Heart Devil [OP Yandere Schizo Ramble LitRPG XD]

Chapter 81: Velvet Teeth and Honeyed Words



The trio left the Acedia estate without escort.

The gates of the Dream Faction slid shut behind them like the eyelids of something that never slept, finally relaxed.

Outside, the city's twilight carried a soft wind. Magic lanterns hummed along floating rails above the capital's inner districts. Gold and white light reflected off marble towers and slow-gliding couriers. Nothing felt urgent here, nothing felt broken.

But Hannya had already chipped at the first crack, the first of many she planned to chisel into.

Noh exhaled sharply as they stepped beyond the inner veil of the estate.

As her over-glamoured geta touched the stones. She paused.

"...The Dream laws beneath us are unsettled…" she murmured.

Shela tilted her head. "What does that mean?"

Noh's painted nails tapped her fan once before folding it closed. "It means something heavy shifted underground. Something old."

She looked at Hannya out of the corner of her eye.

"What did you do?"

Hannya, still wearing her black veil with its glinting pink sheen, walked calmly forward.

"I made a visit," she said lightly. "Nothing more."

Noh narrowed her gaze, lips curling into a faint grin.

"You've always get vague when you're proud of something."

That earned a small laugh from Hannya.

"Kikiki, don't you always say a little mystery was a good thing?"

Noh rolled her eyes. "That was for clothing and men, and both require a clue or two."

Hannya snorted reactively, then shivered. She glanced at Noh, who surprisingly, said nothing of the mistake. She simply eyed Hannya and faced forward, giving her face. With a small grin behind her veil, Hannya continued walking.

They turned down a quiet road flanked by vine-covered walls, leading toward the diplomatic guest quarters they'd been assigned by the Capital Council.

Moonlight dappled the path.

Hannya finally spoke again.

"You did well," she said without looking over. "Infiltrating the estate before we arrived. I wasn't sure you'd get past their vault arrays."

Noh arched a brow. "So you admit I was in danger?"

"I admit," Hannya said, "that if anyone could infiltrate a dream-locked fortress while wearing twelve pounds of ceremonial makeup… it would be you."

Noh smirked.

"It wasn't easy," she said. "Their mind tracing sigils is solid, but not calibrated for…" She trailed off with a little smile.

Shela looked at Noh in surprise. Infiltrated? Noh's presence was always subtle, Hannya's attendant, a musician, and teacher in some aspects, but espionage? And in a place like this?

Wasn't Noh a two star devil?

Shela squinted her eyes a bit, assessing Noh carefully.

"Wait… what exactly are you?"

Noh gave her a soft, amused look.

"I'm a geija," she said sweetly, tilting her head. "A very dedicated one."

Shela frowned. "That doesn't explain-"

But Noh just tapped her fan against her shoulder, gently silencing the question with the rhythm of grace.

Hannya let the moment hang, saying nothing. She knew the truth. Or at least more of it than most. But some mysteries were better unspoken, especially when they served you well.

They arrived at their diplomatic residence a few minutes later, three quiet silhouettes climbing the outer steps of a white-walled manor bathed in spell suppression sigils. A pair of devil guards bowed as they passed, not daring to question their silence.

Inside, the air was warm and still.

Shela excused herself to the courtyard and Noh moved to the bathing room.

Hannya, alone in the guest hall, let her fingertips drift across the edge of a cloth-draped mirror leaning beside her chair now.

The Envious Mirror was quiet now.

Its job was done, for the time being.

He would rise slowly. A tide beneath dream-soaked stone.

And when he opened his eyes, he would remember a name they tried to keep sealed.

"Baku." She smiled.

~~~

Back at the Acedia estate, Lazmer stood in his personal observatory, watching mist curl across the garden pond. The memory crystals slotted in the labeled cubbies behind him. They shimmered with a medley of colors all different, all vibrant.

They shone like a kaleidoscope across the floor beneath him, the low light in the room reflecting off their unique flavors of the dream world like windows to a private plane.

But Lazmer took no time to marvel at the display.

He could feel it.

A subtle churn in the Dream law. A deep pull beneath the estate's stonework, like a forgotten beast shifting in its old grave.

He clenched the fists clasped behind his back.

He didn't know how.

He didn't know when.

But Hannya had come.

And something had changed.

He glanced over to the communication crystal on his desk. His eyes warred with decision.

Making the call would cost him dearly.

His position could be on the line if they knew he was the catalyst to this unregistered change.

He turned and looked back to the pond below.

He relaxed his fists.

He had not lost control of things yet, so there was no need to call.

He simply needed to make some corrections.

He then turned and walked to the door, his eyes now calculating the options he had.

