The silence that settled in wasn’t just a pause—it was a space where decisions began to take shape. Irelia kept her arms crossed, her gaze fixed on an invisible point ahead, as if she were already projecting maps and movents in her own mind. When she spoke, her voice was lower, but full of direction. It was no longer irritation. It was command.
"If they entered stealthily, they didn’t co en masse. They ca in cells."
Alia tilted her head slightly, following the reasoning without interrupting. She had seen this before—silent infiltrations, fragnted movents, attacks that started too small to be noticed. Her fingers slid across the table, as if she could feel the routes there.
"And vampires don’t survive alone for long in hostile territory," she added calmly. "They need footholds. Shelters. Blood."
Irelia nodded once. That was it. The Empire’s mistake would be looking for monsters in the shadows when, in fact, it should be looking for patterns among the living.
"So we don’t hunt vampires," she said, finally turning to Alia. "We hunt change."
Alia let out a slight, almost imperceptible smile.
"Discreet disappearances. Bodies without obvious marks. Districts where the population begins to avoid going out at night... even without knowing why."
"And doctors," Irelia added. "Or whoever replaces doctors. Soone needs to keep the prey alive long enough."
The tension in the air transford into sothing more solid: a plan.
Irelia pulled out a map of the Empire and unfolded it firmly on the table. The major cities were marked in dark ink, but her finger ignored the capitals. Instead, it traced trade routes, smaller villages, waypoints.
"They wouldn’t hide where we’re strong," she murmured. "They hide where no one looks twice."
Alia approached, resting her hands on the table. Her eyes scanned the map with surgical precision.
"Internal borders." Areas of constant traffic. Places where strangers don’t attract attention.
Irelia began to score points.
"We’re not going to mobilize the entire army. That would only make them disappear again."
"Containnt cells," Alia said, almost simultaneously. "Small, mobile, without a fixed pattern. Each one autonomous."
Their eyes t, and for a mont there was absolute understanding.
"And no open communication," Irelia added. "If they’re infiltrated, they’ll hear everything."
Alia straightened her posture, her expression now completely focused.
"Living ssengers. Variable routes. Fragnted information. No one but the two of us sees the complete picture."
Irelia let out a short sigh, as if approving.
"Hunters hunting in the shadows."
But Alia didn’t smile this ti.
"No," she corrected, in a lower tone. "We’ve closed the net."
Her finger touched the map, connecting the points marked by Irelia in a pattern invisible at first glance—but clear to anyone who knew where to look.
"They think they’re scattered," she continued, "but they’re actually surrounded by territories we still control. If we isolate their feeding and escape routes..."
Irelia finished the sentence:
"They beco prey."
The plan, finally, was clear.
It wouldn’t be quick. Nor clean.
But it would be inevitable.
The silence that dominated the room was no longer the sa as before—it wasn’t heavier, nor tense. It was... charged with sothing different. The map was still open on the table, the markings fresh, the plan precisely drawn. Everything was defined.
And yet... the atmosphere changed.
Slowly.
Subtly.
Alia was the first to break it.
She exhaled slowly, as if letting the tension drain from her body, her shoulders relaxing, her gaze ceasing to be purely strategic. Her fingers were still resting on the table, but there was no longer any urgency in them.
"Well..." she murmured, tilting her head slightly. "Now that we’ve saved the Empire for today..."
Irelia let out a small sigh through her nose, crossing her arms again, but this ti without the previous rigidity. There was a different glint in her eyes—sothing lighter. More provocative.
"True," she said, glancing at Kael. "Because, technically... we didn’t co here for that."
Kael, who was still sitting on the sofa, raised his gaze slightly.
A pause.
Short.
"...No?"
Alia turned slowly to him.
The smile returned.
But now... it was a different kind of smile.
"No."
She took a step towards him, calmly, each movent asured, without haste. There was no threat now—only intent.
"We ca," she continued, her voice low, "because soone..."
Another step.
Closer.
— ...disappeared in the middle of the night.
Irelia followed, approaching from the other side, leaning her shoulder against the wall near the sofa, but without taking her eyes off him.
— And we woke up — she said casually — to an empty room.
Alia tilted her head slightly.
— Which was... disappointing.
Kael blinked.
Once.
Processing.
Irelia uncrossed her arms, approaching as well, but slowly, stopping a few steps from him.
