Faro left Rita’s room, his chest still alive with the pulsing shadow gifted to him. The apartment was silent but for the faint hum of the city outside. The hallway stretched before him like a tunnel of dread, and there—just as before—the dark one-horned figure hovered, waiting. Its jagged horn glowed faintly green, and its cloak of shifting smoke licked the walls like living fire.
Faro stopped before it, his expression no longer trembling or broken. He looked the shadow in the face and spoke with a steady, commanding tone.
“I want more,” Faro said. His eyes burned with unnatural light. “I want them both. Ronda and Rita—together. In the master bedroom.”
The figure leaned forward, its hollow ember-filled eyes widening. For a heartbeat, silence hung in the air like a suspended blade. Then it laughed—deep, echoing laughter that rattled the apartment walls and shivered through the floorboards.
“Ahhh, Faro…” the voice hissed, curling around him like smoke. “You are no longer the frail, broken Falcon who wept on this floor. You are becoming something else. Something darker.”
The shadow raised a clawed hand, brushing the air just above Faro’s head. Sparks of black energy crackled between them, humming like caged lightning.
“To demand not one, but both… the fantasy of your boyhood and the lover of your youth, under the same roof, in the same bed… This is not love, Faro. This is power. This is domination. This is the hunger that carves kings and monsters from men.”
Faro did not flinch. He clenched his fists, feeling the strength surge through him, and repeated, “I want them both.”
The figure’s laughter deepened, its horn glowing brighter. “Very well. Call them. Draw them into the master bedroom. I will grant you the strength to bind their will to your own. But know this, Faro: every step you take down this path pulls you further from Falcon… and deeper into me.”
The hallway darkened further, the very air choking with shadow. Faro’s heart raced—not with fear, but with anticipation. His desire had twisted into resolve. The apartment on SouthBank Avenue was no longer a simple dwelling. Tonight, it was becoming a temple of temptation, watched over by a demon with one horn and a cruel smile.
And Faro, no longer Falcon, was ready to see how far the shadows could take him.
Faro stood in the hallway, the dark power humming through his veins like fire. The one-horned figure lingered just behind him, a smoldering shadow stretching across the walls, whispering in a voice only Faro could hear.
“Call them. Command them. They will come to you.”
Faro inhaled deeply, then walked toward the master bedroom. He opened the door, and the shadows thickened inside as if the room itself had been claimed by the figure’s presence. The bed seemed larger, more imposing, the curtains quivering though no wind touched them.
Faro turned back toward the hallway. His voice was low but carried with unnatural force, vibrating in the air like a summons.
“Ronda. Rita. Come to me.”
From down the hallway, Ronda stirred first. Half-asleep, she rose from her bed, barefoot, her glasses left on the nightstand. Something in Faro’s tone pulled her forward, bypassing thought or hesitation. She walked slowly, dreamlike, toward the master bedroom.
Rita followed soon after, her green eyes sharp but dazed, her steps reluctant yet undeniable. It was as though the power running through Faro reached into their very cores, drawing them both closer, binding them to his will.
When the two women entered, Faro stood at the center of the room, his shadow stretching unnaturally behind him, taller, darker, echoing the figure looming invisibly near. His chest rose and fell with controlled breath, his eyes burning faintly with the energy that wasn’t his own.
Ronda blinked up at him, confused. “Faro… why are we both here?”
Rita’s voice was sharper, suspicious. “What are you doing?”
Faro’s lips curled into a faint, almost cruel smile. “I asked for you both. Together. And you came.”
The air grew heavier. The women glanced at each other uneasily, their confusion mixing with the strange pull they couldn’t resist. The figure behind Faro laughed softly, its horn gleaming as if feeding on the tension.
“Yes…” it whispered, though only Faro heard. “Take them. Bind them. This is the test of your true desire.”
Faro stepped forward, placing a hand on each woman’s shoulder. The power coursed through him and into them, making them shiver as though touched by lightning. Both looked at him with wide, uncertain eyes—one with fear, the other with fragile trust.
And Faro, once Falcon, now something else, stood between them, feeling the full weight of the choice he had already made.
