Fate's Slave - Shadow Slave X Honkai Star Rail-Chapter 464: New Ally

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Chapter 464: New Ally

Tingyun went very still, not with the violent shock of someone recoiling from danger but with the fragile, suspended quiet of a mind attempting to reconcile a statement that did not align with any known category of experience. Sunny could almost hear the gears turning in her head, the careful sorting of possibilities, the instinctive search for sarcasm or metaphor that might soften the literal meaning of his words. When none presented itself, she drew a slow breath that sounded unnecessary for a being no longer bound by flesh, yet deeply human all the same.

Sunny, oddly comforted by the fact that he could finally speak without tiptoeing around the truth, leaned back slightly and allowed a trace of swagger to creep into his posture, as though recounting the absurdity of his life as a ridiculous story might rob it of some of its darker weight. If nothing else, he did not have to worry about her running off to tell anyone, because betrayal was not something his Shadows were capable of in any meaningful sense.

"To further elaborate, my birth brought with it the darkest night my homeworld had ever experienced, which was immediately followed by a not-insignificant portion of the population across multiple star systems being dragged into what is essentially an eldritch purgatory. A little over a decade later I was personally blessed by death itself, received a Divine Aspect for my trouble, and gained the ability to drag the deceased back into something resembling life. You, meanwhile, had the misfortune of being possessed by a Lord Ravager who intended to dismantle the Luofu from the inside out, and while she may have been a Supreme Titan with all the theatrics that entails, she still made the mistake of stepping into my mind and underestimating how unpleasant that experience could be."

He paused just long enough to let the image settle, a faint smirk tugging at his lips.

"After that I swung my sword very, very hard. Unfortunately for you, you happened to be caught in the crossfire somewhere between that series of events. And now we have arrived at the present moment."

Privately, he felt a flicker of smug satisfaction at how effortlessly he had appropriated Noctis’ dramatic cadence, though he doubted the once-immortal Saint in question would appreciate the theft. Tingyun, for her part, said nothing for several seconds, the silence stretching until it became impossible to tell whether she was stunned, skeptical, or attempting to determine whether humor was appropriate.

"I... see? I must confess that aside from you, I have only known one other Awakened personally, and her stories have never been quite so... extravagant."

Sunny’s chest puffed out slightly despite himself, ego quick to seize any opportunity for validation.

"Of course they haven’t! Not only am I among the strongest Masters in the entirety of human history, but I have maintained cordial relationships with multiple Saints who have sought my assistance even when I was nothing more than an Awakened. Whoever this friend of yours is, I regret to inform you that she could not possibly hope to rival my greatness—"

Tingyun interjected with gentle innocence:

"Ah, she is also a Saint. Perhaps you know her."

The words hit like a brick. Sunny’s confident posture collapsed mid-sentence, his spine going rigid as if someone had poured cold water down the back of his shirt. He asked weakly:

"Come again?"

Tingyun tapped a finger thoughtfully against her chin, the faint motion audible in the soft rustle of fabric.

"Unless something unfortunate has occurred in my absence, she should still be presiding over the Sky-Faring Commission. Madam Yukong?"

Sunny’s already pale complexion blanched further, draining of color until he looked like someone who had just been informed that the executioner had arrived early. He had never met Yukong personally, yet the memory of Jing Yuan’s booming laughter as a storm of arrows had rained from the heavens during their battle with Phantylia was vivid enough to make his shoulders twitch reflexively. Every Commission aboard the Luofu was headed by a Saint, a fact that now returned to haunt him with merciless precision.

He turned in her general direction, forcing a smile so strained it bordered on painful while keeping his eyes firmly shut.

He said in a saccharine tone that could have soured milk:

"Oh, Madam Yukong? I have never had the pleasure of meeting her, but I am quite certain she is an exceptionally accomplished individual."

Tingyun lifted a hand to her mouth in what was likely a polite gesture of amusement, though he could not see it.

"Nothing compared to you, I am sure. As far as I am aware, she has never personally slain a Supreme Titan. Perhaps the two of you should meet, so that we might relay to her everything you have said."

Sunny shook his head so violently that his hair brushed his cheeks.

"No thank you. I would hate to impose on someone of her stature."

Internally, he found himself mentally cursing his Shadows as a collective entity. Nightmare delighted in needling him, Serpent dispensed edgy commentary like a disgruntled poet, Saint communicated through aloof silence, and now Tingyun had somehow weaponized politeness into a tool of psychological warfare. Truly, Fate had conspired to surround him with the most inconvenient personalities possible.

Clearing his throat, he attempted to steer the conversation back onto safer ground.

