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"Liar, King, Kneel" Chapter 10

Chapter 10: Surgeon of Ruin

The sirens were a distant, jagged scream, barely registering against the wet, rhythmic pulse of Max’s labored breathing.

Kaelen had bundled him into the back of a nondescript sedan, the leather seats rapidly darkening with the life force of the man who had been a king only hours ago.

They reached the safehouse, a windowless bunker buried beneath the city's foundations, far from the prying eyes of Elias and his crumbling sense of justice.

Kaelen carried Max as if he were made of fragile porcelain, his movements frantic and devoid of their usual surgical precision.

He laid Max out on a metal table that served as their makeshift operating theater, the harsh industrial lights humming with a sterile, unforgiving glare.

Max was pale, his skin the color of parchment, his eyes fluttering with a terrifying, rhythmic loss of focus.

"I need you to listen to me, Max," Kaelen said, his voice stripped of its cold, measured cadence, replaced by a raw, desperate grit. "The bullet is lodged near the lung, and I have to go in without anesthesia, or you will never wake up."

Max smiled, a weak, blood-flecked curve of his lips that was entirely devoid of fear. "You have always been the one to dictate my suffering, Kaelen, so why stop now?"

Kaelen didn't answer; he couldn't afford the luxury of empathy, not when the man he had spent a lifetime trying to destroy was currently unraveling in his hands.

He picked up a scalpel, his fingers steadying with a grim, practiced familiarity as he prepared to cut into the ruin of Max's body.

The first incision was a sharp, searing line of agony that tore through Max’s consciousness, dragging a strangled, wet sound from his throat. He didn't pull away; instead, he arched his back, his fingers clawing at the metal table, his gaze locked onto Kaelen’s with an intensity that burned.

"That's it," Kaelen whispered, his own breath coming in ragged, uneven hitches as he navigated the treacherous, pulsing anatomy. "Stay with me, look at me, don't you dare close your eyes."

Max felt the probe delve into the warmth of his chest, a sensation of violation that was, in its own perverse way, the most intimate touch he had ever received.

He watched Kaelen, seeing the way his jaw was clenched, the way his forehead was slicked with a sheen of cold, nervous sweat.

"It’s intimate, isn't it?" Max murmured, his voice a jagged, broken rasp. "Cutting me open like this, seeing what’s underneath the suit and the pride."

Kaelen’s hand faltered for a fraction of a second, his eyes meeting Max’s for a moment that felt like a lifetime. "Be quiet, Max; you are using up the air you need to survive."

"I don't mind," Max replied, his laughter bubbling up as a series of wet, choking coughs. "As long as you’re the one holding the knife, I don’t mind at all."

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Kaelen delved deeper, his hands becoming coated in the hot, copper-scented reality of Max’s blood. Every movement was a calculated risk, every twitch of Max’s body a threat to the fragile hold he had on his own composure.

The pain was a living, breathing thing, a wildfire consuming the nerves and the spirit alike, but Max clung to it. It was the only thing that felt real in a world that had become a sequence of shadows and half-truths.

"You’re doing a good job," Max whispered, his head rolling back, his eyes rolling toward the back of his skull. "You always were the most efficient man I’d ever met."

Kaelen felt a cold, jagged tear open in his own chest, a realization that he had become the very thing he had despised—a captor who had fallen in love with his prisoner’s ruin. He was performing a surgery of salvation, yet he knew that the man before him was already beyond the reach of anything but his own cold, dark devotion.

"I am not doing this for you," Kaelen snarled, his voice a desperate, lying defense. "I am doing this because I am not finished with you yet."

Max’s fingers brushed against Kaelen’s wrist, a weak, trembling touch that felt like the stroke of a feather against the backdrop of the gore. "You don’t have to lie anymore, Kaelen; there’s no one left to impress."

Kaelen pulled the bullet free, the metal clattering against the metal table with a sound that felt like the tolling of a funeral bell. He began to stitch the wound, his hands working with a speed and efficiency that was meant to hide the fact that he was shaking.

"It’s done," Kaelen breathed, his voice hollow as he pulled the final knot tight. "You’re going to live, Max."

Max looked up at him, his face bathed in the harsh, unflattering light of the bunker, his eyes wide and filled with a terrifying, hollow light. He reached up, his hand fumbling until it rested on Kaelen’s cheek, his touch leaving a smear of red across the sharp line of his jaw.

"You win," Max whispered, the words a final, total surrender that seemed to echo through the cold, concrete walls. "You wanted everything, you took everything, and now you’ve even saved the wreckage."

Kaelen didn't move; he stayed bowed over the table, his forehead pressed against the cool, sterile metal. He had won, he had executed the plan, and he had secured the assets—so why did he feel as though he had just sentenced himself to a life of eternal, suffocating isolation?

"I don't want to win," Kaelen whispered, his voice a jagged, broken confession that he had promised himself he would never utter. "I wanted to be the one who ended it, not the one who had to watch it survive."

Max felt the drift, the slow, hypnotic pull of delirium pulling him down into a world of soft, grey light. He felt the cold of the table, the ache of the stitches, and the terrifying, beautiful warmth of Kaelen’s presence.

He closed his eyes, his breathing slowing to a steady, rhythmic cadence that matched the beating of the man standing over him. He was a man who had been a god, a man who had been a monster, and a man who was finally, thankfully, just a body at rest.

Kaelen scooped him up, his movements careful and protective as he carried him to the narrow, thin cot in the corner of the bunker. He sat down, pulling Max into his arms, his body a shield against the rest of the world.

He held him as the delirium took hold, as Max’s consciousness drifted into the dark, welcoming sea of his own exhaustion. Kaelen watched him, his fingers tracing the line of Max’s neck, feeling the steady, thumping rhythm of the heart he had just pulled back from the edge of the void.

The bunker was silent, save for the hum of the air purifier and the faint, wet sound of Max’s breath.

They were two broken parts of a whole that had been severed by a lifetime of ambition and deceit.

Kaelen felt the weight of the years, the weight of the mission, and the weight of the man he was holding. He had set out to break a king, and he had only succeeded in breaking himself.

He leaned his head down, resting his cheek against the damp, messy hair of the man who had traded his soul for a kiss.

He was caught, trapped in a prison of his own making, and the only person who could set him free was currently drifting into the dark.

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