Current location: Novel nest Owned by the Devil Chapter 62

"Owned by the Devil" Chapter 62

Three years ago, the thread of fate snagged on a weekend sunset.

Damien was driving the Spyker C8 home, his movements languid and clinical. A streak of violent orange suddenly tore across the horizon, a pillar of fire rising against the darkening sky.

Childhood memories are a systematic haunting. Damien had witnessed the most savage flames as a boy; in a single night, the child had been liquidated, leaving only the beautiful monster behind.

He did the first "civilian" thing of his life. He jerked the steering wheel to the left and accelerated toward the heat.

That was where he found Mia.

He sat in the car, watching the scene through the tinted glass. A small crew from the docks was surrounding her—low-level thugs looking for a target.

She had a clean, quiet face. Crystalline. But beyond that, she possessed zero attributes that would interest a man of his station.

Damien lit a menthol cigarette. He wasn't Alistair; he didn't have a hobby for "saving souls." He had seen too many "fragile" women crawl to his feet, only to pull a blade or a ledger. Women were just a variable he had grown numb to.

He recognized the crew as Silas Cross's men. He dialed a private line and spoke three cold, rhythmic sentences. Silas guaranteed the girl wouldn't be touched again.

Damien hooked a finger over the ignition. He had done his part. It was his mother's anniversary in two days; he didn't want fresh blood on his hands during the mourning period.

Then, her voice cut through the hum of the engine.

"My mother is still inside! Please... let me go back in!"

Damien's hand froze on the key. He looked up.

He saw her expression—a pure, unadulterated grief. He had assumed she was crying from fear, but her mother was being consumed by the same furnace that had claimed his own.

He pushed the car door open. He didn't step out immediately, his hand anchored to the frame. He had a premonition: if he set foot on that pavement, his life would be inextricably knotted with hers.

He watched her. She was the mirror of his younger self, wanting to lunge into the fire to reach a ghost. But there was one terminal difference.

Mia Clarke had no hatred in her eyes.

She had been destroyed, yet she didn't know how to loathe her destroyers. Damien had become a void of black ink, while she remained as clear as a mountain stream.

He let out a short, incredulous laugh. He couldn't believe a creature this "civilized" still existed.

He stepped out of the car and slammed the door. He drew his P38 from his blazer, worked the slide with a rhythmic clack, and leveled it.

For the first time, for a woman, the Sovereign opened fire.

Two years ago, after the systematic slaughter following his father's death, the Syndicate became an unstoppable monolith. At the victory gala, Damien had retreated to the rooftop to let the freezing wind scour the scent of blood from his skin.

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Julian stood behind him, a silent anchor.

"Julian," Damien had whispered to the dark. "How did we become this isolated?"

"Every person is a nation now," he continued. "We've fortified ourselves with checkpoints. To approach another human is to pay a terminal price—injury at best, liquidation at worst."

He looked at his pale hands. "No one can believe in me. And I can no longer believe in anyone. I am paying the debt of my own sovereignty."

Even Julian, a master of negotiation, had no comfort to offer. Damien had sailed too far from the shore. He was a name that inspired only tremors. He couldn't love, and no one dared to love him.

Until Mia.

This "plain" girl with zero survival instincts had caused a systematic collapse in his chest. She had found the one fracture in his armor and moved inside.

The Sovereign had finally come home.

The evening he brought her back to the estate, Alistair was wrapping the burns on Damien's forearms. Julian stormed into the room, his face a ridge of stone.

"Are you out of your mind?!" Julian roared. "You killed a dozen men, let a stranger run into a furnace, and then dove in after her? You both almost became ash!"

Damien offered a faint, clinical smile. "I have experience. If I hadn't let her go in, she would have been a ghost for the rest of her life."

He remembered his own subordinates holding him back as his mother burned. That regret was a terminal rot.

Julian's jaw tightened. "She's a stranger, Damien. You don't even know her name."

"And?"

"And you're already indulging her."

Damien laughed, the sound loose and uninhibited.

It was over. He was already addicted to her silence.

Mia didn't scream. She didn't fight her fate. She accepted the Sovereign as if he were a natural disaster.

"Damien, we..."

Whenever she used that word—we—he felt the isolation of the rooftop evaporate. She didn't view him as a boss or a monster; she viewed him as a part of her own anatomy.

Even after he took her first night with an uninhibited, systematic violence, she kept a single shred of trust for him.

The morning after, he found her asleep at her desk. She had been reading The Gospel of Matthew.

He picked up the book. A line was traced in blue ink: "If your right eye causes you to stumble, gouge it out and throw it away."

Damien's heart hit his ribs.

She had been weighing him. Deciding if he was the "sinning eye" that would destroy her soul. If he was, she was prepared to liquidate her own life rather than let him ruin it.

He put the book back, kissed her forehead, and prayed for her to have a dream without fire.

He never told her that when Alistair confirmed she might never have a child, he opened the killing season again.

Julian had tried to intervene, warning him to show restraint.

Damien's face had turned into a "Luxury Noir" mask of predatory beauty. "Don't provoke the beast, Julian. Mia is the only thing that keeps me civilized."

Months later, they sat in the screening room. A foreign film was fading into the credits. Damien leaned down, his lips grazing her neck. He felt her fingers go white against his shoulder, but she didn't pull away.

"Damien? Philosophy has a theory," she whispered. "That every relationship, no matter how sweet the start, eventually turns into pain. It just... stays there."

She looked into his gray abyss. "Is that us?"

"No."

He didn't hesitate. The answer was a liquidation of her doubt.

"We won't end up there. We share the same anatomy of fate. In the wilderness of this world, I have finally tracked you down."

He pulled her into the silk sheets, their souls reflecting each other in the dark. She was the dark fire that filled the blackened forest of his heart.

It was a eternal promise. A debt written in skin and bone.

"Remember this, Mia," he breathed against her mouth. "You are the bottom line of my humanity."

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