PART I: BEFORE THE STARLIGHT WALTZS
KYANTE'S LAIR
The first thing Edina felt was the cold.
Not the kind that prickled your skin or hinted at winter. No—this cold crept inside her, deep into her bones, like something was wrong with the air itself. It didn’t just touch her. It settled in her, like it belonged there.
Her eyes blinked open, lids heavy with sleep that felt too long, too thick, like she’d been buried alive in it. Light flickered above her, dim and uneven, casting strange shadows on jagged stone walls. The stones were etched with runes—glowing faintly, pulsing like they were breathing.
Where am I?
She tried to sit up, but her body wouldn't move. There were no chains, no ropes. Just... pressure. Like the air itself was holding her down, pressing into her chest, her limbs, her skull. Her heart raced, her breath coming in short gasps that tasted metallic. Wrong.
Something was watching her.
She didn’t see them at first, but she felt them—pressing against her mind, crowding the edges of her awareness. Slowly, stiffly, she turned her head.
And there they were.
Figures lined the edges of the room—dozens of them, standing motionless, eyeless. Their faces looked almost human... until you really looked. Their skin was stretched too tight, their mouths too still, their bodies locked in stiff, puppet-like silence. And where eyes should have been, there was only black sludge, swirling slowly like ink in water.
One of them tilted its head. Jerky. Wrong. Curious.
Edina's body tensed, a shiver running straight down her spine. “What... what do you want?” Her voice cracked, hoarse, barely above a whisper. But the words echoed anyway, swallowed by the cavernous space.
No answer. Just more stillness.
And then—
A voice.
Not from the creatures. No, this voice came from everywhere and nowhere all at once. Low. Smooth. Wrong. It wrapped around her like smoke, too soft to fight off.
“You’re awake, little human,” it purred, sweet as poison. “Good. I was beginning to think I’d broken you.”
A shape peeled itself from the shadows, each step graceful, deliberate. A woman—tall, cloaked in midnight. Her gown shimmered like oil on water, flowing behind her like it had a will of its own. Pale legs peeked through a high slit with each step, and her white hair tumbled down her back like liquid moonlight.
Her eyes—sharp silver, glowing—found Edina, and stayed there.
“You...” Edina’s throat burned. “Who are you?”
The woman smiled, and it was all wrong—too many teeth, too sharp. “Names are such delicate things. But you can call me Kyante.”
The name hit like a punch.
Maerwynn had mentioned her once, in a whisper. A nightmare passed down in half-told stories.
Edina’s fear twisted into something hotter—anger. “What do you want from me? Let me go.”
Kyante laughed, rich and cold. “Let you go?” she echoed, amused. “Oh, no, sweet thing. You’re here for a reason.” She leaned in, her voice a breath against Edina’s cheek. “You’re the key.”
“The key to what?” Edina snapped, panic breaking through her voice as she fought the invisible force holding her down.
Kyante’s smile widened, and her tone dropped to a hush that was somehow louder than a scream. “To your sister, of course. That little Aether-born who thinks she’s powerful enough to defy me. She will come for you, Edina. She’ll walk straight into my hands. And when she does…”
A slow blink. A shimmer of silver.
“I’ll break her. Right in front of you. At the Starlight Waltz.”
“No,” Edina growled, defiance rising. “You won’t touch her.”
Kyante only laughed again, soft and scornful. “Oh, you’ll try to stop me. They always do. But in the end, you’ll do exactly what I need you to. You’ll lead her here. And she’ll hand me everything.”
She turned then, her gown trailing behind her like liquid shadow. The eyeless creatures stirred at her movement, tilting as if drawn to her presence.
But Edina wasn’t looking at them anymore. Her heart thudded in her chest as the pressure around her loosened slightly—barely. Enough to breathe. Enough to think.
She needed a plan. A crack. A moment.
She needed to get out.
She couldn’t let this be the trap Maerwynn walked into.
Kyante paused in the doorway, one final look thrown over her shoulder—those molten silver eyes gleaming with cruel delight.
Then she was gone, and the scent she left behind was sweet… but off. Like spoiled fruit hidden beneath perfume.
Edina stared up at the stone ceiling, her body still pinned, her mind already moving.
She didn’t know how yet.
But she was getting out of here.
