“That’s the Lycan King?” Dahlia’s face was pressed against my window pane as she looked out towards the procession being held for the Lycan King. He'd been in our pack for two days now, and it was easy to say that I had been avoiding him.
I kept waiting for him to make a big scene and accuse my parents for their deceit or reject me and order for Dahlia to be made his, but he didn't.
My head hung between my legs as my fears threatened to kill me. “Are you alright?” Dahlia asked as she rubbed slow circles around my back.
“Why are you being so nice? It's unnerving”, I knew better than to believe she was suddenly willing to change her attitude towards me for genuine reasons.
She ignored my question and continued, “Mother told me that you and the Lycan King were locked in Father’s study for hours.”
“It wasn’t hours, Dahlia…and we weren’t ‘locked in’ or anything of the sorts…Goddess!” She drew back, her guilty eyes watching me warily.
“I know I’m probably the last person you want to see right now, and I’m sorry that you’re being shoved into my duty—” here we go with the pity talk “—But I’m truly sorry. I couldn’t stand with my family and marry this man and now, you’re being made to.”
“Honestly, Dahlia, he’s not that bad. And I think the rumors are just what they are; rumors.”
“You’re only saying that because your husband is a hottie.” She said, going back to stare out of the window. “---I don’t know why my mother was so against him. She normally disregards the tales people circulate.”
My lips were pinched in a thin line as I watched her, her gaze riveting outside the window. Apparently, she had now taken a liking to the Lycan King. I sighed exasperatedly and she turned to me.
“Would you like to get married to him instead?” I asked, her eyes bulging out of their sockets as she waved her arms in front of her. “There’s now way, Phelia. That man is like ten times bigger than me.”
Her eyes raked down my figure and she realized that I was even smaller than her. I guess the realization caused her to shut up. She smiled tightly and stood up, “I think mother would be searching for me. She doesn’t want me wandering around now that the Lycan King’s people are free to roam the house”, she said as she walked out of my room, leaving me to deal with my riotous thoughts alone.
I thought back on Rafael’s confrontation days ago. It didn’t make any sense that he wanted to cover-up father’s trickery, despite being aware of the whole truth about my family. I couldn't understand why he would choose my devotion over his revenge.
I shivered and stood from my bed, pulling on a sweater over my cotton gown. The festivity was still ongoing, letting me know that father was still preoccupied. I put on my slippers and headed downstairs, making sure no one saw me as I slipped into his library. Father sometimes used this space as his office, although no one really knew that.
It was for this reason that Lucretia had banned Dahlia and I from entering Father's study, even though I was the only one in the family who actively read. I started sneaking into Father's study so frequently that I even got used to navigating my way in the darkness. As I walked into the study, I headed freely in the dark towards the light switch and turned it on after which I turned to head towards my favorite section.
“Fuck-–”, I said , as I was startled to see Rafael in my father's study. A pale man stood beside him and I realized that I’d seen the new man before, although now I could see the striking resemblance he bore with Rafael. Are they brothers?
“What are you doing here?” I asked, trying to invoke as much force in my voice, as I didn't want to seem intimidated by their presence since they were the real culprits here.
“I was interested in your botanical...” Rafael gripped the other man's arm, stopping him from continuing his narrative. The man understood Rafael's reaction and quickly dropped a binder on the large center desk.
“If you’ll excuse me”, he said, tilting his head as he rushed out of the study. While I wanted to run out with him in order to get away from Rafael, I forced myself to remain still.
“I’m glad that it’s you. It’d have been awkward to explain why Xander and I are away from the festivity being held in my honour”, he said.
“Who is Xander?” I asked.
“My brother”. He pickedup the binder that his brother, Xander had placed on the desk and handed it to me. Confused, I looked down at the folder, spying the numbers written on it. My brows furrowed even more when I realized the content of the binder.
“Why are you looking through my father’s ledgers?” I asked, my tone alert and wary.
“Because your father is being naughty. I got news that he’s aiding a pack; one that has an unruly Alpha who’s always ready to butt heads with me.” He scoffed as he said this.
“You’re referring to Alpha Camden?” I’d heard about Father’s friend and how brave he was in front of the cruel Lycan King.
“You know him? The information must be true then, if Kieran’s children know of this man.”
I frowned at his insinuation— “You don’t know your parent’s friends?” He laughed at my question, plucking the binder from my arms and slamming it shut.
“My parents were betrayed by those closest to them, so that’ll be a no. If I knew their friends, they'd all be dead by now”, he threatened as he pushed the binder back into its spot on the shelf.
“I couldn’t find what I was looking for anyway and I’m due to head back to my territory tomorrow. But it’s no issue”, he said, a mischievous grin plastered on his lips.
The way he smiled had my hackles rising, and I knew what he was going to suggest even before he said it. “You’re going to help me get proof of your father’s treachery, Ophelia. You’re mine now, remember?”
I didn't know whether to laugh or cry as I stared at him in disbelief.
