Kota eased Aika onto the cool, velvet floor of the game chamber, its plush surface pulsing faintly with the dungeon's lewd undercurrent, careful to avoid the slick patches where the slime tendrils had teased her moments before.
The musky air hung heavy, laced with a lingering sweetness that clung to their skin, the chamber's crimson glow dimming, its slick walls humming with a sated, predatory calm after the trial's abrupt end.
Aika didn't resist.
She lay there, her breath shallow, eyes fixed on the ceiling's pulsing runes, a faint flush lingering on her cheeks.
Her blazer hung open, a single bra strap slipped off her shoulder, her skirt rucked up just enough to prompt a reflexive curl of her knees, shielding her vulnerability.
She made no move to adjust her disheveled clothes, her body still, as if the game's "humility enforcement" had drained her defiance.
After a long, weighted silence, her voice emerged, soft and raw. "…Why didn't you stop me?"
Kota looked down at her, his hoodie damp with sweat, his gaze steady in the sultry haze. "I told you not to touch anything."
"You didn't say I couldn't go in," she countered, her tone edged with exhaustion.
"I didn't think I had to," he replied, unyielding.
Her mouth twitched—not a smile, but a tense flicker, her face stripped of its usual composure, shadowed by the dungeon's cruel lesson.
Kota sat beside her, the velvet floor warm beneath him, the game's unseen interface prickling with the weight of their exchange.
"I know you weren't trying to rebel," he said, his voice low, measured. "You thought you were helping."
"I was trying to help," she whispered, her fingers twitching faintly against the floor.
"And the dungeon doesn't care," Kota said evenly. "It saw a dominant. It punished you."
Aika turned her head, her eyes meeting his, a flicker of pain behind them. "You let it happen."
"I had to," he replied, unflinching. "So you'd believe it. So you'd stop thinking your instinct is safer than my experience."
She fell silent, her breath hitching in the musky air.
"I'm not better than you," Kota added, his tone softening. "I'm not smarter. But I know this world. And here, knowledge wins. Pride kills."
Her eyes closed, a bead of sweat tracing her temple, the chamber's pulse throbbing faintly around them.
He waited, the dungeon's slick walls watching, their lewd hum a quiet reminder of the game's stakes.
Finally, Aika whispered, her voice barely audible.
"You saved me."
"I always will," Kota said, his gaze steady. "But only if you let me lead."
Aika opened her eyes, meeting his again. For the first time, there was no glare, no defiance—just a tired, clear acceptance, her flushed face softened in the crimson glow.
"…So I take your orders now?" she asked, her tone quiet, probing.
"You follow my voice like it's your spellbook. Like it's your syllabus," he said, his words firm, echoing the game's unyielding logic.
Silence stretched, heavy with the dungeon's musky weight.
Then Aika nodded—not a reluctant, embarrassed gesture, but a quiet, serious one, sealing her submission to the game's hierarchy.
"I understand," she said, her voice steady, resolute.