Later—though he had no idea how much later—Rein slipped out of the sleeping chamber barefoot, clutching a short, serrated blade he'd stolen from a ceremonial fruit platter.
It wasn't much.
But it was sharp, and most importantly, his.
The crimson corridors of Asmodra's sanctuary curled endlessly like veins in a giant organ.
Every surface breathed—softly.
He could hear it now, after the wine's numbing effects faded.
A constant thrum.
Thump-thump.Thump-thump.
It was subtle at first, but impossible to ignore once noticed.
The walls had a pulse.
A rhythm.
It wasn't random—it matched a living heartbeat. Not his.
Hers?
Or… this place?
He slowed his pace.
A vine twitched beside his head, recoiling faintly as he neared.
He narrowed his eyes.
It didn't attack. It… reacted.
He exhaled slowly and touched the wall with his fingertips.
The surface warmed.
It responded to touch, not just presence.
The heat grew slightly when his pulse spiked.
Emotion triggered something here.
Meaning Asmodra's entire palace wasn't just built from her magic—it was linked to feeling.
Desire. Rage. Lust. Fear.
And he'd been feeding it with every panic attack.
Clever girl.
He kept moving.
Eventually, he found a hallway unlike the others—straight, narrow, and cold.
The silk faded to hard crimson stone here, and the air lost its perfume. It smelled like metal and old ash. The pulse was louder.
The path opened into a circular room—larger than any he'd seen.
The walls were black.
Smooth.
Carved with veins of glowing red crystal that pulsed in perfect rhythm. In the center, floating above a raised obsidian pedestal, was a massive red core—like a still-beating heart carved from molten ruby.
It pulsed. Slowly.
Rein stepped closer. The heat increased with every foot.
A whisper rose from the stone—not a voice, not words, but feeling.
Want.Need.Keep.
He stopped three feet away, sweat trailing down his neck.
He felt dizzy.
The blade in his hand hummed faintly.
He stepped even closer.
And the room changed.
He saw images—not visions, not memories. Not his.
Hers.
A battlefield, centuries ago—flames stretching to the horizon. She stood over a dying angel, laughing, covered in blood. Alone.
Silence—a thousand years of ruling with no one to speak to. No touches. No offerings of tea.
Just fire. Fire. Fire.
Then—
Rein, in his cottage.
Rein, brushing his hair back as he knelt in his field.
Rein, saying her name without knowing it.
And her heart, for the first time, aching.
He stumbled back, eyes wide.
The visions stopped.
The pulse slowed.
The whispers faded.
He pressed a palm to the cold stone wall beside him, catching his breath.
The dungeon wasn't just reacting to Asmodra.
It was feeding on him too.
Not magic.
Emotion.
And the more he felt—fear, arousal, guilt—the more it grew.
He looked down at the blade.
Then at the pulsing core.
Then turned and ran.
________
Asmodra was humming when she noticed the silence.
She had been reclining in the bath chamber—a sunken pool of crimson heat and crushed petals—waiting for Rein to return.
She had even braided her hair, something she hadn't done since the Cleansing War two centuries ago.
Men appreciated detail.
Devotion.
Presentation.
He liked honesty, too.
That was new for her.
So she waited.
And waited.
.
.
.
No footsteps.
No scent.
No pulse from the corridor silk.
No vines brushing back to tell her what gift he was admiring next.
She stood, the surface of the bath hissing as her body rose from it.
"Rein?"
No answer.
The vines beside her curled tighter.
"Rein." Louder.
Still nothing.
Her pupils contracted.
A whisper of heat bled from her skin.
The petals on the water ignited in silent sparks.
She stepped out of the bath, wrapping herself in a robe conjured from steam.
The air shifted as she moved, magic responding to her tone. Her bare feet touched the stone floor—and it trembled.
She walked the corridor slowly.
The palace parted for her.
But no heartbeat followed.
The silk was cool. Empty. Untouched.
She paused.
Then called out—not as a queen.
Not as a Demon Lord.
But as a woman whose one bright thing had slipped out of her reach.
"…Did I scare you?"
Her voice was soft. Human.
Nothing answered.
She passed through the map room.
Through the pleasure gardens.
Through the lounge where she'd watched him eat like a starving man.
Gone. All gone.
Her fingers brushed a vine.
It curled around her wrist, trying to soothe.
She pulled it loose.
"No, not yet," she whispered.
Then closed her eyes.
And the palace began to shift.
Not violently. Not in rage.
But in heartbreak.
The walls darkened to garnet.
The vines recoiled into themselves.
Every silken curtain wilted. The air grew hot—not with fire, but fever.
Sick, longing heat.
The heartbeat of the sanctuary began to stutter.
A keening wind echoed through the halls, low and aching.
The petals in the baths dissolved into blood.
Every corner of the palace dimmed to a muted, painful red.
Asmodra stood in the center.
Still. Barefoot. Dripping.
And whispered.
"Please come back. I wasn't done being good yet."