LOGINCHAPTER 3
The Locket Monday, 7:03 a.m. The spiral behind my ear woke me up throbbing like a second heartbeat. I rolled out of bed, hoodie still on from the game, and found the locket on my nightstand exactly where I’d dropped it after Mom handed it over last night. “Grandma Elowene’s,” she’d said, voice too casual. “She wanted you to have it when we finally settled somewhere permanent.” Permanent. Right. The locket was heavier than it looked: blackened silver, Gothic Romanian filigree curling like frozen smoke around a single oval of deep-red garnet. In the center, etched so small I needed a loupe to read it, Japanese kanji: 森羅 Morau – “to receive.” Grandma Elowene had lived in Kyoto for thirty years. Married a Japanese photographer, never came home. Died last spring. I’d never met her. But the locket fit against my sternum like it had been waiting for my ribcage to grow into it. I clipped it on under the hoodie and skated to school through mist so thick the lake looked like it was boiling upside-down. 1st period – Arkansas History Brittany slid into the seat beside me, pom-poms shedding glitter. “Cute necklace,” she whispered. “Antique?” “Family heirloom.” She squealed quietly. “So mysterious! You should totally let me borrow it for Homecoming court pics.” I tugged the hood higher. “Not happening.” 5th period – Photo Lab Mr. Bathory was already at the enlargers, sleeves rolled to the elbow, forearms pale as film base. He didn’t look up when I walked in. “Miss Moreau. The print you exposed Friday night. The one with young Mr. Tsatoke.” My stomach dropped. “I want it for the yearbook spread. Full page. Caption: ‘Freshman phenom or phantom?’” He finally met my eyes. “Bring the negative. Now.” I hadn’t even developed that roll yet. Seras was waiting in the darkroom, red safelight bleeding across her cheekbones like war paint. She held my film canister between two fingers like it was diseased. “Looking for this, Valentina-chan?” I lunged. She stepped back, canister disappearing into her blazer pocket. “Give it.” “Make me.” The spiral behind my ear flared white-hot. The locket followed—garnet burning a circle against my skin. Seras’s eyes flicked to it and narrowed. “So the old witch finally passed it down.” “Grandma Elowene wasn’t—” “Don’t.” Seras’s voice cracked like a whip. “Don’t you dare say her name like you knew her.” She stepped closer. The safelight made her red streak look wet. “My family served the Nakamura covenant for four hundred years. Shadow binders. Blood seals. We kept the mist contained. And every single time the Morau clan breezed in with their pretty lockets and their ‘receiving’ gifts, the council chose you. Kyoto, 1923. Prague, 1889. New Orleans, 1865. Every generation, the Morau get the power and the Nakamura's the scraps.” I backed into a tray table. Developer sloshed. “I don’t even know what you’re talking about.” “Bullshit.” She pulled out a negative strip—old, brittle, edges curled. Held it to the safelight. A little girl on a Kyoto rooftop, platinum hair in twin braids, holding a tiny skateboard. Fresh spiral tattoo behind her ear glowing silver. Same face as mine. Same locket, newer chain. Behind her, a woman in a black kimono—Grandma Elowene—pressing the locket into the girl’s hands while a ring of Nakamura elders knelt in the background, heads bowed. The little girl was smiling at the camera like she’d just won something. Seras’s voice dropped to a hiss. “That was the day the council voted to bind the next Receiver to the Hot Springs vein. Your grandmother stole the covenant from my great-grandmother. And now you’re here to finish the job.” She flicked the negative at me. It fluttered to the floor like a dead moth. “The locket isn’t jewelry, Celeste. It’s a key. And the valley’s been waiting seventy-three years for someone dumb enough to turn it.” The darkroom door opened. Mr. Bathory stepped in, shadow stretching wrong across the floor. “Miss Nakamura. Out.” Seras didn’t move. He repeated, softer. “Out.” The mist vents hissed. Fog curled around Seras’s ankles like it was dragging her. She spat one last word in Japanese—something that made the safelight flicker—and left. Mr. Bathory picked up the Kyoto negative, held it to the light. “Your grandmother was… persuasive,” he said quietly. “Elowene Morau could convince the mist to kneel. A rare gift.” He handed me my own film canister—Seras must’ve dropped it. “Develop your print, Celeste. But know this: every photograph you take with that locket on steals a memory from the valley. And the valley always collects its debt.” He brushed a thumb across the garnet. The locket snapped open for the first time. Inside: a tiny mirror. My reflection stared back—eyes molten silver, mouth smiling like the little girl in Kyoto. But the reflection blinked one second after I did. I slammed it shut. After school I developed the Friday night roll alone. The touchdown shot came up perfect: Remy mid-throw, braid flying, scar glowing. Behind him, the coyote mist pack—eight strong—galloping across the turf. Every single coyote had my face. Platinum hair. Silver eyes. And every single one was wearing the locket. I cropped the print tight on Remy’s face, hands shaking so bad the enlarger danced. When I pulled it from the fixer, the photo was warm—like body temperature. A wet fingerprint appeared on the border. Not mine. Written in fresh red developer: The Receiver has arrived. The Nakamura girl will try to break the chain. Let her. Some locks only open when you bleed on them. —J.B. I wore the locket to bed that night. At 3:33 a.m. it burned cold. The mirror inside cracked down the middle. Through the fissure, a woman’s voice—Kyoto accent, Romanian lilt—whispered in perfect English: “Receive carefully, Celeste. The valley gave you its heart. Now it wants yours back—with interest.” I looked out the window. The mist had formed a perfect spiral on the glass—exact match to the tattoo, the scar, the locket. It spun once. Slowly. Like a key turning. The