Chapter 71: The Taste That Lingers
The banquet ended not with fanfare, but with long silences and uneven footsteps.The laughter was softer now and voices were more subdued.
It wasn't the kind of fullness one felt from a grand meal, it was the sensation of something internal being nudged awake, something that hadn't stirred in years, or perhaps had never moved at all.
Guests drifted out of the Painted Petal like they were emerging from a shared, enlightening dream.
Some clutched their cloaks a little tighter.
Others looked at the stars a little longer than usual.
More than one attendee murmured something strange to their companions, only to pause mid-sentence, as if suddenly uncertain whether it had been their own thoughts or not.
Cieron remained behind the counter, arms folded, head subtly nodding, watching the procession with a craftsman's appraisal.
Baku approached, still chewing on the last bite of spiced marrowcake from a platter that didn't belong to him. As he ate, his vision was still focused and mind still singular. The food did nothing to the old devil. His realm was far too high to reap the benefits.
"Well," Baku said, licking his thumb, "they didn't riot. Guess that's a win."
"They won't understand it all at once," Cieron replied. "But they'll feel it, the shift. The broth opens channels. Some of them were dry. Others had never even been carved."
He glanced out the window where the crowd dispersed into the mist.
"By sunrise, most won't remember what changed, but they'll start to feel like different people. Make sharper decisions. Dream more vividly. Speak truths they'd been afraid to say."
"Not only strength, but boldness, huh?" Baku narrowed his eyes. "And that's safe?"
"No," Cieron said. "But it's movement and that's better for most of them."
"Hn." Baku grunted, stretching his back. "You sound like Hannya when she's trying not to say something honestly."
Cieron gave a small smile but said nothing more.
Elsewhere in the fortress, Hannya walked alone.
Her robe whisked across the mist-slick stone as she returned along the side path leading to her pavilion. The trees had begun to shed pollen again, the air alive with flecks of gold and green that caught on her sleeves.
She walked in deep thought.
The food had affected her, yes. She had felt something stir during the broth, some delicate untangling within her core. A rearrangement of 'threads'.
But the impact was minimal. Compared to the visions flashing behind the eyes of others, compared to the testimonies whispered on the way out, her own shift felt faint. Dim.
That didn't bother her.
She was past the threshold where food or aura could sculpt her inner world. Her mutations were already developed, her bloodline established and cooperative. But she hadn't attended the banquet for herself.
'No… it will serve a different purpose.'
She had seen the changes in the demons.
The swell of untapped potential in the unawakened devils. The glimmer of discipline that took root when someone tasted a possible self. Even Salitha's elegance had faltered for a moment in the presence of something too raw to charm away.
'I can use this, she thought. Not as a cure. But as a seed.'
The meal could become a ritual. A forging rite. A mirror and whetstone for her new recruits.
Not for nobles or warriors.
For believers.
She reached the southern courtyard, winding around a prayer tree just as the moon dipped behind a veil of mist.
That's when Salitha stepped out from behind a pillar, arms crossed, veil half-lowered, eyes half-lidded.
"Hannya." she said softly.
Hannya paused, watching the devil before her.
The moonlight caught on Salitha's earrings, casting silver across her cheekbone.
"Did you enjoy the food?" Hannya asked casually.
Salitha gave a tired smile. "No one enjoys it. We survive it. Then pretend it was elegance."
"Elegance, huh?" An elegant ritual, perhaps? Adjustments would be needed for it to seem that way. Hannya pondered the idea.
Salitha took a step forward. "You have that look on your face again."
"What look?" She replied, one eyebrow raised.
"The one you wear when you're building something."
"I'm always building." She gave a half shrug, continuing her steps.
"No," Salitha said, stepping into Hannya's path. "This time it's different. You're not reinforcing the fortress. You're cultivating it, feeding it... Training it."
She studied her carefully.
"You didn't host that banquet for allies," she said. "You hosted it for followers, right?"
Hannya didn't deny it.
Salitha sighed. "So. The question is, am I still a guest at your table… or a recruit?"
Hannya smiled, barely. She did not want to include her at all if possible. At least, not as she currently was.
"That's up to you." She answered benevolently.
