The rain softened by midnight.
The fire burned low, its embers fading to a deep orange glow that lit the ruin like a dying heartbeat.
Most of the others had gone still.
Zeraka slept on her side now, not wrapped around Rein this time, but with her tail curled protectively behind his back.
Valaithe murmured in her sleep, something about silk and sugar.
Elaris stood against the wall again, sword sheathed, posture loose for once. Even Iris had stopped watching—eyes closed, mouth parted slightly, her breathing almost human.
But Caelia…
Caelia couldn't move.
She sat near the stone pew, just far enough to avoid the firelight, just close enough to see him.
Rein.
Seated with his back against a slab of broken altar, one knee raised, arms resting loosely.
He looked half-asleep.
Not tired. Not haunted.
Just… waiting.
For her.
She stood without thinking.
Her steps were quiet now.
Not armored stomps, not ritual marches—just bare feet on slick stone.
She'd removed her sabatons sometime during the storm.
The rain had soaked her underlayers; her skin prickled with cold, but she didn't feel it.
She only felt the ache.
That brutal, hollow longing.
Not lust.
Not exactly.
Something stranger.
Like a thirst that could never be spoken aloud without burning.
She stopped in front of him.
Rein looked up slowly, eyes soft with sleep and shadow.
"Caelia."
She didn't sit yet.
Didn't speak.
Just stood there, her hair clinging to her cheeks, her soaked tabard heavy against her frame, as if weighted by every vow she'd ever made.
"You're cold," he said.
She didn't nod.
He reached behind and offered a corner of his cloak without comment.
She took it.
Knelt.
Wrapped herself in it.
They sat in silence for a while.
Not awkward.
Not expectant.
Just real.
Two people. One fire. A thousand fractures between them, none of which broke the world tonight.
Finally, she whispered:
"Would you still see me…"
"If I wasn't holy?"
The words felt like glass in her mouth.
She didn't look at him when she said it.
Couldn't.
Her eyes stared forward, unfocused, locked on the way the fire flickered in the puddles near the altar.
She expected a pause.
Expected silence.
Expected him not to know what to say.
Instead…
"Yes," Rein said.
Without hesitation.
Without reverence.
Just truth.
She blinked.
Slow.
Her throat tightened.
"Even if I wasn't good?"
"You're good because you ask that."
He shifted slightly, and then—without moving too close—reached out.
His fingers found her wrist.
Just held it.
Not possessively.
Not to claim her.
Just to touch her in the way people do when they're saying —
I see you.
I want you to stay seen.
Her head dipped.
Her shoulders hunched in.
She didn't sob.
Didn't fall apart.
She just let her body lean toward his, a single inch at a time, like gravity was too tired to resist anymore.
And when her forehead brushed his shoulder…
He didn't move.
He just let her be.
For the first time in her life, Caelia didn't pray.
And for the first time in her life—
She felt answered.
Dawn didn't break.
It bled.
The sky lightened in bruises, purple then gray, as though the night hadn't quite finished its penance.
Caelia hadn't moved.
Not really.
Her forehead still rested lightly against Rein's shoulder, his cloak pulled around her like something sacred.
She hadn't meant to fall asleep. But maybe it wasn't sleep.
Maybe it was surrender.
When she opened her eyes, she found his hand still on her wrist. Warm. Loose. Present.
Not restraining.
Just reminding her that she hadn't dreamed it.
That someone had seen her—truly seen her—and didn't flinch.
The others were stirring.
Valaithe yawned and stretched, her blouse hanging open as usual, golden skin catching the first hint of gray light.
Zeraka was already half-awake, eyeing the perimeter like a soldier with a hangover.
Elaris remained seated against the far wall, her sword across her knees, silent as ever.
And Iris… Iris never slept.
But this morning, she didn't stare at Rein.
She stared at Caelia.
As if she'd seen this play out before.
Caelia sat up slowly.
Rein didn't speak.
Didn't question the tension in her shoulders or the strange stillness in her face.
He only watched her with that quiet, maddening calm.
She stood.
Let the cloak fall away.
And walked toward her armor, piled by the broken pew.
She unlaced it slowly.
Buckle by buckle.
Strap by strap.
The metal groaned as she peeled it off, steam rising from where damp cloth clung to skin.
She pulled free the chainmail, the surcoat, the leather bindings beneath.
She left only her shift.
Her own skin.
Then, wordlessly, she knelt beside the riverstone basin near the collapsed altar—the one used for ceremonial ablutions.
She dipped her hands.
And began to scrub.
Scrubbed off the remnants of the oath glyphs drawn on her neck.
Scrubbed the oil of consecration from her chest.
Scrubbed until her skin flushed red from friction and the cold, until there was nothing holy left to cling to her.
Her breath came sharp.
But not from pain.
From release.
Behind her, Zeraka stepped closer, watching with an amused, lazy curiosity.
"Finally ditching the tin can, priestess?"
Caelia didn't look back.
"It's not armor if it keeps you from breathing."
Valaithe padded up behind her, bare feet silent on stone.
"Ooh. That's poetic."
"Write that down, Rein."
Zeraka rolled her eyes.
"He doesn't need poetry. He's got us."
Elaris stood now too, one hand resting on her blade's hilt.
She said nothing. But her eyes flicked toward Rein. Then back to Caelia.
And then, softly, she nodded.
Caelia dried her hands on a strip of linen, tore the golden sigil from her tabard, and walked barefoot to Rein.
She didn't kneel at his feet.
She knelt beside him.
Not beneath.
Beside.
"I cannot bind you."
Her voice was clear now. Unshaking.
"But I want to be bound to you."
Rein blinked.
Just once.
Then reached forward—
And took her hand.
No ceremony.
No vow.
Just fingers curling into hers like a promise not yet spoken, but deeply understood.
No one clapped.
No one laughed.
Even Valaithe, for once, was silent.
The fire hissed low.
And Caelia?
She didn't smile.
But she did something better.
She breathed.
Like it was the first time she ever had.