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Unbinding the Cuffs

Author: Missy Smith
last update publish date: 2025-07-13 12:03:44

The tension did not fade. Not completely. But it shifted. Softened at the edges. Warped into something heavier, quieter. Everyone had spread out now, claiming whatever space felt safe enough within the strange cathedral of living stone and twisted energy. Riven leaned against a pillar, arms crossed, chewing the corner of his glove like he wanted to bite through the tension itself. Sethis sprawled lazily across a semi-floating platform that drifted a few feet off the ground, looking like he was relaxed but watching everything. Kaine sat farthest from Mae, legs wide, elbows on knees, his glare heavy but quieter than before. Lucien paced in a slow, measured loop around the perimeter, hands clasped behind his back, like a predator in a cage pretending he wasn’t sizing up every shadow.

And then there was Ashar. Sitting, no, occupying, the center of the space. His throne wasn’t a throne, not really, but it fit him all the same. Black hair draped over one shoulder, crystalline eyes duller now, calculating. His hands rested on his knees, fingers flexing occasionally like he was testing the air for fractures only he could sense. And Mae, Mae sat on the lowest step of the platform, knees tucked toward her chest, wrists still bound but loosely now. Ashar’s voice finally broke the silence, low and absolute.

“I’ll remove them.” His gaze pinned her. “But you’re going to talk.” A pause. The others stiffened slightly, even Kaine. “Tell us.” His tone wasn’t cruel, but it was non-negotiable. “When you first noticed... things weren’t normal. Your... ‘bad luck.’” His gaze sharpened at the words. “All of it. Start there.” Mae’s lips parted, then shut. Her throat burned. She hated how small her voice felt before it ever left her lungs. If I talk... if I really talk... what happens? She glanced at each of them. None looked away. None softened. But no one left either.

Slowly, she shifted her cuffed hands onto her lap, fingers lacing together. “It started when I was a kid. I did not think it was anything, not like this.” Her breath trembled, but not her voice. Not yet. “I used to call it, bad luck.” Riven snorted softly from his corner but did not interrupt. “Things just happened. Things broke when I touched them. Lights flickered. Machines failed. People always got hurt when they were too close.” Her eyes dropped to her hands. “Accidents, or that's what I thought they were.” 

“The Wastes are cruel,” she continued, voice tighter. “Stuff breaks all the time. People vanish. I did not think it was me.” A bitter laugh escaped her lips. “Why would I? I was just a stray. Another nobody left to rot in Zone 9.” Lucien’s pacing slowed. Ashar’s gaze never wavered. Mae swallowed. Her hands clenched. “But it got worse. The older I got, the heavier it felt. Like the things around me started cracking and I didn’t know how to stop it. I couldn’t touch electronics without them glitching. Couldn’t stand too close to power grids without things frying.” Her shoulders curled in. “People started noticing.”

The hum of the place deepened, like the walls themselves listened. “Zone 9...” Her throat tightened. “That’s where it got bad. Bad enough the Council sent enforcement. But no one knows what really happened there. Only me and the Council.” The others leaned in slightly. Even Kaine’s scowl deepened into something more, attentive. Ashar’s voice dropped lower, like a predator urging prey closer to its own confession.

“Tell us.” Mae’s lips trembled, her jaw clenching. “The Council claimed it was a reactor malfunction. Collapsed the whole sector. Thousands gone.” Her eyes burned, but no tears fell. Not here. Not in front of them.

“But it wasn’t the reactor. It was me.” Silence snapped tight, like strings pulled to breaking. “I don’t know how. I don’t know what I did. But the enforcers came. They cornered me. Scanners said ‘unauthorized magic DNA.’” She spat the words bitterly. “They didn’t call it anything else. They didn’t know what else to call it. They just, opened fire. I was just trying to run.” Her breathing hitched, hands curling tighter against the cuffs. “And the ground split. The walls folded in. Everything just broke.  People, machines, space itself. I didn’t even mean to. I don’t know how it happened. But I ran. I ran, and when I looked back, the entire sector was gone.”

Her voice collapsed to a whisper. “They covered it up. Blamed the grid. Hid what I did. Put a bounty on me and locked me in the system as contaminated, defective, trash.”

Silence. The energy in the room felt, wrong now. Heavy. Warped. The air shimmered faintly around her, the very walls of Ashar’s home reacting like they could feel the shape of her words, like it remembered. Ashar’s eyes darkened, crystalline glow pulsing low, deep, unreadable. His fingers flexed once. Twice. Then slowly, he stood.

The others stiffened but didn’t speak. Didn’t dare.

Ashar descended the steps, slow, deliberate, until he stood directly in front of her.

His hands hovered over her wrists. Long fingers brushed the cuffs, and with a shimmer of fractured light, they disengaged. The metal fell with a dull clink onto the strange, glass-like floor. Ashar didn’t step back. Didn’t speak. He simply stood there. Close. Unmoving. Watching. Looking. Like whatever puzzle she was, just became far more complicated than even he was ready for.