The courtyard hummed with quiet tension. Mist curled lazily along the edges of the stone walkway, and above, the moon glimmered through a specks of drifting pollen. Salitha stood in the path like a dancer unsure of her next step, while Hannya waited, unblinking.
For a moment, neither spoke.
Then Salitha smoothed her robe and tilted her head slightly, her tone feather-light.
"You've been distant with me lately."
Hannya said nothing.
Salitha continued, still dancing around the center. "Not in public, of course. You're always gracious, generous even. But I've noticed the colder currents beneath the surface. Especially since Shela's here."
Hannya blinked once.
"So I've been asking myself," Salitha went on, her smile still polished, "what I did to fall out of your favor."
Still, Hannya didn't reply.
Salitha's expression softened, carefully practiced. "Was it the charm incident? Something I said? Something I failed to say? I know I tease. I know I play roles, but I don't act in bad faith."
"No," Hannya said, finally. "But you do indeed act."
Salitha's breath caught.
Hannya stepped forward.
"You've been waiting to ask me this for three nights," she said. "And still you're circling it like a dancer afraid of center stage."
"I didn't want to assume-"
"Yet you did." Hannya said.
Salitha fell silent.
"You want to know why I treat you differently," Hannya said. "Why I'm cold to you. Why I look at Shela and see a piece worth sharpening and look at you and see… excess?"
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She didn't raise her voice. But her aura pressed forward like a wave of falling snow.
Salitha held her ground.
But only barely.
"It's because," Hannya said, "you wear a title that doesn't belong to you."
Salitha's smile vanished.
"You're not the 6th Luxuria."
A soft, sharp silence followed.
Hannya's voice lowered, a single thread of steel beneath silk. "You stole it. Wove it into your persona like a ribbon. Told enough lies that they stuck. But that title is mine."
Salitha flinched. Her charm aura snapped outward on instinct, like a hand raised in self-defense.
It flared in gold and wine-pink, a veil of sensory haze meant to sway or shield.
Hannya snapped her fingers once.
The aura died. Snuffed like a flame in a storm.
Salitha gasped, swaying slightly, her balance momentarily lost.
Hannya stepped closer.
"The first reason I don't like you," she said calmly, "is because you took something sacred and made it fashionable, shielding yourself with it."
Salitha's mouth opened, but nothing came out.
"The second reason," Hannya continued, "is that your devil blood is imbalanced. Influential."
Salitha's eyes widened, confused.
"You hide it well," Hannya said. "Too well. It doesn't flare like the others. It coils wrong. Sharp where it should be soft. Swollen where it should be honed. There's a part in you that's unfinished, and one day, it will act on its own."
"That's absurd." Salitha whispered.
"It's inevitable." Hannya said.
She paused. Let that weight sink in.
Then delivered the final strike.
"And the third reason… is because I know your will is weak."
Salitha's eyes shook at the words.
"You act strong, beautiful, clever. But when the blade falls, when the war begins, when the gods cry for sacrifice, you will choose wrong."
Hannya's voice didn't rise. It only fell lower.
"You will lead Shela to her death. And with her, the love faction. All because you won't be able to admit you were afraid."
Each word struck like a stone against glass.
Salitha's lips parted. Her face paled. Her charm aura sputtered and failed to reform.
"I-" she began.
"No," Hannya cut in. "You're not a woman. You're a girl playing pretend. A mirror of someone else's poise. Hollow behind the gloss."
That broke it.
Salitha didn't cry. But her expression cracked.
Not like glass.
Like porcelain. Fine, painted, beautiful... and fragile.
She turned her face, trying to hide it.
But Hannya had already seen everything.
In Tragedy of Heroes, Shela's ending was hailed as legendary, her rise from strategist to demon lord etched in history.
But Hannya remembered something quieter, more damning.
When Shela's aura changed, when her blood thickened with deeper laws, when she finally accepted what she had to become, a devil, Salitha faltered.
Not with blade or vote, but in spirit.
She never betrayed Shela outright.
She just stopped believing in the version of her standing right in front of her.
And that had always been the most elegant betrayal of all.
"You think I'll betray her?" Salitha said, voice tight, gaze locked.
Hannya didn't blink. "You already are."
