SSS-Class MILFs And Their Yandere Daughters, I Want Them All! Chapter 411: What Do Those Lines Mean?
Astrid was terrified.
This was because, even though the situation had been dire and dangerous on all sides before, Mika had been right by her side.
His presence, his warmth, his unwavering determination—it had been her anchor in the storm.
But now?
Mika was gone.
And she was alone.
Completely, utterly alone.
The cave was dark. So dark she couldn’t see her own hand in front of her face.
The only sounds were the distant rush of the waterfall and her own ragged breathing.
No voices. No footsteps. No comforting presence to hold onto.
This was especially jarring because had always hated being alone.
Even as a young child, she craved company, craved connection, craved the warmth of others around her.
Being by herself for even a few hours made her anxious, restless, uneasy.
But this?
This was sothing else entirely.
This was isolation so complete it felt like being buried alive.
And worse was not knowing what was happening outside.
What was Mika doing? Was he safe? Was he fighting? Was he hurt? Was he—
Was he alive?
She had no way of knowing.
No way of finding out.
No way of helping him even if she did.
The thought terrified her more than anything else.
—
Hours passed.
Or maybe minutes.
Or maybe days.
In the darkness, ti lost all aning.
Astrid curled into a ball, her arms wrapped around her knees, her seven tails tucked close for what little comfort they could provide.
She tried to stay strong. Tried to be brave. Tried to rember that Mika had promised he would co back.
But as the hours stretched on—as the darkness pressed in from all sides—her resolve crumbled.
"Mika..." She whispered into the void. "Please co back. Please. I’m scared. I’m so scared."
No answer.
Just the waterfall.
Just her breathing.
Just the darkness.
She cried. She couldn’t help it. Tears stread down her cheeks as she imagined all the horrible things that could be happening to her little brother.
She imagined him surrounded by those vicious demi-humans, their weapons raised, their faces twisted with hate.
She imagined him falling, bleeding, calling out for her—
’Stop it. Stop it. You have to stop thinking like that.’
But she couldn’t.
The thoughts wouldn’t stop.
And as more ti passed—more endless, terrible ti—she reached a breaking point.
She couldn’t stay here anymore.
She had to know.
Even if it ant crawling out on her broken legs.
Even if it ant facing the army herself. Even if it ant death.
She had to find Mika.
She started to move, dragging her useless legs toward the cave entrance, when—
Light.
A sliver of light, cutting through the darkness.
The rocks at the entrance were shifting.
Moving.
Opening.
Astrid’s heart stopped.
’They found .’
’They heard crying and they found .’
’They’re coming to kill .’
Panic seized her. Her eyes darted around the cave, looking for anything she could use as a weapon.
Her hand closed around a rock, rough and heavy. It wasn’t much. Against trained warriors with swords and axes, it was nothing.
But it was sothing.
If they were going to take her, if they were going to hurt her, she would fight. She would make them pay.
She would—
The last rock moved aside.
Light flooded in.
And standing in the entrance, silhouetted against the brightness—
"Mika."
The rock fell from her hand.
He was there.
Astrid lunged forward—or tried to, her broken legs preventing anything more than a desperate crawl.
But Mika was already moving, crossing the cave in an instant, dropping to his knees and wrapping his arms around her.
She clung to him like he was the only solid thing in a world that had turned to quicksand.
"Mika! Mika! You’re back! You’re back!"
She sobbed into his shoulder, her body shaking with relief so intense it was almost painful.
She held him tighter than she had ever held anything in her life, terrified that if she let go, he would disappear again.
"W-Where did you go!? What happened? Is help coming? Are they coming to save us? Did you find a way out?!"
The questions tumbled out of her, one after another, desperate for answers.
But Mika didn’t respond.
He just smiled.
A gentle, tired, loving smile.
Then he pulled away just enough to reach for sothing on the ground. A small rock.
With it, he moved to the cave wall and began to scratch.
One line.
Two lines.
Three.
Four.
Five.
Six.
Seven.
Astrid watched, confused, as he added seven lines to the wall. Then he set down the rock, moved to a spot near her, and sat down heavily like simply standing had taken everything he had.
"What...What are those lines?" She asked.
Mika just smiled again and reached out, gently stroking one of her tails.
The touch was so familiar, so comforting, so Mika, that despite her confusion, despite her fear, despite everything—she felt herself calming down.
She leaned into his touch, letting him stroke her tail, letting the warmth of his presence wash over her.
But even as she relaxed, she noticed things.
His clothes were dirtier than before. Torn in places.
There were scratches on his arms, bruises forming on his face.
Nothing life-threatening—but evidence that whatever he had been doing out there, it hadn’t been easy.
"Mika...what happened to you?"
He didn’t answer.
Just kept stroking her tail.
And soon, despite her worry, despite her questions, despite everything—she drifted off.
Exhaustion finally claid her.
—
When she woke, Mika was gone again.
The cave entrance was sealed.
