LOGIN
The palace of Lunara trembled under the weight of shadows. Screams echoed through the halls as the skies outside turned black — thick smoke and swirling darkness swallowing the moonlight. The Shadow Demon King’s army had come.
Inside the royal chambers, the Queen held a newborn close to her chest. The baby’s soft cries were drowned out by the clash of steel and the crack of breaking stone. A streak of tears ran down the Queen’s pale cheek as she looked toward the balcony, where faint shards of moonlight still pierced the storm.
“ Her magic is too strong,” the King said, his voice rough and desperate. “ He’ll sense her. If he finds her, Lunara is lost.”
The Queen nodded, her eyes glowing faint silver as ancient power awakened within her. “ Then I’ll send her where he cannot follow.”
The King stepped closer. “ You’ll die if you open that portal.”
She smiled faintly, her voice trembling. “ Then let my life buy her future.”
She kissed the baby’s forehead and whispered,
“ Forgive me, my little one.”
The Queen raised her hand, and the air rippled. The crystals embedded in the palace walls began to hum, their light drawn to her like fire to air. Silver sparks circled her body, spinning faster until the room glowed with a blinding radiance.
The King fell to his knees beside her, clutching her free hand. “ What will we name her, my Love?”
The Queen looked at her daughter one last time, her lips parting with a breath. “ Let the world name her when she’s ready.”
Then the portal opened — a swirling mirror of silver light that split the air. Wind howled through the room. The Queen pressed the baby into the heart of the portal, tears streaming down her face.
“ Find peace in the human world,” she whispered. “ And when the time is right… come home.”
The light swallowed the child whole.
The moment she disappeared, the Queen’s magic shattered the palace. Crystals cracked, the walls caved in, and a deafening roar of shadows consumed everything.
The last thing the King saw before the darkness took him was his wife collapsing to the floor, her light fading, and the moon above breaking through the clouds — shining for the final time over Lunara.
Chapter 1
The night was colder than I could ever remember. The kind of cold that bit into your fingers even through gloves and fogged the edges of the windshield faster than the heater could keep up.
I was halfway across the old bridge when the snow started again, thick flakes falling like bits of torn paper. The tires slid slightly on the slick surface, and I tightened my grip on the steering wheel, leaning forward to see through the blur of white. My eyes burned from exhaustion. It had been a long shift at the hospital—another night spent on my feet tending to people who never even remembered your face.
The radio hummed softly in the background. I don’t even remember the song. I just remember the way my eyelids felt heavier and heavier.
I blinked. Once. Twice.
And then came the horn.
I jolt upright, heart slamming against my ribs. Headlights explode in front of me — a massive truck, skidding sideways, coming straight at me.
I yank the wheel left. Tires scream. The world spins.
Metal tears. Glass shatters. Weightlessness.
The railing gives way with a sickening crunch and then I’m falling — plunging into black water below.
The impact slams my head against the window. Stars burst in my vision. The car hits once, twice, then stops nose-first as freezing water gushes through cracks in the doors.
“ No—no, no, no!” My voice sounds small, broken. My breath comes in short, sharp bursts.
I scramble for the door handle and yank it hard. It won’t move. Pressure from outside pins it shut. Water creeps across my shoes, soaks into my jeans. My chest tightens, panic crawling up my throat.
Where’s my phone? Gone. Seatbelt digs into my shoulder as I pull it, clawing at the lock. It jams. I slam it again and again until my palm stings.
The water climbs to my waist. It’s so cold it burns, slicing through me like glass. My body trembles violently. I kick the window with my heel. The glass just shivers. My breath fogs the air.
My teeth chatter so hard my jaw aches. The air feels heavier, thinner. Water rises to my ribs, my chest, my neck. I lift my chin to the roof, gasping for space.
“ Please…” It’s a whisper, cracked with fear.
My fingers are numb. The window crank won’t budge. My lungs burn. The cold is in my veins, my bones. The car creaks, sinking deeper into the icy depths below.
Water touches my lips. Instinct screams at me to breathe, but there’s nothing to breathe. I try to scream, but it comes out a sob. My chest goes into spasms. Five seconds. Ten. The pain in my chest explodes, sharp and unbearable. My vision blurs.
I can’t hold it anymore.
I inhale. Icy water rushes into my lungs like knives. Agony. I’m choking, suffocating, but my body is already going still. My mind screams but my limbs don’t obey. Darkness closes in. Flashes — my life going by so fast.
And then — light.
A golden light bursts around me, blinding, cutting through the water like the sun under the sea. It shimmers too bright, rippling across my skin like liquid fire.
Hands — warm, impossibly warm — grab my shoulders. The pain eases. My body goes limp. The cold fades. The water disappears and darkness swallows me.
“Move!” Rhys shouted.The weak barrier surrounding camp shattered completely.The sound cracked through the night like breaking glass.And suddenly the demons flooded in.Everything happened too fast after that.Council guards were dying within seconds, their ordinary weapons useless against the creatures tearing through camp. Lanterns overturned. Tents caught fire. Screams echoed through the clearing while black smoke slithered across the ground between fleeing people.One of the Council members shouted for everyone to regroup near the crystals, but panic had already taken over.A demon lunged toward us suddenly.Its mouth stretched impossibly wide as it rushed forward through the smoke.Corin stepped in front of me instantly.His glowing blade sliced upward through the creature, destroying it before it could touch me.But more smoke was already rising behind it.Too much smoke.Too many.
