The sun was a dying ember on the horizon, casting long, bloody shadows across the
mountain road. It was a jagged, cruel path that tested the wagon's iron wheels and the
passengers' remaining patience. Inside, however, was a bubble of surreal peace.
Jee-shahn lay sprawled across the wagon floor, his head pillowed on Emiko's lap
while his feet rested casually on Sora's shoulder. Emiko's fingers moved like silk,
gently rubbing his hair. Beside them, Tara sat close, her eyes fixed on Jee-shahn's
sleeping face.
In low, hushed tones, the two women spoke. Though they had only met recently, the
bond between the Divine First Wife and the Ogre Chef had solidified like blood-kin. In
the corner, Kaori and her young son, Ryuki, were already lost to the world of dreams,
lulled by the rhythmic creak of the wood.
Suddenly, the wagon lurched to a halt.
Jee-shahn didn't sit up. He didn't even open his eyes. A small, mocking smile played
on his lips. "Sora," he murmured, his voice a lazy rasp. "I think, in this cruel world,
something has just stepped between me and my destiny with a soft leather bed. Don't
you think so?"
Sora's eyes sharpened. He peered out the window, scanning the grey clifs and the
rocky path. "Master, everything looks normal. Just the wind and the dust."
Jee-shahn didn't move from Emiko's lap. "Then tell me... what is that silver-girl doing
on our driver's seat?"
Sora spun around, his heart jumping. There, holding a jagged dagger to the throat of
their female Goblin driver, was a woman with hair like moonlight and eyes like a
predator. Lupa.
"Hand over everything," Lupa hissed, her voice a low growl. "Or the little green one
dies first. Then the rest of you, one by one."
Sora's face flushed with anger, his daggers sliding into his hands. But before he could
leap, a soft, amused laugh echoed through the wagon. Jee-shahn finally cracked one
eye open.
"Sounding interesting, silver-girl," Jee-shahn said, looking entirely too relaxed. "Let
me see if you can actually do it."
Lupa froze. She expected screams or begging. Instead, she saw a man who looked
like he was watching a comedy show. Infuriated, she didn't kill the driver. She lunged.
With the speed of a mountain gale, she dived into the wagon, her dagger aimed
straight for Jee-shahn's exposed throat.
In the corner, Tara looked at the sleeping Kaori and Ryuki. "They're still sleeping
through this noise?"
Emiko chuckled softly, not even flinching as a blade flew toward her husband. "It's a
habit they've caught from my Lord. They've adapted to the chaos."
Lupa poured every ounce of her silver-blood strength into the strike. Thwack. The
dagger stopped exactly one inch from Jee-shahn's skin. It hit an invisible wall of pure,
condensed Azure Aura. Lupa pushed until her muscles screamed, but the blade
wouldn't budge. Finally, the resistance vanished so suddenly that the dagger fell
uselessly into Jee-shahn's lap.
Lupa gasped, her face inches from his. She felt it then—not just power, but a
presence like a vast, bottomless ocean."Silver-girl," Jee-shahn said, his gaze bored and heavy. "You're a little bit interesting.
But it's my time for sleep. It's better if you leave now."
Lupa trembled. She couldn't sense his aura—it was too high for her to measure—but
her instincts told her she was standing in front of a calamity.
"I don't have a habit of repeating myself," Jee-shahn added, his eyes narrowing
slightly.
Lupa backed away, her eyes wild with a mix of fury and fear. She snatched her dagger
and leaped from the wagon. "I'll kill you for sure one day!" she screamed back into the
wind.
Jee-shahn didn't even acknowledge her. He was already drifting back to sleep.
The Midnight Invitation
Hours later, the camp was still. Tara and Kaori were finishing the cleaning.
"Kaori, there's food left on this plate," Tara noted, confused. But when they looked
again, the plate was licked clean. "I... I must be tired," Tara muttered.
