic clash between hero and demon king.
No.
Malleus had lived centuries watching heroes march to his doorstep, brandishing divine weapons, shouting righteous declarations, vowing to end him. And yet, he had never once fallen. Never once faltered. Never once let a blade even graze his skin.
But yesterday, when you hadnât returned, he had thoughtâah. So this is how it ends.
If he had to be slain, he wanted it to be by your hand.
If he had to see someone for the last time, he had hoped it would be you.
You broke.
Instantaneous. No hesitation. No rational thought. No clever quip or theatrical deflection. No last-minute is this a good idea? self-reflection. Just a sharp inhale, a rapid closing of distance, and thenâ
You kissed him. Hard.
Not soft, not slow, not gentle. Desperate. Raw. Months of pent-up feelings, of endless late nights spent thinking about him, of hands brushing and shared laughter and quiet understanding andâfuck. You were so gone for him.
Malleus stiffenedâbut only for a second.
Then he melted into you.
His hands roseâone tangling in your hair, the other curling around your waist, pulling you so close you swore you could feel his heartbeat hammering against your chest. He kissed back just as desperately, just as fiercely, like heâd been waiting just as helplessly as you had.
When you finally pulled away, breathless, he stared like heâd never seen you before. Wide-eyed. Lips parted. His grip on you so tight, like he was terrified youâd vanish if he let go.
ââŚI suppose that was your way of saying you refuse?â His voice, unsteady.
A breathless, shaky laugh. âYeah,â you whispered. âYeah, I refuse.â
His forehead pressed to yours, breath warm against your lips. His hands didnât loosen their hold.
ââŚThen donât ever leave me.â
You closed your eyes. Gripped his shoulders.
Nodded.
âNever.â
The celestial beingâdivine embodiment of justice and order, an ancient force revered throughout historyâdescended upon Malleusâ lair in a blinding display of light and holy power.
Wings of pure radiance unfurled. A golden staff crackled with divine energy. A voice, imbued with the might of the cosmos, boomed across the chamber:
âCHOSEN HERO. DEMON KING. IT IS TIME FOR YOUR DESTINED BATTLE.â
You blinked. Looked up from where you were curled against Malleus, sipping tea and reading a book titled 1,001 Architectural Wonders (That Are Not Gargoyles, Please Stop Asking).
Malleus glanced up from the game of chess he was currently losing against Lilia. âOh?â he said, perfectly unbothered. âHas it truly been that long?â
âYes, it has been that long!â the celestial being thundered. âYou were sent here to vanquish the Demon King, notââ their eye twitched as they took in the scene, ââplay house with him.â
You frowned. âOkay, first of all, rude.â
"Rude? RUDE?!" The celestial being practically vibrated with fury. "YOU LIED TO US!"
âI did not lie,â you said, deeply offended. âI gave you very detailed mission updates.â
ââIâm gathering intel on the enemyâ?â
âI was!â you huffed. âDid you know Malleus actually prefers honey in his tea instead of sugar? Crucial information.â
The celestial being sputtered. âYou literally wrote, and I quoteââ they conjured a glowing scroll and read aloud, ââI need to study his weaknesses.ââ
âWell,â you said, nodding toward Malleus, âhe is weak to compliments. Call him âawe-inspiringâ and he gets all flustered. Itâs very endearing.â
The being looked one breath away from smiting you. âAND âHEâS PROBABLY PLANNING SOMETHING EVIL, I NEED TO KEEP AN EYE ON HIMâ??â
You pointed at Malleus, who was currently sipping tea with perfect elegance, staring at you like you personally hung the moon in the sky.
âLook at him,â you said dryly. âHeâs clearly up to something.â
Malleus delicately set down his teacup. âIndeed,â he mused. âI was just plotting whether to have scones or biscuits with my tea tomorrow.â
The celestial beingâs golden aura flickered like a candle in the wind. âYOU WERE SUPPOSED TO KILL HIM!â
Malleus frowned. âThat seems excessive for a difference in snack preference.â
The celestial being inhaled sharply, hands trembling. You were pretty sure you just heard them whisper I hate my job.
