“Ember?” she whispered.
The girl’s eyes fluttered open—fully this time. Gold shimmered in her irises, bright and clear. Isla’s breath caught.
Ember blinked, then spoke. “He’s coming.” Her voice was soft, but certain. Not frightened. Not confused.
“Who?” Isla asked gently.
Ember’s gaze drifted toward the window. “The one who watches. He doesn’t like Kael.” Isla’s heart thudded. “You are safe. I promise.” Ember nodded once, then closed her eyes again, she was not unconscious, just resting. Her breathing remained steady.
Isla stepped back, pulse racing. She needed Kael. Now.
She found Kael outside the emergency exit, still speaking to the silver-haired man. Their conversation was hushed, urgent. Isla did not wait.
“She’s awake,” she said, voice sharp. “Your sister just spoke.”
Kael turned instantly, his expression shifting from guarded to fierce. “What did she say?
“She said someone is coming. Someone who does not like you.”
Kael’s jaw clenched. “Did she say anything else?”
“She knew you weren’t in the room. She asked for you.”
He moved past her without another word.
Isla grabbed his arm. “Kael, you need to tell me what is going on. This is not just a fever or trauma. She’s—”
“She’s shifting,” he said, eyes locked on the hallway. “And that means she’s vulnerable.”
Isla did not let go. “You said she’s the key. To what?”
Kael’s gaze flicked to the man behind him, then back to Isla. “To everything.”
He pulled free and strode toward the ward, urgency in every step.
Isla stood in the corridor, stunned. Her fingers tingled where they’d gripped his arm, the heat of his skin lingering like a warning. She had come to Southridge for a fresh start. A quiet life. Healing. Instead, she had walked into a storm, and Ember was at the centre of it.
She pressed a hand to her chest, trying to slow her breathing. The corridor felt colder now, despite the heat rising from Ember’s room. She’d felt this before—after her brother’s final code blue. That same sense of being on the edge of something irreversible.
Thunder rolled again, louder this time. The lights above her buzzed, then dimmed for half a second. She looked up. Something was coming. She could feel it in her bones.
She turned, sensing eyes on her.
The silver-haired man watched Kael disappear down the corridor, then turned his gaze to Isla. His name was Thorne—a former Ashen sentry, now Kael’s most trusted advisor. His eyes, pale grey and sharp as flint, missed nothing.
He’d seen Kael in battle. Seen him bloodied, broken, and unflinching.
But this—this woman—unsettled him.
Thorne had noticed the way Kael looked at Isla. Not just with concern. With heat. With restraint. Like he was holding back something that could burn them both. And Isla—she didn’t even know what she was standing in. Not yet.
She was striking. Fierce in her own quiet way. But Thorne had lived long enough to know what happened when fire met flesh.
He stepped back into the shadows, watching Isla with the same quiet intensity he once reserved for enemies. She was part of this now. Whether she knew it or not.
And the storm was only just beginning.
Thorne’s Memory
He remembered the first time he met Kael and Ember.
They were children then—Kael barely ten, Ember still in her mother’s arms. The Ashen Territory had been quiet that season, the clans in uneasy truce. Thorne had been assigned to patrol the outer perimeter, and Kael’s father, Darian Draven, had invited him to stay for the solstice fire.
Darian had been a leader in every sense—strong, fair, and fiercely protective. His wife, Lyra, had eyes like Ember’s: gold and knowing. She’d held Ember close that night, whispering lullabies in a language older than flame.
Kael had sat beside the fire, silent but watchful. Even then, he had the look of someone who carried too much. Thorne had offered him a blade carved from obsidian. Kael hadn’t thanked him. He’d simply nodded, as if accepting a burden.
The Hollow Clan attacked three nights later.
Thorne had fought through smoke and screams, but by the time he reached the Draven homestead, it was too late. Darian and Lyra were gone. Ember was untouched, glowing in the wreckage. Kael stood over her, blood on his hands, eyes burning with something Thorne had never seen in a child: fury and grief braided into purpose.
Thorne had sworn then to protect them. Not because of duty. Because of what he saw in Kael’s eyes.
Now, watching Isla, he saw the same flicker. The same pull toward something human.
Toward something dangerous.
And he feared what it might cost.