— Because we had plans... plans that involved us having a lot of sex.
Silence.
A second.
Two.
Kael looked from one to the other.
And then...
Slowly.
Very slowly.
His gaze changed.
Subtly.
Surprise.
Real.
Alia watched it happen, clearly pleased.
"And then," she said, crossing her arms now, but with a slight tilt of her hip, "you just... disappear."
Irelia raised an eyebrow.
"Without warning."
"Without explanation," Alia added.
"Without consideration," Irelia finished dryly.
Silence.
Kael opened his mouth.
Closed it.
Looked to the side.
Took a deep breath.
And then turned his face away, running a hand through his hair, clearly trying to reorganize his thoughts—or escape them.
"...Damn it," he murmured softly.
The two waited.
He looked back.
Still sowhat incredulous.
"You guys screw over by saying sothing like that."
The silence that followed lasted half a second.
And then—
Alia laughed.
Uncontrollably.
It was opened.
Funny.
Irelia didn’t laugh loudly... but the corner of her mouth turned up, clearly pleased with the reaction.
"Ah, so you understand," Alia said, tilting her head.
Kael closed his eyes for a mont.
"Unfortunately."
Irelia took another step forward, stopping right in front of him now.
"So..." she said, looking directly into his eyes, "since you decided to go out hunting vampires in the middle of the night..."
She tilted her head slightly.
"What are you going to do now?"
Silence.
The question had no strategic weight.
It had no urgency.
But... it had intention.
Clear.
Direct.
Alia approached from the other side, resting one hand on the back of the sofa, leaning slightly, shortening the distance even more.
"Because we’re still here," she said softly.
Kael remained silent for a mont.
His gaze shifting between the two.
Calculating.
But this ti... no strategy would help.
He exhaled slowly.
And then—
A slight smile appeared.
Small.
But real.
"...This is definitely more dangerous than vampires."
Irelia let out a small sound, almost a muffled laugh.
Alia just smiled.
More.
"And even so" she said "you didn’t try to run away."
Kael looked at the window.
Reflexively.
Then... he looked back at them.
And this ti—
He didn’t look away.
Turning his face gently back to hers. His eyes were dark, fixed, promising everything and nothing at the sa ti.
"Escape isn’t an option" she whispered, before closing the distance.
The kiss wasn’t gentle. It was possessive, demanding, a claim in lips and teeth. Irelia savored it as if reclaiming lost territory, one hand entwined in his hair, pulling him closer. Kael responded with equal intensity, one hand finding her hip, pulling her onto his lap on the sofa.
Before he could deepen the kiss, Alia knelt before the sofa, her hands finding his waist, sliding under his shirt. Her lips found his neck—a soft bite, then a slow lick over the skin.
"You kept us waiting," Alia murmured against his skin, her fingers unbuttoning his jeans with deliberate precision. "That deserves... reparation."
Irelia pulled her lips away just enough to whisper, "Every minute you spent alone... we’ll make up for it."
She slid off his lap, pulling him to his feet. Alia stood up at the sa ti, and for a mont, he stood between them—Irelia unbuttoning her own shirt with firm hands, Alia sliding her hands down his back, kissing his shoulder, his collarbone.
—The bed— Kael managed to say, his voice hoarse.
—Too far— Irelia replied, gently pushing him against the large table, sweeping the map and docunts aside with one arm. The parchnt fell to the floor with a soft, insignificant sound.
Alia smiled against his mouth, kissing him again, slower now, exploring, promising. —This is good— she murmured, sliding her hands inside his trousers. —This is perfect.
Moonlight stread through the window, illuminating their skin, their dark eyes, their satisfied smiles. There were no more vampires, no more empire—only three bodies, three quickened breaths, and the still-young night ahead.
Irelia pulled Kael’s shirt over his head, tossing it aside. Her eyes traveled over his torso. —My turn— she said softly.
And then she pushed him back, sitting him on the edge of the table, kneeling between his legs while Alia kissed his neck from behind, her hands roaming his chest, his stomach.
The air in the room was warm, heavy, laden with promise. And for the first ti that night, no one was thinking about war.
Inari, who was inside Kael, sighed sadly, ’Not even to include in this... you could at least help and tell them of my existence, right?’ She thought, then looked around Kael’s ntal world...
’Where did you go, Umbra...’
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