*
I see the child I could not save. Now bound to night, to lust, a slave. Your crimson eyes, your blood-stained skin. Hide all the light you held within.
I reach for you through grief and flame. A demon’s chains have staked their claim. If love alone can’t set you free. Then death must heal what’s left of thee.
So steel will sing, though heart may break. For mercy’s hand is mine to take. I’ll strike you down, though torn apart. And free the soul that broke my heart.
Forgive me child, when blade is near. For every stroke is born of tear. If heaven calls, then I obey. To guide your soul the righteous way.
*
—
The moment mother’s tail slipped from me, I cried out—loud, needy. My legs quivered, my back arched, and I felt it. Her cum spilling from me in molten streams, hot against my swollen lips, sliding thick and wet down the inside of my thighs.
Gods… the sensation was unbearable. Too good.
I clenched tight, a desperate moan catching in my throat as I forced my walls to hold the rest in, trapping it, savoring it. I needed it to stay inside me. Every drop that left me felt like losing her, and I couldn’t allow that.
The warmth swelled in my belly, heavy and thick, spreading deeper as if her essence were claiming me again from the inside. My skin tingled, my core ached, and my breath came in ragged gasps.
I lowered a hand to my trembling stomach, pressing against the fullness, and a whimper escaped from my lips. Mother’s gift. Mother’s seed.
It wasn’t just cum—it was her claim, her power, her love, her cruelty, all flooding into me at once.
I lifted my eyes, staring into the dark ahead, a smile curled on my lips. The filthy humans were still out there, scurrying like insects, daring to disturb her peace. My Queen’s peace. My mother’s peace.
My body surged forward before I realized it, faster than I had ever moved in my life. The air whipped against my face, the world blurring into shadow and silver.
And gods—her cum sloshed inside me with every stride. The warmth churned, heavy and thick in my belly, driving me wild. Every movement sent waves of her essence sliding through me, and I nearly stumbled from the sheer pleasure of carrying her inside me.
Gods, how could I live without her now? The thought clawed at me, desperate. To be without mother was to be nothing, to fall back into the hollow, trembling shell I once was.
Now I was no longer that weak, trembling girl who bowed to every command in that wretched cult. No longer a servant who lived only to obey. For years, I endured their cruelty because I believed—believed in creating the perfect being.
And now… now I was part of her.
Not just a worshipper, not just a servant—her daughter.
The thought lit my chest aflame, so bright it almost hurt. My lips parted, panting, as the madness bubbled up into a giddy laugh.
The memory of her touch, her voice, her body pressed against mine—it was too much. Every echo of her sent sparks of lust clawing through me, until I thought I might explode just from the thought of her.
And then, unbidden, I thought of that place. Mother’s domain. The place where she broke me, remade me.
The sky had been red when I first saw it—bleeding, endless, heavy as if it would crush me. Fire burned in the distance, rivers of it snaking between jagged peaks that cut at the horizon like the bones of the earth itself. And in the center, towering over everything, the oak tree. Black and split down the middle, its bark cracked open and oozing tar-like blood, its branches bare, skeletal fingers clawing at the sky.
I remembered the whispers most of all. They had no shape, no meaning, just voices that slithered through the air, crawling under my skin, wrapping around my heart. They told me nothing—and yet they told me everything, that I was small, I was weak. Nothing, but a toy for her to claim.
And when mother offered me her hand—her shadow falling over me, her voice silencing the whispers—I didn’t hesitate. I surrendered gladly, utterly, without thought. Relief and awe washed through me. To be remade by her, to belong to her completely—this was all I had ever wanted. My desire unveiled, my dream made flesh—I would fall for her again, a thousand times, just to land in her arms.
And since that moment, I’ve learned. Even her cruelty was a gift. The way she pinned me against the wall, the sting of it, the ache in my bones—gods, I felt her love in it. Not cold, not empty violence, but passion, claiming, need. When she looked at me with those eyes, even as she broke me. I knew, she loved me. That love is all I want. All I will ever want.
I exhaled slowly, dragging myself back into the now. The warmth of that memory lingered, but the voices ahead grew clearer, tugging me out of Mother’s embrace and back into the filth of the world. Their chatter scraped against my ears like iron on stone, Rage boiled inside me again. How dare they intrude upon thoughts of Her? My steps quickened, soundless and sharp, until I took a corner and halted, forcing myself still.
The corridor opened wider here, the air thicker, carrying the scent of sweat, and fear.