The wind shifted, yet not a single breeze stirred outside. Instead, it was a palpable change within the walls of Southridge Hospital—an almost electric tension that vibrated through the sterile corridors. A faint metallic scent, reminiscent of blood and machinery, clung to the air, a haunting reminder of the unnatural.Kael felt it first, a primal instinct prickling at the nape of his neck. He turned sharply, his heart pounding in his chest as his eyes narrowed toward the far end of the ward where shadows pooled. Everything appeared still—no alarms blaring, no footsteps shuffling along the linoleum floor. But the silence was deceptive, hiding an unsettling kind of wrongness that no monitor could detect or quantify.Ember stirred in her bed, her golden eyes darting anxiously toward the same darkened hallway that had captured Kael’s attention. “They’re close,” she whispered, her voice barely above a breath, laced with fear and urgency.Kael crossed the room in two decisive strides, crou
Isla sat beside Ember’s bed, her voice low, her movements slow. The girl’s eyes were open now—clear, golden, watching everything.“You’re feeling better,” Isla said softly, adjusting the blanket with practised care.Ember nodded.Kael stood near the door, arms folded, gaze locked on his sister. He did not speak, but Isla felt the weight of his presence. Protective. Tense. Like he was waiting for something to go wrong.She glanced at him, then back to Ember. “Do you remember anything? From before you woke?”Ember hesitated. Her fingers curled slightly against the sheets. “Dreams,” she said.The overhead light flickered.Isla stilled.“What kind of dreams?” she asked gently.Ember’s voice was quiet, but steady. “I saw you. Not clearly. Just… pieces. Your voice. Your hands. You were near.”Isla’s breath caught. “You’ve seen me before?”Ember nodded. “I think so. Before I woke up.”Kael shifted. Isla looked up—his jaw was tight, his eyes dark with warning. Not anger. Not malice. Fear.She
The room was quiet again. Not the heavy kind, like sleep or sedation. This was the kind of quiet that listened. That waited.Ember lay still, her body warm but no longer burning. The fever had passed. Or maybe it had changed—become something else. Something she could hold.Her skin tingled. Not painfully. Just… aware. The sheets felt too soft. The air too sharp. The light above her shimmered like water. Even the hum of the monitor pulsed like a second heartbeat.Everything felt louder. Closer. Like the world had leaned in.Her eyes drifted to the figures beside her bed.Kael. Isla.They did not speak. Not to each other. Not while they worked. But Ember saw the way Isla’s hand lingered on the chart. The way Kael’s shoulders tensed when she moved too close. The way their silence was not empty—it was full.Have they met before? Ember wondered.It felt like they had. Not in the way grown-ups meant names, handshakes and paperwork. But in the way fire met wind. In the way two things collide
Isla stood beside him, close enough that the edge of her uniform brushed his arm each time she adjusted the monitor’s cables. The soft click of the blood pressure cuff echoed between them, louder than the silence. Kael did not flinch. Did not speak.His focus was clinical, his eyes scanning Ember’s vitals, fingers steady on the chart. But the tension in his shoulders betrayed him. Isla saw it. She felt it. The way his body held itself too still, like he was bracing for something, or someone.“You missed her last set,” Isla said quietly. Not accusing—just stating. Her voice was low, almost careful.“I had to take a call,” he replied, still not looking at her.She nodded, but the air between them thickened. Not with blame. With everything unsaid. The way he had not answered her message. The silence in the break room. The way he stood so close now and yet, he still felt a million miles away.He reached for the thermometer, his hand brushed hers—just for a second. Just enough. Neither of
Kael stepped into the burn unit like a man crossing a threshold he had feared for years. The air was warmer now—not clinical, not sterile. It pulsed with something alive.Ember lay awake, her golden eyes fixed on him the moment he entered.“Kael,” she whispered.He was beside her in two strides, kneeling at her bedside, brushing her hair back with a gentleness that didn’t match the fire in his veins.“I’m here, little flame,” he murmured. “You’re safe.”Ember’s lips trembled. “It hurts less now.”Kael nodded. “That is because you are stronger. You are shifting. Slowly. But it is happening.”She looked past him, toward the door. “The nurse—Isla. She is kind.”“She is,” Kael said softly. “But she’s not one of us.”Ember frowned. “She helped me.”“I know,” he said, voice low. “But kindness does not mean safety. You know that, little flame.”He took her hand, warm and steady. Her skin glowed faintly—not just with warmth, but with something deeper. Like embers beneath the surface. Kael cou
The monitors beeped steadily, but Isla barely heard them. She was focused on Ember’s breathing—slow, rhythmic, stronger than before. The girl’s skin glowed faintly, not with fever, but with warmth. Controlled. Alive.Isla leaned in, brushing a curl from Ember’s cheek. The child stirred.“Ember?” she whispered.The girl’s eyes fluttered open—fully this time. Gold shimmered in her irises, bright and clear. Isla’s breath caught.Ember blinked, then spoke. “He’s coming.” Her voice was soft, but certain. Not frightened. Not confused.“Who?” Isla asked gently.Ember’s gaze drifted toward the window. “The one who watches. He doesn’t like Kael.” Isla’s heart thudded. “You are safe. I promise.” Ember nodded once, then closed her eyes again, she was not unconscious, just resting. Her breathing remained steady.Isla stepped back, pulse racing. She needed Kael. Now.She found Kael outside the emergency exit, still speaking to the silver-haired man. Their conversation was hushed, urgent. Isla did n