Surrender

1038 Words
Some places don’t show your reflection. They show your truth.” She hadn’t slept in two days. Not from regret. Not even from adrenaline. Just... noise. The kind that comes from inside. Dominique had replayed every moan, every gasp, every frame of the last stream. She watched herself dominate that girl like a goddess descending from smoke. She’d watched her own smile—how it curled like a blade. She’d read the comments. The praise. The gifts. The requests. But nothing hit as hard as that single message from Wolf. “You are rising, wolf. And I’m watching.” Watching. Not chasing. Not begging. Not praising. Just watching. Like a predator in tall grass. And somehow, that shook her more than anything else. The invitation came with no warning. A thin, white envelope—tucked between fan mail and lingerie offers. Hand-delivered. No stamp. No return address. Inside: a single glossy card the color of crushed silver. No text. Just a shattered mirror engraved with a symbol she hadn’t seen in years: ∞ But she knew it. Everyone in her world knew it. The Mirror. A rumored space. A place whispered about in late-night DMs and post-orgasm come-downs. Not a bar. Not a dungeon. Something older. Wilder. Exclusive beyond comprehension. Where the most powerful doms went to be unmade—or to prove they could never be. She turned the card over. On the back, in blood-colored ink: “Midnight. Saint Lyra’s Cathedral. Come alone. Wear white gloves.” She shouldn’t have gone. She knew that. But curiosity was a more dangerous drug than power. Saint Lyra’s Cathedral was three towns over—abandoned, supposedly condemned, its stained glass windows still intact like a church that had made a deal with the devil to preserve its beauty. The town around it had rotted. But the building remained immaculate. And at midnight, it glowed. Dozens of figures moved like shadows around its entrance—each masked, cloaked, or collared. Some crawled on all fours. Some stood like statues. No one spoke. Dominique arrived in silence. Black cloak. Silver heels. Red mouth. And the white gloves she hated wearing. They felt like chains. The masked attendant at the door didn’t ask for ID. She only bowed. And whispered: “To enter is to surrender something.” Dominique nodded once. “I surrender my name.” “Then tonight,” the woman said, lifting her mask slightly, “you will be seen, but not known.” Inside was heat. Soft candlelight. Velvet pews. Ropes strung from pillars like holy relics. A stage stood where the altar once had, but the crucifix was gone—replaced by a single massive mirror suspended above, cracked but whole. And it reflected everything except her. She stared at it, chilled. Her body was visible—but her face wasn’t. No matter how she turned. Just… blankness. As if the mirror refused to show her truth. She was handed a silver token and led to a private viewing alcove. The rules were whispered in her ear by a bare-chested man with lips painted black. “No phones. No talking. No touching unless chosen.” “And what if I want to touch?” “Then you’ll have to be brave enough to be touched first.” She sat. The stage below was empty. But she could feel the energy building. Like a storm circling. Like teeth behind silk. She didn’t know what she was waiting for. Until she saw him. The lights dimmed. The air shifted. It wasn’t silence, exactly. More like reverence. Like a collective breath held on the edge of a blade. All eyes turned to the stage—but it remained empty. Only the mirror above shimmered faintly, reflecting distorted images of the pews below, as if something behind the glass was breathing. Then… a shadow stepped forward. He moved like smoke caught in a human frame. Long limbs. Bare chest. A black mask with silver edges. Collar wrapped tight around his neck, the leash trailing behind him like a tail he refused to be ashamed of. But Dominique knew. The moment he entered the circle of candlelight, she knew. Wolf. He wasn’t crawling. He wasn’t kneeling. He stood tall—until another figure appeared behind him and tugged gently on the leash. Only then did he fall to one knee. But not like a man broken. Like a man waiting. Dominique’s lips parted, breath tight in her chest. This wasn’t about submission. This was theatre. Ritual. A carefully orchestrated undoing—and she was the intended audience. The Mistress on stage was masked, silent, dressed in crimson robes that billowed like smoke. She didn’t speak. She didn’t touch him. She circled once. Twice. Then removed her gloves and held out her hand. Wolf laid his palm across hers, face up. And the candles flared. It was as if some unspoken bond had been accepted—an offering made and received. The mirror above flickered—and suddenly, Dominique could see her reflection. But it wasn’t her face. It was his. Wolf’s eyes—piercing through the glass as if he were staring directly at her. She looked away, startled. When she looked back—his head was bowed. The Mistress bound his wrists behind his back with silk cords. He didn’t resist. Instead, he tilted his head slightly to the side—exposing his throat. A show of trust. A dare. Dominique’s fists clenched in her lap, white gloves creasing. This wasn’t just a scene. This was an invitation… without words. The Mistress leaned down, whispered something into Wolf’s ear, and his body tensed. Then— He turned his head slightly. Just enough to meet Dominique’s eyes across the candlelit cathedral. His lips parted. And though she couldn’t hear it… She felt it. “Your turn.” The mirror shimmered again. And this time—her face returned. But it wasn’t the face she wore in public. Not Domica. Not Dominique. It was the girl beneath the velvet. The one who dreamed of power not just to control… but to be seen. Touched. Known. And now? She was being called. Not to dominate. But to surrender to something she didn’t understand.
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