The house settled into that late, lovely quiet where even the appliances try to whisper. Stella had drifted back to sleep on the couch, pendant warm against her chest, stylus tucked under her hand like a pet. The glass dome glowed faintly over its blue rose, holding one word and a lot of feeling. Luna sat beside me under the throw, shoulder to shoulder, sharing the same square of warmth. Tiamat stood by the window, gaze on the city the way a hawk looks at open sky—measuring, choosing not to leave. "I will patrol the horizon," she said, which in dragon means "I am giving you the room." "Don’t bully any more ridges," I told her. "If geography behaves," she said, and then folded space like it was a napkin. One step, a soft ripple, gone. No flash. No drama. Just absence. I let out a breath I hadn’t noticed I was holding. Luna’s hand found mine under the blanket and didn’t leave. "She’s gentler with you," Luna said, eyes on the dark glass. "She is," I answered. "It’s strange. Since High Radiant, the distance changed. Less... pedestal. More person. Still a mountain. Just closer." "You climbed," Luna said simply. "Mountains respect that." We watched the hoverlights drift. My ring warmed once, the shoebox universe inside ticking through its own little night, and then cooled. "Do you remember," Luna asked, "the first time you tried to use Grey on something that was not remotely a door?" "Which time?" I said. "The vending machine? The submarine? The vampire shrine?" She laughed, gold eyes bright. "The vending machine. You looked so betrayed when it refused to become a corridor." "Look, it ate my coins twice." "You tried to open it into a grocery store." "You are always hungry," she said, fond and merciless. "For food, for fights, for problems big enough to matter." "That last one is your fault," I said. "You kept handing me bigger problems." "Someone had to," she said. "Left to your own devices, you would have collected stray cities." "That’s unfair," I said, then considered several maps. "Mildly fair." Her laughter softened and stayed near. We fell into easy silence. The kind that comes after long wars and longer trains and the kind of days you want to live in twice. "Do you remember the Night Market rooftop?" I asked. Luna made a little sound that was all mischief. "When you tried to impress me by balancing on the edge and pretending you weren’t bleeding?" "I was not pretending." "You were absolutely pretending." She tapped my ribs with a finger. "You had three broken ones and a plan to fight a warlord with a broom." "I maintain the broom would have worked," I said. "It would have, because I would have held you together while you swung it," she said, and the truth of it lived in the quiet. We let memory walk through the room. The Savage Communion fortress breaking under a grey afternoon. The blue greenhouse where Rose said "Mom" first and my heart learned a new trick. The moon, silent and black, where a god tried on a crown and I took it away. Tiamat’s training hall where pain was a price and growth was change given shape. Luna’s Purelight under my skin, knitting me back into a person when a fight tried to make me a story with a bad ending. "You were the anchor," I said. "When I shook, you didn’t." "Only on the outside," she said. "Inside, I was a flock of birds. But I learned to teach them to fly in circles. It looked like calm. Sometimes it was." "I leaned on it more than I should," I said. "You leaned the right amount," she said. "Otherwise, you would have fallen sideways. I don’t like you sideways." We smiled at each other, a little helpless. Her glow brushed my wrist where the ring sat. The room smelled like chocolate and roses and clean glass. Beyond the window, Avalon pulsed like a living map. "So," she said, tilting her head, eyes dancing, "how does it feel to be the most kissable demigod in a three-city radius?" "Only three?" I said. "Four if you stand on a chair." I snorted. "When did you decide you were going to kiss me?" I asked, because if we were going to do this we might as well admit we had always been doing this. "Day one," she said, without shame. "Then I met your heart, and I decided to wait until you grew into it." "That’s cheating," I said, throat a little tight. "Using patience as a weapon." "Patience is sharper than most knives," she said. "Also, you were busy collecting fiancées like merit badges." She raised an eyebrow. I surrendered with a hand. "I fell in love," I said. "Repeatedly. Correctly." "You did," she said, softening. "And they fell back because you do that thing." "Walk into rooms and mean it," she said. "See people and keep seeing them even when it’s inconvenient. You would be very annoying if you were not also very good." "That’s not why you love me," I said. "No," she said. "I love you because you are ridiculous and stubborn and you laugh at the wrong time and the right one, and because when the tower fell you went, and because when Stella said ’Mom’ my knees forgot their job." My eyes dropped to her hands. She looked down at them as if she, too, remembered the way they had trembled. "I’ve been a lot of things," she went on. "Contract, companion, healer, problem. ’Mom’ was not on my bingo card." "She meant it," I said. "All the way to the core." "I know," she whispered. "That’s why it knocked me over." We sat with that. It was large. It re-arranged furniture inside the chest. "Do you ever resent it?" I asked. "The five. The schedules. The politics. The way we fit everything around a larger ’we’." "Sometimes I resent the calendar," she said dryly. "And sometimes I resent the way your face looks when you are about to go somewhere I can’t follow. But no. I chose this. I choose it every day. If I needed you alone, I would have had you years ago. I wanted you whole." "That’s... generous," I said, because it was and because it made my eyes sting in a way dragons would mock. "It’s practical," she said. "You at half is a waste. You at whole shakes mountains." I huffed a laugh. "And rearranges the Department of Geography’s inbox." We slid out from under the throw and walked to the balcony because the room felt suddenly smaller than the night. The blue roses breathed cool air. The city stretched to the horizon; the tower’s scar was only a darker line now. The stars tried their best against Avalon’s lights and lost politely. Luna leaned on the rail and looked up. I stood beside her and looked sideways, because looking directly at her when she was looking like that tended to end poorly for my dignity. "Remember when you threatened to bite anyone who called me a pet?" she said, amused. "I will still bite them," I said. "You have five fiancées," she said. "They’ll get there faster." She laughed, then went quiet, and the quiet did that thing where it turns into gravity. She turned toward me. I turned toward her. The simple geometry of it felt like a solution. ᴛʜɪs ᴄʜᴀᴘᴛᴇʀ ɪs ᴜᴘᴅᴀᴛᴇ ʙʏ 𝘯𝘰𝘷𝘦𝘭•𝓯𝓲𝓻𝓮•𝘯𝘦𝘵 "Do you want to?" she asked, as direct as sunrise. "Yes," I said, honest as breath. We stood so close I could count the gold flecks in her eyes. She reached up and touched my face like it was a map she had memorized and was checking for new roads. My hand found the line of her jaw, warm and smooth, and then the back of her neck, where her braid had loosened into silk. Heat ran through me like a lit fuse. It wasn’t the battlefield flare that makes you feel ten feet tall. It was the kind that makes the world small enough to hold. "Arthur," she said, and I have been called many names in many voices, but that one wound through every hard day and pulled gently. "Luna," I answered, and her name fit behind my teeth like it had been waiting there. We leaned in, not rushed, not shy, simply meeting in the space we had been circling for years. The kiss landed soft at first, a promise wrapped in patience. Her mouth tasted like cocoa and something bright that was only Luna. She kissed like she healed—sure, steady, knowing where the hurt used to be and where it wasn’t anymore. My hand slid to her waist. Her fingers curled in my shirt. The city kept humming, respectful. The roses held their breath. Somewhere behind us, Stella turned over and sighed in the exact key that makes a house feel like a home. We broke just enough to breathe and then laughed because we both had the same thought at the same time: finally. "That," she said, forehead resting against mine, "was overdue." "We were busy," she said. "Saving continents," I said. "Collecting moms," she added, and we both had to stop and grin. I kissed her again, deeper, because once was never going to be enough. She answered like someone who had kept the calendar open for this exact hour.