Jewel House Of: Lust

It was a whole life. A whole love story. A beautiful, fabricated hell.

She placed it on the pedestal.

Lira had spent three years diving deeper than anyone, selling shards to afford a single ticket to the upper city. Not to find him. Just to stand where he had stood. Pathetic. Pure. And utterly hungry.

The door would open only if the desire was true, and only if it hurt. Lira was a diver. Her lungs were forged in the pressure depths below Aethelgard, where she harvested fallen star-shards from the mud. Her hands were scarred, her hair bleached white from the chemical fog. She had no business seeking out the Jewel House. But she had a name on her tongue like a splinter she couldn’t swallow. jewel house of lust

In the floating city of Aethelgard, where the rich sailed on silks and the poor dived for scrap metal in the cloud-fog below, there was a legend whispered only in the amber-lit backrooms of brothels and gambling dens: the Jewel House of Lust.

She walked down the corridor. Each gem offered a different flavor of lust. A fiery orange stone showed her a brutal, possessive Kaelen—tearing her clothes off in a rain-soaked alley, claiming her like territory. A pale green one showed her a gentle, sick Kaelen—she was nursing him through a fever, his hand weak in hers, her love as pure as mercy. A black diamond showed her nothing but a bed and a shadow that wore his shape, and the lust there was not for him, but for her own pain.

Lira tore her eyes away. The gem dimmed, satisfied. It was a whole life

In the gem, she was dancing with Kaelen at a masquerade ball. Her scars were gone. Her hair was long and dark. He was whispering something in her ear, and she was laughing—a laugh she had never laughed, light and free. The scene shifted: they were kissing in a rain of rose petals. Then tangled in white sheets. Then arguing in a garden, her voice sharp with love. Then him leaving, her crying, him coming back.

It wasn’t a brothel, not exactly. It was a museum. A vault. A theater of one.

The door opened. Inside, the air smelled of honey and rust. The Jewel House was a single long corridor lined with alcoves, each containing a gem the size of a fist. Rubies, sapphires, emeralds—but wrong. They pulsed. They breathed. When Lira stepped close to the first one, a deep violet amethyst, she saw herself inside it. She placed it on the pedestal

She understood then. The Jewel House didn’t show you your desire. It showed you every possible version of it, every hungry angle, until the wanting became a kind of horror.

Not her reflection. A memory she had never lived.

She whispered her own.