The tavern stood empty, its pulse a quiet hum in the late afternoon light.
Kio lingered at the second-floor landing, a rag in one hand, slowly polishing the rail where Mira had lounged countless times—half-dressed, her bronze skin glowing, her red hair wild, smirking as if she didn't crave the attention she always drew.
Her fireblood had burned fierce, a blaze that demanded notice, but in her final days, she hadn't burned.
She'd glowed, soft and steady, her trust a warmth that lingered in the wood.
Kio moved through the rooms in silence, his steps unhurried, his dark eyes tracing the tavern's familiar scars.
Mira's tea cup sat in the dish rack, its rim faintly stained with mint.
Her scarf—the threadbare one she'd chosen over the mended version he'd stitched—lay folded in a drawer with the others, its frayed edges a quiet testament to her departure.
He smoothed it with a steady hand, the faint scent of her fireblood—smoky, warm—clinging to the fabric.
Upstairs, her bed held traces of mint and sweat, the air heavy with her presence.
Beneath the bedframe, she'd carved a fire pattern—not for power, but for memory, its lines mirroring the tattoo etched beneath her breast, a non-magical guide for her fireblood's rhythm.
Kio touched it with two fingers, feeling the echo of her breath in its shape—not her fire, but her trust, etched into the wood like a vow.
That evening, Kio lit the lanterns himself, their amber glow casting soft shadows across the common room.
He swept the floor, the broom's bristles whispering against the boards, and opened the guest ledger, his quill scratching a new entry:
Mira, fireblood pyromancer. Departed balanced.
He smiled faintly at the phrase—not "safe," not "healed," but balanced, a truth that fit her quiet glow.
Later, he sat on the balcony, sipping mint tea, the horizon stretching dark and endless before the tavern.
The world would send more—women with secrets, warriors with rage, rogues with pride, bards with songs that hid their scars.
And Kio would be here, as always, still, quiet, steady, the tavern keeper who held their fire without being consumed.
The next guest would arrive soon.
They always did—a woman with a voice like honey, perhaps, her songs laced with mischief, her moans a challenge to control, her eyes seeking watchers in the shadows.
When she came, she'd find no blaze licking the tavern's corners, only a warmth that could cradle her without breaking, a place to breathe, to beg, to stay.
The tavern waited, its hearth glowing low, its silence a promise of what was to come.