The first thing she tried on was a dark green blouse.
Clean cut, no frills, with the specific adjustnt for fox‑type beastfolk proportions that the owner had ntioned.
She ca out of the fitting room with her typical neutral evaluation expression.
Alex looked at her.
The way the dark green contrasted with her reddish hair. The cut leaving her shoulders free — Kira had a tracker’s shoulders, defined by years of carrying her bow, and the clothes she normally wore covered them for functionality. This one didn’t.
"Good," said Alex.
"Good as in functional, or good as in sothing else?"
"Good as in you look beautiful."
Kira looked at him.
Her ears moved slightly upward.
"Better than the work shirt?"
"Much better."
Kira looked at herself in the shop’s side mirror.
She studied herself in great detail, analyzing whether this outfit was good for her.
"The proportions are correct," she conceded.
"Buy it."
"It’s expensive."
"Then I’ll buy it."
Kira looked at him.
"I don’t need you to—"
"I know you don’t." Alex looked directly at her. "But I want to. That’s an important difference."
Kira held that gaze.
Then she went back into the fitting room.
---
The second was a dress.
She hadn’t chosen it — the owner had put it in her hands when Kira ca out to look for the next option, with the expression of soone who knows exactly what her clientele needs even if the clientele doesn’t know it yet.
"Just for reference," the owner had said.
Kira had gone into the fitting room with the dress and the expression of soone doing a favor.
This ti she took longer to co out.
When she ca out, Alex looked up from the ceiling where he had been staring, and he didn’t look away for a mont.
The dress was a reddish‑brown color that, on Kira with her hair and her amber eyes, produced an effect that "functional" didn’t describe at all. Simple cut, knee‑length, with a detail at the neck that the owner called a "tie closure" and that made the whole thing have sothing that would make her stand out in a crowd of millions.
Kira’s ears completely visible.
Her hair loose — she had let it down in the fitting room, maybe to see how it fell with the dress.
"Well?" said Kira. In her neutral voice. But evaluating his reaction.
Alex took a second longer than necessary to answer, carefully looking her up and down.
"That one too."
"It’s less practical than the blouse."
"Not everything has to be practical."
"In my work—"
"You’re not working right now."
Kira looked at herself in the mirror.
Her ears in a position that Alex already recognized — she was surprised but also happy and nervous.
"I don’t know when I would wear it."
"Tonight."
Kira looked directly at him this ti.
"Tonight?"
"I’m inviting you to dinner." Alex held her gaze. "Just the two of us. Without the team."
Her ears finished making up their mind.
Upward.
"Is that a date?"
"If you want to call it that."
Kira looked at the dress in the mirror.
"Okay."
---
They bought four items.
The green blouse.
The reddish‑brown dress.
A light travel coat that was genuinely practical and that Kira chose on her own with the satisfaction of soone who had negotiated an acceptable compromise.
And an amber‑colored scarf that the owner showed her at the end and that Kira took exactly three seconds to decide she wanted.
Alex paid for everything without comnting on the total.
Kira looked at him when they left.
"It was too much."
"It was the right amount."
"Alex—"
"Kira." He looked at her. "Accepting good things — it’s a gift from to you for all the effort you put in for the team."
Her ears moved.
"I’m not good at that."
"I know. Practice."
Kira held the bags.
"Thank you," she said. With a slightly more direct tone underneath.
"You’re welco."
---
[Veltharr — Restaurant Salt of the North — 7:30 PM]
The restaurant wasn’t the fanciest in Veltharr — those were for rchants and officials passing through with money to spend. It was the kind of place that existed for people who wanted good food in a quiet atmosphere.
Kira arrived in the earth‑colored dress, her hair still loose.
Alex was already at the table when she walked in.
He watched her co in from the door and thought that there was a real difference between knowing soone was beautiful — an objective fact, confird since the first day in Khar’Seth — and seeing it in this specific way, with the new dress and her ears oriented toward him as soon as she spotted him, and her amber eyes with that attention that Kira gave to things that mattered to her.
He stood up when she reached the table.
Kira looked at him standing.
"You didn’t have to do that."
"Courtesy."
"You’re not especially courteous normally."
"I’m practicing."
Kira sat down. Her ears slightly upward.
---
The food was good.
The conversation was better.
Not about Fragnts. Not about seals or rituals or Heralds or Catacombs.
Kira talking about Khar’Seth — not the town under Matthias’s control, but the town she rembered from before. The evening market that had been there for three hundred years. The blacksmith who started working again. The mountain creatures she knew by family na because she had tracked them long enough to tell them apart.
Alex listened.
Asking specific questions because he loved the expression on Kira’s face when she talked about sothing that fascinated her.
Kira noticed that — the questions were specific, not filler conversation.
Her ears stayed up for the entire dinner.
---
When the plates were almost empty, Kira asked what she had been holding back.
"Are there other anchors? For the other seals."
Alex set down his cup.
"Grim thinks so. For the other three active seals."
"Do we know them?"
"Not yet."
"And when we find them?"
"We protect them." Alex looked directly at her. "Just that simple."
Kira held that gaze.
"Just that simple?" she repeated.
"Just that simple."
"You said the sa thing when you explained the anchor chanism to . What happens if I die in the wrong place." Her amber eyes serious. "And you still went to Level Four knowing the risk."
"Yes."
"Why?"
Alex thought about it.
"Because ’just that simple’ doesn’t an easy. It ans there’s no other option worth considering."
Kira looked at her glass.
"Three more anchors," she said quietly. "Three people who don’t know what they are."
"Yes."
"Like I didn’t know."
"Yes."
"When we find them, they’re going to be scared."
"Probably."
"Soone will have to explain it to them."
Alex looked at her.
Kira raised her eyes.
"I can do that." Not as an offer — as a decision already made. "What it’s like to be an anchor. Soone who lived it explaining it is different from soone who read it in a report."
Alex looked at her for a mont.
"Yes," he said. "It is."
Kira nodded.
And her ears — which had been serious during that part of the conversation — went back up.
---
[Veltharr — 9:15 PM]
The night in Veltharr was quieter than during the day. The market closed, the streets with the reduced traffic of people heading back to their inns.
They walked unhurriedly.
Kira with the shopping bags from the afternoon in one hand, the earth‑colored dress moving slightly with each step, her ears following the sounds of the city completely automatically.
Alex beside her.
They weren’t talking. It was the kind of silence that doesn’t need to be filled.
They turned a corner.
Kira stopped.
A building to her right — smaller than The Broken Rock inn, with a simple sign over the door and neon light around it. The kind of place that existed in every border town for exactly one night of passion.
Kira looked at it for a second.
Then she looked at Alex.
"You promised ," she said.
It wasn’t a question.
It was a reminder of an agreent established with the sa seriousness that Kira took all agreents.
Alex looked at her.
The bags in her hand.
The new dress.
The amber eyes direct as always.
He didn’t say anything.
He took her hand.
And led her inside.
User Comments
0 comments from readers