~~~

Back at the guest residence.

A letter arrived in a velvet scroll tube, deep pink with gold-stamped orchids. The delivery devil wore the Pleasure Faction's sigil like perfume, excessive, unmistakable, and too carefully styled.

Hannya didn't even look up as the scroll was placed on her table. She already knew who it was from.

"Second one," Noh noted, fanning herself lazily from her seat across the room. "They're getting bolder."

"No," Hannya said softly, her voice a veil of silk over steel. "They're getting desperate."

Shela raised an eyebrow. "Why? You haven't even answered the first one yet."

"That's why," Noh said, sitting upright now. "Hannya didn't take the bait and simply waited. Now they're changing the flavor of the hook. And I think you know why."

Shela just nodded. It was probably because of the display she showed at the sword ceremony.

The scroll's charm seal unwrapped with the lightest tug. A wave of perfume-laced mana wafted up as the letter unfurled itself in the air, script appearing line by line in shimmering pink.

[

To Lady Hannya of the Hazy Mountain and Dreamveil Compact,

On behalf of the Heirs of the Pleasure Faction, we humbly extend a second invitation to our table. We understand the demands placed upon those who ascend quickly, and wish only to offer a moment of rest, reflection, and… resonance.

Our halls remain open, and our seats warm.

Tonight, at dusk.

~ V.

]

"'Resonance…'" Shela repeated, narrowing her eyes.

"They've stopped flirting," Hannya said. "They're offering something now. Something they think I want."

"Or something they want from you." Noh added, glancing over her fan.

'Clever,' she thought. 'They're trying to push closeness. Unity. Or maybe stake a claim before someone else does.'

"Are we entertaining them?" Noh asked casually, though the way her fingers flexed slightly at the base of her fan betrayed her interest.

"Yes," Hannya said at last. "We'll stay one more night."

Shela crossed her arms. "You think they're setting something up?"

"I think," Hannya replied, slipping the letter back into the scroll tube with a soft click, "they're trying to keep me from leaving the board before they finish their move."

They postponed their return to Hazy Mountain by a day.

The Capital Council had said nothing yet about the outcome of the recent summit, nor about the captured noble from the Pride Faction. Showeuff remained locked in the depths of the Hazy Mountain's dungeon, but the Pride nobles had begun whispering a convenient lie.

That Showeuff was resting at a family estate. Meditating. Building his strength.

They dared not reveal the truth. That one of their young scions had been beaten, broken, and then captured by a rising devil faction, all under the Capital Council's nose.

That silence was telling. They were calculating, weighing responses.

And in that lull, before consequence could ripple, the Pleasure Faction moved.

Hannya changed attire. Her black kimono was replaced with a softer drape of pale blue and light pink. A delicate gold-thread veil framed her eyes now, hiding everything else, but making her gaze even harder to escape.

Noh adorned herself in a tighter-fitting robe of red silk lined in obsidian thread, her usual geisha makeup subdued for once, though her lips remained deep rose. A single hairpin bearing the Hazy Mountain's sigil, a mist-clouded mountain, anchored her style.

Shela wore what she always wore, practical armor over ceremonial black. She had let her hair down for once, which made her look younger. Less like a warrior. More like a woman pulled into something far more intimate than she'd expected.

As the three exited their estate into the capital's dimming light, the city changed around them.

The Pleasure Faction's couriers were already waiting with a charm-drawn carriage lined with illusion silks. Inside, rose-glow lanterns and low music greeted them. Every corner of the experience whispered indulgence, subtle power, and psychological pressure.

"They're not trying to impress me," Hannya said quietly as she took her seat. "They're trying to… soften the battlefield."

"I didn't know banquets counted as war." Shela said.

"Only the ones that matter." Noh fanned.

The carriage then rolled forward.

This text was taken from Royal Road. Help the author by reading the original version there.

Inside, Hannya was already planning.

They wouldn't press her overtly. That wasn't how the Pleasure Faction worked. They would flirt with the boundary. Offer promises in velvet tones. Lean into their mutual 'bloodline resonance'. Maybe even hint at political marriage, through implication, not word.

'But they'll want something,' she thought. 'And whatever it is, they're willing to gamble their charm for it.'

They could try.

She had plenty of charm to spare.

As they arrived at the location, the three gazed out at the destination slowly approaching.

The Pleasure Faction's estate was more of a temple than a mansion.

Its outer walls were shaped like folding silk fans, layered in pearl and pink hued stone. Aromatic flowers climbed up archways, their petals blooming only at night under the influence of the charm-saturated air. The scent lingered like a lover's breath, coy but soft, and ever present.

