NOVEL The Genie's Transmigrated Master: My Lady in Red. Chapter 13: Kiss me!
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Chapter 13: Chapter 13: Kiss me!

Celestia looked around her.

She did not understand what was happening, but she felt the air change. That much was undeniable.

The room had shifted in a way that had nothing to do with temperature or light, a shift that lived beneath the physical, in the particular pressure behind her ears and behind her sternum that she had no name for yet but recognized instinctively as significant.

She looked down at the lamp in her hands.

She had caught it on reflex. One moment it had been sliding off the shelf, the next it was in her grip, saved from the floor by instinct alone. She had not thought about it, she had simply moved.

And now here she was, holding it, and the room was doing something rooms were not supposed to do.

"What is inside you," she murmured to it quietly, turning it over in her hands, studying the markings that crawled across its tarnished surface, "that is emitting all of this impure magic?"

It was strange, she had no magic of her own, had never had any, the old soul in her had been told so consistently and by enough people that she had long since stopped questioning it. And yet since she had woken up in this world she had developed something she could not explain. A sensitivity, a sense of distinction for magic.

She could feel magic the way some people could feel a change in weather before it arrived, not see it, not use it, simply sense it. Pure magic felt like sunlight on the inside of her chest, clean, warm, expansive.

This was not that.

This was something Impure.

Dark and dense and vast in the way that very deep water is vast, not threatening exactly, but enormous in a way that reminded you of how small you were by comparison.

Impure magic. Darkness itself, concentrated and sealed and apparently no longer entirely content to stay that way.

The lamp shook.

Not gently, not subtly. It shook with the full intention of something that had been contained for far too long and had finally found a reason to object.

Celestia’s grip tightened involuntarily, then released entirely as the shaking intensified beyond what her hands could manage, and the lamp clattered to the floor between her feet.

The room went dark.

Completely, absolutely dark, the kind of dark that didn’t leave room for shadows because shadows require some light to exist and there was none. The only things Celestia could see were herself, dimly, as though she was producing some faint illumination of her own, and the lamp on the floor at the center of everything, glowing with that dark crawling light that was strangely beautiful in her eyes.

She should have moved away from it.

She crouched beside it instead, lowering herself until she was level with it, studying the markings as the magic pouring from it intensified and swirled and began, slowly, with enormous deliberateness — to gather itself into something.

The warmth she had felt earlier was gone. What replaced it was something more complicated.

"Tell me," she said softly, to no one in particular, to the darkness itself, "is darkness truly my desire?"

The question left her lips and the air changed again, heavier this time, the way air changes when something ancient has been disturbed and is deciding what to do about it.

Her fingers found her fan without her thinking about it. She held it loosely and closely, not open, just present. A

"I have always desired the darkness, she thought. Even when I pretended to seek the light."

The thought arrived the way the truest thoughts always did, uninvited, unannounced, entirely certain of itself.

Celestia stared at the swirling dark energy rising from the lamp and waited for the fear to follow the thought.

It didn’t come.

And that, that was the part that should have concerned her more than anything else currently happening in this room.

A sensible person would have been at the door by now. A reasonable person would have dropped the lamp the moment it started glowing and gone directly to find their grandmother and let someone older and wiser handle whatever this was.

But the Darkness didn’t repel her.

If anything it felt, she searched for the right word and found one that made no logical sense and was almost certainly true anyway —

Home.

Not the home she was desperately trying to get back to. Not her original world, her original life, whatever had existed before she opened her eyes in this one.

Something older than that.

Somewhere that felt like her true self, regardless of what she had been told she was, nothing, powerless, ordinary. Like a part of her had been waiting quietly, patiently, entirely for this exact moment.

"That is deeply concerning", she told herself firmly because of all the mixed feelings or should she say confusion brewing inside her. freewёbn૦νeɭ.com

"Figure this out later but for now focus on what is going on right now", she said, smacking her fan to her and head lightly.

The swirling slowed.

And then a thought arrived that pushed everything else temporarily sideways.

Is that a Genie?

She watched the dark energy coiling and gathering and beginning to take a shape that was unmistakably — she leaned forward slightly — unmistakably human in its general outline, and felt something that was not fear and not quite excitement but lived in the territory between them.

A Genie.

She had read about them once. Briefly, in a dusty neglected volume in House Alwyn’s library, in the section of books that appeared not to have been opened for a long time as people in that house rarely went to the Library.

The passage had been short and vague, something about ancient contracts, bound magic, and

Wishes.

The Kingdom of Thaloria, she thought, had remarkable things in it. Remarkable, impossible, extraordinary things. And if this was truly a Genie then she was going to set aside the existential questions about darkness and belonging and what exactly she was feeling in her chest right now and focus on the matter at hand.

She had wishes.

She had, if she was being completely honest with herself, an entire catalogue of wishes that had been accumulating since the moment she woke up in this world without asking to.

Her first wish required no deliberation whatsoever.

Send me home.

That was the one. Above everything, above comfort, above answers, above the magic she apparently possessed without knowing it, above every question this world kept generating faster than she could answer them, she wanted to go back.

