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I lie motionless beside him and stare into the low red heart of the brazier while something inside me starts closing up. He means it as the future. I know that much. I know it in the same way I know when he is angry at the world and not at me. I know it in the way he brings me food before hunger turns sharp. In the way he sees the scrape on my wrist or the tightness in my shoulder and notices before I say a word. He is not cold. Not calculating. Not treating me like an empty container to fill and set on a shelf.

That is what makes it hurt more.

Because if he were cruel, this would be easier. If he were simply using me, simply demanding heirs because he is Kai and kings need children and a wife matched by fertility is useful, then I could put the pain in the right place and leave it there. I have survived cruel things before. Survived blunt truths. Survived men who looked at hungry women and saw what they could take.

But Kaiven is not that.

He is worse for my heart.

Because he means it. He means every word he says. About children. About daughters. About putting his future in my hands. About never letting me go hungry again. About life, andline, and home, and my body at the center of all of it. And still, somehow, all my body hears now is the old terror underneath. That I mattered because I could carry. That I was chosen because I was fertile. That before he ever met me, before he knew the sound of my laugh or the way I sleep curled half toward warmth, before he knew the shape of my thoughts or the places I startle or the words that make me soften, he knew my age, my body, my compatibility, and my fertility.

He had that first. My body first. My file first. My ability to give him children first.

I close my eyes hard for one second. It does nothing. The memory comes anyway. Cold rooms on Mars. Technicians saying pelvic structure was strong, like I was livestock. Marat Veylor’s calm voice on the shuttle, telling me children are expected. Women by the fire speaking of spring births and healthy daughters as if they were discussing the weather. And tonight, Kaiven speaking into my skin like the deepest thing he could give me was the promise of filling me with his children.

I should not be surprised. This world has been telling me the truth from the moment I arrived. I just wanted very badly to believe I had become more than that to him.

Beside me, Kaiven breathes slowly and evenly, not asleep yet but close enough to it that his body has fully settled. His arm tightens once around my middle in a small instinctive motion, possessive even in near-sleep, as though some part of him feels me pulling away inward and tries to draw me back with simple touch.

It almost works.

That is the worst part.

I have grown attached enough that his arm feels like safety. His body is warm. His presence makes some low desperate part of me want to turn toward him and ask the question plainly. Do I matter to you outside of what I can carry?

But I do not ask.

Because what if the answer is yes, and nothing changes? What if the answer is yes, and children remain the center? What if this world simply does not separate love from use in the way I need it to? What if on Tigris, those things were never different at all?

My throat tightens. I keep my breathing even so he will not hear it change.

That, too, should anger me. The fact that I am already trying not to hurt his feelings while my own are splitting open quietly in the dark. But it makes sense. He has not struck me. Has not humiliated me. Has not taken what was not given. He has tried, in all the rough ways he knows, to care for me.

And still I feel reduced.

Reduced not by cruelty, but by his deepest sincerity.

That is the cut I do not know how to survive.

If he had spoken carelessly, I could dismiss it. If he had spoken like a Kai only, I could have hardened myself against it. But he spoke like a male already dreaming of daughters with my eyes and sons with his blood and a tent full of children who would never know hunger. How am I supposed to fight that and not feel monstrous for doing it?

I open my eyes again and look at the dark curve of the tent roof. Beyond it is Tigris night, cold and wide and indifferent, the camp sleeping in scattered quiet around the Kai’s tent as if the whole rasha rests easy inside an order I still do not fully understand.

I had started to soften here.

That is the truth I cannot escape.

I had started to trust the food left near the bed. The water. The wraps folded close by. The way he notices. The way his tent has begun feeling less like a place I am kept and more like a place I return to. The way his voice changes when he says my name in private. The way he crouches instead of towering whensomething inside me has gone too tight. The way he spoke about choosing me before the horde.

All of that had begun to build something fragile and real in me.

And now this.

Now this old cold fear is sliding back through all of it, asking whether every kindness ends at the same place. My womb. His children. My usefulness dressed in devotion so deep it almost fooled me into believing usefulness had disappeared.

A sharp sting hits behind my eyes.

I refuse it.