Inside the wagon, Jee-shahn sat up. He grabbed his pillow and a thick, warm
bedsheet. Ryuki stirred, blinking sleepily. "Master... where are you going?"
"I think those big trees over there want me to sleep in their shadows," Jee-shahn
whispered. "I'm going to go bless them with my presence."
Ryuki watched him go, yawning. "Master's built diferently..."
Jee-shahn found a spot under an ancient mountain tree, settling into the dirt as if it
were a royal palace. The branches above him began to shake—not from the wind, but
from the weight of someone hiding in the leaves.
"Silver-girl," Jee-shahn said into the darkness, his voice thick with sleep. "I know
you're there. If you're getting cold, I don't mind sharing my hot sleeping sheet. Stop
torturing that tree."
Silence followed. Then, Lupa climbed down. She was shivering, her pride wounded,
her body shaking from the mountain frost. She stared at him, then, driven by a mix of
anger and survival, she crawled under the heavy sheet.
"Don't wake me," Jee-shahn muttered. "I am meditating."
"What kind of meditation is this?" Lupa snapped, but Jee-shahn was already snoring
lightly.
In the darkness of the sheet, Lupa stared at the man beside her. Her predatory heart
hammered against her ribs. "I want... to know why you aren't afraid," she whispered,
her voice lost in the wind. Her hunger for blood was slowly dissolving into a diferent,
desperate biological pull—a hunger she didn't yet understand.
;) PAGE 2
The first light of dawn was cold and grey, barely piercing the thick mountain mist.
Under the massive, ancient tree, the heavy bedsheet stirred. Lupa opened her eyes,
her breath hitching in her throat. She was still pressed against Jee-shahn's side, the
warmth of his body acting like a drug on her freezing Wolf-Kin biology.
For a moment, she stared at his sleeping face. He looked so defenseless—so lazy. Her
hand slowly moved toward the dagger she had hidden in her boot. Her mind
screamed at her to drive the steel into his heart and end the humiliation of the
previous night.
But her fingers wouldn't move. Her body felt heavy, anchored by a strange, magnetic
pull. The Aura leaking from Jee-shahn's skin had begun to weave into her own,
creating a biological chain she didn't understand.
"If you're going to stab me, silver-girl," Jee-shahn's voice rumbled, eyes still closed,
"do it quickly. The indecision is vibrating the sheet, and I'm trying to dream about a
world where people don't wake up before noon."
Lupa jerked her hand back as if burned. She scrambled out from under the sheet, her
face a mask of snarling pride and deep, internal confusion. "You... you are a demon.
You've cursed me with your scent!"
Jee-shahn finally sat up, his hair a mess, looking utterly bored. He didn't look at her;
he looked at the tree. "I didn't curse you. I shared my heart. You're the one who
crawled in, remember? Now, stop barking. You're giving the mountain a headache."
The Tense Journey
The next few hours of travel were agonizingly slow. Lupa didn't leave. She followed
the wagon like a ghost, walking along the rocky clifs above the road, her red eyes
never leaving Jee-shahn.
Inside the wagon, the mood was thick with unease. Emiko sat silently, her fingers
tracing the glowing crystal of her ring, her eyes occasionally darting to the silver
shadow on the clifs. Tara was busy preparing a thick stew, but even her movements
were hesitant.
"Master," Sora whispered, his hand on the reins. "She's been following us for miles.
She isn't a bandit anymore. She's a hunter waiting for weakness."
"Let her follow," Jee-shahn replied, lying flat on his back. "It's good exercise for her.
Besides, she's keeping the other predators away. Nobody wants to hunt a wagon
followed by a silver-haired disaster."
The Confrontation at the Threshold
By midday, the jagged towers of Mossburrow Hills appeared. The gate was a massive
slab of iron-wood, guarded by hundreds of Wolf-Kin warriors. As the wagon
approached, the guards didn't shout; they simply drew their bows in a terrifying,
synchronized movement.