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  • Claimed by the Fallen Five   The Hidden Architecture

    The chamber did not open with a sound. It unfolded in layers, like geometry reconsidering itself until space existed where there had been nothing. Mae stepped forward slowly as the air cooled against her skin, her chains warming in quiet response beneath the surface of her body. The floor beneath her boots shimmered in faint grids of gold and violet, lines that rearranged themselves each time she blinked.Ashar entered first at her side, his presence steady enough to anchor the shifting light around them. His fire did not flare here; it steadied, as though even his power recognized something older than war. “This is not a place,” he said quietly. “It is a function.” Mae felt the truth of that immediately, the room reacting not to their movement, but to their intent.Lucien followed with measured caution, his chains coiling faintly at his wrists like restrained thought. He tested the air with slow movements, as if expecting resistance, but none came. “Containment without confinement,”

  • Claimed by the Fallen Five   Secondary Chamber

    The castle did not sleep. It adjusted around them in soft clicks and distant hums, like some ancient machine relearning its own shape. Mae stood in the central chamber with her chains dim beneath her skin, feeling every pulse in the walls as if the place had threaded itself through her nerves. The others gathered slowly, drawn by tension, exhaustion, and the simple truth that none of them could pretend this had gone away.Lucien was the first to put words to it. He stood near the broken edge of the old war table, hands braced on the stone, eyes fixed on Mae. “We stop guessing now,” he said. “Whatever changed out there, we measure it, map it, and name it before it names us.” The chains beneath his skin glimmered faintly as he spoke, their light sharper than it had been before the new champion arrived.Ashar did not object. That alone told Mae how serious this had become. He moved to the chamber’s center and pressed his palm against the floor, where the runes of the castle answered with

  • Claimed by the Fallen Five   That Was Enough

    The battlefield did not return to normal. It settled into something quieter, heavier, like the world had shifted its weight and refused to move back. Ash still drifted through the air in slow spirals, catching faint light that no longer came from any clear source. The ground beneath them looked whole, but Mae could feel the seams beneath it, threads that had been pulled apart and stitched back together wrong.Mae stood at the center of it, her chains dim and restless against her skin. They no longer reacted to danger with sharp bursts of power, but with low pulses that felt almost like thought. Every movement around her registered differently, not as sound or motion, but as access points and resistance. It was as if the world had turned into something she could touch without using her hands.Lucien was the first to reassert control because he always had been. His chains drove into the ground around them in clean, deliberate strikes, forming a perimeter that glowed faintly with white he

  • Claimed by the Fallen Five   Convergence Protocol

    Mae’s stride prompted no resistance from the world; instead, it adjusted smoothly. The ground beneath her softened, with cracks closing as if sewn shut by unseen threads. The air grew denser, pressure changing until each breath was deliberate and controlled. Her chains moved across her skin, no longer reacting out of fear but forming into new routes. They were no longer restraints, but interfaces.The figure’s hand hovered inches from hers. Close enough that Mae could feel the pull, not physical but architectural. As if something were mapping her structure, measuring her capacity down to the smallest fracture in her will.Lucien called her name, but his voice arrived too late, as if the space between them had suddenly stretched. She shifted her head just enough to see his chains pulling against the air, with white light bending in unnatural ways.“I am not letting it take me,” she said again. Her voice sounded different to her own ears, layered. The figure responded immediately.‘Clar

  • Claimed by the Fallen Five   What Was Taken

    The first sound Sethis made was a breath dragged too deep into his chest. Not pain. Panic. Mae caught him before he fully collapsed, her hands gripping his shoulders as his weight sagged forward. His body shook beneath her touch, muscles locking as if they no longer knew how to hold themselves together. Where his shadows should have pooled, there was nothing. Bare ground. Empty air.“Sethis,” she said again, sharper now. “Look at me.”His eyes were wide, unfocused, pupils blown as if he were staring into something only he could see. His voice came out hoarse. “They are not answering.”Mae’s chest tightened. “They will. You just need a moment.”“No,” he said, almost violently. “You do not understand. They are gone.”The words hit harder than the blow Lucien had taken. Mae felt the fracture stir uneasily, a subtle misalignment where Sethis’s presence had always been threaded into the battlefield. It was not gone. It was wrong.Lucien staggered closer, chains still glowing faintly as he

  • Claimed by the Fallen Five   The Shape of Refusal

    The light did not explode outward. It collapsed inward.Mae braced herself as the golden rift collapsed in on itself, ash and air drawn toward a single point with terrifying precision. The ground groaned beneath her boots, cracks racing outward like veins beneath the skin. Her chains burned hot, not in defense but in recognition. This was not an attack. It was formation.Sethis swore under his breath, shadows flaring wide as he shifted closer to Mae. “That is not how a champion arrives.”Kaine did not answer. His eyes were fixed on the narrowing core of light, his jaw set, the gold fire along his arms dimming as though something were being siphoned away.The vortex tightened further. The sound deepened into a low resonance that rattled teeth and bone, not violent but deliberate. Mae felt it in her chest, a pressure that matched her pulse exactly. Whatever was forming was listening.Then the light split, and a figure stepped free.It was neither vast nor monstrous, nearly human in form,

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