LOGINEvery hundred years, the Dragon King demands one human sacrifice to maintain peace between the races. Nineteen year old Aria Solenne is chosen — quiet, ordinary, and completely unprepared for what awaits her beyond the mountains. King Zaron has ruled the Dragon Realm for over three centuries with an iron fist and a heart of stone. He does not feel. He does not want. He simply rules — cold, ruthless, and untouchable. But the moment Aria is brought before his throne, everything changes. His dragon recognizes what his mind refuses to accept — she is his fated mate. The last descendant of an ancient bloodline powerful enough to either save him or destroy everything he has built. Aria came to the Dragon Realm expecting death. Instead she finds something far more dangerous. A king who will burn the world before he lets her go.
View MoreAria's POV
The announcement came at sunrise. I remember the exact moment because I had been awake since before dawn, sitting on the old wooden fence behind our cottage, watching the sky bleed from black to purple to the softest shade of gold. It was the kind of morning that made you believe the world was peaceful. The kind that made you forget, even for a moment, that we lived at the mercy of creatures who could reduce our entire village to ash without blinking. The bell rang three times. Three rings meant a gathering. Mandatory. No exceptions. I slid off the fence and smoothed the front of my plain linen dress. Around me the village was already stirring doors creaking open, children rubbing sleep from their eyes, women pulling shawls around their shoulders against the early morning chill. Everyone moved toward the village square with the same tight, careful expression. The expression our people had worn every hundred years when this particular bell rang. The Choosing. I told myself I was not afraid. I had been telling myself that for weeks, ever since the elders announced that the century mark had arrived. That the Dragon King would send his messengers. That one name from our village would be drawn from the sacred bowl. One life, offered freely or so the elders called it in exchange for another hundred years of peace. I had told myself the odds were small. There were over three hundred young women of eligible age in our village alone. Three hundred names in that bowl. The chances of my name being chosen were so slim they were almost laughable. Almost. I reached the square just as Elder Caden my father stepped onto the raised stone platform at the center. He was dressed in his ceremonial robes, deep blue with silver stitching, the ones he only wore for occasions that mattered. His face was composed in the way it always was in public. Unreadable. Dignified. He did not look at me. He never looked at me in public. I had learned not to take it personally. Being the elder's daughter came with certain unspoken rules one of them being that I was not to expect special treatment or special acknowledgment. I was simply another villager. Another name in the bowl. "People of Stonehaven,"my father's voice rang out, deep and practiced and perfectly calm. "The century has turned. The covenant with the Dragon King must be honored. One among us has been chosen to serve as the sacred offering to cross the mountains into the Dragon Realm and fulfill the ancient promise our ancestors made three hundred years ago." The square was so silent I could hear my own heartbeat. My father reached into the sacred bowl a wide stone basin that sat on a pedestal beside him, filled with rolled pieces of parchment, one for every eligible woman in the village. He did not hesitate. He did not look pained. His hand dipped in, swirled once, and closed around a single roll. He unfurled it slowly. He read it once to himself. And then just for a fraction of a second his eyes found mine across the crowd. My blood ran cold. "Aria Solenne,"he said. The world did not stop turning. That was what surprised me most. I had always imagined that if the worst happened, time itself would pause. That the sky would crack or the earth would shift or something, anything, would mark the moment as significant. But the sun kept rising. The birds kept singing somewhere in the trees beyond the square. A baby near the back of the crowd began to cry, and its mother shushed it quickly. People turned to look at me. I stood very still. Lyra appeared at my side so fast I did not even see her move. Her hand found my arm and gripped it tight, tight enough to hurt, though I did not think she realized it. "No,"she breathed, so quietly only I could hear. "No, this is wrong. This is—" "Lyra."* *My voice came out steady. I did not understand how, but it did."Don't." "Aria—" "Don't," I said again. My father was still speaking. Something about the honor of the covenant. Something about how the chosen one would be remembered. How her name would be carved into the Remembrance Wall beside all the others who had come before her. All the others who had died. Because that was the truth nobody said aloud. The sacred offering did not return. In three hundred years, not one girl had ever come back from the Dragon Realm. The elders called it a sacrifice of peace. The children whispered that the Dragon King ate them whole. I did not know which version I preferred. The ceremony moved quickly after that. There were words spoken over me — blessings, the elders called them, though they felt more like goodbyes. A white cloth was draped over my shoulders. Someone pressed a small pouch of herbs into my hands, the kind meant to calm the nerves. My father stepped down from the platform. He walked past me without stopping. "Father," I said. He paused. Just barely. His back was to me and I watched his shoulders rise with a slow breath. "The messengers will come for you at dawn tomorrow," he said quietly. "Be ready." And then he kept walking. I spent the rest of the morning in a daze. The village moved around me with a strange mixture of grief and relief — grief for the show of it, relief because it was not their daughter, not their sister, not their name that had been called. I did not blame them. I understood it. If the situation were reversed I could not say with certainty that I would feel differently. By midday, women had begun leaving small offerings at my doorstep. Bread still warm from the oven. A bundle of dried wildflowers. A small carved wooden bird from old Maren who lived at the end of the lane and had never once spoken directly to me in my nineteen years of life. I carried them all inside and set them on the table