Lupa leaped down from the clifs, landing hard in front of the wagon, her spear held
low. She wasn't standing with the guards, and she wasn't standing with Jee-shahn.
She was alone in the middle.
"Father!" she screamed toward the battlements. "The one you called 'weak' is here!
The one who thinks your mountain is his bed!"
King Fenris stepped onto the balcony, his golden eyes narrowed in fury. He looked at
his exiled daughter, then at the wagon. "Lupa! You return with a human? Have you
truly fallen so low that you lead cattle to our gates?""He is no human, Father!" Lupa's voice was full of a dark, vengeful hope. She wanted
her father to strike Jee-shahn. She wanted to see if the "Lazy Monster" could be
broken by the King of Wolves. "He is the one who took my dagger and laughed! If you
have any pride left, show him why we rule the frost!"
Fenris let out a low, vibrating growl. "Archers... loose!"
A volley of black-feathered arrows hissed through the air. Sora ducked, and Tara
shrieked, but Jee-shahn didn't even move his head.
The air in front of the wagon suddenly rippled. The arrows didn't hit an invisible wall;
they simply stopped, their tips glowing a faint, mocking blue. One by one, they turned
to ash and fell like black snow.
Jee-shahn let out a long, heavy sigh that seemed to drain the color from the world. He
slowly stood up, stepping onto the front of the wagon. He didn't look at the archers.
He looked directly at Fenris.
"I am very, very tired," Jee-shahn said, his voice quiet but echoing like thunder. "And
when I am tired, I am not a 'Monster.' I am a problem. Fenris, if you fire another stick at
my wagon... I will flatten this mountain until it's as smooth as a dinner plate. Open the
gate. Now."
The sheer weight of his Aura slammed into the guards like a physical blow. Several
fell from the walls. King Fenris felt his knees tremble—an instinctual fear he hadn't felt
in a century.
Lupa watched her father's face turn pale. She felt a surge of cold, bitter satisfaction,
mixed with a terrifying realization: she had brought a god into her house, and he was
in a very bad mood.
;) PAGE 3
The massive iron-wood gates of Mossburrow Hills groaned as they swung open, a
sound like a dying beast echoing against the mountain clifs. The wagon rolled
forward at a snail's pace. Sora gripped the reins so tightly his knuckles were white,
his eyes darting toward the thousands of Wolf-Kin warriors lining the path. They
stood in eerie, predatory silence, their spears leveled not at the wagon, but at the
ground—a forced sign of submission that dripped with hidden resentment.
Lupa walked ahead of the wagon. She did not look back at Jee-shahn, but her gait had
changed. It was no longer the light, agile bounce of a scout; it was heavy, grounded,
and her hand rested perpetually over her stomach. The silver hair on her neck was
bristling. Every step she took into her father's city felt like she was walking toward her
own execution.
Inside the wagon, the air was stifling. Tara had stopped humming. Emiko sat perfectly
still, her divine eyes fixed on the back of Jee-shahn's head.
"My Lord," Emiko whispered, her voice a soft bell in the silence. "The hatred here is
very loud. It smells like old blood and fresh iron."
Jee-shahn didn't open his eyes. He was lying on his side, his cheek pressed against a
silken pillow. "Let them hate, Emiko. Hatred takes a lot of energy. Eventually, they'll
get tired and go take a nap. That's when the world finally becomes peaceful."
The King's HallThey reached the central spire, a jagged tower carved directly into the mountain's
heart. King Fenris waited at the base of the stairs. Up close, he was terrifying—a wall
of grey muscle and scars, his golden eyes filled with a lethal mixture of shame and
fury.
The wagon stopped. Jee-shahn took his time. He yawned, stretched his arms until his
joints popped, and finally stepped down. He looked at the King, then at the hard stone
floor, and sighed.
"Fenris," Jee-shahn said, his voice mocking and slow. "Your city is very vertical. Don't
you people believe in elevators? My legs are already complaining about the three
steps I just took."