"She hasn't turned into anything monstrous," Salitha snapped. "She's still her. She's still… Shela."
"You're clinging to her shadow, one that's fading." Hannya said. "One that makes you feel safe."
Salitha's charm aura stirred, gold and rose-tinged, elegant and accusatory.
"And you?" Salitha said, stepping forward, "You're projecting an image on someone who hasn't even changed yet, because deep down, you want her to change. You want her to become something broken. So you can say you saw it coming. So you can control her."
"No," Hannya said. "I want her to survive what's coming. You're the one who'll fail her."
Salitha's voice rose. "You think you're her savior? You, with your creepy little temple and your dead god wrapped in chains?"
That finally got a twitch from Hannya.
Salitha pressed. "You follow some ruin that no one remembers, that no one wants back, and you think that makes you more loyal? You think worshiping a myth gives you the right to lecture me about loyalty and love?"
Hannya's smile under the veil was slow and strange.
"I don't follow him," she whispered. "I remember him. I know him."
Salitha recoiled slightly. Baffled by the certainty.
"You've never met him."
"I don't have to. I've read him in blood, in ash, in all the places the world tried to erase. He was too fast, too bright, too alive… And they killed him because they were afraid. But I wasn't there to stop it then."
Her tone shifted, her eyes spinning and voice hushed, trembling with feverish conviction.
"But I am now."
Salitha shook her head. "You-you're deranged."
"I'm devoted," Hannya said. "You kneel at altars of peace and call it love. I kneel at his silence and call it memory."
"You're just a fanatic."
"I'm a furnace," Hannya hissed, stepping forward. "And when the world turns its back on Shela, when she's left alone to carry the sins of others, you'll preach restraint, and I'll burn for her anyway. That's the difference."
Salitha's aura cracked, flaring too fast, too hot, then flickering out.
"You don't even love her."
"No," Hannya said. "But I love what you never could: truth. Even when it's ugly. Even when it's broken horns, ruin, and grief."
"I've stood by her longer than you've drawn breath."
"You've stood beside the version of her that flattered your fantasy," Hannya snapped. "Not the woman she'll become."
Salitha gritted her teeth. "She won't become that."
Hannya's voice dropped to a whisper. "She will. So stop pretending you don't see it."
And the silence that followed told Salitha she believed it.
"Your love is conditional," Hannya said. "A porcelain loyalty. You'll follow her until she makes a decision you don't agree with, then call it a tragedy and walk away."
"That's a lie!"
"No. That's your pattern."
Salitha stepped back, lips parted.
"I don't need to see the whole path," Hannya said. "I've read enough of your kind to know how you end."
Salitha clenched her fists. "You think I'm a villain?"
"I think you're a doll," Hannya hummed. "Painted to resemble something sacred. But you're hollow. And your love?"
She paused.
"Your love is weak, pitiful. Just like your will."
The blow landed like frost.
Salitha turned, not fast enough to hide the crack in her composure.
But she didn't speak again.
Because she couldn't.
And Hannya, already fading into the mist, didn't wait for forgiveness.
The mist clung heavier in the courtyard now. The perfume of blood lotus from the banquet had faded, leaving only the cold scent of dream pollen and ashes.
Salitha stood near the prayer tree, her spine rigid, fists trembling slightly at her sides. Her veil had slipped loose, caught awkwardly across one shoulder. Her expression, usually composed, framed in the elegance of practiced serenity, was now raw.
Not tearful.
Just open in a way Shela had never seen before.
And then, Shela approached from the eastern corridor. Her steps light, sensing something had soured in the air. She paused a few paces away, her sharp eyes immediately registering the unusual stillness in her old companion.
"Salitha?" she called, voice cautious but calm.
Salitha didn't turn.
Shela stepped closer. "What are you doing out here? The banquet's over."
"I know." Salitha replied softly.
Her voice was hollow, not cold, just distant. Like it had gone somewhere else and hadn't come fully back.
"You missed your wine toast," Shela added, trying to gently draw her in. "That's not like you."
Salitha laughed faintly. But it sounded wrong. Forced.
"Wasn't in the mood..."
Shela moved beside her now, studying her expression.