and stood in the middle of my small cottage and looked at them for a long time. Then I sat down on the floor and pressed my back against the wall and pulled my knees to my chest. I did not cry. I wanted to. The tears were there, sitting just behind my eyes, heavy and waiting. But something would not let them fall. Some stubborn, foolish part of me refused to spend my last night on earth weeping on a floor. My mother would not have wept. I closed my eyes and tried to remember her face. It came to me in pieces the curve of her smile, the particular warmth of her hands, the way she smelled of rosewood and something sweeter underneath. She had died when I was seven, quietly and without warning, and taken with her any softness my father might have had. "You are more than they know, my love,"she had whispered at the very end, her fingers wrapped around my small wrist, her thumb pressed over the mark I had been born with. The mark that looked like a flame. I looked at it now, turning my wrist over in the pale afternoon light that filtered through the cottage window. It had always been there small and strange and slightly warm to the touch, as though something lived just beneath the skin. The village healer had called it a birthmark. The children had called it ugly. My mother had called it a gift. I had never known what to call it. I pressed my thumb over it the way she used to do and sat there in the silence of my cottage and breathed. Lyra came as the sun began to set. She did not knock. She never knocked not in all the years we had been friends, not once. She simply pushed open the door and walked in and stopped when she saw me still sitting on the floor. "You've been sitting there all day, haven't you," she said. It was not a question. "Most of it,"I admitted. She crossed the room, dropped down onto the floor beside me, and leaned her head on my shoulder. For a long moment neither of us spoke. Outside the window the sky was turning shades of amber and rose, the kind of sunset that belonged in a painting, the kind that felt almost cruel in its beauty on a day like today. "I went to the council,"Lyra said finally. I turned to look at her. "Lyra" "I told them it wasn't fair. That the bowl could have been tampered with. That there should be a redraw." Her jaw was tight, her dark eyes bright with something fierce and furious."Elder Brom told me to go home and mind my place." "And what did you say?" A ghost of a smile crossed her face. "Something that will probably get me fined." Despite everything, I laughed. It came out small and broken but it was real and it surprised us both. "You are impossible," I told her. "I know,"she said. Then softer, "I'm not going to stop fighting this, Aria. Even after you even if they take you, I'm going to find a way to" "Lyra."I took her hand and held it between both of mine. "Listen to me. I need you to let this go." "I can't." "You have to. Your mother needs you. Your brothers need you." I squeezed her fingers. "Promise me you won't do anything reckless after I'm gone." She was quiet for a long time. "I'll try,"she said finally. Which from Lyra was as close to a promise as I was ever going to get. We stayed on the floor together as the room grew dark around us. We talked about small things — the kind of things you talk about when the big things are too heavy to carry. The baker's son who had tripped over his own feet at the midsummer festival and knocked an entire table of food to the ground. The way the river looked at first light when the mist sat low on the water. The afternoon when we were seven years old and had decided, with complete seriousness and absolute certainty, that we would be best friends until we were old women with grey hair and bad knees. We did not talk about tomorrow. When the candles had burned more than halfway down Lyra finally rose. Her eyes were red at the edges though she had not let a single tear fall in front of me. She pulled me up from the floor and hugged me so tightly I felt my ribs protest. "You are the bravest person I know,"she said into my hair. "I'm terrified," I told her honestly. "I know,"she said."That's what makes you brave." She left without looking back. I understood. Some goodbyes were easier if you did not watch them walk away. My father came home close to midnight. I heard his key in the lock and sat up straighter on the edge of my bed where I had been sitting in the dark, still dressed, unable to bring myself to lie down and pretend that sleep was possible. He stood in the doorway of my room for a moment. A tall man, broad-shouldered, with dark hair shot through with grey at the temples. People in the village said I had his eyes. I had never been sure whether that was a compliment. "You should be sleeping,"he said. "So should you,"I replied. He was quiet. In the dim light from the hallway I could see the lines of his face, deeper than usual, carved with something I could not quite name. Not grief. Not guilt. Something older and heavier than either. He stepped into the room and sat in the chair across from my bed the old wooden one that had been my mother's reading chair, that he had never once sat in during all the years since she died. The fact that he sat in it now made my chest ache in a way I had not expected. "I did not choose your name," he said. "I know," I said. "I want you to know that." "Father."I looked at him steadily."I know. I have never believed otherwise." He nodded once. His hands were clasped between his knees and he stared at them for a long moment. "Your mother,"he started. Then stopped. "What about her?" He shook his head slowly."She always said you were protected. That something watched over you."He looked up at me then, and his eyes in the dim light were complicated and tired and so deeply sad that I had to look away."I told her she was speaking nonsense. I told her there was no such thing as protection in this world. That we are all equally at the mercy of fate." He stood. "I am beginning to think,"he said quietly,"that your mother knew things I did not." He walked to the door. Paused with his hand on the frame. "She loved you very much, Aria. And so—"He stopped. Cleared his throat."Be ready at dawn." He left. I stared at the empty chair for a long time. The hours before dawn were the longest of my life. I lay on my back on top of my blankets and watched the ceiling and listened to the village sleep around me. Somewhere a dog barked twice and went quiet. The wind moved through the trees beyond the cottage walls. A shutter somewhere down the lane knocked softly