The air in the iridium pits was a dense, metallic vacuum, a place where the earth's most unyielding element was kept in a state of silent, eternal cold.
Xuan sat on a jagged slab of silver-white ore, his fingers tracing the crystalline structure of a metal that had arrived on the wings of a fallen star.
"The world is hardening tonight, Ning. I can hear the city above forging its own shields, trying to find a weight that can crush the ghost of us," he rasped.
The extreme level of his jealousy had turned the very concept of durability into a rival, as if the iridium were trying to outlast his memory of her.
Ning stood in the center of the vault, her body a pale, celestial ghost in the dim light, her eyes two dark voids that pulled the silver radiance in.
"Let it harden. The strength of the surface is just a brittle shell. My only true anchor is the way your obsession sinks into the core of my soul," she whispered.
She walked toward him, her movements leaving faint, metallic echoes in the stagnant air, her extreme level of misery seeking the anchor of his presence.
Xuan didn't offer a hand; he watched the silver dust coat her shoulders, his eyes burning with a possessive need to be her only impenetrable wall of pain.
"Wei Chen bought a satellite array today. I heard it on the deep-space band. He's trying to bounce a signal off the stars just to see if you're still breathing."
The misunderstanding was a jagged blade he kept sharpened; he couldn't see the rival's search as anything but a claim on her cosmic, silent history.
Ning's face contorted with an extreme anger; she grabbed a piece of the iridium-crust, her knuckles white and skeletal in the flickering, dim light.
"He's looking at signals! He's looking for a pulse while I'm right here, living in the iridium and the absolute fire of your heart, Xuan!"
Her extreme level of cryingness returned, a sudden, jagged flood of her soul that the silver metal turned into streaks of shimmering lead on her skin.
Xuan's jealousy flared into a manic energy; he pulled her up until they were chest-to-chest, his breath hot and smelling of the dry, ancient earth.
"I'll find a way to scramble the array. I'll turn his satellites into a pile of drifting junk so he can see what it feels like to have no sky left to hold."
The extreme level of his possessiveness was a physical hunger, a need to dismantle the rival's vision until nothing was left but the current debt.
"Don't go back up. The surface is a vacuum of lies. I'd rather have you here in the silver than lose you to a world that wants a signal."
Ning's extreme level of devotion was the only thing keeping her heart beating, a sheer act of will that defied the toxic, heavy pressure of the pit.
Xuan looked down at her, his expression a mask of shattering, extreme misery, and he buried his face in her hair, his body shaking with a sob.
"I won't leave. I'll stay until the iridium turns to dust. I'll stay until the earth forgets that there was ever a sun or a sky above us, Ning."
The misunderstanding of the surface—that they were victims—was the only mercy the world had left to give them in their self-imposed, lethal exile.
Xuan stood up, carrying her through the narrow passage where the walls were thick with the silver soot of a thousand forgotten industrial shifts.
"We're moving toward the old thallium wells. It's a blue tomb of silence. No one has checked the levels since the last ghost was bottled below."
He set her down on a pile of raw mineral, his hands immediately searching her body for any signs of the metal-burns or the dry, cold air.
"You're silver, Ning. The earth is trying to steal the light I gave you. I should have wrapped you in the silk from the first night in the vault."
His jealousy was so extreme that he was now envious of the very iridium for being able to touch her skin, as if it were a rival trying to bond.
He began to rub her skin with a manic, obsessive intensity, his movements predatory and ritualistic, a claim of total, absolute ownership over her.
Ning leaned into him, her throat exposed to the dark, her misery turning into a jagged, ecstatic peace under the weight of his obsession.
"The silk is gone. The night is a memory. I only want the friction of your hands, even if they turn my heart into a cold, silver ghost," she crooned.
The 133rd chapter of their descent was a study in the narrowing of a world, a place where two people became the only two points of gravity.
The misunderstanding of the world above—that they were dead—was the shield they used to build their own private comedy of pain and love.
Xuan pulled a heavy iron bar from the wall, his mind already calculating how to collapse the shaft that led to the city's aerospace center.
"I'll bury the rockets. I'll turn their center into a hole in the ground so they can see the void you really live in, away from their stars."
Ning watched him, her heart aching with an extreme level of devotion that saw his paranoia as the ultimate form of a love letter to her soul.
"Bury it all. I don't want their sky. The sky is where people lie. I only want to be the truth in your eyes, in the shadows of the iridium."
The extreme level of her possessiveness over their secret was her only pride, the only thing she left of the girl who once owned a name.
Xuan returned to her side, his face covered in the dust of the deep, looking like a ghost that had finally found its silver, toxic throne.
"You are mine. In the iridium, in the silver, in the silence. Mine."
The misunderstanding was a distant memory, a flicker of light at the end of a very long, very dark hallway they had long since abandoned.
They were the only two inhabitants of their own private universe, a place where extreme love was the only law and jealousy was the only god.
Xuan lay down beside her, his body a barricade against the cold, his arms a cage that promised a safety the light could never provide.
Ning closed her eyes, the rhythm of his heart a lullaby that drowned out the whispers of the past and the hum of the city above.
They were safe. They were alone. They were together.
And in the darkness of the thallium well, the debt was finally, irrevocably, and beautifully cancelled by the weight of their shared obsession.
Xuan's hand remained on her throat, a gentle, possessive pressure that reminded her she was alive only because he permitted her to breathe.
And in that pressure, Ning found the only security she had ever known, a love so extreme it was indistinguishable from a beautiful death.
They were Xuan and Ning, and they were the masters of their own destruction, a couple bound by a love that was too extreme for the living.
The chapter closed on a darkness so heavy it felt like the weight of the entire world was pressing down on their locked, cold, and smiling lips.
They were happy in their own, twisted way, two broken mirrors reflecting each other's shadows until there was nothing left but the silver dark.
The debt was a ghost, the rival was a memory, and the love was a cage that they had built with their own hands out of blood and iridium.
And in the absolute blackness of the shaft, the only light was the spark of an obsession that refused to be extinguished by the weight of the world.
The end of the day was the beginning of their forever, a cycle of obsession that would repeat until the earth itself forgot the sound of their names.
The 133rd chapter of their descent ended in a silence so profound it felt like the weight of the entire world was pressing down on their lips.
But they didn't mind the weight; they were together, and in the kingdom of the buried, that was the only truth that held any weight at all.