Fenris's jaw tightened, his claws digging into the stone banister. "You bring a
human's arrogance into the Hall of the Moon. You have humiliated my daughter. You
have shamed my blood."
"I haven't even started humiliating you yet," Jee-shahn countered with a sleepy smirk.
"That usually happens after I've had a bad night's sleep. Speaking of which... where is
the leather?"
Lupa stepped between them, her red eyes burning. She looked at her father, then
turned a look of pure, jagged loathing toward Jee-shahn. "He doesn't care about your
honor, Father. He doesn't care about your city. He only cares about his own comfort."
She felt a sharp, sudden cramp in her abdomen—a pulse of Azure Power that made
her stumble. The "biological hunger" was intensifying. Her pregnancy wasn't a normal
one; it was consuming her strength to build something much more dangerous.
"Lupa," Fenris growled, noticing her stumble. "You look... diferent. Your scent is
wrong. You smell like... him."
"I smell like a curse," Lupa spat, her voice trembling with rage. "I am carrying the
consequence of your weakness and his boredom. Are you going to kill us both now,
or are you going to let this monster sleep in our beds?"
The Cold Night Begins
The King didn't answer. He couldn't. The memory of the arrows turning to ash was still
fresh in his mind. He gestured for his guards to lead them to the high spire.
The room they were given was grand, but cold. The windows had no glass, letting the
freezing mountain wind howl through the stone. Jee-shahn walked straight to the
center of the room, where a large, wooden frame sat.
"Sora," Jee-shahn said, poking the frame. "This is wood. I specifically requested
leather. Tell the King that if my back feels a single splinter tonight, I'm going to use his
throne as firewood for Tara's kitchen."
Lupa stood by the window, watching the moonlight. She was shivering again, but she
refused to move. She wanted to stay in the cold. She wanted the pain to remind her of
how much she hated the man lying just a few feet away.
"Silver-girl," Jee-shahn called out from the darkness of the room. "The wind is going
to make the baby grumpy. And a grumpy baby is a loud baby. Come away from the
window before I have to actually get up and pull you away."
"Don't touch me," Lupa whispered, her hand tightening on her spear. "I am waiting for
the moment you fall into a deep sleep, Jee-shahn. I want to see if your 'Aura' can stop
a blade when your soul is wandering in your dreams."
Jee-shahn let out a long, lazy breath. "I'll leave the door unlocked for you. But fair
warning... I move a lot in my sleep. You might just end up as a pillow again.
;) PAGE 4
The moon hung over the jagged peaks like a cold, judgmental eye. Inside the royal
guest chambers, the only sound was the howling wind and the occasional crackle of a
dying hearth. Jee-shahn lay on the wooden frame, his eyes closed, seemingly adrift in
his usual sea of indiference. But the air around him was humming—a low, rhythmic
pulse of Azure Power that kept the frost from touching the bed.
Across the room, Lupa was a shadow against the stone. She wasn't sleeping. She was
hunched over, her arms wrapped tightly around her midsection. The "biological
hunger" was no longer a whisper; it was a roar in her blood. She could feel the
child—the consequence of her night under the sheet—draining her warrior essence to
fuel its own terrifying growth.
"It's eating me," she whispered into the dark, her voice trembling with a mix of fear
and fury. "You... you are growing a monster inside me to finish the job of destroying
my pride."
Jee-shahn didn't open his eyes, but his mocking smirk was visible in the moonlight.
"It's not eating you, silver-girl. It's just making room. You Wolf-Kin are so used to
fighting the world that you don't know how to let something in without trying to stab it
first."
"I will never let you in," Lupa spat, struggling to stand. Her legs felt heavy, as if the
gravity of the Monster-Lord's aura was pinning her down even from across the room.
