Chapter 7, The Vel’Rasa Order
The wooden doors thudded shut behind us, the noise rolling through the plaza like a dying heartbeat. The torches outside spat sparks against the cavern draft, their light carving harsh amber lines across the boards of the barn and the faces of the guards posted around it. They stood stiffly at their posts, pretending not to have heard a single word spoken inside, pretending none of their tails had twitched when Master had walked past them, pretending they were made of discipline instead of instinct.
Master stepped a few paces into the open space, the murmur of the Maw Market drifting toward us like a half-drunk lullaby of danger and commerce. I watched the way his shoulders rose and fell, controlled, deliberate, the rhythm of a man who’d already put Kaelenna behind him the moment he crossed the doorway.
Then he sighed.
He leaned one hand against the barn wall, boots set wide on the packed cavern soil, head angled low in that noir way he slipped into like it was a second skin made of disappointment. The posted guard beside us stiffened, eyes darting to him, tail curling down as if she sensed the weight of whatever was about to come out of his mouth.
Master spoke without looking at her. Without looking at me. Without needing to look at anything. “She knows nothing,” he muttered, voice low and dry as dust on a corpse. “Everyone in there is sniffing around in the dark, hoping the shadows answer back. But shadows don’t talk. They just swallow fools whole.” He exhaled once, slow, bitter. “Animals are useless in this sort of game. They react. They don’t think. They wait to be told where the danger is, and by the time they see it, it’s already got its teeth in their throat.”
The guard swallowed hard.
My tail slid instantly back around Master’s thigh, tightening like a living chain, muscles coiling with possessive electricity that hissed up my spine. I stepped closer, brushing my shoulder against his arm, claws scraping the barn wall behind him with a long, deliberate drag. I wanted the guard to hear it. To feel it in her bones. To understand the difference between what he meant and what I would allow.
Master’s cynicism curled through the air like cold smoke, bitter and sharp, and it made something in my chest grow hot and hungry. I turned my gaze toward the guard, pupils narrowing to predatory slits. “Careful,” I purred, voice low, dripping with the kind of threat that sounded like affection only if you’d lost your mind the way I did. “He wasn’t talking about me.”
The guard’s ears flattened so quickly she nearly lost balance. Good. The cavern around us breathed with tension, distant Ren voices arguing, dwarfs haggling over metal scraps in Embercrack green, merchants shouting half-heartedly across the stalls, everyone pretending this was a marketplace instead of a battlefield waiting for the wrong whisper.
I curled closer to Master, pressing my forehead briefly against his arm, tail tightening enough to make my muscles shiver. “She doesn’t know anything,” I said quietly, voice shifting into something darker, velvet-thin and razor-backed. “Kaelenna’s blind in her own den."
I inhaled through my nose, scenting the market, the guards, the barn, the trails of stress and fear still clinging to the wood. “We’ll find who,” I whispered. “And then I’ll tear out their spine for making Master waste his time".
The words then slipped from his mouth, “Good kitten.” Good Kitten ?
It hit me harder than any spearpoint. My spine arched in a sharp pulse, ears flicking up before I could stop them, tail tightening round his thigh like instinct had hijacked muscle. A warm, electric shiver crawled beneath my skin as if every nerve had been waiting for that single scrap of praise. I leaned closer, chasing his scent, ready to coil myself entirely around him and never let him move again.
But he didn’t stay still. He didn’t linger. He didn’t give me direction or explanation or even the grace of a backward glance. He just turned. And walked. Straight past the guard, past the market noise, past the torches spitting against cavern wind, his boots striking the stone with that cold, noir certainty that said he’d made up his mind three steps before anyone else even realised there was a choice to make. No inn. No discussion. No warning. Just motion.
The guard beside us stiffened as he brushed past her, her ears shooting straight up, tail curling forward with startled instinct. She wasn’t looking at him anymore. She was watching me. She should. Because for half a heartbeat… I froze. Not out of fear. Not out of confusion. Out of something deeper. Something primal.
The bond tugged hard as he crossed the plaza, dragging me with it like a hook lodged deep inside my ribs. Panic flickered at the edges of my vision. Not panic that he’d leave me. Never that. Panic that the distance grew, inch by inch, enough to light that instinct of abandonment that lived in my bones like a disease.
He didn’t tell me where he was going. He didn’t have to. But he didn’t look at me. And that, that BURNED. My claws dragged a long line down the wooden wall, not even trying to hide the snarl curling up my throat. The guard jumped back so fast she nearly dropped her spear.
“Move,” I hissed, stepping off the wall, tail already snapping behind me like a whip made of wire. “Unless you want to explain to your High Watcher why you were the last thing between me and him.”
The market stretched ahead, torches reflecting off damp stone, voices rising in cautious tension as Ren and Embercrack traders eyed each other across crude stalls. Smoke drifted low. Fish stench coiled with hot metal. Old hunting rites from the Vel’Rasa Order echoed faintly from deeper tunnels, the scent of blood-offerings still lingering like iron incense.