Devil attendants in embroidered robes bowed low as Hannya stepped out of the carriage.

Her eyes scanned everything, movement patterns, mana threads laced throughout the ground, hypnotic harmonics humming beneath the welcome incense.

'Everything here is designed to relax the will,' she thought. 'So you give away more than you meant to without realizing it.'

Shela, armored and alert, stayed close by her side.

Noh, unfazed, fanned herself slowly and took in the shimmering lights with a knowing smirk.

"Beautiful," she murmured. "It's like a performance dressed as sincerity."

They were ushered through tall lavish doors into a hall that shimmered with subtle illusions. Curtains of mist, lightly tinted pink, fell from the ceiling in soft sheets, framing walkways and concealing alcoves. Gentle music played from instruments with no visible musicians.

Each step deeper into the estate made the world feel softer, slower, more pliable.

Shela's steps grew more rigid as they continued, but Hannya's didn't falter once.

They were received in a pleasant dining area with pink cushions and extra couches and loveseats throughout the hall, and strangely, a veiled bed near the deeper corner of the space.

The air inside was warm with lingering perfume and curated ambiance. Fine food steamed on low tables. Jewel-colored drinks danced in glass cups, sparkling and chilled.

And at the far end of the room, two figures waited.

The Sibling Heirs of the Pleasure Faction.

The elder sister, Lady Vellea, lounged with feline grace. Her dark hair swept down one bare shoulder, decorated with gold and white clasps that glowed faintly with enchantments. Her gaze was calculating beneath the fan she held, but the smile she wore was soft and familiar.

Beside her, half-seated, stood her younger brother, Lord Vaedran, barefoot, beautiful, and bright-eyed with a hint of mischief. His smile was gentler, more charming, and yet… tinged with tension. He was dressed in soft flowing robes open at the collar, a charm sigil faintly glowing across his sternum.

Both radiated charm. Not just magical, but practiced, deliberate. Like actors who had rewritten themselves for this very moment.

"Lady Hannya," Vellea spoke as they approached. "Your presence honors us both. We had hoped you'd allow us the pleasure of your company... and here you are."

"Pleasure is best when mutual," Hannya replied, offering the smallest of bows. "It seems you've prepared quite a stage."

Vaedran stepped forward and took her hand briefly, not to kiss it, but to feel the energy beneath her skin. He dared not be brazen today.

Hannya allowed it, for exactly two seconds.

He then let go.

"Your charm is…" he trailed off, then smiled faintly, "...efficient. Not wasteful. You don't drown the air like most of us."

"She distills it," Noh said sweetly from behind her fan. "It's more dangerous that way."

The siblings laughed lightly, well-trained and melodic.

Shela didn't laugh at all. She just stood there. Like a roadside rock. Out of place, yet not in the way.

The dinner began with perfectly timed grace. Dishes appeared swiftly, practically grown from the table. Wines arrived as servants glided in with trays, each paired with the topic being discussed.

But beneath the warmth, the food, and the polite discourse about regional magic trends and dream-touched agriculture, a tension simmered.

They never mentioned the missing Showeuff.

They never mentioned the factions' current silence or the true weight of Hannya's recent moves.

But every question, every compliment, was calculated.

"How does Hazy Mountain handle initiates from mixed bloodlines?" Vellea asked at one point.

"Do you have plans to expand influence beyond the borderlands?" Vaedran asked another time.

And eventually, they tried to say it, without saying it.

"It must be difficult," Vellea murmured, sipping her wine, "to rise so quickly. So many wanting things from you. Power, allegiance."

"Others might offer you help," Vaedran added, tone light, "if they were brought close enough to understand your goals."

Shela's brow twitched.

Hannya leaned back just slightly in her seat.

"They'd need to be very close." she said.

Vellea's smile didn't fade.

"But isn't that the point of pleasure?" she said gently. "Closeness? Unity? Resonance?"

Noh stifled a laugh. "You're not proposing what I think you're proposing." she said.

"We're proposing dinner," Vellea said, still smiling.

"And a partnership," Vaedran added.

"And the faint suggestion," Hannya said, lifting her tea with delicate ease, "of a political marriage."

No one denied it.

No one confirmed it either.

Just wine, charm, and silence.

The banquet continued, but the elegance was thinning.

The wine remained sweet. The food was exquisite. But the silence between courses was growing heavier. Every word from the heirs was precise. Gentle. Dripping in refinement. And yet, beneath the charm, there was pressure.

Hannya stirred her tea.

The amber ripples inside mirroring her own measured thoughts.

Shela had stopped eating. Noh was watching the curtains, not the people.

