I straightened from the bow and t Akane’s gaze steadily, my own eyes reflecting the silver moonlight spilling through the half-drawn curtains. "I do," I said, my voice low but firm.
"I know how you trained her, how you promised her mother on her deathbed that you’d keep her safe, how you’ve watched over her from the shadows, even when you had to stay away—when she needed you most but couldn’t have you. I know the weight you carry. I know you’d give anything to protect her and this family, even if it ans sacrificing your own peace."
For a long mont, Akane simply stared at , her sharp eyes searching mine as if trying to peel back every layer of truth.
The moonlight painted silver across her face, highlighting the faint lines of exhaustion and quiet strength etched there—lines earned in battles unseen by anyone but those who truly knew her. The lines of a guardian who had spent a lifeti balancing duty with devotion, love with sacrifice.
Then, slowly, the last traces of vigilance left her body. Her shoulders relaxed, the rigid assassin’s posture softening into sothing almost human. The knife slid back into its sheath with a soft, final click, the sound like a sigh of relief.
She took one small step closer, studying my face as if seeing for the first ti—not as a threat, not as an intruder, but as sothing far more complicated. Sothing neither of us had expected.
Akane shook her head gently, a faint, almost weary smile touching her lips. "You don’t need to thank ," she murmured. "It is what I should do. It is what I have always done."
She tilted her head slightly, her eyes tracing the empty air where I had appeared monts earlier, her curiosity replacing suspicion. "You don’t look like you’re wearing any technology... and there’s no trace of interference of any kind."
"No heat signature. No electromagnetic hum. Nothing at all." Her voice was clinical, almost admiring. "It looks like an innate ability... or is it like us ninja, using internal energy to move swiftly?"
"But reaching your level—to beco completely invisible, undetectable even to soone like —is sothing I haven’t seen or heard of in all my years of training and fighting."
She paused, her fingers tapping lightly against her thigh, a habit I recognized from years of watching her unravel a problem. "How does it feel? To simply... vanish like that? Does it drain you? Or is it as natural as breathing?"
I looked at Akane, genuinely surprised by her careful, precise interpretation. Most people would have panicked. Most people would have accused of tricks and gadgets, demanded answers, or tried to disarm . But Akane? She analyzed it in seconds, calm and clinical, like a master assessing a new technique she might one day teach.
"This is the first ti soone has actually noticed ," I admitted, a small chuckle escaping despite the tension still lingering in the room.
"I’m a bit surprised. About my ability... it is indeed an innate gift. Not sothing I’ve practiced or learned. It’s just... part of . Always has been." I paused, choosing my words carefully. "Like a second heartbeat, I can turn it on or off. It doesn’t drain . It is ."
Akane nodded slowly, respecting the boundary I had drawn without hesitation. Seeing that I didn’t reveal more, she didn’t press about other secrets—neither mine nor anyone else’s. That quiet restraint spoke volus about her honor. Instead, she let out a low, thoughtful hum and crossed her arms lightly, the gesture more reflective than defensive.
"An innate gift..." she mused, her voice barely above a whisper. "I’ve heard legends of such things in old scrolls, but never believed them until tonight." Her eyes flickered to the space where I had stood monts ago, then back to .
"You could have used it to end the mont I sensed you. Or to disappear forever. Yet here you stand, bowing, thanking , explaining what little you can." Her voice ward with quiet respect.
"That tells more about your character than any power ever could. Tell , Jack... why reveal yourself at all? You could have stayed hidden and simply watched. Why step into the light for soone like ?"
I smiled faintly, the honesty of her question catching off guard. "Because you are Sister Yuko’s master," I said simply. "And after seeing you help her... after seeing you deal with Daiki... I realized sothing." I t her gaze, unflinching.
"You’re not just Sister Yuko’s master.. You are family."
Akane’s eyes softened further, a rare flicker of warmth breaking through her usual mask. For a heartbeat, she looked almost vulnerable—just for a heartbeat. Then, just as quickly, she composed herself again.
The silence between us felt different now. Charged, but no longer dangerous. It was the kind of silence that cos after a storm, when the air is still thick with the echoes of what was said and what wasn’t.
I took a slow breath and asked the question that had been nagging at since I first sensed her presence in the mansion. "Is your injury healed...?" My voice was gentle, almost hesitant.
Akane’s eyes flickered with mild surprise, then softened even more. She touched her side lightly, almost absentmindedly, where I knew the wound had been. "Yeah... it was just a minor scratch." She gave a small, reassuring nod, the ghost of a smile returning.
"I’ve had far worse—broken ribs, shattered bones, nights where I thought I wouldn’t see morning. A few hours of rest and the right herbs, and it’s already closing." Her lips quirked. "You really do notice everything, don’t you, Jack? Even the things I try to hide."
I didn’t answer right away. Instead, I let the silence stretch, knowing that sotis, the most important things didn’t need to be spoken aloud.
"I noticed," I said finally, my voice barely above a whisper. "Because I care about you. Not just as a protector, but as a person. As soone who has given everything—even the things she can’t afford to lose—and still doesn’t ask for anything in return."
Akane’s breath hitched, just for a second. Then, she looked away, her fingers tightening slightly around her own arm.
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