Vespera had chosen the seat that put the most distance between herself and everyone else, angled slightly away from the arrangent, closer to the far side of the room than to the center. Her legs were tucked to one side. Her hands rested in her lap. Her posture was immaculate, spine straight, chin level. A woman sitting exactly as her parents had taught her to sit in every room she’d ever entered.
The laughter hadn’t reached her. It had passed through the space between the couches and the armchair and arrived at her like an echo, like music from a party she was standing outside of.
She watched her son scratch behind his lover’s ears while another lover sulked beside him and three more laughed across the table. The scene was so warm and so foreign that it might as well have been behind glass.
This was not her world. She had been raised in silence, in protocol, in rooms where laughter was a lapse in discipline and affection was a private indulgence to be managed, never displayed. She had been married to a man who shared that philosophy and together they had built a household where love, if it existed at all, moved through formal channels and arrived on schedule.
Her son had built this.
A demoness who bit tails and refused to apologize about it. A felinid who faked injuries for head scratches. A girl who had no mouth filter and fewer manners, yet sohow managed to make her affection and loyalty to her friends clear nonetheless. A girl who watched everything and missed nothing, smiling as she made notes for the future. A girl whose beauty could stop traffic and whose tears fell silently, yet she could turn extrely fierce and territorial from one mont to the next.
Loud, ssy, unrefined, fiercely devoted, and so full of love for her son that the space itself felt warr for it.
He had walked out of the cold house she’d raised him in, and he had found this. No, not found...
He built this with his own two hands.
Every one of these won had chosen him. He had chosen them. What they had together was everything the Ashborn Manor had never been.
The distance between Vespera’s armchair and her son’s couch was four ters.
Yet it felt like a canyon.
Then, a voice ca.
"Mother."
Kaiden was looking at her. His hand was still in Bastet’s hair. Calypso was still beside him, arms folded. The laughter had settled, and all five of his won had turned to follow his gaze.
"There’s enough space for all of us." He patted the spot on his right. "Why don’t you co sit with us?"
Vespera’s chin lifted by a fraction.
"I am fine here."
"I know you are." His voice was patient, non-demanding. "But why don’t you co over here?"
She looked at him.
"It’d make really happy."
He wasn’t asking her to perform. He wasn’t asking her to be soone she wasn’t. He was just asking her to close the distance. Four ters. That was all.
The five won on the couches were watching her. Nyx’s look was one of warmth. Aria’s eyes were soft. Luna was pretending not to care and failing, her left hand rubbing at the spot above her elbow without thinking about it. Bastet’s ears had turned toward her. Calypso grinned.
Vespera looked at the space. Then at her son. His arm was resting where the empty spot waited, and his expression held the sa kindness he’d worn when he’d called her "wonderful" on the stream, the word that had made the Shadow Monarch’s shadows recede.
Her chest tightened.
She stood, posture unchanged. She crossed the four ters with the sa asured stride she used in boardrooms and battlefields, and she lowered herself onto the couch beside her son with the precision of a woman who had never once in her life flopped onto furniture.
Kaiden’s arm settled around her.
The warmth hit first. His body beside hers, solid and real, radiating heat through his sleeve into her shoulder. She had watched this warmth from four ters away and it had looked like sothing behind glass. Now it was pressed against her, imdiate and overwhelming in a way she had not prepared for.
Bastet’s purring resud from his lap. The low vibration traveled through the couch cushions and into Vespera’s thigh, a sensation so dostic and so alien that she didn’t know what to do with it. Across the table, Aria and the others were beaming at her, or rather, the affection of mother and son being put on display with zero complications now.
The laughter that had arrived at her armchair like an echo soon arrived again, close enough to touch. The glass was gone. The canyon that had stretched between her and her son’s family collapsed under the weight of a single arm around her shoulders.
And Vespera Ashborn, who had spent all her life sitting at a distance from everything, sat in the middle of her son’s family, feeling welcod and accepted for the very first ti.
...
For a mont, no one spoke.
The warmth was there. The smiles were there. Every woman in the room was genuinely happy for what she’d just witnessed, and it showed on their faces in ways they weren’t trying to hide - maybe besides a certain stormy gremlin.
But despite all that, the woman sitting beside Kaiden was still Vespera Ashborn.
The Shadow Monarch. The woman whose presence in a foreign nation constituted a diplomatic crisis. The woman who had bodied dangerous S-tier awakened fighters when she desired to impose her will upon others. The woman whose shadows could swallow a room and everything in it without her expression changing.
She was sitting on a couch. Letting her son hold her.
And none of them knew what to say to her.
Aria’s mouth opened. Closed. She glanced at Nyx. Luna shifted on the couch, then folded her arms tighter. Bastet’s ears rotated once toward Vespera and flattened halfway, the felinid equivalent of clearing one’s throat without committing to speech. Calypso was grinning, but even she hadn’t opened her mouth.
Nyx watched all of it.
She saw Aria’s aborted attempt. She saw Luna’s arms lock. She saw Bastet’s ears and Calypso’s uncharacteristic silence. Four won who had fought monsters way above their level, and not one of them could figure out how to start a conversation with their boyfriend’s mother.
Nyx recrossed her legs and looked at Vespera.
"Well." Her voice was easy, unhurried, as if she’d been waiting for the right mont and had found it. "I think I speak for everyone when I say that tonight was extraordinary."
A pause. Her eyes stayed on the Shadow Monarch.
"We’ve t before, but it’s a pleasure to sit down with you in a calm setting for once, Miss Vespera."
Vespera’s eyes moved to Nyx. Slowly. Red, unblinking, fixed on the pink-haired woman with the full weight of what the Shadow Monarch was behind closed doors.
Nyx’s skin prickled. Goosebumps rose along her arms and the back of her neck, the kind that had nothing to do with temperature and everything to do with the ancient, predatory attention of a walking catastrophe. Her posture didn’t change as she held the stare and waited.
Three seconds passed.
User Comments
0 comments from readers