Izumi slowed when they reached the corridor, the quiet of the lodging wing settling around them like a held breath. The warmth and laughter of the common room faded behind them, replaced by softer lantern light and the muted hush of polished floors and papered walls. The shift in atmosphere was immediate. What had once been a shared space now felt narrower, more deliberate, as if every step forward carried a little more weight than the last.
She watched him carefully as he moved ahead of her, noting the easy confidence in the way he carried himself. When he stopped at the closed door and lifted the keycard, her gaze lingered on the movement. It was the kind of motion that suggested he was used to making decisions without asking permission first.
"Private and less crowded."
The words settled between them, quiet but unmistakably intentional.
Izumi did not respond right away. Instead, she studied him more closely than she had all evening. The visor concealed his eyes, but the rest of him gave away enough; the subtle tilt of his head, the calm patience in his stance, the faint hint of amusement in the way he waited. He had left the choice open, at least on the surface. Yet there was something about him that suggested he already believed he knew how the moment would end.
The lock chimed softly. A green light blinked, and the door slid open with a quiet mechanical hiss. Warm light spilled into the corridor, brushing across the floor between them like an invitation that had suddenly become real.
For a moment she didn’t move. Not because she was unsure of herself, but because the moment deserved more thought than simply stepping forward. Men who carried themselves like Drystan often assumed the path ahead was obvious. That confidence could be irritating. Presumptuous, even.
And yet she was still standing here.
Her gaze drifted briefly toward the open doorway before returning to him. For a few seconds she simply looked at him, as though weighing something she hadn’t quite decided how to name.
“You have an interesting way of asking,” she said at last, her voice quiet but steady in the still corridor.
“You leave the door open, but somehow it always feels like you’re expecting someone to walk through it.”
There was no accusation in her tone. If anything, there was a faint trace of curiosity threaded beneath the words.
She stepped forward then, closing the distance until she stood just at the threshold. The warm light from inside the room caught the dark red sheen of her armor, outlining her figure in gold before fading into the softer shadows of the hallway behind her. For a brief moment she lifted her gaze to the dark visor again, as if searching for the eyes hidden beneath it.
“You’re very certain of yourself,” she continued softly.
“I haven’t quite decided yet whether that’s confidence… or simply habit.”
Without waiting for his reply, she turned and stepped inside. The room felt quieter than the hallway, the warm lighting softer and more intimate than the lantern glow outside. She moved only a few steps inward before setting the sake cup down on a nearby surface, the gentle tap of ceramic sounding louder than it should have in the stillness.
Then she turned back toward the doorway.
Drystan was still standing there, framed by the hall light, the bottle in hand and the visor reflecting the room’s glow. Izumi regarded him for a moment, her posture relaxed but her attention sharp, as if she were still deciding what kind of man had followed her this far.
“You’ve gone through quite a bit of trouble,” she said quietly, her voice calmer now, lower in the quiet room.
“A private room. Another bottle. A careful invitation that pretends not to be one.” She let the thought linger between them for a second before tilting her head slightly.
“So now I’m curious,” she added.
Her gaze lingered on the visor again, steady and searching.
“Was this all part of the plan…” she said softly,
“…or are you just as interested to see what happens next as I am?”