But on the wall, there were three more lines.
—
This beca their rhythm.
Mika would leave.
Hours would pass—sotis half a day, sotis longer.
Astrid would wait in terror, imagining the worst, praying for his return.
And then—every ti—he would co back.
He would add lines to the wall.
Rest.
Stroke her tail until she cald down.
And then leave again.
At first, she tried to stop him. Grabbed his arm, begged him to stay, pleaded with him to just rest, just be with her, just stop.
"Mika, please! You don’t have to keep going out there! Just stay with ! We can figure sothing out together!"
But he would just smile that sa smile, pat her head, and go.
And she couldn’t stop him.
She was too weak.
Her legs still wouldn’t work.
She was completely dependent on him.
—
And then soon, each ti he returned, he brought sothing.
The first ti, it was food. Not just berries or roots—actual food.
Wrapped in leaves, still warm, clearly made by soone. Demi-human food, from the taste of it.
"Where did you get this?" She asked, amazed.
"I found it lying around." He said.
That was all.
The next ti, it was a knife. Small, sharp, enchanted—the blade glowed faintly in the darkness.
"For protection." He said, pressing it into her hands. "Just in case."
Another ti, it was armor. Not much, just a chest piece and so guards for her arms, but it was sothing.
He helped her put it on, his small hands surprisingly gentle as he adjusted the straps.
The ti after that, it was dicine.
Astrid stared at the small vial in disbelief.
"How...How did you get dicine? We’re in the middle of a forest! There’s nothing here!"
Mika just shrugged and began applying it to her wounds.
The infection that had been spreading through her body? It stopped.
The fever that had been plaguing her? It broke.
The pain in her broken legs? It eased.
She healed.
Slowly, but surely.
Because of him.
—
And with each return, he added more lines to the wall.
Days passed.
Weeks, maybe.
Astrid lost count. The lines accumulated—ten, twenty, fifty, a hundred.
The cave wall beca covered in them, a silent testant to ti she couldn’t asure.
At one point, she stared at them in horror.
"A hundred days? Have we been here for a hundred days? That’s months! That’s—"
Miko shook his head and stroked her tail.
"Relax." He said softly. "It’s not what you think."
But he didn’t explain what it was.
And Astrid, comforted by his touch, let the question fade.
—
Then ca the day everything changed.
Mika returned, and Astrid’s blood ran cold.
He wasn’t just scratched anymore.
He wasn’t just bruised.
He was broken.
His face was swollen, one eye nearly shut.
His clothes hung in tatters, revealing a body covered in cuts and gashes.
His arm was bent at an awkward angle, clearly fractured.
There was a stab wound in his side, still oozing blood.
And the way he moved...or rather, the way he stumbled...suggested injuries she couldn’t even see.
He collapsed just inside the cave entrance.
Astrid scread.
"MIKA!"
She dragged herself toward him, ignoring the pain in her own legs, and gathered him into her arms.
He was so light. So fragile. Covered in blood—his blood and shaking with pain he was too proud to voice.
"Mika, Mika, what happened? Who did this to you? Why—"
He tried to smile.
But failed.
"Just...one more round..." He whispered.
"No!"
She held him tighter.
"No more rounds! No more leaving! Look at you! You’re—you’re—"
She couldn’t finish.
Because she was looking at a child.
A five-year-old child who had been fighting an army alone.
For her.
"Stay with ." She begged, tears streaming down her face. "Please, Mika. Stay with . Don’t go back out there. Soone will co. Soone has to co. We just have to wait—"
She gestured at herself desperately.
"Look! I’m healing! The dicine worked! I’m getting stronger! I can—I can protect you now! You don’t have to keep fighting! Just stay! Please, just stay!"
For a mont, she thought he might listen.
His eyes t hers.
So tired.
So young.
So full of love.
Then, slowly, painfully, he pushed himself up.
"One more round, Astrid."
His voice was barely a whisper.
"Just one more. And then...I’m pretty sure...we’ll be out of here."
"Mika, NO!"
But he was already moving.
Already stumbling toward the entrance.
Already leaving her behind.
He paused at the cave mouth and looked back at her one last ti.
That sa unwavering love was there in his eyes.
Then he was gone.
And the rocks sealed shut behind him.
—
Astrid sat in the darkness, holding the knife he had given her, wearing the armor he had brought, surrounded by the evidence of his countless sacrifices.
And for the first ti since this nightmare began—
Her confidence wavered.
Before, no matter what happened, she had believed Mika would handle it.
He was her protector. Her guardian angel. Her hero.
But now?
Now she had seen him broken. Bleeding. Barely standing.
Now she had watched him stumble back into danger despite everything.
Now she didn’t know if he would co back at all.
"Please, Mika." She whispered into the darkness.
"Please co back."
The cave had no answer.
Only silence.
Only the waterfall.
Only the marks on the wall—over a hundred of them—counting a quantity that she couldn’t understand.
And she waited.
Waited for her little brother to co back.
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