KAIA'S POV:
The walls of the principal’s office feel like they’re closing in on me. My palms are sweaty, heart thundering as I step inside. Principal Davis sits stiffly behind her desk, her lips pressed into a thin line. But it’s the two unfamiliar people seated across from her that make my stomach sink. Social workers. I’ve seen enough movies to recognize that kind of calm, the kind they put on when they’re about to drop a bombshell. Tight-lipped kindness. Gentle voices. Soft destruction. "Kaia," Principal Davis says, her voice unnervingly gentle. "Please, have a seat." I hope I'm not in any trouble but I can't even think of anything that can cause social services to show up here except... I hover for a second, already on edge, then drop into the chair like I’m about to be sentenced. The woman to her right leans forward, her blazer too neat, her clipboard too full. "My name is Mrs. Jennings, and this is Mr. Cole. We’re from Child Protective Services." Panic skitters through me, fast and sharp. "Is something wrong?" Mrs. Jennings and Mr. Cole exchange a look that makes my insides twist. Mr. Cole adjusts his tie, like the truth is a little too tight around his throat. "Your foster parents were arrested early this morning," Mrs. Jennings says. "Drug trafficking." Foster? The words hang in the air like a punch I didn’t see coming. I blink. Once. Twice. "What?" She repeats it. Slower. Softer. But the second time doesn’t help. "That’s not... they wouldn’t. I’ve lived with them forever. They are my parents. Why would you call them foster parents? And I'm sure ther must be a misunderstanding. They will never do such a thing. They’re just... strict." They are just lying to me. It's probably just one big misunderstanding. Mr. Cole folds his hands. "Kaia. You’re not their biological daughter." Silence crashes over me like thunder. I stare at them. At Principal Davis. At nothing. The world tilts on its axis. "What do you mean I’m not their daughter?" My voice is barely a whisper. Mrs. Jennings opens a folder. “You were adopted under unusual circumstances. There were gaps in your file. Things we only found out because of the investigation.” "This is a mistake," I mumble. "There’s no one else. It's always just been me and them." "There is someone else," she says, carefully. "Your biological family. You have three older brothers. They live in Canada. I shake my head, slow, like if I go slow enough the lie will unravel itself. "No. I don’t have brothers. I'm the only child." "You do." Mr. Cole’s tone is kind, but it doesn’t help. "And they’ve agreed to take you in." Everything inside me hollows out. "You will have to go home tonight and pack because we cannot let you live alone there much longer. You are not a legal adult yet, unfortunately." Mrs. Jennings says. "We’ve already arranged your flight for tomorrow morning." These people are not serious are they? They just want to drop a bomb on me an proceed to ship me off to a country I've never been to before. Is this a soap opera?? "Tomorrow?" My voice rises. I can’t help it. "You’re just... just shipping me off like luggage?" "This isn’t punishment, Kaia. This is a chance to be with your real family." I want to laugh. Hysterically. Bitterly. "My real family?" I choke. "Where were they when I was six and hiding bruises under sweaters in summer? When I had to teach myself how to cook because my foster mom said I ate like a pig? When I begged not to be left alone with-" Everything starts coming out before I can catch myself. My voice breaks. I suck in a breath and look away. Principal Davis clears her throat. She’s suddenly fascinated by her stapler. Did I really think she would even care? I stand too quickly. My chair scrapes the floor with a screech. "I need to go." "Kaia-" Mrs. Jennings starts. But I’m already walking out, my breath shallow, vision blurry. I don't want their pity party. I don’t remember leaving the office. Don’t remember stepping outside the school. But suddenly the sun is too bright, the air too loud, and everything feels fake. I walk home in a daze, the cold biting at my cheeks, but I don’t notice. I don’t notice anything until I’m standing in the doorway of the house I never wanted to call home. Inside, it smells like bleach and old secrets. The TV is off. The silence presses against me. I walk down the narrow hallway, into the room I’ve hated since I was old enough to understand what hate was. Everything in here is familiar, but suddenly it all looks foreign. Like a stage set. A bad imitation of a life. I sit on the edge of the bed. The mattress sinks slightly under my weight. My fingers twitch as I glance around the room; white walls, creaky floorboards, the same purple curtain I begged for when I was eight because I thought maybe if my room looked happier, I’d feel happier too. A framed photo sits on my nightstand. I pick it up. It’s of me at five years old, sitting stiffly on my foster father’s lap. I’m smiling, but my eyes aren’t. His hand is on my shoulder, just a little too tight. I never noticed it before. Or maybe I did, and I buried it. I stare at the photo for a long second before my hand moves on its own. It crashes to the floor and shatters. Glass shards glitter on the carpet like bitter confetti. I don’t breathe. I just sit there and look at the pieces of my past scattered around me. Sharp. Irreparable. And then.... I cry. Not the quiet tears I’ve mastered over the years. Not the kind you hide behind a pillow at night. This time, I cry like my soul is being wrung out. Loud. Messy. Ugly. Because my entire life? It’s been a lie. Everything I thought I knew is gone. A fake family. A fake home. A childhood I was barely surviving through and it wasn’t even mine. And now I’m supposed to just leave. Get on a plane. Meet three complete strangers and call them brothers? I fall back onto the bed, my face buried in the pillow, letting the sobs take me under. The kind of cry that leaves you breathless and hollow. For the