The master bedroom breathed like a living thing. Shadows clung to the corners, thick and shifting, the faint glow of the city outside cut off by curtains that swayed without wind. Faro stood at the center of the room, the force in his veins pulsing outward like invisible chains, binding the space to his command.
Rita lingered near the doorway, her arms folded across her chest, green eyes sharp with suspicion. “Faro… this isn’t right. Why did you bring me here with her?”
Ronda, smaller and softer in her frame, stood closer to him. She tugged nervously at the hem of her nightdress, her bare feet curling against the floor. “Faro… I don’t understand. What’s happening?”
Faro looked at them both. The horned figure was behind him—unseen, but there, its laughter a whisper in his mind. Take them. Show them what you are now.
His hands rose, and without touching them, both women felt the force ripple through the air. Ronda gasped, clutching her chest as warmth spread through her, while Rita staggered slightly, her breath quickening despite her resistance.
“I brought you both here,” Faro said, his voice deeper, carrying a weight it never had before, “because I want you together—with me. I want what I’ve always wanted… all of it, without choosing.”
Rita’s lips parted in outrage, but her body betrayed her—her breath grew heavy, her pulse racing as the dark energy inside Faro pressed against her will. She shook her head, her hair falling wild over her shoulders. “You… you’re not thinking straight. This isn’t you, Faro!”
Ronda looked between them, confused and trembling. Yet when Faro stepped closer to her, placing his hand gently against her cheek, the fear softened into a dazed calm. “Faro…” she whispered, leaning into his palm.
Rita snapped, “Don’t touch her like that—” but before she could finish, Faro turned his other hand toward her, and she froze. A shiver ran through her as though invisible fingers had traced her spine. Her body quivered, her resistance bending under the force of the shadow running through him.
The one-horned figure’s laughter filled the room though only Faro truly heard it. Yes… command them. Make them yours. Together.
He pulled both women closer, Ronda on his right, Rita on his left. The bed behind them seemed to swell in size, its silken sheets rippling as if waiting. His arms wrapped around their waists, and he felt the surge of their conflicting energies—Ronda’s innocent trust, Rita’s reluctant surrender—both feeding into him, making the shadow fire burn hotter.
For a moment, Rita’s eyes locked with his, pleading. “Faro… don’t let this thing control you.”
But Faro’s smile was faint, dangerous, his voice a whisper meant for them both. “I am in control. Tonight, you’re both mine.”
And as he guided them toward the bed, the horned figure’s shadow loomed taller, its single glowing horn casting a dim green light across the room, watching the scene unfold like a dark priest at an unholy rite.
The bed seemed to breathe beneath them as Faro drew both women closer. Ronda leaned into him with a trusting warmth, her small frame trembling, while Rita resisted with words but not with her body—her pulse betraying her, her breath quickening each time the shadow-fire within Faro brushed against her will.
He guided them both onto the silken sheets, the three of them sinking together as though the bed had been waiting. The shadows in the corners of the room thickened, draping the walls like curtains of smoke. Above them, the one-horned figure loomed—half unseen, half real—its horn glowing faintly green as though sanctifying the act in darkness.
Ronda’s voice was soft, fragile: “Faro… I’m here.”
Rita’s voice was sharper, defiant even as her body trembled: “This isn’t you… this thing has changed you.”
Faro silenced both with his touch. His hands burned with power, each caress a surge that made them gasp, made their resistance falter, made their trust deepen. What had once been simple love or hidden fantasy now transformed into something larger, more dangerous—an act not of intimacy, but of conquest.
The horned figure’s laughter rippled through the air, low and resonant, as if echoing in their bones. Yes… take them both. This is the altar of your desire, and you are the god upon it.
The night stretched on, shadows weaving around the bed like serpents. The movements, the gasps, the tangled bodies—all blurred into a fever dream of power and hunger. To Faro, it was more than passion; it was rebirth. Every moment fed the dark fire inside him, every shiver from Ronda and Rita fanned the flames higher.
At last, silence fell. Ronda lay curled against his right side, spent, her face peaceful in sleep. Rita remained on his left, awake, her green eyes wide and haunted as she stared at him. Her lips trembled, wanting to speak, but no words came.
Faro lay between them, his chest rising and falling steadily, his eyes faintly aglow. He felt not guilt, not shame, but triumph. The man who had once been Falcon was gone. In his place was something darker—something greater.