I closed my eyes and listened. With my new hearing, their whispers were as loud as confessions.
“…he’s gone. Therin is dead.” A man’s voice, trembling, desperate to convince himself it was true.
“Dead? He was the Arch Mage. If he couldn’t stand against that thing, what chance do the rest of us have?” Another, higher, fraying at the edges.
My lips curled. Therin… His name was ash to me now, the man who had once stood on equal grounds with me, cut, drained. Dead by my hands.
Perfect.
“They say Ysara’s gone too. The research head.”
A ripple of silence followed, uneasy and sharp. My chest shook with suppressed laughter. Dead? Oh, little fools. If only you knew what crawled closer with every step.
Boots scraped, someone spat. “Then it’s over. All of it. Without them, without her notes—we have nothing. Just prey waiting for death.”
They began to argue over countermeasures, voices overlapping, panic thick in their tones. Words like wards, binding circles, holy fire spilled from their mouths, all worthless babble. None of them realized they were already too late.
Then—her voice. Rough, worn by battle and authority, but painfully familiar.
“Quiet.” The command cracked through the others like a whip, and they obeyed, though I could hear their shuffling, their shallow breaths. She was back. One of the apostles I had known. A name tugged at the back of my skull, and with it, old bitterness.
“We can’t waste time with fantasies,” she said, her tone steadier now. “The door’s our only way forward. Once it’s open, we regroup on the other side. Seal this corridor behind us.”
I followed the sound, each step measured, savoring their futility. Then finally the passage opened into a wide chamber, its pillars cracked and blackened by old spells. Around fifteen of them lingered there—some clutching blades, others whispering prayers to absent gods. Two men worked desperately at the iron door, their magic sparking uselessly against its seals.
And near them, standing tall in gleaming armor, was a woman I knew. A pale scar carved from her brow to her ear, splitting the skin around her eye. A paladin. Her voice carried above the rest, steady, commanding, as if she could hold back the fear gnawing at them all.
“How long will it take?” the woman demanded.
“One—one more minute,” one of the men stammered.
My hunger coiled tight inside me, sharp as knives. They were so close, so fragile. And before he could finish his plea, the sound slipped from me, low, rich, delightful.
A chuckle.
…
A low, throaty chuckle rippled through the chamber.
“Heh… heheheh… “
The sound curled along the walls, rich and mocking, slithering into every corner of the vast hall. The humans froze mid-breath, their hearts caught in their throats.
“Hello, Apostle Eliza,” came the silken greeting. “How are you?”
Every head whipped toward the shadows. They found her there—Ysara, standing bare and unashamed, her body slick with dried blood like warpaint, her crimson eyes gleaming with a hunger too sharp to be human.
The paladin turned last. Slowly, heavily, she pivoted, her holy sword rising in a defensive arc. Its golden light wavered in her grip, fragile against the darkness that bled from Ysara’s presence. When her gaze landed on the figure before her, her one good eye widened, stricken.
“Child…” Eliza’s voice cracked. The word fell from her lips heavy with grief, with disappointment so deep it seemed to pull the air down with it. “Is that you?”
The sound struck Ysara like a lash. A growl tore free of her throat, loud and feral, vibrating through the chamber. In the next instant she vanished, reappearing in a blur beside the nearest man. Before he could scream, her claws split his skull like parchment, tearing his head apart in a spray of crimson. Hot blood rained across her pale skin, streaking her face, her breasts, trailing from her hair like a crown of gore.
She turned her blood-soaked grin toward Eliza, baring her fangs.
“Don’t,” Ysara hissed, her voice jagged with fury. “Don’t call me that. From anyone else’s mouth it is filth. Only hers… only Mother’s may name me so.”
The chamber erupted in chaos. Screams tore through the air as the cultists stumbled back, weapons clattering to the stone floor. Some tripped over their own feet in their desperation to retreat, their eyes wide, whites flashing in the dim light. The stink of fear rolled through the room, sharp and intoxicating.
Yet through the chaos, one figure did not falter. Eliza stepped forward, planting herself between Ysara and the trembling mortals behind her. Her armor caught the flickering glow of dying wards, golden plates shimmering like defiance itself.
“Chil—no, Ysara…” Her words faltered as she stopped herself, correcting her voice mid-breath. “What… what has happened to you?”
A low, breathy moan escaped Ysara as she dragged her bloodied hands over her chest, sliding it over her breasts and down her torso. Her crimson eyes glimmered, fixed on Eliza with dangerous reverence.
