OP Absorption -
Chapter 81: Into The Domain
Chapter 81: Into The Domain
Fin stared. The girl who stumbled towards him, relief clear on her face, wasn’t the spider-assassin he remembered. Pale skin, yes. Dark hair, yes. But the eyes were normal, large and dark, holding only two pupils. The extra limbs were gone. The chitinous armor replaced by simple dark clothing that looked vaguely familiar.
She looked... human. Disturbingly so.
"What the hell?" he asked, the words escaping before his cold logic could process fully.
She stopped a few feet away, tilting her head, a flicker of confusion in her now-human eyes. "My Lord? Is something wrong?"
"You," he stated flatly, gesturing vaguely at her. "You look... different."
She glanced down at herself, running a hand over her arm. "Oh. Yes. The domain... it changed when you claimed it." She looked around the altered throne room – the softer lines, the warmer light, the tapestries. "It reflects the owner now. Your influence."
"My influence?" he repeated skeptically. "This place looks like Meg’s bedroom threw up everywhere."
Arachne blinked. "Meg? Is that... someone important to you? Her preference seems quite strong. It overwrote most of the Queen’s design. And," she hesitated, looking down at her own hands again, "it seems your mana signature is doing the same to me."
"My mana?"
"Human mana," she clarified. "It’s dominant in this domain now. Your domain. The Queen’s spider essence... it’s being suppressed. Overwritten." She seemed almost puzzled by it herself. "I didn’t think it worked that way."
"Neither did I," he admitted dryly. ’Human mana overriding ancient spider Queen magic? Makes no sense.’ He filed it away under ’Things That Shouldn’t Work But Apparently Do’.
He scanned the hall again. Quieter now. Less oppressive without the Queen’s presence. "Where are the others? The stragglers?"
"Gone," she said quietly. "They were bound directly to the Queen’s life force. When she... ceased... they did too." She shuddered slightly. "The bond we share, the one you forged... it’s the only reason I persist."
He absorbed that. So she was literally the last one left. Tied to him. Dependent on him.
"Right," he said. "So. Exits. You said I can make one?"
"Yes," she confirmed. "As the Dominus, you command the domain’s boundaries."
"Anywhere?" he pressed. "Can I make it open exactly where I want?"
"Theoretically. Precision depends on focus. The stronger your will, the clearer your mental image of the destination, the more accurate the gate." She looked thoughtful. "You need to picture it. Every detail. The smell, the light, the feeling of the air."
Details. Okay. He could do details.
He closed his eyes. Shut out the gothic throne room, Arachne’s confusingly human face, the lingering echo of cosmic revelations.
He pictured home. Not just the street address. The specific worn patch on the armchair. The lingering scent of Meg’s slightly burnt cooking. The way the late afternoon light hit the dusty window. The chipped paint on the kitchen counter. The feeling of her presence in the space, even when she wasn’t there.
He focused. Poured intent into the Mark on his chest. Willed the connection.
He felt the shift. Power answered. Reality warped.
He opened his eyes.
Before him hung the portal. Swirling light, yes, but through it, he saw the familiar, slightly messy living room. His living room.
It worked. Perfectly.
He glanced back at Arachne. She stared at the portal, mouth slightly open, awe clear on her face.
He stepped through without a word.
The portal snapped shut behind him, leaving him standing in the quiet apartment. The air felt normal. Real.
"Meg?" he called out, his voice echoing slightly in the sudden silence.
No answer.
He walked through the rooms. Kitchen empty, a half-eaten bowl of cereal on the counter. Bedroom door ajar, bed unmade. Bathroom damp from a recent shower.
She wasn’t here. Out. Shopping? With friends?
A prickle of unease. After Rowena’s visit...
He pushed the thought away. She was fine. Had to be.
He found himself walking towards the hallway, towards the basement stairs. Force of habit? Or something else pulling him?
He descended into the cool, quiet dark. The simple bier he’d made stood untouched. Juliana lay exactly as he’d left her, peaceful, serene, defying time and decay.
He stopped beside her. The silence felt different down here. Less empty.
"Hey there," he murmured, the sound soft in the stillness. "Long time."
He looked down at her peaceful face. The Silver Core hummed faintly within him, a quiet echo of her sacrifice. She deserved better than a dusty basement. She deserved... sanctuary. Safety.
His domain.
He made the decision instantly. He carefully, gently, lifted her body into his arms. She felt impossibly light, almost ethereal.
He turned and carried her back up the stairs, back into the living room where the imprint of the portal still seemed to linger faintly in the air.
He focused again. Pictured the throne room, the dark wood, the soft light. Willed the connection.
Reality tore open once more.
He stepped back through, carrying Juliana, into the silent domain that was now his own.
"Hm? Back already, my Lord?" Arachne asked, blinking as Fin stepped back into the throne room, Juliana held gently in his arms. "You were barely gone five minutes."
"Just bringing someone important," he replied, his gaze shifting to the still form he carried. "Where’s a safe room? Secure. Comfortable."
She tilted her head slightly. "Is this... Meg?" The name felt strange on her tongue.
"No." His voice was quiet but firm. "This is Juliana. Someone special." He paused, his gaze distant for a moment. "Someone who gave up her life for me."
"Oh." She fell silent, absorbing the weight of his words. She didn’t understand the context, but the reverence in his tone was clear. "This way, then."
She led him through a newly formed archway off the main hall, down a short corridor lined with the same shifting, abstract tapestries. The air here felt calmer, more insulated. She stopped before a heavy wooden door, pushing it open.
The room beyond was large, dominated by a massive bed draped in dark, soft fabrics. A single window looked out onto a swirling, nebula-like starscape – the domain’s ’outside’. It was quiet, peaceful.
He walked to the bed and carefully laid Juliana down, arranging her hands over her chest, just as she had been in the basement. He stood there for a moment, looking down at her serene face.
"Okay," he said, turning back to Arachne. "Keep an eye on her. Let nothing disturb this room."
He started walking back towards the main hall where the echo of the portal lingered.
"I’m going back for Meg."
She bowed her head, the ingrained subservience overriding her confusion. "Yes, my Lord."
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