©WebNovelPub
Extra's Life: MILFs Won't Leave the Incubus Alone-Chapter 306 - 302: The Weight of Names
Dawn—if one could call the faint violet light that seeped through the high crystal slits "dawn"—found the great hall empty of spectacle. The braziers had burned down to dull red embers. The velvet cushions from yesterday’s confessions still lay scattered like forgotten promises. The air carried only the faintest trace of oil, ink, and skin.
Aiden was already there when the first women arrived.
He sat cross-legged on the cold marble floor in the very center of the hall—no chair, no dais, no throne. Barefoot. Shirtless. A single black rose from the lower gardens rested across his open palm. He turned the stem slowly between thumb and forefinger, watching the petals catch the dying light.
They came in ones and twos, hesitant at first, then steadier. No one spoke until spoken to. Husbands trailed behind like shadows, kneeling at the perimeter without being told. Their chains made no sound; the silver threads had gone quiet overnight, as though the Spire itself were listening.
Aiden did not look up immediately. He continued turning the rose.
"Names," he said at last, voice so soft it barely carried past the first ring of women, "are heavier than chains."
Catherine, standing nearest, tilted her head. "My lord?"
He lifted his eyes—slow, deliberate—and met hers.
"You were born Catherine de draconic. Then you became Lady leonidus. Then wife. Then mother. Then... something else entirely." His gaze drifted to Flora, who stood beside her mother with wide, uncertain eyes. "Each name added weight. Each one made the next one harder to carry."
Catherine’s throat worked. She did not answer.
Aiden set the rose down on the marble between them.
"Tell me," he said gently, "the name you miss most."
She stared at the flower as though it might bite.
"Cat," she whispered after a long silence. "My brother called me Cat when we were children. Before titles. Before expectations. Before... all of this."
Aiden nodded once.
"Say it again."
"Cat."
"Louder."
"Cat."
The word echoed faintly off the vaulted ceiling. Several women flinched as though struck. Lord Blackthorn—kneeling ten paces away—lowered his head until his forehead touched the stone.
Aiden reached out and brushed one fingertip along the inside of Catherine’s wrist, following the faint silver line of her chain.
"From this moment," he said quietly, "when we are alone—or when I permit—you may be Cat again. Only with me. Only when I allow it."
Her breath shuddered out of her. She did not cry. She simply closed her eyes and nodded.
He moved on.
Elara Voss knelt without being asked when he turned to her. She looked smaller without her usual armor of hauteur.
"What name do you carry that you never chose?" he asked.
"Voss," she answered immediately. "My father’s name became mine the moment he sold me to Lord Voss to settle a debt. I was never asked."
Aiden traced the curve of her jaw with one knuckle—slow, almost tender.
"Then tonight, when the hall sleeps, you will be only Elara. No house. No lord. Just Elara."
Tears slipped down her cheeks. She did not wipe them away.
He continued this way for hours.
To Lirael he gave back "Lira"—the name her nursemaid had sung to her. To Sabrina he offered "Bri"—the childhood shortening her mother had used before politics swallowed their family whole. To younger daughters he gave permission to reclaim pet names long abandoned: Luna became "Lulu" again in his presence; Flora became "Florrie."
Each gift was small. Each was private. Each was absolute.
And with each name returned, something in the woman shifted. Spines straightened fractionally. Breaths deepened. Eyes cleared.
The husbands listened to every word.
Some wept silently. Others stared at their wives with something close to wonder—as though seeing them for the first time in years. Their locked cocks remained hard, leaking, but the humiliation felt different now: less like punishment, more like witness to a private miracle they were no longer allowed to touch.
Lord Blackthorn lifted his head once, just long enough to meet Catherine’s eyes. She looked back at him—steady, no anger, no pity. Just recognition. He lowered his head again.
Lord Voss kept his forehead on the stone the entire time Elara spoke. When she finished and Aiden gave her back "Elara," Voss’s shoulders shook once—silent, contained. He did not look up.
Sabrina’s husband—already broken in ways the others had not yet reached—stared at the floor with empty eyes. When Aiden offered "Bri," Sabrina exhaled like she had been holding her breath for years. Her husband’s leaking cock twitched once, then stilled.
The younger husbands—those married to the daughters—watched with wide, stunned expressions. They had never heard the pet names. They had never known the girls before the Spire. Now they heard "Lulu" and "Florrie" spoken in Aiden’s low voice, and something in their faces cracked open.
