Chapter 210 210: They both laughed softly.
Chapter 210 210: They both laughed softly.
They stepped back into the street under a sky that refused to calm down.
Fireworks still bloomed overhead in lazy intervals, staining the clouds with red and gold and electric blue. The city had shifted into celebration mode without asking anyone's permission. Music drifted from somewhere distant, laughter folded into it, and the night air carried the warmth of a thousand small lives happening at once.
Belle slipped her hand into Sebastian's like it belonged there.
It wasn't a grand gesture. She didn't look at him when she did it. She simply intertwined their fingers and started walking, tugging him gently along the lantern-lit street.
He followed.
The pavement shimmered faintly from residual mana woven into the city's architecture. Light pulsed beneath their feet in slow waves, reacting to the fireworks above like the ground itself was watching the sky. Shops lined the road in uneven rows, their windows glowing with soft amber light. Vendors called out half-heartedly, more interested in enjoying the night than selling anything.
They didn't talk much at first.
They walked shoulder to shoulder, hands linked, letting the city carry them. Belle's thumb traced idle patterns over the back of his hand. Sebastian noticed every single one.
They passed a street performer conjuring miniature constellations between his palms. Children sat in a circle around him, gasping as stars spilled into the air like glittering sand. Belle slowed just enough to watch. Her expression softened, the sharp edges of her usual composure melting into something quieter.
"She would've liked this," she said.
Sebastian didn't need to ask who.
He squeezed her hand. She squeezed back.
They kept walking.
A breeze threaded through the street, carrying the smell of sugar and fried dough. Belle turned her head instantly.
"No," Sebastian said.
"Yes," she replied calmly, already dragging him toward the source.
The stall was absurdly bright, stacked with pastries glazed in colors that didn't exist in nature. The vendor grinned at them with the confidence of a man who knew he was about to win.
Belle ordered three things without hesitation. Sebastian didn't recognize any of them.
She handed him one. It was warm and dusted in powdered sugar. He took a bite and immediately regretted every dessert he'd ever eaten before that moment.
"That's illegal," he muttered.
Belle looked smug. "I know."
They ate while walking, sharing bites without discussion. Powdered sugar ended up on his sleeve. She brushed it off with unnecessary seriousness. He retaliated by tapping a bit onto her nose. She stared at him, offended for exactly half a second before laughing and wiping it away.
The night stretched open ahead of them, generous and unhurried.
They reached a bridge that arched over a narrow canal glowing with floating lanterns. The water reflected the fireworks like shattered mirrors. People leaned against the railings, watching the lights drift by in quiet reverence.
Belle guided them to an empty spot.
They stood side by side, elbows resting on cool stone. The canal whispered below. For a while, neither of them spoke.
Sebastian watched her reflection in the water instead of the lanterns. Her eyes tracked the drifting lights, violet catching every color. Seeing her look at the world still felt new, still felt impossible in the way miracles often did.
"You're staring," she said softly.
"I know."
She turned her head slightly. "And?"
"And I'm not stopping."
A beat passed.
She smiled, small and private. The kind of smile meant only for one person.
Another firework bloomed overhead, bright enough to paint the bridge in silver. Instinctively, Belle leaned closer. Her shoulder pressed into his. He felt the warmth of her through the fabric of their clothes.
"Thank you," she said.
The words were simple. The weight behind them wasn't.
He didn't answer right away. He didn't trust his voice. Instead, he lifted their joined hands and pressed a kiss to her knuckles.
Her breath hitched, just a little.
They stayed like that until the fireworks thinned and the crowd began to drift. The city exhaled. Night settled into something softer.
Belle straightened and tugged him away from the railing.
"Come on," she said. "I'm stealing you."
"You already did," he replied.
She rolled her eyes, but her grip tightened.
They wandered into quieter streets where the noise of celebration faded into distant echoes. The buildings grew taller, older, their stone walls humming with ancient enchantments. Moonlight pooled in the spaces between them. Their footsteps became the loudest sound.
Belle stopped suddenly.
Sebastian almost walked into her.
She turned, backing him gently against a wall. Her hands came to rest on his chest, fingers curling into the fabric of his suit like she was testing whether he was real.
He looked down at her.
Her expression wasn't teasing. It wasn't playful. It was open in a way she rarely allowed, eyes searching his face like she was memorizing it.
"You're staying," she said quietly.
It wasn't a question.
"Yes," he answered just as quietly.
Her shoulders loosened. Relief flickered across her features before she smoothed it away. She leaned in, resting her forehead against his.
For a moment they just breathed.
The world narrowed to warmth and heartbeat and the faint scent of sugar still lingering on her breath.
Sebastian lifted a hand and tucked a strand of hair behind her ear. His fingers lingered against her cheek. She didn't move away.
"You're staring again," she murmured.
"I know."
"And you're still not stopping."
"No."
Her lips curved.
The kiss wasn't rushed. It unfolded slowly, like the night itself was giving them permission. Soft at first, a careful meeting. Then closer. Warmer. Her hands slid up to his shoulders. His found her waist. The city disappeared entirely.
There was no fireworks this time. No audience. Just the quiet echo of their breath in the narrow street and the steady certainty of each other.
When they parted, she didn't step back. She stayed close, nose brushing his.
"We're terrible at dates," she whispered.
He smiled. "This is the best one I've ever had."
"Low bar."
"Unbeatable competition."
She laughed under her breath and kissed him again, quick and light, like punctuation.
They eventually resumed walking, but slower now. Unhurried in a different way. Belle leaned into his side. He draped an arm around her shoulders without thinking. Their steps synced naturally.
The city lights thinned behind them.
Ahead, a small park opened between buildings, grass glowing faintly under moonlight. Fireflies drifted lazily above the ground, their glow gentle and steady. A single bench sat beneath a tree heavy with silver leaves.
Belle pulled him toward it.
They sat. The wood was cool. The night air wrapped around them, calm and forgiving. She curled into his side, resting her head on his shoulder. He tilted his head against hers.
No words were needed.
They watched the fireflies weave slow patterns. Somewhere far away, a final firework cracked, distant and fading. The city was settling into sleep.
Sebastian felt Belle's breathing even out. Not asleep, just peaceful. He'd learned the difference.
He kissed the top of her head.
She smiled without opening her eyes.
They stayed like that until the sky began to pale at the edges, the first hint of dawn creeping in. Neither of them commented on the passing time. The night had given them exactly what it promised: a pocket of quiet in a world that rarely stopped moving.
When Belle finally lifted her head, her hair was a mess and she didn't care.
"We should go back," she said reluctantly.
"We should," he agreed, making no move to stand.
She looked at him.
He looked back.
They both laughed softly.
Eventually, they rose. Hand in hand again. The city greeted them with the fragile light of early morning, streets washed clean of celebration, smelling faintly of rain and smoke and sugar.
They walked home together.
Not as saviors. Not as weapons. Not as symbols.
Just two people who had stolen a night and filled it with warmth.
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