The morning had an edge to it.
Not the kind that cuts skin—but the kind that coils in your stomach. That whispers, something's coming.
Cain felt it first. He was seated on the edge of the bed, shirtless, hands resting on his knees like he was bracing for an invisible hit. Selene stirred behind him, her fingers lightly tracing the lines of his spine.
"You felt it too," she said.
He nodded. "The seal's weakening."
Lucien had never been a fan of old places that smelled like dust, death, and dad issues, but here he was—again—in the family crypt.
Eira walked beside him, their shoulders brushing just enough to make him hyperaware of his heartbeat.
"You okay?" she asked, genuinely.
"I mean, yeah, if you ignore the haunting energy and the stone coffin humming like it wants to murder us," he said casually.
Eira smirked. "So, you're fine."
Lucien squinted at the sealed door. "This thing's been locked since our grandfather's era. Why now?"
Eira tilted her head, studying the crack forming across the runes. "Because something inside wants out. Or someone outside wants in."
Ayden appeared behind them, cloak swirling like a dramatic anime anti-hero. "We shouldn't be down here alone."
Lucien muttered, "Nice timing, Batman."
Ayden ignored him. "This door opens, we might not be able to close it."
Eira swallowed. "Then we keep it sealed. Period."
But even as she said it, the door pulsed again. Dark energy rippled through the stones like veins.
"Let me come," Selene said, tugging on her boots.
Cain leaned on the wall, arms crossed. "No. If this gets ugly, I need to know you're safe."
"I can fight."
"I know," he said, stepping close, brushing a strand of hair from her face. "But I just got you back. I'm not losing you now."
Her voice softened. "I hate it when you're sweet. Makes it harder to argue."
He kissed her forehead, lingering. "Then don't argue. Wait for me."
The Door Breaks
It happened fast.
A scream—not human—ripped through the crypt, the air shimmering with energy so cold it burned.
The seal shattered like glass.
The door groaned.
Then opened.
Something stepped out. Cloaked in shadow, tall, elegant, cruel. Its eyes—silver and wild—roamed until they landed on Lucien.
"You're not your father," it rasped.
Lucien's voice dropped. "And you're not dead enough."
Ayden pulled his blade, blue flame crawling up the steel. "Who the hell are you?"
The figure smirked. "Call me Silas."
Selene wasn't great at following orders.
Especially when her chest twisted with dread and Cain was downstairs with a demon whose voice could peel paint off the walls.
She grabbed her blades, looked at the altar one last time, and ran.
Cain joined his brothers, his presence shifting the room like gravity.
"Silas," he said. "You're supposed to be sealed."
Silas turned, eyes gleaming. "So were you, once."
Cain didn't hesitate. He lunged.
The impact sent shockwaves through the crypt. Cain's fist connected with Silas's chest, but instead of shattering bone, it passed through — like he'd hit smoke.
Silas smiled. "Oh, little prince. You're going to have to do better."
Lucien cursed under his breath. "Why do they always talk like theatre kids?"
Eira summoned her shadow magic. "Because they are."
Ayden ducked a claw swipe. "Can we not insult the super-demon while he's trying to kill us?!"
She dropped in like a comet, blade first.
Silas stepped back just in time.
"Well, well," he said. "The human with fire in her spine."
Selene snarled. "Touch him, and I'll make sure you regret being born."
Cain looked both furious and in love.
"You didn't listen," he said, spinning to cover her.
"Did you expect me to?" she countered, slashing at Silas's arm.
"...Fair."
Eventually, Silas vanished. Not defeated—just amused.
"A taste," he said, voice fading. "We'll meet again, Sons of a Devil."
And then he was gone.
The crypt shuddered back into silence.
Selene had her arms crossed. Cain paced.
"You could've died," he said.
"I didn't."
"You could've."
Selene stepped closer. "So could you."
Cain stopped pacing. They stood there, inches apart, the space between them charged with too many feelings.
"You frustrate me," he whispered.
"You love me."
He grunted. "Unfortunately."
She smiled and pulled him in. "Fortunately."
Eira stood outside alone, staring at the stars, jaw clenched.
Lucien approached, no jokes this time. Just quiet.
"You okay?"
"I don't like feeling useless," she admitted.
He nodded. "I don't like watching you hurt."
She looked at him, surprised.
Lucien shrugged. "Even crackheads like me have layers."
Eira actually laughed. "Thanks, onion boy."
Lucien bumped her shoulder. "I'm here. Just… letting you know."
She didn't respond, but she didn't walk away either.
The past opens a door they never wanted. A new enemy steps into the light. Old love is tested. New feelings grow. And through it all, the bond of the brothers and their chosen family is the only thing holding the darkness at bay.