âEnough!â they roared. âFIGHT! NOW!â
You and Malleus exchanged a long glance.
There was a beat of silence.
Then, with all the excitement of two overworked employees being forced into another useless meeting, you both sighed and reached for the nearest decorative swords.
You lifted your sword. Malleus did the same.
And then, with all the enthusiasm of two toddlers being told to pretend-fight for Grandmaâs amusementâ
âyou both half-heartedly tapped your swords together.
clink.
âThere,â you said, monotone. âWe fought. Can we go back to cuddling now?â
The celestial being screamed.
The celestial being didnât so much escort you to the heavens as haul you there like a parent dragging a misbehaving child to a disciplinary hearing. You barely had time to adjust to the blinding light before being unceremoniously dropped onto the cold marble floor.
Above you, the gods loomed from their gilded thrones, their divine radiance pulsing with something that was not quite angerâbecause gods did not feel anger, only divine disappointment, which was so much worse.
The celestial being, standing smugly beside them, crossed their arms. âI told you they werenât taking this seriously.â
The first god spoke, voice like rolling thunder. âChosen hero.â
Another voice, this one like a windstorm, joined in. âYou were sent to slay the Demon King.â
A third, calm and cold as deep water. âAnd yet, you have done nothing.â
You opened your mouth to argue, but the celestial being snapped their fingers, and suddenly, an image materialized before you. A glowing vision of you, fully reclined across Malleusâ lap, popping fruit into his mouth while he read a book.
You stared.
ââŚOkay,â you admitted, âthis looks bad.â
The celestial being glared. âBecause it is bad!â
The gods ignored them, their voices deepening into something more final.
âThis war against the Demon King has lasted centuries,â one intoned.
âYou were our last hope,â another added. âIf you do not complete your duty, there will be no other hero for another hundred years.â
âWithout a hero,â the celestial being hissed, âthere will be no one to protect the world from his inevitable destruction.â
Their words should have shaken you. You should have felt the weight of them pressing into your spine, the consequences of this moment sinking into your bones.
Instead, you just felt tired.
Tired of this war you never understood. Tired of the gods, who sat safe in their gilded heavens, while they sent hero after hero to their deaths.
Tired of pretending that Malleus was something he wasnât.
You took a slow breath. Then, you reached up and began unbuckling the divine armor. The metal rang loud as it clattered to the ground, reverberating through the silent chamber. You ripped the sacred amulet from around your neck, tossing it aside like an afterthought. The enchanted boots that carried you here? Gone.
The gods watched, speechless, as you stripped away everything that bound you to them.
Then, you stood taller than you ever had before.
âI quit,â you said simply.
The chamber erupted. The celestial being choked. âYou canât justââ
âI can,â you interrupted, stretching your arms, reveling in the freedom of it. âAnd I am. You want a hero? Find another poor fool. Iâm done.â
The gods stared, as if they truly couldnât comprehend your audacity.
âThere will be no other hero for a century,â one god reminded you. âDo you understand what you are forsaking?â
You grinned. âYeah. Unnecessary slaying.â
And with that, you turned on your heel and walked away, the celestial doors parting effortlessly before you. The gods did not stop you. Perhaps they couldnât.
You returned to Malleusâ lair lighter than you had ever felt.
He was waiting for you when you arrived, standing near the entrance, his expression unreadable. His eyesâthose impossibly green eyesâwatched you carefully, searching for something.
âYouâre back,â he said softly.
You stepped closer, meeting his gaze. âOf course.â
Something flickered in his expressionâsomething relieved, something like hope.
You exhaled, the weight of everything lifting off your shoulders. âIâm free now, Malleus. No more gods. No more divine duty. Just⌠me.â
For the first time, you saw itâtrue joy in his gaze. He stepped forward, closer, until there was nothing between you.
And then he kissed you.
It was not hesitant. Not questioning. It was certain, like he had always known this moment was inevitable, like he had only been waiting for you to realize it too.
