Extra's Life: MILFs Won't Leave the Incubus Alone
Chapter 358 - 353: Council of Knives
The command pavilion smelled like cold iron and bad sleep.
Aiden sat at the head of the long table with his white hair unwashed, his golden eyes carrying the particular flatness of a man who had spent the night being taken apart from the inside. The bond rebound didn’t kill you cleanly. It just made you wish it would.
Every hour since midnight had been a slow grinding of fractures reopening along nerves that didn’t have names, and now he was supposed to run a war council.
The Empress sat beside him. Close. Chair dragged until her thigh pressed against his, her arm resting along the back of his seat. Her thumb moved in slow circles over the fabric at his forearm, tracing where she knew the fracture lines ran. She didn’t hide it. That was the point.
Twelve senior officers. Eight noble representatives. Four faction captains who hated each other. And every single one of them watching his face for signs of how badly the night had broken him.
Lord Merrick spoke first, because he always did.
"The bond suspension is a matter of record now." He set a folded document on the table. Didn’t slide it. Set it, like a stone on a grave. "The army saw the surges last night. They saw the Archbinder drop twice on the northern ridge. Command authority requires—"
"Command authority is intact." The Empress didn’t raise her voice. She didn’t need to. "The Archbinder sealed two breach points before dawn without harem support. That’s not weakness. That’s a man proving the bond doesn’t own him."
A tremor moved through Aiden’s left hand. He pressed it flat against the table. The Empress’s thumb stilled, then resumed.
"That’s a generous interpretation," said Captain Vael, from the middle of the table. He was one of Merrick’s, but he was smart enough to dress his words carefully. "The women who hold his bindings have severed access during an active campaign. If Varen hits us tonight—"
"Varen will hit us tonight," said Catherine.
She stood at the far end of the tent, flanked by two guards who looked slightly embarrassed to be doing their job. She’d come in under escort, which was Merrick’s demand, and she’d walked through the tent like the escort wasn’t there.
Sabrina stood beside her. Arms crossed. Eyes on the table.
"The foreign reconnaissance elements moved twice in the last six hours." Catherine kept her voice flat. Facts only.
"Their amulets are opening micro-rifts on a rotation — test sequences, not full breaches. They’re mapping our surge response times. Which means they know the suspension happened, they know what it costs him, and they’re deciding whether tonight is the right window." She looked at Merrick.
"So we can spend this council debating our internal politics, or we can address the fact that someone sold our operational status to Varen’s command."
Silence.
Merrick’s jaw tightened. "That’s a significant accusation."
"The foreign mage in the eastern cage said the deal is already sealed." Her eyes didn’t move. "That’s not an accusation. That’s a quote."
From behind Aiden, near the tent’s rear post, a figure shifted. Isolde — nominally an aide, practically something else. Aiden had noticed her twice this morning moving between officer clusters before the council started. He filed it. Did nothing with it yet.
"Bring the mage in," he said.
Two soldiers went out. When they came back, they were half-dragging a man in foreign court clothes that had been expensive once. He was laughing. Not hysterically — just a quiet, sustained amusement, like the proceedings genuinely delighted him.
They sat him in a chair at the side of the tent. He looked at Catherine, looked at the Empress, looked at Aiden. 𝘧𝓇ℯ𝑒𝓌𝑒𝑏𝓃𝘰𝘷𝘦𝘭.𝒸ℴ𝓂
"The deal is already sealed," he said, before anyone asked.
The Empress stood. One smooth movement. She walked to the mage, put two fingers under his chin, and tilted his face up. She looked at him for a long moment.
"Sealed by whom," she said. Not a question. A ledger entry she was verifying.
The man smiled.
She stepped back and turned to the council. "The harem’s suspension weakened our response window. That weakness was visible. Someone communicated it outward." She let that sit. "The Archbinder cannot chase that intelligence thread while managing the rebound and the approaching army. I can.
" She returned to her chair. Her hand settled back on Aiden’s arm. "Which is why I’ve proposed a formal unified command structure — temporary, tied specifically to the duration of the Varen conflict and the rift sealing. Shared authority. Shared accountability."
"That’s a regency," said Vael.
"It’s a wartime necessity."
From outside the tent, voices. Then Flora’s voice, sharp and breaking in a way that meant she’d stopped trying to hold it together: "—I’m not standing out there while they decide everything—"
The tent flap opened. Flora came in. One of her escort guards followed with the expression of a man who had failed at his only task.
She looked at Catherine across the full length of the tent. Her eyes were red but her voice had gone past tears into something harder. "You’re willing to let the whole camp burn. To protect me." Not an accusation. Almost worse — like she was asking Catherine to confirm it so she could stop hoping she was wrong.
Catherine’s face didn’t move. "Yes."
"What kind of strength is that?"
"The kind that keeps you breathing."
Flora laughed. Short and ugly. "He dropped twice last night. I felt it — even through the suspension, I felt it. You think I slept?" She looked around the table at the officers and nobles watching them and seemed to decide she didn’t care. "We are making her job easy." Her eyes went to the Empress without quite reaching hostile. "No offense."
"None taken," said the Empress. "You’re not wrong."
Aiden put both hands on the table. The effort of sitting straight was getting expensive and he was spending reserves he didn’t have. "Here’s the offer on the table," he said.
"Partial restoration. Tiered access — enough to stabilize the rebound surges, not the full bond channel. In exchange, the pairs accept the unified command structure for the duration of the campaign." He looked at Catherine. "It limits the Empress’s authority after Varen. Clean sunset clause."
Catherine was quiet for four seconds. "And the foreign intelligence leak?"
"Investigated under the new structure. Jointly."
"By whom."
"People neither of us have compromised."
Another second. He watched her weighing it — he’d always been able to read her, the way you could read anyone you’d been bound to for years, and what he read now was a woman who had already decided and was checking her math one more time.
"No," she said.
The word landed flat.
"Not partial. Not tiered. Either the bond is open or it’s suspended. You don’t seal a rift with one hand."
"Catherine—" Sabrina said, low.
"I’m not finished." She looked at Aiden directly now, not at the council. "I will restore full access when the foreign threat is contained and we have a name for who’s been selling information.
Not before. And not under a command structure that hands her"—she didn’t look at the Empress—"a title she keeps after the fighting stops."
Merrick’s hand moved toward the document he’d set down earlier. "Then under existing authority, this council can vote on the harem’s status as a destabilizing—"
"Vote," the Empress said.
Merrick blinked.
"Call the vote now." She leaned back, her hand still resting on Aiden’s forearm. "Let the council decide. I want it on record."
The vote was not close enough to be comfortable and not decisive enough to be clean. Eight to five for temporary unified command. Merrick’s faction made noise. Two of the undecided officers looked like they’d chosen the option they were less afraid of rather than the one they wanted.
Catherine watched the hands go up. Her expression didn’t change.
Outside, from the direction of the eastern pickets, something screamed. Not human. The particular register that meant something had come through a breach.
A runner hit the tent entrance at speed: "Rift activity in the outer ring — monsters inside the picket line, sir. And Varen’s forward elements are on the last ridge."
Aiden stood. The rebound hit him like a fist in the spine the moment he put weight on his feet, and the Empress was up and beside him in one motion, her hand at his back, steadying. The contact was visible to everyone in the tent.
Near the rear post, Isolde turned toward a wavering junior officer and said, very quietly, "The mothers cut the bond. The Empress never flinches." She let the pause breathe. "Who would you follow into the dark?"
Aiden heard it.
He didn’t look at her. Not yet.
He walked toward the tent opening with the Empress at his side and the fractures burning white behind his eyes, and the camp outside was already beginning to come apart.