“Mother remade me,” she murmured, voice soft, sultry, trembling with pleasure. “She took me… and turned me into this. Into something… beautiful.”
Eliza’s grip tightened on her sword, knuckles whitening, her one good eye flickering with pain and disbelief. “How… how could you fall so far?” she whispered, voice breaking. “This… this isn’t the girl I knew. How did it come to this?”
Ysara’s lips parted, a quiet moan slipping from her throat as she slid two fingers inside herself, bringing them slowly to her mouth. She drew them between her lips, tasting, savoring the essence of her mother. Her gaze never left Eliza’s, dark and gleaming with fire.
“It wasn’t hard,” she purred, her voice low and teasing. “Years of torment here… and just a small touch, a nudge from Mother… it was easier than I ever imagined.”
A shiver ran down Eliza’s spine. She tightened her hold on the hilt of her sword, trembling with sorrow and helplessness, but her resolve hardened.
“Ysara,” she said at last, her voice steady but heavy. “I came back here after five years to see you. To see how you were faring… and if there was still a chance to bring you out of this place. Out of this hell.”
She did not call her child this time. The word died in her throat, as though naming her so now would have been a lie. This was not the girl she had once guided, but something else—someone else. And Eliza’s heart broke as she spoke her name instead.
Her one good eye searched Ysara’s face, lingering—on the unnatural glow of her crimson eyes, the way silver threaded through her long dark hair, the inhuman perfection of her beauty that chilled as much as it dazzled. Eliza’s jaw trembled, and then she exhaled, a long, weary sigh that seemed to drain years from her bones.
“It seems…” she whispered, her voice faltering around the words, “…it is too late.”
Lifting her left hand, she murmured in a tongue known only to the holy church, words guarded like relics. Each syllables curling through the air like fire and wind.
“Sanctum Aelora… Ven’thir Malakar… In nomine Lux Aeterna.”
The space before her shimmered. Light fractured, then solidified, until a heavy shield of impossible beauty appeared in her grasp—etched with runes that pulsed like living stars, its surface inlaid with the intricate geometry of divine craft. It was a relic that did not belong in mortal hands, a weapon of saints.
With sword in one hand, shield in the other, Eliza leveled her gaze at Ysara, grief hardening into steel.
“If I cannot save you in life…” she said, voice raw, resolute, “…then I will save you in death. I will send you to my Lord, and He will redeem your soul.”
Eliza’s vow hung in the air, a silence heavy enough to crush the breath from every mortal throat in the chamber.
And then—laughter. Low at first, a ripple spilling from Ysara’s lips, but rising, swelling, echoing off the cracked stone like the voice of madness itself. She laughed until the air quivered with it, until even the torchlight seemed to falter.
But it ended as sharply as it began. Her crimson gaze hardened, cutting through the space between them like blades.
“You don’t get to judge me, Eliza,” Ysara hissed. “You don’t get to dictate what I’ve become. And who are you to speak of a Lord? You betrayed the church long ago. Now you’re nothing—nothing but a lapdog for the Apostles of Ruin. And that shield—” she gestured with a dripping hand, her lips curling into a mocking smile, “—you’ve no right to even hold it. A traitor’s hands should burn upon its touch.”
Her laugh rang out again, cruel and jagged.
But before another word could leave her lips, Eliza moved. The shield came down with a thunderous crack, slamming into the stone floor so hard the chamber shook. Dust rained from the ceiling. Sparks of light flared from the runes across its surface.
“Enough!” Eliza’s voice tore through the air, raw, trembling with fury and grief both. Her teeth were bared, her eye blazing with holy fire. “I have never betrayed my Lord! I still serve Him—my one, my only lord. That has not changed. That will never change.”
She raised the shield, divine radiance spilling from its edges, her holy blade glinting with lethal purpose. Her gaze locked on Ysara, unflinching.
“Forgive me…” she whispered, voice cracking, a plea and a vow at once. “…for what I am about to do.”
Ysara’s lips peeled back in a grin too wide, too sharp. A low chuckle slipped free, a knife of sound.
“Forgiveness?” she spat, fangs gleaming. “You don’t deserve such a thing.”
For a heartbeat, time itself seemed to still—light against shadow, faith against corruption, both women burning with the certainty of their cause.
And then they moved.
The chamber exploded with motion, Ysara a streak of crimson and shadow, Eliza a wall of blinding gold. Their clash was a storm breaking, a collision that made the earth tremble and the terrified mortals scream.
