The tavern slumbered, its pulse slowed to a whisper.
The hearth in the common room had dwindled, embers glowing faintly under a shroud of ash, casting a soft red haze.
The air was heavy with the scent of cooled woodsmoke and the lingering warmth of the day's bread.
Rin didn't sleep.
She sat cross-legged on the edge of Kio's bed, a thin linen robe draped loosely over her frame, the front parting to her waist, baring the curve of her breasts and the scars crisscrossing her ribs.
Her tail lay slack across the mattress, a tired ribbon of fur, twitching faintly as if stirred by a dream.
Her dark gray hair, damp from a late bath, curled at the edges, clinging to her neck where heat still lingered.
Kio entered, an oil lamp casting a warm glow in his hand, a folded cloth tucked under his arm.
He set the lamp on the bedside table, its soft hiss filling the quiet, and handed her a steaming mug—spiced milk, laced with honey and a whisper of cinnamon.
She took it with a nod. "Thanks."
"You won't sleep otherwise," he said, his voice low, steady, a thread of care woven into the words.
She grunted, the sound soft but agreeing, and sipped the milk, its warmth spreading through her chest.
He sat beside her, the bed creaking faintly under his weight.
They drank in silence, the lamp's flicker dancing across the rough-hewn walls, the only sound the faint pop of embers in the distant hearth.
Then Rin spoke, her voice cutting through the quiet like a blade. "I found something on my last job."
Kio turned his head, his dark eyes meeting hers, waiting.
"A ruin," she said, her tail giving a single, restless flick. "Way off-path, hidden behind a lakefall. Shielded by some kind of vision ward. Took me two hours to even realize it was there."
"What kind of ruin?" His tone was even, but his gaze sharpened, a subtle shift that made her ears twitch.
"Old. Older than kingdoms. No writing I could read, but the stonework…" She paused, her fingers tightening around the mug. "It was made for hands like mine. Clawed."
Kio's expression didn't change, but the air between them grew heavier, charged with unspoken questions.
"And the strangest part?" she went on, her voice dropping. "Murals. Beastkin, standing tall. Holding swords, wearing armor. Like we were rulers, not savages."
He didn't react, his silence a weight that pressed against her words.
Rin leaned forward, her golden eyes searching his face. "You knew."
He held her gaze, unflinching, his stillness a kind of answer.
"You always know," she said, softer now, a mix of frustration and awe.
Kio reached into his coat, drawing out a small bundle wrapped in black velvet. He placed it in her hands, his fingers brushing hers, warm and sure.
Rin unwrapped it slowly, the velvet parting to reveal a knife—curved, bone-handled, its edge catching the lamplight with a faint, hungry shimmer.
Not magic, but something older, forged with a purpose that seemed to hum in her bones.
"What is this?" she whispered, her fingers curling around the grip, instinctive, like it belonged there.
"It sings near spirit-locked stone," Kio said. "If that ruin's sealed, this will find the key."
Rin stared at the blade, her tail stilling, her breath catching. "How… where did you get this?"
"Made it. Long time ago."
"You're no smith."
"No."
"Or a scholar."
"No."
She looked up, her voice barely above a whisper. "…What are you?"
For a moment, his eyes softened, as if he might let a truth slip past the walls he'd built.
Then he leaned forward, pressing a kiss to her forehead, his lips warm against her skin, a gesture that held more weight than words.
"You'll be back before you figure it out," he said, his voice a low murmur, both promise and deflection.
Rin didn't smile, but she didn't press further. Her gaze dropped to the knife, its weight grounding her, a tether to the mystery she'd stumbled into.
She slipped it under the pillow, the blade's presence a quiet hum against her senses, and leaned into Kio, her shoulder brushing his.
Silence settled again, warm and heavy, like the furs draped across the bed.
For the first time since her return, Rin didn't need his touch to feel claimed—his presence, his secrets, and the knife's weight were enough.