The next ten minutes were spent in explanation.
Nerithâs mother had pulled Jax aside and walked him through the ritual. Every detail. Every sacred implication.
All his doubts were cleared by the end.
Whatever bullshit that priest had done. Whatever stupid oath Nerith had recited. None of it was mere formality.
It was real.
The soul binding had been invoked the moment Nerith called upon Lord Azoth. The kiss was meant to seal the bond completely.
But due to all the interruptionsâthe army, the fight, the near-murder things had stretched far beyond the normal ceremony.
And apparently, that had caught someoneâs attention.
Lord Azoth himself.
The demon god hadnât just watched passively. He had stayed. Observed the chaos. Found it... entertaining, perhaps.
And then he had blessed them.
Nerithâs mother had gestured toward the statue of Lord Azoth.
The hand that had been resting at its side was now raised. Miraculously. As if bestowing divine approval upon the couple.
And that horny-looking face?
It was smiling now.
Jax stared at the statue.
âIs he smiling because of our bond? Or laughing at my situation?â
Probably both.
Now, Jax would have been absolutely FURIOUS if this marriage meant he was bound to only Nerith. That would mean cheating on Adelina. Betraying whatever they had.
He would have marched up to that statue and smashed its perverted face into rubble.
But he had asked that exact question.
And the answer had been... relieving.
In demon society, once a woman married a man, she could never marry another until death.
But a man?
A man could collect wives like trading cards. No restrictions. No consequences. Just keep adding to the collection.
âWow. The demons really said "gender equality" and then threw it into a volcano.â
âActually, I shouldnât complain. This unfairness is literally saving my ass right now.â
Jax now understood everything.
Why Nerith had been in such a desperate hurry. Why sheâd grabbed the first semi-capable stranger she found.
âI literally thought she was dumb at first.â
He recalled his initial assumptions.
âIf she married me, that didnât change anything. That bastard Ery...something, whatever his name wasâwould have just killed me and taken her anyway.â
The marriage wasnât protection.
It was sacrifice.
âShe decided from the very start to throw away her love life. Her married life. Everything. Just to escape that animal.â
He looked at Nerith across the room.
âPoor girl.â
Then a darker thought struck.
âWait. Shit. Iâm her HUSBAND now.â
The weight of it crashed down on him.
âSheâs bound to me for ETERNITY. Iâm a human. Sheâs a demon. I have Adelina waiting. I have a hundred things to do. Quests to complete. World to conquer.â
His head dropped into his hands.
âI am absolutely, completely, utterly DOOMED.â
Later that night.
Jax sat alone in the luxury room of Nerithâs place, mind racing.
âWhat do I do?â
Option one: Just leave.
Escape the demon realm. Disappear. Forget this ever happened.
âBut then what? Nerith becomes the suspect. "Whereâs your husband?" "He vanished." Sounds great for her familyâs already-destroyed reputation.â
New punishments would rain down. Punishments he wouldnât be there to prevent.
And for himself?
âIâd be mildly wanted at best. Hunted at worst. And what if they discover my real identity during the investigation?â
Plus, he still didnât know how to escape this realm.
And Astrid was out there somewhere. Wandering alone with a bag of demon money and zero survival skills.
âI need to find her first.â
Option one was too risky.
âSo... option two. Explain things to Nerith. Another lie. Something believable.â
Because telling her the truth that he was human was suicide.
âDemon or not, kind or not, thereâs no way theyâd cooperate with a human. Iâd be dead before I finished the sentence.â
Another lie it was.
His planning was interrupted by the door opening.
Nerith walked in.
And Jaxâs brain stopped functioning.
She wore a gown of deep crimson silk that flowed like liquid fire around her form.
The fabric clung to her curves before cascading to the floor in elegant waves. Thin straps crossed her shoulders, leaving her collarbone and the swell of her chest tantalizingly exposed.
Her white hair had been styled with delicate braids woven through, small gems catching the candlelight like stars trapped in snow.
This was clearly a first-night dress. The kind a bride wore when she intended to be... unwrapped.
Jaxâs jaw dropped.
His eyes went wide.
His brain screamed âBEAUTIFULâ in seventeen different languages.
But Nerith?
Nerithâs reaction was even MORE dramatic.
Her jaw dropped FURTHER than his.
Her eyes went WIDER.
And the aromatic bowl sheâd been carryingâsome kind of ceremonial incense thing slipped from her frozen fingers.
CRASH.
It shattered on the floor. Fragrant oils and herbs spreading everywhere.
Neither of them moved.
Jax looked down at himself.
Pajamas. A simple t-shirt. Heâd been planning to either sleep or jump out the windowâhadnât decided which yet.
âDo I really look that good?â
He genuinely didnât understand her reaction.
âI didnât even put in any effort. But I guess my natural beauty just canât be contained.â
Nerith stood petrified for several seconds.
Clearly thinking something.
Processing something.
Then she slapped both her cheeks.
Hard.
Forced a smile.
And walked toward the bed with measured steps.
She sat on the edge. Looked up at the ceiling. Refused to meet his eyes.
"So..."
Her voice was carefully controlled.
"I never got the chance to thank you properly. With everything that happened... itâs been complicated."
Jax patted the bed beside him.
"You can thank me right now, you know."
His voice was pure suggestion.
She whipped toward him with a death glare.
Jax raised his hands.
"Cool down. Iâm just mocking you."
The glare softened. But something else took its place.
Pain.
"I was a fool."
Her voice carried a weight that made Jax pause.
"For not recognizing you. That power you displayed. That oddness about you."
She shook her head.
"Things were always suspicious. I should have seen it."
Jax leaned back with a proud expression.
"Well, Iâve been like this since birth. The prodigy. The genius. The one blessed by the heavens themselves."
He gestured grandly at himself.
"Thatâs what separates me from beings like you."
Nerith looked down at her lap.
"So you think of us demons as dumb."
It wasnât a question.
Jax maintained his proud face.
âDamn right I do.â
Then Nerith smiled.
But it was wrong.
Pain hiding beneath the curve of her lips. Agony masked by forced cheerfulness.
"Humans are always that way."
Jaxâs smugness flickered.
âHumans?â
"Letâs leave this topic, Jax."
She finally looked at him.
"Tell me what you need from me. Tell me why youâre showing your true self now."
Tears began forming in her eyes.
"After everything. When Iâ"
She stopped herself.
But the sobbing didnât stop.
Her shoulders shook. Tears streamed down her cheeks.
Jax was completely lost.
âWhat the hell is going on?â
âDid she... did she know I was human? But from when? How?â
A small hint of dread crept into his mind.
His eyes drifted downward.
And found them.
On the floor.
Both his horns.
Lying there.
Slowly degrading. Crumbling. Astridâs magic fading away.
He hadnât noticed. Heâd been too deep in thought. Too distracted by planning and worrying.
And now?
Now heâd stepped into an entirely new mess.