first time in a long time, I don’t try to be strong. I don’t try to be okay. Because I’m not. I don’t know if I ever was.SONG OF THE CHAPTER: WAIT FOR YOU BY MELVITTO AND OXLADE.LUCIEN'S POV:****Seris stands beneath the canopy of silver-streaked trees, moonlight catching on her pale hair as if the sky itself had woven it. Her presence is quiet but commanding, the kind of stillness that makes the wind pause. I’m not sure what I expect when she finally speaks, but her voice is gentle and sound like it is velvet-wrapped steel. "I am Seris of the Moonblood," she says, her gaze fixed directly on me. "Descendant of Lunari, the lunar god who once walked with wolves."The words roll over me like a forgotten tide. Rhea stiffens beside me. Nyrielle, ever-watchful, narrows her eyes but says nothing. Seris continues, stepping forward, the edges of her cloak brushing the dusted grass. "I carry the blood of the first Moon-Blessed. My presence here is not accident, Stormwalker. It is the fulfillment of prophecy." The air grows colder, but not unpleasant. It's the kind of chill that reminds you you
CHAPTER 116: BEYOND THE VEILRHEA'S POV:SONG OF THE CHAPTER: WHEN THE WORLD IS ENDING BY JSAXE.~~~ The Guen Packhouse feels heavier now. Like every stone has memorized Rowan’s silence. I walk slowly through the corridor, my boots nearly silent against the rune-laced floor. Lucien trails behind me, his steps slower than usual, weighted by something he isn’t saying. Nyrielle waits outside the room, her expression unreadable, her wings clutched tightly to her sides. Ezra’s pacing just outside Rowan’s door. “We’ve tried everything,” he mutters, not looking at me. “He’s breathing, but he’s not... there. He is not waking up ” “I have to try,” I say quietly. My voice doesn’t ask permission, it never could, not when it comes to family. I at least have to try something... Right? Inside, Rowan looks... too still. His chest rises and falls in even beats, but there’s no light behind his eyelids, no spark of the man who once led entire warrooms with nothing but a look. This fe
LUCIEN'S POV:SONG OF THE CHAPTER: LOVE U BY HOWL I stand on the cliffs just outside the Guen stronghold, stormclouds coiled tightly above me, the sky too still to be trusted. The scent of rain lingers, but it hasn't fallen. It's as if the sky itself is holding its breath. Elen stands beside me, silver-blue hair dancing like a banner in the wind. He is watching the sky too, but his expression is calm... too calm. "You're not just a stormwalker," he says finally, voice quiet like thunder before the quake. "You're the turning key." I arch a brow. "You’ve said that before. Vaguely and mysteriously. Like a damn Windborne oracle. Care to be less poetic and more useful?" Elen turns his strange, cloud-swirled eyes to mine. "Fine. The prophecy calls you the Stormwalker; he who walks the edge of storms, who splits fate from ruin with a single breath. But that path doesn’t end with the Boundless."Oh, more trouble? Nice. The wind howls as he says it, like the very air is trying
CHAPTER 114: DRAGONHEARTPOV: RheaSONG OF THE CHAPTER: The first thing I notice when I wake up is the silence. Not the kind that is comforting and not the kind that means rest. This one is loud. It echoes in the bones of my ears and pulses inside my chest like a space that used to hold something important but now just rings hollow.My body feels strange. Not broken, not bruised. Just... feels borrowed. Like it belongs to someone else now. I blink at the ceiling above me which is carved with stone, shifting patterns like wind trapped in rock and I can feel Lucien before I see him. His presence wraps around me like a storm barely held at bay."You're awake." His voice is soft but raspy, like he's used it too many times while I was unconscious. I turn my head. He’s seated beside the bed, dark hair a mess, storm eyes rimmed red. His hand tightens around mine before I even realize he’s holding it. "Three days," he whispers. "You didn’t move for three days."My mouth is d
CHAPTER 113: AFTERSTORMLUCIEN'S POV:SONG OF THIS CHAPTER: NEED YOU BY FIREBOY DML~~~ The room is too quiet, too still and I hate how loud my thoughts get in its silence. Rhea hasn’t stirred since the Crown fused into her. It’s been three days, a freaking seventy-two hours of not hearing her voice, not seeing her eyes or feeling her fire through the bond.And gods, I miss her fire. I sit beside her, my hand closed around hers like it’s the only thing keeping her tethered. I count her breaths obsessively. One every five seconds. Soft and shallow. Her skin is warmer than normal, like the sun lives in her veins now. The dragon mark on her wrist pulses faintly every few minutes, flickering gold and ember-red, like it’s remembering what she’s become. Nyrielle told me it would happen. That after the shards merged, Rhea would need time to re-forge herself. But what no one told me is that it would feel like waiting for death. I haven’t slept. I barely eat. Rowan sends food
CHAPTER 112: CROWN OF THREEPOV: RHEASONG OF THE CHAPTER: MY DEMONS BY STARSET (ACOUSTIC)~~(MOMENTS BEFORE THE DREMARI DIES:)The wind is too quiet.It’s the kind of stillness that only comes after something sacred has shattered. The kind that hangs heavy in your lungs, tastes like copper and grief. The Dremari lies on the stone altar, more shadow than substance now. His form is flickering each breath a struggle, each movement like smoke curling in reverse. The crater around us glows faintly, the remains of his protection spell still etched in the cracked ground. I kneel beside him, the others keeping back with Lucien standing closest with his jaw tight and fists trembling. Rowan leans heavily on one arm and blood trailing down the ruin of the other. Nyrielle crouches next to Elen, trying to keep him conscious.And the Dremari… he’s dying. “I’m not ready,” I whisper. My voice is hoarse. “Don’t leave yet. You haven’t told me how.”His head turns slowly toward me. His eyes ar