The King's Shadow
Outside the heavy iron doors, King Fenris stood in the shadows of the corridor. He
was not alone. Two of his most trusted shadow-assassins stood behind him, their fur
dyed black, their blades coated in the venom of the mountain viper.
Fenris watched the faint blue light leaking from under the door. His heart was a drum
of war. He looked at the guards, then back at the door. He didn't care about Lupa's life
anymore—to him, she was a vessel for a curse that threatened his entire throne.
"When the moon hits the peak," Fenris breathed, his voice a lethal rasp. "Enter. Do
not speak. Do not hesitate. If the 'Monster wakes, do not look into his eyes. Just
strike."
The First Pulse
Inside the room, the atmosphere shifted. Lupa suddenly let out a sharp, choked gasp
and fell to her knees. A blinding flash of Azure light erupted from her stomach,
illuminating the entire chamber.
It was the first kick. But it wasn't the kick of a baby; it was the pulse of a Calamity.
The force of it cracked the stone floor beneath her. The sheer pressure made the
windows shatter outward, and for a split second, the spectral image of a silver wolf
entwined with an azure dragon flickered in the air.
Jee-shahn finally sat up. He wasn't smiling anymore. He looked at Lupa, who was
panting on the floor, her eyes glowing a terrifying, glowing red-gold.
"Careful, silver-girl," Jee-shahn said, his voice dropping to a low, dangerous tone.
"The little one has a temper. He felt your 'grandfather' standing outside the door with
a knife. He doesn't like being interrupted during his development."
Lupa looked up at the door, then back at Jee-shahn, her teeth bared. "Then let them
come. Let my father see what he has created by casting me out. I hate you,Jee-shahn... but I will kill anyone who tries to touch this child before I have the chance
to show it how to hate you, too."
The door began to creak open. The slow-burn was over. The heat was here.
;) PAGE 5
Jee-shahn remained seated on the edge of the wooden frame. He wasn't lounging
anymore. His hair cast a deep shadow over his eyes, but the Aura rolling off his body
was no longer a gentle pulse—it was a freezing tide. Beside him, Lupa struggled to
her feet, her hands white-knuckled as she gripped her spear, her belly glowing with
that terrifying, rhythmic light.
"Father," Lupa rasped, her voice dripping with venom. "You come in the dark like a
scavenger. Is this the 'Honor of the Pack' you preached when you threw me to the
dirt?"
Fenris stopped, his nostrils flaring as he inhaled the scent of the room. It smelled of
ozone, ancient scales, and something else—the scent of a New King being forged in
the womb. "That thing inside you is not blood, Lupa. It is a parasite of the heavens. I
am here to cut the rot out before it consumes us all."
He signaled the assassins. They didn't even get to take a step.
"I told you," Jee-shahn's voice was a low, seismic rumble that made the very
mountain vibrate. "I am in a very bad mood."
Jee-shahn didn't stand. He simply looked at the two assassins. In an instant, the
gravity in their square inch of space increased a thousandfold. There was a sickening
crunch of bone meeting stone. The assassins weren't just knocked down; they were
fused into the floor, their poisoned blades snapping like dry twigs. They didn't even
have time to scream before the pressure rendered them unconscious.
Fenris recoiled, his own knees buckling. He looked at Jee-shahn's face—for a split
second, the lazy, mocking mask had slipped. What remained was a face of ancient,
divine apathy. It was the face of a being who had watched stars die and felt nothing.
"You want to 'cut out the rot'?" Jee-shahn asked, his voice chillingly calm. "Lupa
hates me. She wants to kill me more than you do. But she is carrying a part of my
soul. If you touch her... I won't just kill you, Fenris. I'll make sure your soul is trapped
in a dream of falling for the next ten thousand years. I'm too lazy to hunt you, so I'll
just make you sufer where you stand."
Lupa watched her father tremble. She felt a surge of cold, dark triumph, but it was
hollow. She turned her gaze to Jee-shahn, her red eyes burning. "Do not think this
makes us allies, Monster. I am only standing because the child demands it. Once he is
born... I will be the one to finish what my father failed to do."