"For the record, I would strongly advise against seeking her out. For several extremely practical reasons."

Tingyun replied calmly.

"I had already reached the same conclusion. In my current state, it is far more likely that an arrow would pass through my body before she had the opportunity to recognize me. Even if she did, it would place you in a very precarious position, would it not, Benefactor?"

Sunny nodded automatically, the title once again sending an uncomfortable shiver down his spine due to its uncanny resemblance to the way Phantylia had addressed him.

"Do you know what you intend to do now? Or is there anything else you need?"

Tingyun shook her head slowly.

"My most sensible option is to remain with you. I possess neither the means nor the justification to reintegrate into society, and while my strength may currently be limited, I would like to believe that my skills are not entirely without value."

He could practically hear the smile in her voice, warm and faintly triumphant, as though she had secured something important.

"If you will have me, of course."

Sunny hesitated only briefly before nodding. Despite the discomfort of knowing her loyalty was not wholly voluntary, denying her would have been tantamount to abandoning her to nonexistence.

"Fine. You can stay."

Relief radiated subtly from her, though she maintained her composed demeanor.

"Thank you."

Her tone darkened with quiet resentment.

"Though I must admit, I am disappointed that Phantylia is dead. She wronged me deeply, and I had hoped to repay that debt in kind."

Sunny blinked, eyes snapping open on instinct before he immediately slammed them shut again, the brief glimpse of her shadow-formed body reigniting his earlier panic.

"About that..."

Sunny rubbed his neck.

"She is not entirely gone. I destroyed her body, not her existence."

Tingyun fell silent, the weight of that revelation settling heavily.

"I would like to say that this is encouraging, but I cannot imagine any scenario in which a living Lord Ravager is a positive development."

"Join the club."

Though, to be fair, Sunny wasn’t quite done with making Phantylia’s continued existence a living hell.

Another pause followed before she asked, her tone lightly curious.

"Why have you been keeping your eyes closed?"

Sunny pursed his lips, debating whether honesty was worth the humiliation, then remembered that dishonesty was not an option available to him.

"From my point of view, you are completely naked..."

***

Before the massive cauldron of the Alchemy Commission, a single figure stood in contemplative silence, a long coffin balanced across his back as though it weighed nothing at all.

Luocha’s pale hair caught the ruddy light, turning molten gold at the edges, while his pristine white garments remained an almost jarring contrast to the soot-darkened stone and the dried smear of blood staining the ground at his feet.

The mark had been partially scrubbed away, but not enough to erase the violence that had occurred there, a stubborn echo of catastrophe embedded into the very texture of the floor. Around him, squads of Cloud Knights moved with disciplined precision, their armor whispering softly as they patrolled in overlapping circuits, yet not a single one so much as glanced in his direction, their gazes sliding past him as though he were nothing more than an absence in the air.

He studied the stain with quiet intensity, eyes reflecting the cauldron’s glow like polished amber, as though attempting to read a story written in blood alone.

"The currents of Fate are chaotic."

A soft voice echoed behind him, feminine and serene, carrying with it the faint cadence of someone accustomed to speaking truths that others would rather not hear.

"Rather than a Star appearing here as expected, a Shadow came and brought death with his own hands."

Luocha inclined his head slightly, acknowledging her presence without turning, as though he had sensed her arrival long before she spoke.

"I suppose that means there is no need for our presence here. I assume you are ready to turn ourselves in?"

The woman paused beside him, her footsteps soundless despite the hard stone beneath her feet. She was strikingly beautiful even with a silk blindfold concealing her eyes, her expression tranquil in a way that suggested sight was an unnecessary luxury. Like Luocha, she went entirely unnoticed by the passing patrols, their formation splitting and rejoining around her without any sign that they perceived an obstacle.

"Not yet. There is one final lesson I must impart to my student before that Chapter may close. His soul is quite beautiful, you see, and I’d regret not shaping it myself. Moreover, a friend of mine has returned to the Luofu, and I find myself curious to see what remains of him, different though his soul may now be."

Luocha did not question her, nor did he attempt to follow as she stepped past him and continued onward, her presence fading into the cavernous hall like a whisper swallowed by distance. Within seconds she was indistinguishable from the darkness itself, leaving behind only the faint impression that she had never been there at all.

He remained where he stood, silent and unmoving, until the last echo of her passage dissolved completely. Then, slowly, he lifted his gaze toward the distant false sky above.

For a brief instant, something unreadable crossed his expression, a mixture of resignation and quiet anticipation, as though he were observing the unfolding of a play whose ending he already knew yet could not avoid watching to its conclusion.