Lyra shook her head, even as her body trembled. “I won’t… break that easily.”
Lyra flinched. A tiny, involuntary gasp escaped her.
Lady Vane laughed—a genuine, delighted sound. “Oh, my dear. Breaking is for the weak. I’m not going to break you. I’m going to unravel you.” tickling submission
Lady Vane didn’t answer. She just kept the feather moving, maddeningly slow, from arch to toes and back again. She knew exactly where the nerves were most raw. Lyra’s laughter grew louder, more frantic. It wasn’t joy anymore. It was a tide rising past her control.
Lady Vane stopped in front of her, a slow smile spreading across her lips. It was a terrible smile—patient and knowing. “Then you understand why you’re here. Not for pain. Pain makes people stubborn. It builds walls.” Lyra shook her head, even as her body trembled
The first few minutes were almost playful. Lady Vane used just the tips of her nails, tracing spirals on Lyra’s sides, behind her ears, along the backs of her knees. Lyra squirmed, biting her lip, suppressing the giggles that bubbled in her throat. It was embarrassing, not painful. She could endure embarrassment.
What followed had no clock. Time became a wet, breathless blur. Lady Vane used her hands, the feather, a soft brush, her own silken hair. She tickled Lyra’s stomach until her abs ached. She teased her neck until Lyra was shrieking with helpless laughter. Every time Lyra tried to form a coherent thought, a new attack on a fresh spot shattered it. Lady Vane laughed—a genuine, delighted sound
Lyra closed her eyes, and in the warm silence of the library, she found a strange, profound peace in the ruins of her resistance. She had not been broken. She had been asked to surrender—and finally, she had chosen to.