Chapter 77: Proof Through Action
Snow clung to the spires of the Hazy Mountain when Shela returned.
She arrived without escort, walking the winding path up from the valley alone, her cloak thin but unsullied. She did not pause or trudge as she advanced, the wind that once curled against her back now moved aside.
When she passed the outer gate, the guards stood straighter.
When she crossed into the acolyte quarter, silence followed in her wake.
It wasn't just that she'd come back from the Capital.
It was that she'd gone at all.
Inside the inner fortress, Noh met her with a scroll tucked into her sleeve and a slight tilt of her fan.
"No blood," Noh said. "That's a surprise."
"Not everything requires a sword," Shela replied.
"No," Noh murmured. "But they usually require a different kind of blade."
Shela smiled faintly, no warmth, just knowing.
"I'm here to deliver their reply."
Noh raised an eyebrow. "And what's their temperature?"
"Embarrassed," Shela said. "Angry. Divided."
She handed over a sealed response scroll, the Pride faction's official reply to the Dreamveil Compact.
"Their vote's not unanimous. The sword clause cracked them more than they'll admit."
"And yet they haven't rejected it," Noh said, slipping the scroll into her sleeve.
"Not yet."
"Then the insult landed," Noh said with a grin.
Shela looked past her, toward the upper balcony where Hannya often stood.
"She knew it would."
~~~
In the Superbia estate, the air had taken on a thick, hot stillness. Scrolls lay unrolled across the obsidian table. The sword Vanity, its jade-inlaid hilt wrapped in blood-hued ribbon, now sat at the center of the room like a question no one wanted to answer.
"It hasn't been touched in generations." one councilor said.
"It can't be wielded," said another. "It's attuned to a bloodline that no longer exists."
"It was forged for a Vainglory, wasn't it?"
"Allegedly." someone muttered.
Eronius Superbia stared at the blade in silence. His nephew Showeuff still hadn't been returned, and now this. A relic request from a devil whose origins no one could verify, delivered by an imp girl wielding a law colder than snow.
"They don't want it for battle," Eronius said finally. "They want it for meaning."
"Then let them have nothing." snapped a younger noble. "We can't give it to them. It's-"
"A public concession," Eronius finished. "And that's why she asked for it."
No one spoke.
They all understood.
The sword was useless.
But refusing it might carry more cost than its weight.
Far to the west, in the Pleasure faction's coastal court, the perfume of heated amber oil and wine-soaked fruit curled through a domed chamber of glass.
Vequess wrote with a calm, slow precision, quill scraping across paper adorned in crimson and gold design.
The invitation was brief.
Polite.
Dignified.
And laced with twelve layers of encoded meaning.
An audience, a performance, a proposal, cloaked in ritual and curiosity.
He'd studied Hannya's subtle language. Her Compact phrasing. The way her eyes never drifted, even while manipulating half a dozen of those nobles in silence.
He knew how to speak her language now.
And how to keep her curious.
When the ink dried, he sealed the message with the wax seal of the elder sister's crest, then rang for a courier to deliver it through neutral Dreamveil roads.
As the runner vanished, Vequess leaned back into a silk cushion.
"They won't understand the sword," he whispered, tapping the table in thought.
"But she will."
~~~
That evening, Hannya stood at the edge of the central courtyard, veil drawn, her black kimono catching the rose-tinted lantern light. Acolytes trained quietly in the distance, and the moonlight painted lines along the edge of her sleeves.
She didn't turn when she heard Shela approach.
But she spoke.
"You delivered it."
"Yes."
"And?"
"They don't understand it."
"Of course not," Hannya said. "They've forgotten what legacy feels like in their bones."
Shela hesitated.
"Hannya," she said quietly, "who is the sword for?"
Hannya's hand rested lightly on the edge of the stone railing.
She didn't answer.
Not directly.
"Some things should be returned to the hands that forged them," she said. "Even if those hands have been broken."
Shela didn't press.
But in the back of her mind, the word lingered.
Vainglory.
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The name unspoken.
But present.
Later that night, Shela sat by the brazier in her private room, the Compact scroll laid out before her. She traced the seal with her fingertip.
Then slowly reached into her cloak.
And pulled out Salitha's letter.
Still unopened.
Still weighted.
The temptation to break it now, to know, itched in her hands.
Had she been betrayed? Had Salitha made a deal behind her back?
Shela closed her eyes.
No.
Not yet.
She would wait.
Just a little longer.
Because now, the mountain wasn't a place she reported to.
It was her place.