Even the perfume that once drifted pleasantly through the air now hung thick. It clouded the room with expectations.

"You've both built this hall to perfection," Hannya said, her voice floating and light. "Subtle, warm. A place where anything can be said without ever being spoken."

Vellea tilted her head, expression demure. "We prefer implication over declaration."

"Words are so binding," Vaedran added softly.

"But we are devils," Hannya said, sipping her tea. "Binding is what we do."

That line drew the first visible shift in the room.

A tiny, subtle twitch in Vaedran's aura. A pause in Vellea's fan.

She had spoken plainly, and in doing so, cracked the elegant veneer.

Hannya continued, her tone still soft.

"So let's peel this gently. You invited me here twice. You adjusted your language. You used resonance, not alliance. You say unity, not pact. And all of it… dances around a single truth."

Her eyes gleamed faintly beneath her veil.

"You don't want my alliance."

The room held its breath.

"You want my blood."

Vellea didn't falter. "You make it sound so brutal."

Vaedran smiled, but it was thinner now. "Like you said, we're devils, Lady Hannya. Everything is blood. Yours just happens to shine a bit brighter."

Shela's fists clenched under the table, Noh let out a very soft exhale, and Hannya set her teacup down.

"So tell me," she said gently, "how many of your inner circle know what you're planning?"

Vellea's fan lowered just slightly.

"The capital is fractured," she said, not answering the question, moving to facts. "Hoard and Pride still choke every appointment made. Dream steers politics through delay and red tape. And Love," she smiled faintly, "has no stomach for conquest. It's time for a change. For charm. For elegance backed by something more than perfume and poetry."

Vaedran leaned forward now, expression softer than ever.

"You've done what no one has, Hannya. You've turned the Mountain and Feast into an alliance. You've made Pride flinch and Dream calculate. You've even created a cult of loyalty without ever once invoking fear."

He gestured with open palms.

"We don't want to bind you with politics, Lady Hannya. We want to… converge."

Hannya leaned back in her seat, veil catching the soft light.

"A devil Union," she said flatly.

"Yes!" Vellea answered without shame. "A union between you and the both of us. A union of bloodlines. Body and Law. We are Luxuria, as you are. Your innate charm law is... unprecedented."

"We believe," Vaedran said, his voice low now, "that if you... gifted your line to both of us, we could birth something strong, something entirely new."

Vellea took over seamlessly. "An heir line stronger than either of our houses. With enough presence to inherit, not just the Pleasure or Love Faction, but perhaps the entire Capital."

"You want my children," Hannya said. "As weapons."

"We want your legacy." Vaedran said gently.

Noh clicked her fan shut. "How romantic."

Shela's voice cut low. "How delusional."

But Hannya only tilted her head slightly.

Then stood. Her veil fluttering softly as she did.

"My body," she said, tone suddenly distant and cold, "will never be offered for convenience. Not to you. Not to anyone."

Vaedran glanced at his sister, unsure.

"You seem to misunderstand something," she continued, tone flat and cruelly elegant. "You mistook something priceless for something available."

Vellea opened her mouth, but Hannya raised one finger.

"One king," she said, without explaining. "That's all I'll ever claim." Her eyes betraying a hint of disdain.

She stepped away from the table.

"I would rather throw myself into the order platform than lie with strangers playing royalty in powdered courts."

As she turned to leave, Vellea hastily reached out, just a touch on her hand, meant to halt her. A small gesture of decorum.

And Hannya stopped mid-stride.

Her head turned, slow as a clock hand.

"Your hand… remove it."

Vellea chuckled, sweetly. "You don't have to be so dramatic, Lady Hannya-"

"I wasn't being dramatic," Hannya said calmly. "I was being generous."

In the next heartbeat, her chi bloomed, a tight coil of parasitic pink light that snapped onto Vellea's wrist like a leash soaked in honey.

The aura clung to the hand that touched her, and began to eat. Slow and gluttonous, clingy and abrasive.

Not tearing into flesh but the circuits containing her mana.

It drained slowly, silently, spreading from Vellea's fingers to her palm, then up toward her forearm. Her own chi tried to counter it. It flared in desperate defense, to purge it. But found no resistance to strike, flowing passed only to be surrounded in the next instant.

It was like trying to fight perfume, a futile war against softness weaponized.

Her heart skipped a beat.

Decisively, she conjured a blade from the folding fan in her free hand, and without hesitation, severed the infected one at the wrist.

It fell with a soft thud, pink aura still pulsing from the dismembered hand.

Hannya didn't stop walking.

"You've touched what wasn't offered, and there is a cost of doing so."

Noh followed, serene and composed.

Shela walked last, her footsteps deliberate.

