Chapter 1349: Story 1349: I Didn’t Let Her Go
I should have let her go.
They told I should’ve burned the body.
They scread, begged, even tried to drag her from my arms.
But I didn’t listen.
Because she was still warm.
Because she was still her.
Because love makes monsters of us all.
Her na was Lyra, and she died in my arms with a whisper.
“I’m scared.”
And I held her as the tremors ca. As her eyes dulled. As her breath stopped.
She didn’t deserve the fire.
She didn’t deserve the pit outside the town gates where they dumped the turned.
So I brought her ho.
Our apartnt was quiet.
The world outside burned, crumbled, howled.
But here, with the windows boarded and candles flickering, it still felt like us.
I laid her on our bed.
Brushed her hair.
Washed the blood from her face.
And I waited.
Three hours later, she twitched.
Her fingers curled.
Her lips parted.
And her eyes—those perfect eyes—snapped open.
Black veins webbed beneath the surface.
But it was still her face. Her sll. Her warmth.
“Lyra,” I whispered.
She growled low.
Snarled.
Clawed at the sheets.
But I didn’t move. I just wept.
“I’m here,” I told her. “I never left.”
I chained her to the bedposts. Leather belts, thick rope, my own trembling hands.
It wasn’t cruelty.
It was care.
She thrashed, screeched, snapped her jaws.
But I still saw her—the woman I’d danced with in the kitchen, the one who made laugh until I choked, the one who said she’d never leave , even if the world fell apart.
She didn’t leave.
She just… changed.
People ca.
They slled the rot.
They heard the sounds.
They pounded on my door. “She’s turned, Ezra! Let her go!”
But I didn’t.
I made them leave.
Days passed. I played her favorite songs.
She stopped snarling when I read her our old letters.
Her head would tilt, just slightly.
Recognition?
Hope?
Madness?
I fed her scraps. Watered her lips with a sponge.
Her eyes watched .
Not with hunger.
With sothing else.
Then one night, the ropes frayed.
She broke free.
I woke to her shadow over .
Her face inches from mine.
Her mouth open.
Teeth exposed.
But she didn’t bite.
She stared.
Touched my face with cold, cracked fingers.
Then staggered back to the bed.
Laid down.
As if waiting.
The next day, I reinforced the chains.
But I also kissed her forehead.
Because she was still in there.
Sowhere.
And I didn’t let her go.
I won’t.
Ever.
Love is supposed to be patient.
Kind.
Enduring.
But nobody tells you what happens when it refuses to die.
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