And the world was finally beginning to react.
As the snow began to drift over the polished stone floor of the Hazy Mountain's upper tier. A hush blanketed the halls, broken only by the sound of footsteps too confident to be questioned.
Shela left her room to train, to clear her head. She strode through the inner halls with a long coat trailing behind her and a sheathed blade at her hip.
The acolytes bowed as she passed, though she hadn't asked them to.
Shela was no noble. No bloodline heir.
But power didn't need pedigree anymore.
Not here.
Not in Hannya's domain.
~~~
In the Capital's Superbia estate, Eronius Superbia stood in silence before a tall velvet-draped cabinet.
The sword Vanity rested within, still untouched, still inert.
Three new scrolls lay open on the table behind him, one from Dream, one from a coalition of minor houses, and one unsigned and unscrutinized, but clearly from the Love faction's reformists.
None advised surrendering the blade outright.
But all feared what would happen if they didn't.
"Offer it conditionally," Eronius muttered to himself. "Publicly claim it as a gesture of unity. Demand something symbolic in return."
"But what?" asked his cousin from the shadows. "What can you demand from someone whose strength isn't written in blood?"
Eronius turned to him, eyes narrowed.
"Visibility."
Elsewhere, in the lavender-paneled chambers of the Love faction, Salitha paced beneath a massive sky-lantern that flickered with glimmers of enchanted warmth. Her acolytes, eight young devils of varying ages and refinement, stood at a respectful distance, uncertain whether they were being called to action or to prayer.
Salitha's mind was fractured. Equal parts guilt, pride, and fear.
Shela had returned with strength.
Not just raw power.
But the presence of someone who had become.
Salitha had told herself it was for Shela's safety. That leaving had preserved the future of their bond. That Hannya's influence was a temporary storm, and she would gather Shela again when it passed.
But now…
Now she watched the reports come in, of Shela defending her ideals in the Capital, representing a devil born from nowhere, standing alone before the Council and not breaking.
And Hannya, whose words still echoed in Salitha's memory like a wound healing wrong.
"You've stood beside the version of her that flattered your fantasy, Not the woman she'll become.."
"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."
She had hated those words.
Still did.
But something in them rang true.
Salitha turned to the young devils. None of them were older than three decades. Many were lowborn or mixed blood like Shela. Some had already been marked by minor social exile. Misfits in the Love faction, devils who believed in love but had never been loved.
She saw it in their eyes.
Not just hope, but the need to fight for it.
Salitha drew herself up.
"We go to the mountain."
One of them, a boy with pink horns and hopeful eyes, blinked. "Now?"
"Yes."
Another, softer-spoken warned "The elders will call it treason."
Salitha met her gaze. "They can call it whatever they like. But love without action is pity. And I won't offer pity to the one person who never asked for it."
They bowed as one.
And with that, the first fracture in the Love faction's core split open.
~~~
As sunset spilled golden fire over the western slope, Hannya stood in the snow-ringed courtyard, her black veil trailing faintly in the breeze. Behind her, the petals of a strange flowering vine bloomed out of season, one of the many side effects of her growing aura of charm and mist.
Baku approached from the far side, carrying a sealed letter in his hand.
"Shela's back." he said.
"I know."
"This just came from the Pleasure faction," he added. "From Vequess."
Hannya didn't move.
But her voice drifted low.
"An invitation?"
"Yes. Veiled in formality, but clear."
She turned finally, golden eyes sharp behind the silk.
"They want to court me."
"They want to test you," Baku said. "With petals and poison."
Hannya gave a soft smile.
"Let them."
~~~
The next day the outer paths of the Hazy Mountain stirred with motion. Fresh snow had not yet melted underfoot, but bootprints, many and layered, trailed steadily up the steep incline toward the southern gate.
At the front walked Salitha, hood pulled low, her ceremonial Love faction garb replaced by a simpler travel robe, open at the chest and pinned with her personal sigil: a silver ribbon wound around a crescent thorn.
Behind her marched eight young devils, their eyes wide and faces cautious. Some carried supplies. One carried a banner folded tight to avoid attention.
They were not dressed for war.
But they came with intention.
"Are you seeing this?" an acolyte whispered from atop the gate post, peering down.
"I count eight. No, nine." muttered another.
"Wait… is that…?"
"Yeah," the first one said, heart shaking. "That's her. That's Salitha."
Word spread like spilled wine through the upper tiers of the mountain. By the time the gates opened, a loose crowd had gathered in the outer courtyard, not to jeer, not to welcome.
But to watch.