Flora’s husband—barely more than a boy himself—let out a small, choked sound when Aiden said "Florrie." Flora glanced back at him. Her expression softened for the first time in months. She gave a tiny nod—almost imperceptible—before turning back to Aiden.
The hall stayed quiet except for the soft drip of condensation and the occasional shaky breath.
Aiden worked methodically. He spoke to each woman in turn. Asked one question. Listened. Gave back one name. Touched one small place—wrist, jaw, collarbone, cheek. Never more. Never less.
Hours passed. The violet light shifted to deeper indigo. Braziers dimmed further. Shadows lengthened across the marble.
Isolde came last—deliberately last.
She did not kneel. She stood before him, the fresh sigil on her hip glowing faintly beneath the sheer silk of her gown.
Aiden looked up at her for a long time.
"You already know your true name," he said.
"Do I?"
"You’ve never let anyone take it from you." He rose slowly—fluid, unhurried—until he stood close enough that she could feel the heat radiating from his bare chest. "That’s why I chose you to carry my mark. Because you never truly bent."
Isolde’s lips curved—just a fraction.
"Yet here I stand," she murmured, "marked. Owned."
"Marked," he agreed. "Never owned."
He reached out and laid his palm flat over the sigil on her hip. The contact was warm, steady. She inhaled sharply but did not step away.
"Tomorrow," he said, voice pitched for her ears alone, "you choose the next ritual. You decide who kneels deepest. But tonight..." His thumb brushed the edge of the mark in a slow arc. "...tonight you tell me your name. The one no one else has ever heard."
For the first time since the ritual began, Isolde hesitated.
Then she leaned in—close enough that her lips nearly brushed his ear.
"Isolde," she whispered. A pause. "Just... Isolde."
He closed his eyes for one heartbeat.
When he opened them again, the silver fracture on his wrist flickered—brief, almost invisible.
"Thank you," he said simply.
He stepped back.
The hall remained silent.
Aiden looked around at the circle of women—some weeping quietly, some smiling through tears, all of them somehow lighter.
"Rest," he told them. "Tomorrow your voices will be heard."
He walked toward the shadowed archway.
At the threshold he paused, turned back.
His gaze found Isolde one last time.
"Sleep lightly, Just-Isolde," he said. "Tomorrow you speak for me... and the Spire listens."
Then he was gone.
The women did not leave immediately. They stood in place for several minutes, letting the words settle. Catherine—Cat—touched her wrist where Aiden had traced the silver line. Elara—only Elara—wiped her cheeks with the back of her hand. Sabrina—Bri—exhaled long and slow.
Flora—Florrie—looked at her mother. Catherine met her eyes and gave a small, real smile. The first in a long time.
Luna—Lulu—reached for Sabrina’s hand. Sabrina squeezed once.
The younger women exchanged glances. Some smiled shyly. Others looked thoughtful. 𝕗𝕣𝐞𝐞𝘄𝐞𝚋𝚗𝗼𝘃𝗲𝗹.𝚌𝕠𝚖
The husbands rose slowly. Chains clinked. They did not speak. They simply followed their wives toward the side doors.
Lord Blackthorn paused beside Catherine. He did not touch her. He just looked.
"Cat," he said—testing the word.
She nodded once.
He bowed his head and left.
Lord Voss did the same with Elara. "Elara," he whispered.
She touched his cheek—brief, gentle—then walked away.
One by one the hall emptied.
Isolde stayed longest.
She walked to the center where Aiden had sat. Picked up the black rose he had left on the marble. Twirled it once between her fingers.
Then she tucked it behind her ear.
She left through the main doors.
The corridors were dark. Torches burned low. Her footsteps echoed softly.
In the private wing, Aiden stood at his window. Moonlight slanted across the floor. The silver fracture on his wrist pulsed once—slow, steady.
A soft knock.
"Enter."
Isolde stepped inside. She still wore the sheer gown. The sigil glowed faintly.
She closed the door.
Aiden turned.
They looked at each other for a long moment.
"You gave them back their names," she said.
"I gave them permission to remember them."
She crossed the room. Stopped in front of him.
"And mine?"
"Just Isolde," he said.
She reached up. Touched the black rose behind her ear.
"Tomorrow I choose the ritual."
"Yes."
"And the one who kneels deepest."
"Yes."
She studied his face.
"I’ll start with Catherine—Cat. She’s ready to lead. Then Elara. Then Sabrina—Bri. The daughters last."
Aiden nodded once.
"And you?" she asked.
"I’ll watch."







