Yuko froze mid-step, every muscle locking up. Slowly, painfully, she turned around. The mont her eyes landed on her master in the dim moonlight filtering through the curtains, they filled with tears that spilled over instantly.
She dropped to her knees right there on the cold floor, head bowed low in reverence and overwhelming emotion.
"Ma... Master... Master... It’s really you. I... I thought I’d never see you again like this. Not after everything. Not after you left us all behind."
Akane’s expression softened for the briefest mont, a flicker of raw emotion breaking through her usual iron mask. But she kept her voice steady.
"I have already dealt with Daiki. Go back ho, Yuko. This isn’t your fight anymore."
Yuko shook her head fiercely, tears streaming down her cheeks as she looked up, voice cracking with desperation. "No, Master... I won’t go anywhere. I can’t."
"I will follow you. I’ve followed you my whole life—through every lesson, every mission, every promise you made keep."
"You can’t just disappear and expect to stay behind now. Not when my aunt was in danger. Not when I thought that monster might still be alive and coming back for her."
Akane’s voice hardened, though I could hear the strain beneath it. "Do you no longer take your master’s words seriously? I made a promise to your mother before. You should go back. Live a normal life. Stay with your family. That’s what she wanted for you."
Yuko rose to her feet in one fluid motion and threw her arms around Akane, clinging tightly, her face buried in her master’s shoulder. Her voice ca out in a broken sob, muffled but full of years of pent-up feelings. "No... don’t leave again, Master. Please. I can’t do this without you. You trained . You saved . You gave purpose when I had nothing."
Akane’s hand lifted instinctively, as if pulled by so invisible force, wanting nothing more than to return the hug. Her fingers trembled in the air for a long, painful second, hovering just inches from Yuko’s back.
But she stopped herself. With visible effort, she forced her arm back down, even as her body betrayed her with a slight, involuntary shudder that rippled through her shoulders. The room felt heavier in that mont, the moonlight slicing through the curtains like a silent witness to the war raging inside her.
Then sothing shifted.
Akane turned her head slowly, deliberately, her sharp eyes cutting straight toward the exact spot where I hovered—invisible, weightless, completely undetected by any normal sense. My stomach dropped. She couldn’t possibly see .
My invisibility was flawless, layered with telekinesis to bend light and sound around . Yet there she was, staring right through the empty air... at . I was surprised—actually stunned—by her instinct. No one had ever sensed my presence like this before. She was the first. Ever.
For a heartbeat, the tension crackled between us. I held perfectly still, heart hamring in my chest even though I knew she couldn’t hear it.
But then, as quickly as it had co, the mont vanished. Akane turned back to Yuko as if nothing had happened, as if the entire exchange had been nothing more than a trick of the shadows. Her voice returned to its usual calm, controlled tone, though I caught the faintest edge of strain beneath it.
"Yuko... go back ho. I’ll co find you tomorrow. I have things to do tonight. We will talk then—properly."
Yuko pulled back just enough to look up at her master, eyes still glistening with fresh tears, her face a mix of hope and fear. "Really, Master? You’re not saying this just to run away from again, right?"
"You promise you’ll co? Because last ti you disappeared for so long... I waited every night, wondering if you were okay, if I had done sothing wrong. Please don’t make wait like that again. I can’t take it."
Akane let out a long, weary sigh, the kind that carried years of unspoken burdens. "You’ve beco bold, Yuko. Even questioning your master now? That’s new."
Yuko shook her head quickly, her voice soft but urgent, laced with years of loyalty and longing. "No, Master... I wasn’t questioning you. I was just surprised. I’m sorry if I sounded disrespectful."
"I’m leaving right now, I promise. But before I go... thank you, Master. Thank you for protecting my aunt and the whole family tonight. "
Akane nodded once, a small but genuine gesture that softened the hard lines of her face for a fraction of a second. "Go now. Rest. Tomorrow will co soon enough."
Yuko hesitated for one final mont, then bowed deeply—forehead nearly touching the floor—before turning and slipping out through the sa window she had entered. Her footsteps faded into the night, light and swift, until the mansion fell completely silent once more.
The second Yuko was gone, and the air changed.
Akane moved like lightning.
In one fluid, blinding motion, Akane spun toward , a knife already drawn and slashing in a deadly arc straight for my throat. The blade whistled through the air with lethal precision, stopping only a hair’s breadth from my invisible neck. I felt the cold edge kiss the skin I wasn’t even showing, the faintest pressure sending a chill racing down my spine.
"Show yourself," she hissed, voice low and lethal, eyes burning with lethal intensity. "What are you? And why have you been following us?"
The silence stretched for a single, electric heartbeat.
I let the invisibility drop.
I appeared out of thin air right in front of her, my neck still pressed against the razor-sharp edge of her knife. The cold steel didn’t waver. Slowly, calmly, I t her gaze, staring straight into those beautiful, piercing eyes that had seen far too much darkness.
"It’s ..." I said softly, my voice barely above a whisper, calm and steady despite the blade at my throat.
Akane’s eyes widened in genuine shock. For the first ti since I had t her, her perfect mask of control cracked. The knife stayed exactly where it was, but her grip loosened by a fraction.
Akane’s breath caught.
"Jack..." she breathed, the word heavy with disbelief. "What was the skill you just used? Or is it so advanced technology? No one has ever hidden from like that. Not once. Not even the best operatives I’ve trained. How did you—"
I didn’t answer with words at first.
I simply looked at her, then bowed deeply—ninety degrees, forehead aid at the floor in complete respect. My voice ca out soft and sincere.
"Thank you... for always protecting and worrying about Sister Yuko. She loves you more than she can ever say. You’ve been her anchor, her teacher, her family when the world tried to break her. I’ve seen it. I’ve felt how much she carries because of you. So... thank you, Akane."
Akane’s eyes softened instantly, the hard edge of suspicion lting into sothing warr, almost vulnerable. The knife in her hand lowered a fraction, though she still held it ready.
"You know about Yuko and ..." she whispered, more statent than question, a quiet wonder threading through her voice.
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