A return, unannounced.
Uninvited.
And yet somehow expected.
Shela stood on the threshold of the mid-tier pavilion, arms folded across her chest, watching as the small procession crossed into the courtyard. Her hair was pulled back in a half-knot, and her aura sat close to her skin like cold mist on glass.
When Salitha met her gaze, the air felt too still, and a bit chilly.
The young devils with her hesitated, unsure whether to bow or continue.
They stopped behind her, fidgeting.
Salitha did not break stride.
She walked to Shela, stopped five paces short, and dropped to one knee.
The gasp rippled out across the watching acolytes.
Not because it was a full kneel, but because it was Salitha. A noble.
A dream knight in the distance, Donald, trembled slightly as his eyes caught the scene by unfortunate chance. He immediately dropped to the ground and turned his head away. Not daring to watch this scene again.
He was ignored.
"I was wrong," Salitha finally said.
Shela didn't move.
Salitha stayed where she was, head lowered. "I thought the Love faction could be saved from within. That patience and doctrine would hold. But I saw what they said about you. I heard what they called you."
She lifted her eyes.
"And I realized love doesn't survive by being good. It survives by being held."
Shela's arms tightened.
"You left," she said. "And I had to stand alone in the Capital. I defended Hannya's Compact while they whispered 'Imp' and watched me like a beast in a gilded cage."
"I know."
"No," Shela said coldly, "you don't."
The silence that followed was brutal.
Salitha rose to her feet. "I'm not asking forgiveness."
"Good."
"I'm asking for permission to stand beside you again."
Shela didn't answer right away.
But her eyes flicked to the devils behind Salitha, most of them no older than thirty, all of them staring at her like she was more than a soldier, more than a weapon.
Like she was a future.
And that was harder to refuse than an apology.
She stepped forward once, placing her hand on Salitha's shoulder, not as a sign of forgiveness.
But as acknowledgment.
"You'll have to earn it." she said.
Salitha nodded once. "I intend to."
High above, beyond the crowd's reach, Hannya watched from her balcony with arms folded beneath her veil.
Noh stood beside her, sipping warm tea and saying nothing.
"She came back." Hannya said, voice unreadable.
Noh tilted her head. "Not for you."
"No," Hannya replied. "That makes it more interesting."
"She doesn't follow your philosophy." Noh pointed out.
"She doesn't need to."
"But she's loyal to Shela."
"And Shela is mine." Hannya shrugged, speaking calmly.
Noh glanced at her, then smiled faintly behind her cup.
"You really do collect strays."
"They aren't strays," Hannya said. "They're kindling."
That night, a new wing of the eastern pavilion was prepared for Salitha's group. The young devils settled in quietly, wary but not rejected. Acolytes from the mountain gave them space, watchful but distant, unsure if this was a defection or an infiltration.
Salitha closed the door to her chamber with a soft click. The room was modest but elegant. clean walls, a polished stone basin, a slatted window facing the moonlit courtyard. A brazier glowed in the corner, burning sweet lavender resin.
She slipped her travel robe from her shoulders, letting it fall in a soft whisper of cloth.
Her body, honed through years of charm-based cultivation, was lithe and graceful, each motion deliberate, elegant in its restraint. Soft curves, like silk draped over tensioned steel, moved with instinctive allure. Her skin glowed faintly in the firelight, a natural luster common to Luxuria devils who had refined their bodies through training and evolution.
As she adjusted the inner wrap of her sleeping robe, she paused, then glanced down.
Five small stars, inked in fine midnight sigils, ringed the inside of her left thigh, hidden unless one knew where to look.
Each one denoted a stage of her strength, a wish to grant.
A five-star devil.
She touched them lightly with her fingertips, not out of vanity, but as a reminder.
'What have you done with these stars, Salitha? Waited? Hesitated?'
She tied her sash and crossed the room to her travel chest.
From its interior, beneath sealed scrolls and folded sashes, she drew out a small glass bottle, sealed in rose-colored wax and bound in a ribbon of pale pink.
Inside shimmered a gently swirling fragment of aura, compressed Love energy, crystallized during her time under the Heartward Matrons. A spiritual relic, not yet weaponized.
She held it up to the firelight.
Not a weapon.
Not yet.
But perhaps… someday.
She tucked it into the folds of her robe, just above the sash line.
Maybe for Shela.
Maybe against Hannya.
Maybe… for herself.
But not tonight.
Tonight, she would rest.
And tomorrow, she would learn what kind of love could survive a mountain carved from obsession, wrath, and ambition.