The hairline cracks in her usual poise were subtle, but unmistakable. The tight jaw. The slight shaking in her hands. The dull gleam in her aura, like silk that had been soaked through and left to dry in the shade.
"Did someone say something to you?"
"No."
"Someone hurt you?"
"No."
"Salitha."
Salitha finally looked at her. It wasn't anger in her eyes; it was confusion. Deep and reflective. The look of someone suddenly uncertain about everything they'd built around themselves.
"Do you ever wonder," Salitha asked, "if loving someone the right way still leads to the wrong end?"
The question hit with unexpected weight.
Shela blinked at the words. "That's... vague."
Salitha smiled. Not prettily. Not like usual.
"I guess it is."
Shela crossed her arms. "If someone's trying to get in your head, I want names."
"They didn't say anything that wasn't true." Salitha murmured.
"About me?"
"No. About me."
Shela's brow furrowed. "That's not possible."
Salitha didn't answer.
She just looked up at the moon, it's light filtered through mist like stained glass.
There was a long pause between them. One of those silences that stretched far too long. The kind you don't know how to fill without unraveling something too delicate.
Finally, Shela said, "You're not acting like yourself."
"Maybe that's the point." Salitha whispered.
Shela reached out, gently placing a hand on her shoulder. "If something's wrong, just tell me."
"I'm fine."
"You're not."
"I'll be fine."
And there it was. The first real fracture.
Not a lie.
But not the truth either.
And Shela, sensing the boundary, didn't press further.
Still, something in her chest felt unsettled. Salitha had never been this unreadable. Even at her worst, she wrapped herself in charm and witty remarks. But now?
Now she was brittle.
Haunted.
Like she'd seen something she couldn't explain, and didn't want to.
Shela let her hand drop.
"Let's walk back." she offered.
And Salitha nodded.
They left the courtyard in silence, side by side.
But their steps were no longer in sync.
The mountain winds were colder by the time Shela and Salitha reached the inner hall. The dream mist had thinned, parting just enough to reveal the pale flicker of the fortress lanterns and the worn stone paths below.
Salitha walked in silence.
Shela didn't press her again.
But something remained unsettled inside her.
Not fear, Shela didn't rattle easily, but something harder to name. A tension that had no clear source. A crack that had appeared where none had existed before.
Salitha wasn't weakened, exactly. She was still walking with pride in her spine, still holding her poise like a trained diplomat.
But something had fractured beneath the surface. Some internal certainty had snapped, and Salitha hadn't picked it back up.
Shela kept glancing at her when she thought she wouldn't notice.
'Whatever happened in that courtyard… it got through.'
And Shela couldn't help but wonder what it meant for the future. Because if even Salitha, the ever-graceful, ever-controlled Salitha, could be shaken like this, what else might begin to unravel?
Up above, from a shadowed archway high on the pavilion wall, Hannya watched them retreat.
She didn't move. Her breath was steady. Her veil was drawn. Her presence was as quiet as snow.
But in her mind, the wheels were turning.
'That was enough.'
Not to destroy Salitha, but to test her.
To scrape past the charm, the polish, the empty sweetness.
She hadn't broken her.
She'd shown her the outline of the blade that would one day fall. Her own.
And now?
Now Salitha had a choice.
Hannya didn't care whether she liked it. She didn't care if she cried over it. She didn't even care if she hated her for it.
'The plan is simple. Either she evolves… or she steps aside.'
There could be no middle ground.
Not for what was coming.
Not for what Shela would one day become.
Not for what the world would try to take from her.
Loyalty was not poetry. It was not silk and hand-holding and tearful farewells at the edge of a battlefield.
Loyalty was standing in the fire and burning with someone, even when they stopped looking like the person you once knew.
And Salitha?
She wasn't ready for that.
Not yet.
But she could be.
If the cracks deepened, if the illusions collapsed, if the comfort of her idealized love shattered hard enough, often enough.
Then maybe, just maybe… Something real would grow in its place.
'Something useful.' The Heart Devil smiled.
She stepped back into the shadows, her form swallowed by mist as the moon passed behind clouds.
Shela and Salitha disappeared down the corridor below.
They didn't see her.
They didn't need to.
The seed had been planted.
And it would sprout in silence.