against its frame. Ordinary sounds. The sounds of a world that would keep turning after I was gone. I thought about the Dragon King. Everyone had heard stories. He had ruled the Dragon Realm for longer than anyone could remember — ancient and powerful and utterly without mercy. They said his eyes could freeze a man where he stood. They said he had not smiled in centuries. They said the last human who had looked directly at him had dropped dead on the spot from fear alone. I did not know how much of it was true. I knew only that I was to be brought before him tomorrow. That I was to kneel. That I was not to speak unless spoken to. The elder's instructions had been very clear on that point — do not speak, do not look directly at him, do not make any sudden movements. Essentially, do not exist too loudly. I was good at that, at least. I had been doing it my whole life. I closed my eyes. And then I felt it. It came without warning a warmth that bloomed in the center of my chest, slow and deep and steady, like a coal that had been sleeping for a very long time suddenly remembering that it knew how to burn. It moved through me from the inside out, reaching all the way to my fingertips, to the soles of my feet, to the small mark on my wrist that had always run slightly warmer than the rest of my skin. I pressed my hand flat against my sternum. The warmth pulsed once beneath my palm. Steady. Certain. Almost like a heartbeat that was not entirely my own. I did not understand it. But for one strange, suspended moment, lying alone in the dark on the last night of my life as I had known it, I was not afraid. The fear did not disappear. It was still there, coiled and waiting. But underneath it, deeper than it, was something else entirely. Something that felt almost like recognition. Almost like a beginning. I did not know, in that moment, what the warmth meant. I did not know that the mark on my wrist had begun to glow faintly in the dark, gold and flickering like a candle flame. I did not know that the power sleeping in my blood ancient and vast and patient as stone had just drawn its first waking breath. And I did not know that across a thousand miles of mountain and darkness and ancient sky, in a palace built from black stone and dragon fire, a king who had not felt anything in over a century had just sat up straight on his throne. His golden eyes had snapped open. His dragon, silent for longer than most civilizations had existed, had just lifted its head. And for the first time in three hundred years King Zaron felt something. He did not yet know her name. But his dragon did.Aria's POVSenna knew before I said a word.I saw it the moment she walked into my chambers that morning — the way her steps slowed almost imperceptibly at the threshold, the way her eyes moved to my face and then away and then back again with the specific quality of someone checking for something they were hoping not to find. She had the careful composed expression she always wore and underneath it, visible only because I had spent twelve days learning to read her the way I had learned to read everything in this palace — below the surface, in the space between what was shown and what was true — something else entirely.She knew.I was not certain whether it was the message case or the panel behind the dressing screen or simply the accumulated weight of twelve days of watching me closely enough to notice when I had been changed by something. It did not matter which. The knowledge was in her face and she could not entirely keep it out and she was doing her best anyway, moving to the br
Aria's POVI went back to my chambers and acted like nothing had happened.This was harder than it sounds.Not because I was a poor performer — I had been performing composure since the morning my name was called in the village square and I had nineteen years of practice at making my face say something different from what my chest was doing. The difficulty was specific and particular: I had to perform normalcy for someone who was also performing. Someone who had been performing for considerably longer than me, with considerably more at stake, in a role she had been placed in before I had arrived.Senna was in my chambers when I returned.She was doing what she always did in the midmorning — moving through the room with her quiet efficient precision, straightening things that did not particularly need straightening, replacing the water in the washing basin, folding the extra blanket at the foot of the bed with the particular care of someone who had always treated the objects in this ro
Aria's POVHe talked for a long time.This was the thing I had not expected — not the words themselves, not the information they carried, but the sheer fact of him talking. Zaron, who communicated in the minimum number of words required and occasionally fewer than that, who used silence the way other people used sentences, who had built an entire kingdom on the understanding that he did not owe anyone an explanation for anything — this man sat across his desk from me in the firelit study and talked.Not easily. Not fluidly. Not the way someone talks when talking is natural to them. The way someone talks when they have been not talking for so long that the mechanism of it requires deliberate operation — each sentence considered before it was released, each piece of information placed with the care of someone who had never before had occasion to give it to anyone and was therefore uncertain of the correct order and weight of things.But he talked.And I sat across from him and listened
Aria's POVSenna brought the summons with breakfast.Not verbally — Senna rarely delivered things verbally when a more efficient option existed. She set the tray on the table by the window the way she always did and then she set a small folded piece of paper beside the teacup and she did not say anything about it and she did not look at me while she set it down which was, I had learned, Senna's particular way of communicating that the thing she was not looking at was significant.I picked it up.The paper was heavy. Good quality, the kind that came from somewhere expensive. The writing on the inside was brief and in a hand I had not seen before — not Drex's careful soldier's script but something older and more economical, each letter formed with the minimum number of strokes required to be legible and not one more.My study. Tenth hour. Come alone.No signature.No signature because none was needed. There was only one pe
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