locket is warm now. It has a pulse. And it just whispered your name in two languages.Chapter 75 – They Say No One Dies From LoveDecember 14, 2030 – Aerie Academy, then XibalbaThey say no one dies from love.Well, I might just be the first.It starts with a week that is actually, infuriably normal.Classes. Office hours where freshmen cry because Rowan rewrote gravity again. Kayo teaching “Intro to Chaos” by turning the cafeteria into a zero-G rave. Nerida winning the void-skate championship while literally eating a black hole for style points. Remy and I sneaking off to the floating island every night just to breathe the same air and pretend the universe isn’t trying to kill us again.Seven whole days of ordinary married-student legend life.Then Thursday happens.I wake up and the bed is cold on his side.No note. No scent trail. No heartbeat in the pack bond.Just the faint smell of wet limestone and marigolds.The kind of flowers you leave for the dead.I’m in the council chamber in under thirty seconds, still in his T-shirt and panic.The others are
Chapter 74 The Morning After the End of the WorldThe sun came up over New Orleans like it was shy (soft gold, no judgment, just checking to see if we were still here).We were.The Chevy rolled back through the academy gates at 7:17 a.m. with eight teenagers, one ancient headmistress, and one dragon who still hadn’t found his shirt.The courtyard looked like a war zone that had decided to throw a block party instead of dying.Someone had already strung Christmas lights through the broken columns. A ghost brass band was playing “When the Saints Go Marching In” at half-speed and twice the soul. The smell of chicory coffee and beignets drifted from a food truck that definitely hadn’t existed yesterday.Remy parked crooked, killed the engine, and just sat there for a second.Celeste leaned her head on his shoulder, twin tails brushing his Rams jacket.“We did it,” she whispered, like saying it too loud might jinx it.Remy huffed a laugh. “Yeah, babe. We kinda saved everything.”Luci
CHAPTER 73The First Hand and The Last HandThe moment our feet crossed the chalk line, the world folded like a deck of cards being shuffled.One blink: pine forest and moonlight.Next blink: an endless starlit plain under a sky that had too many moons and not enough rules.In the center stood a single round table carved from the trunk of the World Tree (roots still growing through the legs, leaves whispering secrets in languages that died before humans had names).Four chairs were already occupied.Coyote (still in his zoot suit) lounged sideways in one, boots on the table, dealing cards that flickered between paper and living flame.Across from him sat a woman made of storm clouds and galaxies, eyes like colliding nebulae (Raven, older than stories, trickster of the North).To her left: an enormous serpent whose scales were every color that ever hurt to look at (Quetzalcoatl, the Feathered One, wearing a smile that tasted like sunrise).To the right: a figure wrapped head to toe in
CHAPTER 72 The Council Can Kiss Our Collective Ass They arrived at high noon, because vampires love drama and bad timing. Twelve ancient bloodlords in crimson robes descended on a storm of screaming ravens, landing in the academy’s ruined courtyard like they’d rehearsed it in a mirror. The leader (Councilor Vespera, Thorne’s great-aunt a few centuries removed) stepped forward, petrified-dragon-bone staff tapping the cracked marble like a judge’s gavel. “Thorne Alexander Blackwood. Riley Kane.” Her voice cut through the midday heat like iced steel. “You are charged with unauthorized activation of the Sanguis Draconis, catastrophic property damage, and the unsanctioned execution of a Class-Omega Void entity.” She waved a pale hand at the smoldering skyline of New Orleans. “Also, noise violations.” Remy, leaning against his Chevy with a piece of beef jerky hanging out of his mouth, started laughing so hard he had to brace himself on the hood. Celeste rolled up beside him on he
CHAPTER 71The Hot Springs ContingentThe Mississippi was still burning when the sky tore open a second time.A perfect ring of violet fire bloomed above the river, smelling of cedar smoke, hot asphalt, and sweet tea gone feral.A matte-black 1970 Chevy pickup shot through the rift like a bullet, tires screaming, and slammed onto the levee hard enough to make the ground jump.The driver’s door kicked open with a boot.Remy Tsatoke stepped out.Tall, copper-skinned Caddo, long black braid swinging down his back, Lakeside Rams letterman jacket (crimson sleeves, white body, big red ram head snarling across the shoulders) hanging open over bare, scarred chest. A copper-wrapped baseball bat rested easy on one shoulder like it had grown there. Coyote shifter, trickster-blessed by Chulëkonsis himself, grinning like the world owed him money and he’d come to collect with interest.Right behind him, Celeste Valentina Morau Tsatoke rolled in on a blood-red skateboard that hovered an inch off the
CHAPTER 70The Sanctum of First BloodThey took us to the oldest part of the academy: a circular chamber buried beneath the roots of the original dragon-nest tree.Stone walls veined with living fire, ceiling open to the night sky, moonlight pouring straight down like liquid silver.The floor was carved with one massive sigil:a crescent moon devouring a flame.Thorne carried me across the threshold and the doors sealed behind us with a sound like a heartbeat stopping.Elowen stood at the edge of the circle, wings folded, face unreadable.“Sunrise is in four hours,” she said. “After that, the mark will finish itself whether you want it to or not.You have until then to decide:- Sever the bond (I cut the mark out, you both live, but you’ll never touch again without agony).- Complete the bond (you finish the Sanguis Draconis on your own terms, and you become the living key to the Veil).”She placed an obsidian dagger on the floor between us.“One drop of willing blood from each of you