EDINA POVI kissed him back, fierce and desperate.My fingers tangled in his hair, tugging him closer. He groaned into my mouth, and the sound sent heat sparking down my spine. Every inch of him was solid and fire-hot and mine.He backed me into the edge of the desk, lifting me onto it without breaking the kiss. His mouth moved over mine—lips and teeth and tongue, all heat and fury and want. Like he’d been waiting lifetimes to touch me.He broke the kiss just enough to speak, his lips brushing mine.“You’re going to ruin me.”My breath hitched. His eyes—gods, those green eyes—burned into mine like wildfire through snow.My fingers tangled in his hair, then slid around his neck, pulling him down to me again. “Good,” I whispered.His smile curled, slow and devilish. Then his mouth met mine again—hotter this time, hungrier. His kiss was not sweet. It was possession. A claiming. Every sweep of his tongue against mine was a promise I wasn’t sure I was ready to keep, and still—I gave in. I
EDINA POVFeena and I step off the carriage, our skirts brushing the grass as we touch the familiar pathway leading back to Baelorin’s estate. The late afternoon sun splinters through gnarled branches overhead, casting dappled shadows against the mossy stones. The distant laughter of pixies and rustle of leaves feels like an echo of the countryside’s warm embrace — and not-so-distant, the hollow clink of approaching footsteps.I glance up and spot Baelorin striding toward us — his posture rigid, dark hair catching the sun, and those green eyes narrowed like I’d been caught doing something cruelly wrong. He turns to Feena just as we approach, long-legged and tense.“You took her to the countryside,” his voice is low, controlled — but there’s a growl in it.Feena straightens, basket of gifts in hand. “She wanted to see it,” she says plainly. “She was fine. She’s a big girl.”He tilts his head, jaw clenched. “And if there’d been an Algoth attack? A demon ambush? Dozens of fae wicker rest
EDINA POVAs we head for the carriage, the air shimmers with late afternoon sun spilling over the trees. The soft crunch of gravel under our boots is drowned by the growing sound of footsteps—light and many.The folks are gathering again.They line the edge of the narrow path—wraiths with their translucent skin glinting in the light, forest-dwelling fae with moss in their hair and flower crowns resting over pointed ears. Children run out with hands full of petals, tossing them into the air with cheerful whoops.“Until next time!” one calls.“Thank you, Lady Feena!”“And our thanks to Lord Baelorin!”Baelorin?My brows pinch. I pause on the carriage step, glancing back at the sea of kind faces—so many smiling, nodding, eyes full of gratitude. And not one of them had forgotten to mention his name.I turn to Feena. “Why are they thanking Baelorin?”She’s already climbing in beside me, gathering her skirts. But she pauses and looks up at me, a soft smile curving her lips. The kind of smil
EDINA POVI crouched as another child handed me a daisy crown, a little crooked but still intact.“For you,” she whispered, shy but proud.I took it, my throat tightening. “It’s beautiful. Thank you.”“You’re very shiny,” said a wraith boy nearby, blinking up at me. “Your eyes are strange.”“Wraith manners are a work in progress,” Feena called over her shoulder, already busy sorting a stack of medicine bundles. “Just nod and smile.”I did exactly that.We walked farther in, weaving through the small village paths where homes were carved into trees, nestled into earth, or floating just above shallow ponds on lily-thick waters. Some homes had ropes of bones and herbs hanging from the doors. Others had polished glass beads and old starlight charms.And the more I saw, the more I understood.They couldn’t leave.This place wasn’t just a home. It was their body. Their breath.The trees bent toward them like guardians. The air shimmered differently here, thick with earth-magic. Wraiths ling
EDINA POVThe Starlight Waltz was in two weeks.Which meant I had only two more weeks left in Baelorin’s estate—until his Absolute wore off. Until I’d be free to go wherever I wanted. Back to the Court. Back to… whatever waited for me after this.I didn’t know if I felt relieved.Or disappointed.But there was an ache in my chest that hadn’t quite settled.Feena was fussing with some delicate gossamers, her hands dipped into a golden jar that shimmered like liquid sunlight. “We usually decorate a little late for the Waltz,” she said, twisting a silver ribbon between her fingers. “But since I’m here this year, I figured I’d start earlier.”She smiled—light, easy. “Baelorin’s not really the festive type, you know.”“I can tell,” I said dryly, catching a flicker of my reflection in the curved belly of the golden vase.Pointed ears. Purple irises. A face that still didn’t always feel like mine.The gold was polished enough to show me clearly—too clearly. Sometimes I looked at myself and s
MAERWYNN POVHeat bloomed beneath my skin, unwelcome and rising.Below, the two High Lords were a blur of motion—steel flashing, wings slashing through air, bursts of power sparking where their magic collided. The crowd had quieted, breathless, watching something ancient and brutal unfold.I could barely watch.Their bodies moved with purpose now. Not practice. Not ceremony. Each step was a warning. Each strike, personal.Valen didn’t hold back.Neither did Aurocen.And the longer it went on, the more I realized no one would stop it. No one could.The court was too stunned. Too awed. Too afraid.My hand tightened around the balcony edge until my knuckles went pale. Lira and Caelora were on their feet beside me now, both watching with thinly veiled concern.I turned toward the lower stands, my eyes locking on Rhaenan, silently begging him to step in.He caught my look and shook his head.This is between them, his eyes seemed to say.But I didn’t care. I couldn’t care.Because they were