To her original world, her original life. What had existed before she opened her eyes as Celestia of House Alwyn, unwanted and underfed and informed, consistently, that she was nothing.

She wanted to go home more than she had ever wanted anything.

Hashtag wish number one, she decided, with the quiet finality of someone who had made up their mind completely. Non negotiable. First thing I ask. No exceptions.

She paused.

Although

Her mind — being the relentlessly practical instrument it had always been — immediately began constructing contingencies. Because what if going home was not possible? What if the Genie didn’t have that particular capability, or what if the cost attached made it impossible?

If going home was not an option,

Then I will make the most of being here, she thought, with the pragmatic resignation of someone who had adapted to impossible circumstances before and fully expected to do so again.

The contingency list assembled at impressive speed.

Hashtag 2, Her mother’s history. The full truth of it, not the comfortably edited version, not the silences, all of it, every piece that had been kept from her.

Hashtag 3, Her real identity. What she actually was. What the mark on her wrist meant, and why that absolutely gorgeous but psychopathic man at the Royal Court looked at it with such hatred today. Was it something bad?

All right, she thought, squaring her shoulders. "Stay calm", she said to herself trying to control her racing mind and heart.

The smoke rose, dark and alive, curling upward with the slow certainty of something that had been waiting for precisely this moment and was not going to be rushed now that it had finally arrived.

It caught the faint light from the lamp and moved through it and Celestia watched with her breath held and her fan loose in her fingers as a figure began to emerge.

At first his form was obscured, shifting smoke and dark light making him more impression than detail. But even through the haze she could tell that whatever was coming out of this lamp was not the small, accommodating, wish-granting creature the dusty library book had suggested.

The outline alone was enough to communicate that.

Tall. Impossibly so. A bare chest visible through the thinning smoke, defined and sculpted in a way that suggested something beyond ordinary physical existence. Silver hair catching the dark light. The kind of presence that didn’t announce itself because it didn’t need to, it simply arrived and the air around it rearranged accordingly.

"Such a beautiful Genie" Celestia squealed in her mind and again, she had always had a thing for gorgeous men, it was always a sight to behold and the sight of anything aesthetically pleasing to the eyes brought her so much joy.

She couldn’t see the Genie clearly but from his bare chest.

"Oh my gosh, focus! Focus! Focus!" she chanted to herself multiple times.

His eyes were still closed.

Celestia did not move, did not back away, did not do the sensible thing, which would have been either of those options. She simply looked at him the way she looked at most things that surprised her, directly, with the calm of someone who had learned that showing fear was more dangerous than feeling it.

Then he spoke.

"I do not answer questions."

His voice was low, unhurried, the kind of voice that had never needed to raise itself because everything in its vicinity had always gone quiet for it without being asked.

"Why does that voice sound familiar?" the thought moved through her quickly, but the smoke was still thick between them and she couldn’t place it and the figure before her was the kind of thing that made coherent thought somewhat difficult to maintain.

A pause settled between them, heavy and deliberate.

"But I grant wishes."

He stepped forward. The smoke shifted with him, thinning at the edges.

"Now that you have awakened me —" His voice dropped slightly, carrying the weight of something that had not been said aloud in centuries. "You are my Master."

Celestia held his gaze — or the place where his gaze would be, eyes still closed — without flinching.

"So," she said softly. "What makes that special?"

Drazeil chuckled, having the privilege to be the Master of a powerful genie like him, was a very special thing.

"You are not limited," he said. "Unlike others — you are not bound to three wishes. You are my first Master. What that means is yours to discover."

He let that settle for a moment.

"But every wish beyond your first three will carry a price. That is the nature of the contract. It cannot be changed."

Silence.

Celestia tilted her head slowly. Studying him the way she studied everything, thoroughly, without rushing to conclusions.

"Come closer," she said..."I shall make my first wish now"

He moved, bent down because the height difference between them was considerably high, losed the remaining distance between them until very little space existed between them both, that their nose were almost touching.

"What!, What is happening, is this Genie trying to seduce me, Oh Well, seems he succeed because...

Celestia did not look away. Did not step back. The darkness that poured off him, ancient, enormous, the same darkness that had been calling to something in her chest since the moment the lamp began to glow, did not frighten her. It settled around her like something familiar.

She leaned forward slightly, making their nose touch, smiling cheekily.

Her voice dropped to barely above a whisper.

"I wish —"

The tension in the room grew high.

"— you would kiss me."

Silence.

For the first time since he had emerged from the lamp, something moved through Drazeil that he did not immediately have a name for and did not particularly want one. It was not confusing. It was not the cold fury he had arrived with. It was something that lived in the space between recognition and resistance, something that his centuries of careful, deliberate, absolute control had never had cause to account for before.

He moved closer.

His hands found her waist: certain, unhurried, the movement of someone who had decided something without quite knowing when the decision had been made.

The smoke that had kept his face indistinct began to thin. Slowly. Curling away at the edges, revealing him gradually, like a curtain being drawn back one inch at a time.

His eyes were still closed.

"Do you understand," he said quietly, "what you have just done?"

The last of the smoke dissolved, revealing his face fully, and his heterochromic eyes, one blood red, one deep emerald, slowly opened and met hers.

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