"Discarded: Claimed by the Apocalypse’s Mad Tyrant" Chapter 4

Chapter 4: The Merchant’s Shadow

The Bastion was a fortress of contradictions. It was a sterile, high-tech cathedral designed to keep the world’s rot at bay, yet it was also a marketplace.

Once a week, the heavy blast doors to the outer courtyard would shudder open to allow the wandering merchants to deliver rare supplies that the Bastion’s own synthesis labs couldn't replicate: old-world spices, preserved vintage fabrics, and organic stimulants.

Serafina was permitted to watch from the glass-enclosed observation deck. It was Dante’s way of reminding her of the world she had been "rescued" from—the dirty, desperate, scavenging world.

That was where she saw Jax.

He didn't look like the other scavengers who cowered before the Bastion’s guards. Jax was lean, draped in a coat of mismatched leathers, with a smile that was far too sharp and eyes that danced with a reckless, illicit intelligence. He walked through the courtyard as if he owned the very dust under his boots.

When he reached the center of the courtyard, he stopped. He looked up, directly at the observation glass. He didn't look at the guards. He didn't look at the Commander’s office. He looked at Serafina.

Serafina leaned closer to the glass. She felt a strange, electric pull—not the suffocating intensity of Dante’s obsession, but a flicker of the old world’s defiance.

Dante, standing beside her, stiffened. The temperature in the room plummeted.

"That is Jax," Dante said, his voice a low, dangerous rumble. "He is a parasite. He trades in information as much as he trades in goods. Do not look at him, Serafina."

"He looks like he has something worth seeing," Serafina retorted, her eyes locked on the merchant.

Jax raised a hand, tossing a small, glinting object into the air—a silver locket, tarnished but beautiful. He winked at her, a quick, daring motion.

Dante’s hand shot out, gripping the back of Serafina’s neck. His fingers were cold, biting into her skin, forcing her to turn her head away from the glass. He pressed her face toward his chest, his palm splayed over her hairline, holding her in place.

"He is filth," Dante hissed against her hair. "He thrives on the decay I have spent my life eradicating. His hands are covered in the grime of a thousand dead cities. If you look at him again, I will ensure he has no eyes to offer his wares."

"He’s just a trader, Dante," she breathed, her voice muffled against his tunic. "You’re afraid of him?"

Dante let out a sharp, jagged laugh. He released her head and moved toward the door. "I fear nothing. But I loathe the intrusion of the common."

He strode out onto the courtyard platform. Serafina followed, unable to stop herself.

Jax was standing by a crate of supplies, leaning against it with a casual grace that seemed to infuriate the guards. When he saw Dante emerge, his grin widened, though it didn't reach his eyes.

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"Commander Vane," Jax drawled, bowing with exaggerated theatricality. "I brought the shipments you requested. Synthetic alloys, high-grade medical stimulants, and..." He paused, his gaze drifting over Dante’s shoulder to where Serafina stood, trembling slightly.

"A few trinkets from the ruins. I thought the lady might appreciate something... authentic."

Jax pulled a small piece of silk—vibrant, deep crimson—from his pocket. It was a stark contrast to the sterile, monochromatic palette of the Bastion. He looked at Serafina. "It’s a relic, my lady. Genuine pre-fall silk. Not the synthetic trash they grow in those tubes."

Serafina took a step forward, a genuine smile breaking across her face for the first time in days. "It’s beautiful."

Dante’s shadow seemed to elongate, stretching across the courtyard like an encroaching oil slick.

"Step back, Jax," Dante warned, his voice calm, which was always the prelude to a storm.

"Just offering a gift, Commander," Jax said, his voice dripping with mock innocence. He stepped closer to the platform, his gaze lingering on Serafina’s throat—where Dante’s bite mark was still visible, a faint, mottled bruise against her pale skin.

"Though, I must say, you have a rather... distinctive way of marking your property. I didn't think the 'Great Architect' was the type to leave teeth marks."

The air in the courtyard ignited.

There was no sound of a struggle, only the sudden, violent whoosh of superheated air. A jet of white fire erupted from Dante’s outstretched hand, not hitting Jax directly, but curling around him like a hungry snake.

Jax screamed, stumbling back as the heat singed his hair and the sleeve of his leather coat, melting the fabric instantly. He collapsed onto the frozen ground, gasping, his hands clutching at his singed arm.

Dante stood over him, his eyes glowing with that terrifying, luminescent gold. He didn't blink. He didn't show a flicker of mercy.

"You speak of my property again," Dante said, his voice chillingly melodic, "and I will not stop at your sleeve. I will turn your lungs into ash while you are still breathing."

Serafina ran to the edge of the platform, her hands gripping the railing. "Dante, stop! He didn't do anything!"

Dante turned to her, his gaze sweeping over her with a possessiveness that was almost physical. He walked toward her, the scorched air still swirling around him. He didn't look at the merchant again. He didn't care if Jax lived or died.

"He looked at you, Serafina," Dante whispered, his hand coming up to trace the line of her cheek, his thumb brushing her lip. "He saw the mark I left on you and he dared to imagine he could touch what belongs to me."

"I am not a piece of inventory!" she shouted, trying to pull away.

Dante ignored her. He leaned in, his forehead resting against hers, his breath hot and scenting of ozone and burnt things.

"You are the center of my world. You are the only thing that is mine. When you let someone like him look at you, you are inviting the rot into this sanctuary. Do you want the Bastion to become like the Dead Zone?"

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"I want to breathe!" she retorted, her eyes burning with defiance.

Dante’s expression softened, but it was the softness of a predatory cat playing with its prey. He reached into his coat and produced a pair of gloves, sliding them onto his hands with agonizingly slow precision.

"You will breathe, Serafina. But you will breathe only what I provide."

He turned to the guards, who were already dragging the shivering, singed merchant toward the exit. "Expel him. And if he returns, leave him for the infected."

As the heavy blast doors began to close, muffling Jax’s cursing, Dante turned back to Serafina. He took her arm, his grip firm, and led her back toward the sanctuary.

"Come," he commanded. "You have been exposed to too much… outside influence. We need to begin your purification again."

Serafina looked back at the courtyard. The spot where Jax had stood was scorched, a black, jagged scar in the middle of the pristine white concrete.

She was safe, she was fed, and she was being kept in a cage of luxury. But as Dante’s hand tightened on her arm, leading her into the dark, white heart of the Bastion, she realized that Dante didn't just want her to be clean.

He wanted her to be empty. He wanted her to have no eyes but his, no thoughts but his, and no world beyond the white walls he had built.

The merchant’s shadow was gone, but the darkness in the room was only just beginning to grow. Serafina walked into the sanctuary, the scent of burnt leather still clinging to the air, and for the first time, she wondered if Dante was right.

In a world this broken, perhaps the only way to survive was to become someone else entirely—someone who belonged to no one, and feared nothing.

But as the door locked behind her, and Dante’s hands began to roam over her skin, she knew the truth.

She was a blade, and he was the only hand that knew how to handle her. And he would never, ever let her go.

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