Masuk
Prologue — The Fire and the Betrayal
The night smelled of lavender and smoke. It wasn’t supposed to. The house on the hill had always smelled of salt and herbs—like the sea trying to remember the land. But that night, the air turned heavy, bitter, metallic. Inside, candles guttered. The wind shifted. And something old enough to recognize danger stirred in its sleep. Evelyn Blackwell stood at the kitchen counter, humming softly as she poured tea. Her husband smiled drowsily from the table, half-asleep already. The herbs had worked. She hadn’t noticed the wrong ones floating in his cup. On the stairs, a floorboard creaked. Evelyn looked up, frowning. “Sister?” A shape appeared in the doorway—her sister, eyes wide and wet, holding a candle that dripped wax onto her wrist. “You said you’d help me.” Her voice trembled. “You promised.” Evelyn’s stomach went cold. “You’ve done something.” “I had to!” her sister cried. “You were given everything—Mother’s power, the Goddess’s blessing—and I was given nothing. I asked for one thing, just one—” “You asked me to create a child out of envy!” “I asked you to make me whole!” The candle shook in her hand. A drop of wax hissed to the floor—and with it, a single spark. The curtains caught. The smell of lavender turned to fire. Evelyn lunged for the stairs, coughing as smoke rose thick and fast. The air warped with heat. She made it halfway before her knees gave out. Her head swam. The tea— Realization hit too late. “Why?” she gasped. Her sister’s shadow wavered in the smoke. “Because you left nothing for me.” The words were almost tender. Then she was gone—running upward toward the child’s cries. In the nursery, the baby wailed. The aunt hesitated only a moment before gathering the tiny body, wrapping her in a quilt that smelled of rosemary and milk. “I’ll keep you safe,” she whispered, not sure if she was telling the truth. “You’ll be my proof. My payment.” Downstairs, Evelyn called her name again, voice breaking against the roar of fire. The roof groaned. The aunt stumbled through the back door into the cold night, clutching the baby. Behind her, flames poured from the windows, painting the sky the color of blood. She turned once—just once—and saw Evelyn collapse against the stair railing, eyes half-open, mouth forming her daughter’s name. The aunt fled. By dawn, the house was ash and silence. The tide crept close enough to taste the ruins and retreated again. The aunt stood at the edge of the cliff, shaking, the child in her arms. Below, the sea boiled faintly where the fire’s ash met water. She stared down at the waves, then up at the fading moon. “What do I do now?” she whispered. No voice answered—only the whisper of wind, and the sound of waves pulling secrets back to the deep. But high above, the Moon Goddess watched. Her silver gaze lingered on the baby. And where the fire’s smoke scarred the sky, Selunara drew a mark of light and whisper: “When the tide turns red, the child will awaken.”The storm came without warning.By late afternoon, the sky over Mystic sharpened into steel.Not rain.Not thunder.Pressure.Like the air itself was holding its breath.Rowan was stocking new vials of moonwater behind the counter of Tidal Moon when her wrist prickled—static beneath her skin. Not pain.A pull.Something’s shifting, Windy murmured from her place beneath the hanging herbs.Her voice was calm, but her eyes were on the door.Rowan’s aunt stood near the conservatory entrance, one hand resting over her swollen belly as if listening for something beneath her skin. Pale light shimmered through her dress—faint at first, like moonlight through fog.Then brighter.Rowan froze. “Aunt?”The light pulsed again. Once.Twice.Her aunt’s breath hitched. “He… kicked. But it didn’t feel like a kick.”Her voice trembled with wonder—and fear. “It felt like he was reaching.”The lights in the shop flickered.Rowan didn’t move, afraid that if she breathed wrong, the moment might shatter int