When he finally pulled away, he rested his forehead against yours, his lips curling into a smile.
âI was hoping youâd choose me,â he murmured.
You smiled back, fingers threading through his.
âI always would have.â
It happened over tea, as most of your most life-altering conversations with Malleus tended to.
You had been lounging on his absurdly comfortable sofa, sipping something floral he had brewed just for you, feeling very much like a person who had absolutely no idea that their entire life was about to be rearranged.
Malleus, ever composed, set down his own cup and regarded you with something almost too fond.
âIâve been thinking,â he began, âabout how long weâve been together.â
You blinked. âHow long?â
He hummed, tilting his head. âSince you gave me your sword, of course.â
You continued blinking, because surely, surely you had misheard him.
ââŚMy sword?â
Malleus nodded, utterly serene. âYes. It was an elegant proposal.â
You made a sound. It wasnât a word, exactly, but it conveyed your confusion well enough.
Malleus watched you, waiting patiently for what he must have assumed was joyous realization.
You, meanwhile, were still trying to process whatever the hell was happening.
ââŚProposal,â you echoed, because maybe if you repeated it, reality would shift into something that made sense.
Malleus offered a rare, knowing smile. âA symbol of devotion. Offering oneâs most treasured possession to anotherâit is an unbreakable vow, a declaration of lifelong commitment. The moment you placed your sword in my hands, you became mine.â
A long pause.
You stared at him. He continued to look pleased.
You, meanwhile, were experiencing an entire existential crisis.
âHold on,â you said slowly. âSo youâre telling me that, in demon culture, giving you my sword meantââ
âA proposal,â Malleus finished, nodding. âIt was quite romantic.â
Your brain short-circuited. You thought back to that moment, a year ago, when you had so casually handed him your holy sword, thinking haha, maybe he can make this thing shut up.
In reality, you had apparently gotten engaged like an absolute moron.
You set down your tea with the careful precision of someone trying very, very hard not to spiral. âMalleus,â you said, voice deceptively calm, âwhy didnât you tell me?â
He blinked, puzzled. âI thought you knew.â
âMalleus, Iâm human.â
He tilted his head, considering. âAh. I see the problem now.â
You pinched the bridge of your nose, inhaling deeply. âSo, in your mind, weâve been betrothed this whole time?â
âYes,â he said, utterly unbothered.
You stared at him. He stared back, composed as ever.
And then you justâlaughed. Because of course. Of course you had accidentally proposed to the Demon King like an idiot.
âWell,â you said between snickers, wiping at your eyes. âSince weâre apparently already engaged, wanna just go ahead and get hitched?â
Malleusâ grin was blinding.
âAbsolutely.â
A) i was a church organist
B) i made cereals w beer instead of milk
C) i can hold my breath for 40 seconds
Which one is a lie
âIâm sorry Iâm sorry Iâm sorry... Iâll be good I promise, Iâll change I wonât do anything you donât want me to do. Please I canât live without you, youâre my savior, my goddess please donât throw me away Iâll die without youâ
âI hate being alone, itâs so cold here without you. Not being able to see you scares me, I feel so uneasy. I exist for you, I wonât leave this room unless Iâm with you, I wonât even talk to anyone b-but you are able to do those without me, because you donât need me. I can smell other people whenever you come back to this room, I know I have no right to complain about such things but it breaks my heart I canât help it. I exist for you, I breathe for you, I live for you. This worthless life belongs to you so please keep it, donât throw it away donât neglect itâ
The Prince Part 3 - final part
And ofc they lived happily ever after
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knight strip tease. is that anything
THE TWST4 KOMAđđ
"Go to bed" ruggies face while counting the madols look devious lmao
POOR JACK BUT ALSO THATS SO CUTEđđ
Also i need to point out how GORGEOUS vil is in this comic this month like yasss queen
RUGGIE NO DONT EAT THEM
love how cute jack is
Also ruggie wrong lyrics
Evryone here is a freak,its not even shocking anymore
NEW REACTION IMAGE: ACQUIRED