Jee-shahn let out a long, tired sigh, the azure light dimming as he slumped back onto
his pillow. "Fine, fine. Put it on the schedule, silver-girl. But right now? The baby is
finally quiet, and I'd really like to get back to my 'meditation.' Fenris, take your trash
and leave. And tell the servants to bring me some grapes. The heavy lifting has made
me hungry."
The Slow Aftermath
The King retreated, dragging his broken assassins with him, his spirit crushed by a
power he couldn't comprehend. The room fell back into a tense, heavy silence. Lupadidn't go back to the window. She sat on the floor near the bed, her spear across her
lap, watching Jee-shahn with a gaze of unending, focused hatred.
She was a warrior-daughter, an outcast, and now, a vessel for a god's heir. She didn't
know what the future held, but she knew one thing: The "Lazy Lord" had turned her
life into an epic tragedy, and she would play her part until the very end
;) PAGE 6
Time slowed to a crawl. The King's servants approached the spire with trembling
hands, leaving oferings of rare meats and soft leather outside the door as if feeding a
sleeping volcano. Inside, Jee-shahn existed in a state of perpetual, mocking rest. He
rarely spoke, and when he did, it was usually to complain about the texture of the
grapes or the "loudness" of the mountain wind.
Lupa, however, was undergoing a transformation that was as beautiful as it was
terrifying. Her silver hair took on an azure sheen, and her movements became
unnervingly fluid. She did not rest. Every day, she sat in the center of the room, her
spear across her knees, practicing a form of "breathing" that drained the very heat
from the air.
"You're wasting your energy, silver-girl," Jee-shahn remarked one afternoon, his voice
barely a whisper. "Training to kill a man who doesn't even want to stand up is a very
poor use of a Saturday."
Lupa's eyes snapped open, glowing with a fierce, predatory red-gold. "I am not
training to kill a man. I am training to erase a mistake. The child in my womb is the
only thing keeping you alive. Once his cord is cut, yours will be too."
"Such a violent mother," Jee-shahn chuckled, turning his back to her. "The boy is
going to have a very confusing childhood."
The Birth of the Disaster
The end of the ninth month arrived not with a cry, but with a shattering of reality.
A storm of Azure lightning swirled around the spire, turning the night sky into a
bruised purple. Inside the room, the pressure was so immense that the stone walls
began to weep crystal tears. Lupa did not scream. She gritted her teeth, her hands
digging into the floor until the stone turned to powder. Her hatred was her anchor; she
refused to show weakness to the "Monster" who had done this to her.
Suddenly, a pulse of light erupted that was so bright it blinded the guards in the
courtyard below.
When the light faded, the room was silent. Lupa lay against the wall, her chest
heaving, her spear still within reach. In her arms was a small, silver-haired bundle.
Shin had arrived.
The baby didn't cry. He opened his eyes—perfect, mocking mirrors of Jee-shahn's
azure gaze—and looked around the room with a look of profound boredom. He let out
a tiny, soft yawn, and a ripple of power moved through the spire, causing the King's
throne three floors down to crack in half.
Jee-shahn stood up—slowly, for once—and walked over to the bed. He looked down
at the child, then at Lupa's vengeful, tear-streaked face."Look at that," Jee-shahn whispered, a genuine, dark smirk touching his lips. "He's
only been alive for ten seconds, and he's already tired of your speeches, Lupa. He
really is my son."
Lupa pulled the child closer, her knuckles white as she glared at Jee-shahn. "He has
your eyes... but he will have my heart. I will raise him to be the weapon that finally
puts you to sleep forever."
Jee-shahn let out a long, lazy breath and headed back toward his bed. "Good luck
with that. But for now... tell the 'weapon' to keep it down. I'm going to need at least
twelve hours of sleep after watching that. It was very... exhausting.
