Re: Tales of the Rune-Tech Sage-Chapter 31: Hope and Responsibility

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Chapter 31: Hope and Responsibility

CH31 Hope and Responsibility

***

The second Rune Tattooing session took place the following day.

The air between them still carried the same charged tension, but Alex found it easier to maintain focus now that he was more accustomed to the scenery. That said, the soft fleshy mounds and their firm pointy peaks remained no less breathtaking.

Alex slipped into his focused state, his mind narrowing until only the Rune existed. Zora, meanwhile, watched him with the same quiet intensity she’d shown the day before.

A couple of hours passed.

The Rune was nearly complete. Only the final embellishments remained—minor touches that wouldn’t affect the functionality but would enhance the structure’s integrity and symmetry.

Even before those touches were added, Zora noticed something.

The Mana around her shifted.

It was subtle—imperceptible to most—but she felt it clearly. The flow, the resonance... something fundamental within her had changed.

"It’s working?" she murmured, a trace of awe in her voice.

Alex exhaled, his own shoulders relaxing. "That’s good, then."

He looked up to find Zora’s gaze distant, one eye slightly glassy.

"Are you okay?" he asked, concerned.

"It’s nothing," Zora replied quickly, shaking her head. But she wiped at her eye with a finger, catching the tear before it could fall.

Then, without warning, she moved forward.

Alex’s reflexes kicked in. He instinctively shifted the Rune pen to safety.

"Hey, careful, that’s dange—"

Before he could finish, Zora wrapped her arms around his neck and pulled him into an embrace.

"Thank you," she whispered. "Really, Alex... thank you."

His words caught in his throat.

The woman who always carried herself with cool maturity was trembling against him. And in that moment, Alex finally grasped the true weight of what he’d done.

To him, the Siphon Rune was just a stopgap. A temporary solution. A first test.

But to Zora?

It was the first real step toward salvation. A foothold on the impossible climb she had never imagined could exist.

To her, it represented hope.

Alex gently set the Rune pen down on the table and wrapped his arms around her, one hand rubbing slow, reassuring circles on her back.

The dam Zora had carefully held inside her for years finally broke.

She didn’t sob. She didn’t cry out.

She just let go—silently and wholly—against his shoulder.

No words passed between them. None were needed. Only the quiet comfort of shared understanding.

Out of her line of sight, Alex’s gaze hardened with resolve.

He’d come into Zora’s life like a storm—unexpected, disruptive. She had already made peace with her fate, resigned herself to her inevitable death at the hands of the very Bloodline that defined her. But now he had given her a reason to hope. A reason to believe she could survive. That she could live.

And as wonderful as hope was, it was also the cruellest thing in the world.

It was better to have no hope than to be given hope only to watch it be torn away.

He had ignited that flame in her.

And now, whether they ended up as lovers or simply companions on this path, he had a responsibility—a duty—not just as a man, but as a human being.

He had to see this through to the end.

No matter the cost.

In each other’s arms, the two came to terms with the quiet shift in their relationship—and the promise it now carried.

A few minutes later, Zora gently pulled away from Alex’s embrace.

She swiped at the corners of her eyes, though the tracks left by fallen tears were still faintly visible.

Alex offered her a handkerchief. She accepted it with a quiet nod, dabbing away the tear lines.

"Thank you," Zora murmured as she returned the cloth to him.

As usual, Alex could tell her words carried far more weight than their surface meaning.

"I didn’t want to show you such a weak side of myself," she admitted with a wry smile.

Alex shook his head. "I don’t think that was weakness. If anything, it showed how strong you truly are."

He added with a self-deprecating grin, "Honestly, if I were in your shoes, I’d have completely lost my way by now."

Zora narrowed her eyes in mock suspicion. "Alex Fury, are you trying to charm me with sweet words? Nice try."

She reached out and ruffled his hair playfully.

The tension that had gripped the room vanished, shattered like glass.

Alex could only sigh at her teasing, helpless to resist.

"If you’re not going to believe me, then fine. But at least let me finish my work."

Zora nodded, reclining back into her chair with a composed breath.

Alex returned to the table, picked up the Rune pen, and replaced the ink with a fresh cartridge. Then he leaned forward and resumed his work.

"Hey, Alex..." Zora said suddenly. "What do you think love is?"

His hand paused mid-stroke.

He mulled over her question for a few seconds before shaking his head.

"I’m not sure, really. Maybe... wanting to be with someone? Wanting what’s best for them, even at your own expense?"

"That’s so like you," Zora replied, her tone unreadable.

"Then what about you?" Alex asked. "What do you think it is?" freewёbn૦νeɭ.com

"I don’t know," she replied honestly. "That’s why I asked you."

Alex gave her a flat stare, which only made her laugh.

Eventually, her voice softened. "I don’t believe love is some fleeting feeling based on appearances. It should be the sum of shared experiences between people—the good, the bad, and the ugly. A conscious decision to grow something beautiful together through it all."

A flicker of surprise crossed Alex’s eyes.

He had always seen Zora as a realist, or rather a pragmatist. But her words now hinted at a kind of grounded idealism—a mature optimism tempered by reality.

’Maybe she’s not one over the other, but a blend of both,’ Alex mused. ’A blend shaped by everything life has thrown at her.’

"What do you think?" Zora asked, her voice bringing him back to the moment.

"I think it’s something worth striving for," Alex said with a nod.

With that, he finished the final strokes of the Rune.

The design pulsed briefly, emitting a soft bluish-white glow—the neutral hue of neutral Mana—before fading from view.

"It’s gone?" Zora asked, concern in her voice.

"No," Alex said with a small smile. "I added a camouflage component. Figured you wouldn’t want the Rune Tattoo to spoil the look of your flawless skin."

Zora raised an eyebrow but said nothing. He continued, "You can will it to become visible the same way you do with your Nirvana Markings."

"Oh," she nodded, thoughtful.

She closed her eyes briefly and focused. A moment later, the Rune reappeared—this time alongside her Nirvana Markings.

"They’re interacting with each other," she observed quietly.

With a little mental probing, she discovered how to selectively hide or display either marking. It didn’t take long before she mastered the process.

Just as she turned to share her discovery, she paused.

Alex was staring at her—not at her face, nor her body—but past her, eyes glazed with that now-familiar contemplative look.

Zora recognised the expression immediately.

A new idea had just taken root in his mind.

***