“You are not going to tell me what to do,” I said slowly, making sure every word landed exactly where I wanted it to. “I don’t care if I’m a Princess.”The older woman straightened carefully in her chair, though I noticed her eyes flick once more toward the golden energy glowing around my hands.“Princess—”“No,” I snapped before she could continue. “You have done nothing but sit here and speak at me like I’m some object you dragged out of the woods.”The taller man’s jaw tightened slightly.“You would do well to calm yourself.”“And you would do well to stop deciding my entire life for me.”The warmth beneath my skin flared hotter.The crystal lanterns above us flickered violently.“I agreed to come with you,” I continued, my breathing sharper now, “because I wanted answers. About my parent
Corin sliced through another demon before snapping, “You can thank her later!”The camp around us was still falling apart.More shadow demons continued pouring from the cracks splitting across the earth, their shrieks echoing through the burning clearing while terrified guards ran in every direction. Crystal lanterns shattered one after another while smoke swallowed entire sections of camp.No matter how many demons Corin and Rhys killed—More kept coming.And coming.And coming.“There’s too many!” I shouted.Corin’s jaw tightened grimly. “I know!”Another demon lunged toward me.This time I moved faster.I ducked beneath its claws and slashed upward through its body exactly the way Corin taught me. The creature dissolved into ash before it could touch me.But the second it disappeared, another emerged from the ground behind it.The earth suddenly trembled beneath our feet.Hard.
My fingers tightened slightly against my lap.“The people of Sylvaris will pay attention to these things,” the older woman continued. “Appearances matter within the capital.”I already hated where this conversation was heading.“The future Queen cannot appear emotionally compromised by a guardian,” the thin man added calmly.Emotionally compromised.The words irritated me more than they should have.“He is not just some guardian,” I said before I could stop myself.The second the words left my mouth, silence settled across the tent.The older woman watched me carefully now.And something inside me stirred sharply with sudden anger.Because this morning I had still been laughing beside Corin on horseback.And now strangers sat calmly across from me deciding how close I was allowed to stand to him.The silence inside the tent stretched for a moment after my words left my mouth.He is not just some guardian.I instantly wished I could pull the sentence back.Not because it was untrue.Bu
“Did people die here?” I asked after a long silence.Corin did not soften the answer. “Yes.” The single word sat heavily between us.None of us spoke for a while after that.The road carried us deeper through the dying stretch of land, and the farther we travelled, the more abandoned places we saw. Some were only watch posts with collapsed towers and weakened crystal markers. Others had once clearly been larger villages before being swallowed by silence.It was strange.Before coming to Lunara, I had imagined magic as something beautiful. Powerful. Almost endless.But now all I saw was what happened when it started disappearing.The shadows were winning slowly.Not through great battles or giant wars.But piece by piece. Village by village, and crystal by crystal.One of the Council guards near the front suddenly raised his hand, signaling for everyone to slow.I straightened slightly.Ahead of us stood another old outpost near the road, though this one was smaller than the others we
By the next morning, I was convinced horses were created purely to torture people.Every part of my body ached. Not just one place. Everywhere. My back hurt, my legs hurt, my shoulders hurt, and I was fairly certain there were muscles in my body I had never used before this journey that now hated me personally. Even sitting still in the saddle hurt at this point.I would have given anything for a hot bath.Not even a luxurious one. Just warm water deep enough to sink into and stay there for an hour. Maybe longer. I wanted to wash the dust from my skin, the smell of horse from my clothes, and whatever part of my soul had died somewhere along this road.Instead, I was once again riding through endless stretches of land while the morning wind hit my face and the horse beneath me continued its personal mission of ruining my life.I did not know how much longer I could take this.Ride all day. Stop at night. Set up camp. Sleep for a few hours. Wa
Katana stepped closer to the crystal, resting her palm against its vines. “ Now, we protect you,” she said. “ Until your powers awaken. Until the Heart Crystal is whole again.” Corin nodded. “ And when that happens, the ba
I opened my mouth to argue, but he did something that froze me completely. He dropped to one knee. “ Corin—” He lowered his head. “ My suspicions were true,” he said, his voice steady but thick with emotion. “ The light, the way the crystal reacted, the way it recognized you… There’
She smiled, her green eyes glowing faintly. “ One of the forest’s daughters,” she said. “ Born of root and river. And old enough to know when two hearts are pretending not to beat for each other.” I froze. “ What?” Katana turned to Corin, a knowing smirk playing at her lips. “ Don’t look a
The forest changed with nightfall. Colors that had been soft and glowing under the afternoon light deepened into shades of violet, teal, and silver. Crystals hidden among the roots began to shimmer faintly, casting a soft glow that seemed to drift with the breeze. The air smelled of moss and someth