Lucien didn’t plan surprises.Wards? Strategies? A thousand-year chess match with the Lunar Court?Yes.But joy? Celebration?That felt far more dangerous.The Eclipse Bar was closed for the night. The lights were dim, bottles lined in a soft twilight glow. Windy circled him once, tail brushing his leg like a reminder.Stop overthinking, she said through the bond. You’re not designing a war map. You’re planning love.Lucien set the charcoal sketch on the counter — a moonlit canopy on the beach, lanterns leading Rowan down the sand like a path of constellations.The front door opened.Mirabel Hallow slipped inside first, cheeks flushed from the bakery ovens.“You said it was urgent. What level of urgent? ‘A ghost stole my sourdough starter’ urgent, or ‘Rowan might accidentally explode something’ urgent?”Lucien pushed the sketch toward her.Her face softened. “Oh… it’s that urgent.”Theo entered next, hauling a crate of lanterns from Hallow’s Market.“I did not steal these,” he announc
The cloaked figure didn’t move.Not when Rowan, Lucien, and Windy stepped onto the slick boards of the pier.Not when the moon caught its outline and revealed no face beneath the hood.Not even when the harbor water lapped around its knees in rhythmic, unnatural pulses.Like the ocean had begun to breathe.Rowan’s breath steamed in the cold night air. Windy stood ahead of her, fur bristled so wide she looked twice her size.Lucien shifted closer, placing himself slightly in front of Rowan without blocking her view — a protective instinct wrapped in respect.“Don’t react to its pace,” he murmured.Rowan nodded, voice low. “I’m choosing the rhythm.”Windy’s telepathic voice slid into Rowan’s mind.The cloak has no scent. No heartbeat. It isn’t alive.Rowan swallowed. “Then what is it?”Lucien answered without looking away from the figure.“A conduit.”Of course. The Court wouldn’t risk themselves while the town was unstable.Wind from the harbor carried voices — no, fragments of voices
Rain whispered across Mystic like fingertips brushing parchment.Not a storm — not yet.Just a warning.Rowan lingered outside Tidal Moon, locking up after a long evening of frantic customers who couldn’t articulate what they needed. Some claimed they were sleepwalking. Others swore someone was whispering their names from the harbor.Her belly tightened with unease.The veil was thinning — but faster than it should.Windy stood at Rowan’s side, fur damp from drizzle, eyes fixed toward the distant shoreline.The energy source moved again, she said, her telepathic voice low and steady. It’s not the bridge this time. It’s the harbor mouth.Rowan swallowed. “The same place where the lattice connects.”Windy didn’t answer — which was an answer.The streetlamps flickered.A breath of cold air swept past them, brushing Rowan’s cheek like a hand made of mist. She flinched, pressing a palm to the bump of her sternum where her magic lived.“I don’t like that,” Rowan whispered.“You shouldn’t.”
The storm didn’t begin with thunder.It began with silence.Mystic slept under a slate–gray sky, the air heavy with that strange stillness that always comes before something tears open. Rowan stood at the cottage’s front window, fingers pressed to the glass. The trees beyond were motionless. Even the sea had stopped its relentless breathing.Behind her, Lucien was a soft rustle of movement — the slide of fabric as he collected supplies, the low hum of a protection spell preparing itself.He didn’t ask if she was afraid.He knew.Windy lifted her head from her spot near Rowan’s feet, eyes glowing faintly.They’re closer tonight.Rowan swallowed. “The Court?”No. Windy’s tail swished once. Something older.Lucien crossed the room, setting down a jar of moonwater and a coil of shadow-thread in the bowl they used for spellwork. His sleeves were pushed up, mark visible, faintly pulsing in time with Rowan’s own heartbeat.“We’re strengthening the wards,” he said gently. “Not because you’re
Wind rattled the attic windows of the cottage like impatient fingers.Lucien stood at the center of Rowan’s conservatory, sleeves rolled to his elbows, his palm hovering over the scrying bowl. Moonwater reflected neither light nor shadow — only a faint pulse, like a heartbeat under glass.He wasn’t looking at the water.He was looking at Rowan.She paced the tiled floor, barefoot, her hair in a messy braid that had given up existing ten minutes ago. Every few seconds she flexed her fingers as if trying to disperse magic that kept gathering against her skin.“I can feel it,” Rowan murmured. “Not just from the river anymore. The pressure’s everywhere. Like Mystic’s holding its breath.”“It’s September,” Lucien said softly. “The veil thins whether we want it to or not.”“That’s not all. Something is pushing. Like a force testing the seams.”Windy lay near Rowan’s feet, chin on her paws, eyes glowing faint silver. Something is watching, she warned. Not close. But focused.Rowan stopped pa







