SIX MONTHS LATER
The village is small. Thirty families, clustered at the edge of what was once the Crimson Vale. The settlement existed before the clan’s fall, but it’s grown since then—refugees trickling in from the dead territory, looking for a place to rebuild.
We’ve made our home here. A modest house near the village’s edge, with two bedrooms and a garden that Dena tends with obsessive care.
She’s determined to make things grow—has spent months coaxing vegetables from the thin soil, celebrating every sprout with the fervor of a scholar discovering ancient texts.
She’s learning to read too. Imara teaches her in the evenings, after the clinic closes. Simple words at first—her name, common objects, basic concepts. Dena absorbs it all with hungry intensity.
“She’s brilliant,” Imara told me last week, pride warming her voice. “In another life, she could have been anything. A scholar. A healer. A leader.”
“She can still be those things.”
“I know.” Imara smiled. “That’s the point.”
The point. The purpose we’ve chosen. Helping people find the lives they were always capable of, freed from the system that would have consumed them.
Imara runs the clinic from our front room.
She uses her blood magic for healing now—reading ailments through drops of blood, prescribing treatments, occasionally performing small workings to speed recovery.
The villagers were suspicious at first. Blood magic carries dark associations, especially this close to the Vale’s old borders.
But Imara is patient. Gentle. And her results speak for themselves.
Word has spread. People travel from neighboring settlements now, seeking the healer who can diagnose illness with a touch. Imara helps everyone who asks. She doesn’t charge more than people can afford.
“We have enough.” She smiles at my questioning look. “More than enough. What else am I supposed to do with skills that used to destroy people?”
I don’t have a good answer. So I help where I can.
My work is different.
The shadow-touched territories beyond the Vale’s old borders are dangerous.
The clan’s fall left a power vacuum, and things that lurked in the darkness have grown bold.
Creatures warped by centuries of blood magic, no longer held in check by the Matron’s wards.
Monsters that prey on travelers, settlers, anyone unlucky enough to wander too far from safety.
I hunt them.
It’s what I was designed for, after all.
I was the seventh attempt. The only one who lived long enough to choose something different.
The violence in my blood doesn’t disappear because the Matron is dead. But now I choose my targets. Now I kill to protect instead of to control.
The work is satisfying in ways I didn’t expect. There’s clarity in combat—the simple calculus of threat and response, the physical release of channeled aggression. And when it’s over, when the monster lies dead at my feet, I walk home to Imara and Dena instead of reporting to the Womb Chamber.
I walk home to people who love me.
The concept still feels foreign sometimes. I’m a weapon. Weapons don’t have homes. Don’t have families. Don’t have soft things waiting for them at the end of hard days.
But I do now. And I’m learning to carry that gift without breaking it.
Night.
The house is quiet. Dena went to bed hours ago, exhausted from a day of reading practice and garden work. Imara joined me on the porch afterward, and we watched the stars emerge from the darkening sky.
No crimson glow. No pulse of blood-wards. Just ordinary night, ordinary stars, ordinary peace.
She’s sleeping now. Curled on her side in our bed, her dark red hair spread across the pillow, her breath coming slow and even. The scars on her arms catch the moonlight—faded to thin silver lines, barely visible against her pale skin.
I lie beside her. Watch her breathe. Sense her in my blood, that warmth that hasn’t faded in six months, that shows no sign of fading ever.
The resonance between us is quieter now.
Not weaker—just settled. Integrated. Part of the baseline of my existence instead of a strange new sensation.
I know when she’s happy without asking. Know when she’s tired, worried, afraid.
Know exactly where she is, always, even when we’re on opposite sides of the village.
I thought it might fade when the Vale’s magic died. Thought the resonance was a product of the power we channeled, temporary and conditional.
I was wrong.
This is ours. This bond we built in nights of hard-won intimacy, in moments of shared survival, in the quiet aftermath of violence. The clan didn’t give it to us. The Matron didn’t design it. We created it ourselves.
And it’s permanent.
I reach out. Brush a strand of hair from Imara’s face. She stirs, makes a small sound, but doesn’t wake.
Ours. This life, this house, this woman sleeping beside me—it all belongs to us now. Not the clan. Not the Matron. Us.
The certainty is absolute. Unshakeable.
I settle back against the pillows. Close my eyes. Let her presence wash over me—that constant warmth, that steady reassurance that I’m not alone anymore, that I never have to be alone again.
Sleep comes slowly. Peacefully.
For a monster designed to destroy, I’ve found an unexpected talent for building. A home. A family. A life.
I’m not sure what I am anymore. Not the clan’s weapon. Not a monster without purpose.
But I know what I have.
And that’s enough.
“You’re thinking too loud.”
Her voice pulls me from the edge of sleep. Murmured. Drowsy. She hasn’t opened her eyes.
“How do you know I’m thinking?”
“Because I can feel it.” She shifts closer, her back pressing against my chest. “You get this… intensity. Even in your sleep. It wakes me up.”
I wrap my arm around her waist. Pull her tight against me. Press my lips to the curve of her neck.
“Sorry.”
“Don’t be sorry.” She finds my hand. Intertwines our fingers. “What are you thinking about?”
“You.”
A soft laugh escapes her. I feel her smile even though I can’t see it.
“Good answer.”
“It’s the truth.” I kiss her neck again. Her shoulder. The shell of her ear. “I’m always thinking about you.”
“Dangerous habit.”
“The best kind.”
She turns in my arms. Faces me in the darkness. Her eyes are half-open, still heavy with sleep, but the warmth in them is unmistakable.
“I love you.” The words come simply. Without drama. A statement of fact.
“I know.” My lips brush her hair. “You tell me every day, in a hundred small ways.”
“Still.” Her hand comes up. Traces the line of my jaw. “I love you, Kharvek. Every brutal, violent, impossible inch of you.”
My chest aches. The good kind of ache—the kind that means I’m alive, I’m feeling, I’m not just a weapon following orders.
“I love you too.” The words come easier now than they did six months ago. Practice, I suppose. “More than I know how to say.”
“Then don’t say it.” She pulls me down. Kisses me soft and slow. “Show me instead.”
I show her.
Later—much later—she falls asleep in my arms.
I hold her close. Listen to her breathe. Feel her heartbeat against my chest, her warmth seeping into my bones.
Outside, the night is peaceful. Inside, the house is full of small sounds—Dena murmuring in her sleep down the hall, the wind rustling through the garden, the creak of settling wood.
Home.
The word still feels new. Still carries the weight of impossibility.
But it fits.
I close my eyes. Let sleep claim me.
In my dreams, I don’t see violence. Don’t see blood or death or the Matron’s crimson eyes.
I see Imara. Dena. The garden growing. The village thriving. A future unfolding, day by day, one choice at a time.
Where do weapons go when wars end?
Wherever they want.
And I want to be here. With her. For as long as she’ll have me.
Which, based on everything I know about Imara Calder, will be forever.
Good.
I plan on being around for forever.
**THE END**