Mag-log inThe heartbeat was slow. Steady. Unhurried in the specific way of something that had learned
to be patient past the point where patience was still a choice.Aurora stood with her fingers pressed to the wall and felt it move through the stone into herpalm and up her arm and into her chest where the ember caught it like kindling catching aspark — not burning brighter, exactly, but deepening. Becoming more certain of itself.Behind her, Lucien had made it to theThe heartbeat was slow. Steady. Unhurried in the specific way of something that had learned to be patient past the point where patience was still a choice.Aurora stood with her fingers pressed to the wall and felt it move through the stone into her palm and up her arm and into her chest where the ember caught it like kindling catching a spark — not burning brighter, exactly, but deepening. Becoming more certain of itself.Behind her, Lucien had made it to the bottom of the stairs. She heard the ward release him fully as he stepped off the last step into the chamber. His footfall on the stone floor. The small sound of his breath adjusting to the underground air.Then silence as he saw what she was looking at.She didn't turn around. "She's here," Aurora said."Aurora—""She's on the other side of this wall," Aurora said. Not upset. Not breaking. Just certain. "She has been here this whole time. Not i
The staircase was behind the fireplace.Dorian showed them. He pulled a specific stone in the fireside wall — third from the bottom, worn smooth from repeated use — and the fireplace swung inward on a pivot so perfectly balanced it moved at a touch. Behind it, cut into the pale rock, a staircase descended into darkness.Not the amber-torch darkness of the Citadel's corridors. Real darkness. The kind that predated fire."I found it in my first year," Dorian said, standing at the top of the stairs with a torch. "I tried to go down once and the wards pushed me back." He looked at Aurora. "I don't think they were designed to keep everyone out. I think they were designed to keep out everyone except a specific type of person.""Someone carrying Malachar's blood," Aurora said."Yes."She looked at the darkness below. The ember in her chest was pulling with a steadiness that had become almost loud — a sustained tone rather than intermitt
They found him at the gate before breakfast.Not all twelve riders. Just one — sitting in the frost with his back against the gatepost and his hood deliberately down, which in the language of people who kept hoods pulled up for a reason was a clear statement. I am visible. I am here by choice. I am not hiding.He was young. Younger than any of the others she had glimpsed from the trees, with a narrow face and dark eyes that tracked the three of them as they came into the courtyard with professional alertness rather than fear.Lucien stopped several feet from him. Cassian drifted to the right, casual, covering the angle. Lucien's hand was open at his side — deliberately not reaching for his blade, which she was learning was its own kind of signal."You're on warded ground," Lucien said."I walked through the ward deliberately," the young man said. "If I'd wanted to attack, I'd have waited outside it where I had the advantage." His eyes mov
She pushed back from the table and walked out.Not dramatically. No chair overturned, no raised voice. She simply stood and moved away and through the nearest door, which led to a narrow corridor running along the interior wall of the Citadel, lit by amber torches, stretching ahead until it curved out of sight.She walked.Her footsteps echoed off the pale stone and she let them, let the sound fill the space around her, because the alternative was standing still and letting everything settle properly into her bones. Her mind needed movement the way fire needed air.Malachar. King of the Hollow Realm.Her father.She had grown up in the specific way of someone who had always known they were missing something without ever having a precise shape for the absence. She had built herself around the gap, structured her sense of self in relation to what was not there. The girl with no parents and no origin story that made any tidy sense. She had accepted that. Made peace with it.And now here
The tea went cold.No one moved to freshen it.Aurora sat with her hands wrapped around the cup and looked at Lucien — really looked at him, the way she had been carefully not doing since the first moment she understood that looking at him too long was its own particular danger. She looked at the lines around his eyes. The exhaustion worn so deep it had become structural. The gray threading his dark hair at the temples, which she had noticed before and assigned to stress and now reassigned to something else entirely.Twice the mortal rate.For twenty-three years."How old are you?" she asked."Thirty-one," he said.She did the arithmetic. "You look closer to forty-five.""I'm aware.""And you didn't think—" She stopped. Restarted. "You didn't think that was relevant information when you were kneeling in front of me telling me who I am? When you were pressing your hand to my chest and waking something up inside me that I didn't know existed?" Her voice stayed level. She was proud of th
The courtyard held its breath.Dorian was nothing like what Aurora had assembled in her mind during the hours since Lucien's first flinch at the word brother. She had built a picture of something dangerous and broken — something that warranted avoidance and sealed doors and the particular refusal of direct address that Lucien applied to the subject.Dorian was none of those things on the surface.He was perhaps a year younger than Lucien, taller by a fraction, with the same dark coloring and the same strong bones — sharp jaw, straight nose, the architecture of someone whose bloodline had been composed with intention. But where Lucien's face was controlled, every expression deliberate and rationed, Dorian's was open. Loose. Easy with itself in a way that should have been reassuring.It was the most unsettling thing about him.That ease. That comfort. That complete absence of the tension Aurora would have expected from a man who had spent a
The portal spat them out into a windswept clearing surrounded by towering obsidian trees. Moonlight filtered through their skeletal branches, casting eerie shadows on the frost-glazed earth. Aurora stumbled forward, boots crunching against the silver grass as she caught herself on Lucien’s arm.He
The wind howled like a wounded god.As Seraphina and her companions crossed into the northern borders of the kingdom, the world changed. The sky turned iron-gray, the trees skeletal, and the earth beneath their horses cracked with frost even though it was spring. This was no ordinary terrain.This
Aria lay still in the grand bed, her body enveloped in silk sheets that clung to her skin like a second touch. The moonlight filtered through the heavy velvet curtains, casting a bluish glow over the ornate furniture and gothic carvings. Everything felt too large for her — the bed, the room, the pr
The ash had barely settled over the battlefield when the rumors began.Kaelith was dead. The rebellion shattered. The Flameborn Queen had stood against darkness and burned it away. But power, Seraphina knew, was a fragile thing. Even fire could flicker if starved.She stood at the palace balcony as