At the table, Vellea cradled her wrist, expression perfectly poised and calm, but her eyes betrayed the cracks beneath.

Vaedran did not speak.

He simply watched the bloodless stump, then to the empty doorway.

'A touch cost her a hand.'

And though devils could regrow flesh, as common as growing a flower.

But the rare emotion of fear… was harder to replace.

Hannya and her party left without delay.

They walked through the quiet, gilded streets of the capital, the warmth of the Pleasure Faction's estate far behind them. Night clung to the corners of towers and courtyards. The city slept unaware that the balance had shifted once again.

Shela walked behind Hannya and Noh, her gaze lowered, silent in thought.

She replayed everything.

'One king.'

'Touched what wasn't offered.'

'My body will never be offered for convenience.'

And then… there was the sword.

Vanity.

Not for her, and not simply for show.

A weapon the Pride Faction refused to discuss. A relic no one understood. Except, somehow, Hannya.

Then there was the Caged God, the one she worshiped, a 'deity' she planned to revive. Sealed in chains in the temple Hannya built on the mountain, an even grander one being built in her new valley. No one knew the god's name, not even the priests.

But the sculpture, tall, obscure, impaled by stakes and script. It was not a random piece.

'The sword. The god. The declaration. The king…'

Shela had never heard Hannya pray aloud. She had also never seen her hesitate. The only time Hannya had ever looked shaken was in that temple, standing before the nameless idol she alone seemed to understand.

'She knows something.'

That much was clear, her fate mutation was guiding her to a path that held more to her than a mythical revival of a dead god.

It all painted a figure Shela didn't quite know how to define.

'Not a sycophantic follower, a lover maybe?. But if that's true, who?'

As she thought, a strange connection of the words made an old memory hazily flash in the back of her mind among others processing in her head. It flashed quickly, just passing her conscious grasp.

But it hit her instincts, whispering to her, giving her a strange feeling of familiarity… or recognition.

Sadly, the epiphany slowly forming deep in her mind was distracted and cut short by the two ahead of her.

Ahead, Hannya slowed her stride, then stopped.

"Noh," she said, eyes forward beneath her veil, "spread a whisper."

Noh tilted her head. "Specific tone?"

"Make it sound credible, not damning. Just... salacious."

Noh's fan clicked open. "What am I whispering?"

"That the Pleasure Faction offered me a devil union. Both heirs. Political, of course. Charming, of course. But in essence, they wanted my children to lead the Capital Council in the future. A dynasty. A bloodline. All of it mine… theirs… and no one else's."

Noh's fan paused mid-sweep.

"Ah," she murmured. "So we pull at the threads of every other faction's ambition by giving them a common enemy… in bed with the siblings. Just as they wanted."

"Exactly." Hannya said.

"It'll strain the brittle ties between Love, Dream, and Pride. And if the other factions still think they can outlast the new age of possible change with tradition… this will make them sweat. Or at least make them aware of a bit of heat."

"Do it by morning," Hannya said softly.

Noh bowed her head in mock submission, her smile blooming. "The capital's seamstresses will be sewing scandals by dawn."

Shela's voice, when it came, was quiet.

"That wasn't just strategy, was it?"

Hannya turned her head slightly.

Shela's eyes met hers.

"The 'One king' " Shela repeated. "You meant someone real, didn't you."

Not just myths, visions, and legends.

Hannya didn't answer immediately.

But her aura shifted, ever so slightly. Less polished. Less composed.

And Shela caught it.

"I meant what I said."

"And Vanity. And the Caged God. And this… path you're walking. It's not about power or worship, is it?"

Noh looked over, curious now. She had her own conjectures, but unlike the blunt imp beside her, Noh always deferred to devil etiquette. All devils had secrets.

Hannya didn't smile.

"I'm building something," she said. "And it has no place for imposters in satin robes, or heirs who think their blood is enough to crown them."

"And this king?"

Hannya turned fully to face Shela, her eyes unreadable behind the veil.

"He's not ready, but he will be." she whispered. "And when he is… he'll remember those kept the world waiting. All of them."

And though the street was empty, the echo of that promise. Quiet, unhinged, and absolute, lingered in the space between them like a prophecy spoken too early.

And that very night, Hannya left the capital, with sword in tow and seeds sown, she headed back to the mountain.

She'd gotten the sword, established a presence and a proposal, and gained the allies she needed for now.

Now all that was left was her final task.

One she planned to keep secret from the eyes of the soon to be paranoid nobles.

The perfect time to act while the council disputes on their next move against her… and their moves against each other.

An action that's sure to send out the capital's true enforcers once discovered.

Evolution.


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