He walked straight into it. Into their territory within the fishing district. He didn’t even check if I followed. He didn’t need to. I launched after him with a burst of movement sharp enough to startle two passing travellers, my tail slicing the air as I closed the distance in rapid, hungry strides. My claws clicked every few steps, a warning, a promise, a declaration.
He didn’t tell me where he was going. But I knew. I always knew...
Master moved like a man walking toward a crime scene he’d already solved, pacing the same path he once carved in blood and smoke. He moved toward the scent of old violence, toward the district where he’d broken a gang leader in front of his own men, toward the memory of the massacre we’d wrought together. And I followed, the eternal shadow at his heel, breath syncing with his, heart pounding in that familiar, obsessive rhythm.
If he wanted the fishing district, I would burn the entire Maw Mine to escort him. If he wanted the Crimson Swarm, I would tear through every Vel’Rasa zealot and Ren butcher until he had his answer. If he wanted nothing but a walk through blood-soaked streets, then I would walk behind him like ruin incarnate.
The fishing district’s church still smelled like blood even though the stone had been scrubbed until it nearly bled itself. The Maw never forgets violence. It absorbs it. Stores it. Whispers it back through the cracks.
Master stepped in first, boots brushing dust from the old ritual floor tiles. The Vel’Rasa church had always been a bastard thing, half shrine, half slaughterhouse. Rusted chains hung from beams where initiates once dangled in the dark to “confront fear.” Deep pits in the floor still held old scorch marks from the oil-soaked offerings flung into the abyss. Candles were lit in uneven rows, offering flickering light to a deity who valued pain more than prayer.
The air carried the coppery tang of sacrifices long gone, soaked into the grain of the wood. The worshippers had scurried deeper into Embercrack tunnels when rumours spread that he had returned. They feared Master in a ceremonial, respectful way.
They feared me in a holy way. One of the altar drapes still bore claw marks. Mine. Deep, parallel, vicious. A reminder of the night their priest made the mistake of laying a hand near Master’s jawline as if he had the right to touch a god’s chosen.
The moment we stepped inside, my lungs tightened around a memory. My portrait waited on the wall. It was larger than I remembered. A painted mural spanning nearly the full height of the church’s right side, lit by oil lamps that haloed it in amber glow. They called it "The Beast". They had painted my ears up, tail coiled in an arc of violence, eyes wide with that manic, cold devotion I’d felt the moment I saw the priest reach for Master. The painter had captured the exact second the spear thrust through his throat, my grin, stretched sharp and cruel, my claws dripping, the priest’s expression frozen between shock and reverence.
The congregation had screamed. Then they had bowed. Vel’Rasa teaches one truth, the strong hunt, the weak are blessed in death. When I killed him, they didn’t mourn. They elevated me. A new beast in their pantheon. A living proof of Vel’Rasa’s law.
My tail coiled itself round Master’s thigh before I even realised I’d moved. Not in fear. In pride. In possessiveness. In the deep animal certainty that this building was mine because he had walked into it. The mural stared back at me in the half-light, and something inside me shivered, a darker echo of memory. I stepped closer to him, claws clicking softly against the stone. “They worshipped me after that day,” I murmured, voice low, humming with a twisted joy. “They saw me spill his blood for daring to touch you. In their faith, that made me divine.”
Master remained silent, gaze sweeping the church with that noir detective calm that made even holy places feel like crime scenes he’d already solved. Dust motes drifted through the shafts of lamplight crossing his face.
The moment Master moved, the air in the church snapped tight like a snare trap closing. He crossed the floor in that cold, efficient stride of his, the kind that made everyone in the room either freeze or flinch. The faint shuffle I’d heard hiding behind a pillar became a trembling silhouette, trying to melt into the shadows.
Master didn’t give him the chance. He lunged, hand already reaching to seize the stranger by the collar and slam him into the wall with that brutal, noir certainty that turned violence into punctuation.
Master’s Attack Roll, NATURAL 1
The world held its breath. And the entire scene shattered. Master’s boot slipped on the thin layer of soot and old wax lining the church floor. The man jerked sideways in panic. Master’s hand missed his collar by inches, pure chaos, no grace, the kind of failure that never belonged to him but decided to strike now, in the most insultingly inconvenient fashion possible.
He stumbled a half-step forward. His shoulder bumped the wall instead of the man’s skull. A tiny cloud of dust puffed off the wood where he hit it. And the terrified Vel’Rasa worshipper squeaked, tripped over his own feet, and fell backwards onto the floor in a messy heap of limbs and fear.
Silence rang. Then my entire spine arched. A laugh ripped out of me, manic, high, wicked, so sharp it echoed off the rafters like a blade scraping stone. My tail snapped with such force it thumped Master’s thigh, wrapping him tighter, claws digging into the boards as I doubled over in feral delight. “Master,” I gasped between wheezing, hysterical breaths, “you tried to throw him at the wall and you threw yourself instead…” My ears went flat then forward then flat again, laughing so hard my tail fluffed itself out like a mad creature.