At the foot of the bed, unseen by the women, the horned figure still hovered, its horn gleaming with cruel satisfaction.
“You see now, Faro,” it whispered. “You were never meant to be Falcon. You were meant to be mine.”
And Faro did not deny it.
The next morning.
The first rays of sunlight broke through the blinds of the SouthBank apartment, casting long golden bars across the master bedroom. Faro stirred awake, his body heavy, his mind clouded. For a moment, he couldn’t tell if the night before had been real or a fevered dream born from exhaustion and regret.
Ronda lay curled on one side of the bed, her glasses set carefully on the nightstand, her breathing soft and steady. Rita was on the other side, her dark hair spilling across the pillow, one arm draped loosely over Faro as though clinging to him even in sleep.
For a fleeting second, Faro felt a warmth he had not known in years—family, closeness, intimacy—but it was quickly poisoned by the memory of how it all came to pass. The shadow in the hallway. The horn. The deal.
He carefully slipped out of bed, his legs trembling as he stood. In the bathroom mirror, he saw himself differently. His eyes glowed faintly green, the trace of power the dark figure had placed in him. His skin carried a restless energy, like he could lift mountains or call down storms if he wished. And yet… his chest ached with emptiness.
When he returned quietly to the hallway, the one-horned figure was still there, hovering as if it had never left. Its grin was wider in the morning light, though its body still dripped shadows like smoke.
“Well?” it rasped. “You tasted what I gave you. You had both, as you wished. Do you feel like a king, Faro Faros?”
Faro lowered his head, his voice ragged.
“I feel powerful… but also hollow. I don’t know if it was me or just your gift that carried me through. And I don’t know what kind of man I am anymore.”
The horned figure chuckled, the sound like dry leaves on fire.
“Then you are ready to decide. Keep my power, and you will never doubt yourself again. Refuse it… and you go back to being the broken boy who cries in the hallway.”
From inside the bedroom, the faint voices of Ronda and Rita stirred, calling softly for him. Faro clenched his fists, torn between the warmth of family and the cold promise of unlimited strength.
The morning after was no ending. It was the beginning of a choice that would define the rest of his life.
Breakfast.
The smell of toasted bread and fresh fruit filled the small kitchen of the SouthBank apartment. Morning light poured in through the curtains, glinting off the simple cups of juice placed on the table. Ronda had tied her hair back, her round glasses perched neatly on her nose, while Rita sat across from her in a silk robe, her green eyes sharp and unreadable.
Faro walked in last. His steps were slow, deliberate, as though every movement carried the weight of an unseen burden. He sat between them, his hands still trembling faintly from the lingering energy of the horned figure’s gift.
For a while, only the clinking of plates filled the silence. Finally, Ronda cleared her throat.
“Last night… was different.” She avoided his gaze, pushing at her food with the edge of her fork. “You were… stronger than I’ve ever seen you. Almost like another man was inside you.”
Rita gave a low laugh, her tone edged with something between pride and suspicion.
“He was more than himself, Ronda. I felt it too. But I wonder…” Her eyes narrowed at Faro. “Was it really you, Faro? Or was someone else whispering in your ear?”
Faro froze, his chest tight. He remembered the glowing eyes in the mirror, the shadow waiting in the hallway. He couldn’t tell them the truth—not yet.
“I don’t know,” he admitted quietly, staring down at his untouched plate. “All I know is… it didn’t feel right. Not fully. I was there with both of you, but part of me… part of me was somewhere else.”
Ronda finally looked up, her eyes wide behind the lenses. “Faro… are you saying you regret it?”
Silence pressed down on the table. Rita leaned forward, her voice low and cutting.
“Regret? Or fear? You’ve always been torn between us. Last night, you tried to have it both ways—and maybe you did. But something about you feels… tainted.”
Faro’s jaw tightened. He wanted to tell them everything—that a dark one-horned figure had given him temporary power, that the choice still lingered in the air like poison—but the words died on his lips.
Instead, he simply whispered, “I don’t know what I am anymore.”
Ronda’s hand trembled as she reached for his. Rita pulled her robe tighter around herself, her stare unblinking. The breakfast table became less about food and more about truths hanging heavy, waiting to break free.