The fire didn’t burn us.Not in the way we expected.It peeled. It seared. But not flesh identity.As we passed through the threshold of Valden’s Gate, the air turned thick and golden, like walking through breath made of heat. The ground pulsed beneath each step, sand turning to glass, then back to ash. The walls were molten stone, veined with veins of obsidian that flickered with runes too old to name.Every heartbeat echoed. Every thought felt loud.Rafael kept pace beside me, sweat glistening on his brow. Dahlia walked with one hand on the stone wall, whispering translations under her breath. Seris’s eyes glowed faintly with a red hue, her breath shallow but controlled.This place wasn’t just hot. It was alive.The Chamber of TrialAfter what felt like hours, the tunnel opened into a wide chamber.A circle of flame burned in the center.No fuel. No scent.Just heat. Color. Will.Seven stone seats formed a ring around the flame, but only one was lit by its glow.As we entered, a voi
The snow thinned as we rode south.What began as frost and stillness soon gave way to red clay earth, then dry wind and sun-cracked stone. The transition from Elarion's chill to Valden's burn was not merely physical. It was elemental.The first gate tested memory.The second would test endurance.Seris said she dreamed of flame trees that bled sand, and skies that whispered names into her bones. Dahlia worked feverishly with her maps, trying to match the stars of the desert to the shifting sigils above the Hollow. She muttered phrases in old tongues, drawing arcane alignments in the dust as if decoding something older than language.And Rafael, ever alert, rode closer to me now than ever before."This time," he said, "I walk through the Gate with you."I didn’t argue. This gate would not be mine alone to face.The Desert of the ForgottenWe reached the outskirts of Valden after seven days of heat, stone, and shadow.The desert was a graveyard of broken monuments half-buried statues wi
I emerged from the Gate like a breath rising from cold water.The air hit me like a rebirth sharp, immediate, alive. Snow clung to my cloak. My lungs burned. The frost hadn’t retreated, but it no longer felt foreign. It felt like mine.The others were waiting. Rafael had arrived.He stood beside Dahlia, her eyes wide, her face pale. Seris knelt in the snow with her palms pressed to the earth, whispering something to the ice.Rafael rushed to me. "You were gone for two hours. We couldn’t follow you."I looked at the horizon."I wasn’t just gone. I was elsewhere."The Gate’s EchoBehind me, the Elarion tower pulsed.No longer cracked.Its glass shimmered with gentle light, the fracture sealed not with frost but with choice.The Gate had accepted my answer.And now, its silence was not warning.It was waiting.A new harmony had settled over the landscape, as though even the wind was listening now.ReunionRafael touched my hand, his warmth grounding me. "What did you see?""Versions of m
I emerged from the Gate like a breath rising from cold water.The air hit me like a rebirth sharp, immediate, alive. Snow clung to my cloak. My lungs burned. The frost hadn’t retreated, but it no longer felt foreign. It felt like mine.The others were waiting. Rafael had arrived.He stood beside Dahlia, her eyes wide, her face pale. Seris knelt in the snow with her palms pressed to the earth, whispering something to the ice.Rafael rushed to me. "You were gone for two hours. We couldn’t follow you."I looked at the horizon."I wasn’t just gone. I was elsewhere."The Gate’s EchoBehind me, the Elarion tower pulsed.No longer cracked.Its glass shimmered with gentle light, the fracture sealed not with frost but with choice.The Gate had accepted my answer.And now, its silence was not warning.It was waiting.A new harmony had settled over the landscape, as though even the wind was listening now.ReunionRafael touched my hand, his warmth grounding me. "What did you see?""Versions of m
I stepped into the Gate.The world vanished in an instant.No sound. No snow. No wind. Only an endless expanse of mirrored frost, stretching outward in every direction. My breath fogged, but I saw no sky. No ceiling. No walls. It was as if I had fallen into the breath between moments, into a silence that remembered everything.Elarion wasn’t a place.It was a memory.And I was inside it.ReflectionsI walked forward though I could not say how far or how long. Every step echoed, not around me, but inside me. It was as though the Gate was not simply showing me something it was reading me.As I moved, the mirrors began to shimmer.Each one showed a different version of my life.In one, I ruled the Crescent Court as queen, my enemies kneeling.In another, I bore a daughter with Rafael, our family whole and unbroken.In a third, I was alone a shadow walking the Hollow, never choosing love, never touching fire.There were more.A hundred versions of me. Some joyful. Some monstrous. Some bro
The journey north felt different this time.I was not a queen on a warpath or a prophet heeding a vision. I was something smaller, simpler, and yet heavierA woman returning to the part of herself she had buried beneath the snow.We rode fast.Xander led a handful of Hollow blooded scouts while Seris rode beside me, silent but focused. Behind us, the wind carried no sound but the crunch of hooves over frostbitten earth. Even the air felt muted, as though the world was holding its breath.The ice thickened. The trees thinned.And ahead, the sky changed.It turned glassy.And the light bent wrong.Elarion was close.Arrival at the TowerThe black tower emerged from the snow like a blade stabbed into the sky.Dahlia stood near the stone perimeter, her cloak rimmed in frost, her posture alert.When I dismounted, she didn’t speak. She only opened her hand to show me the ring I’d given her, now cracked down the center."It started last night," she said. "The Gate is bleeding memories."Seri