LOGINPOV: Rory Hale
The car halted so suddenly I almost smacked my forehead on the window.
“This is it,” the woman in the black suit stated casually, like she wasn’t throwing me into the jaws of something I didn’t understand.
I lifted my eyes and my chest clenched.
The Academy wasn’t a school. It was a monster with stone skin.
Gothic spires rose against the stormy sky, their sharp edges piercing into the clouds. Black iron gates curved with symbols I couldn’t read. Mist clung to the broad woodland surrounding it, thick enough to cover anythingwolves, shadows, maybe even bodies.
My pulse was hammered. “This looks like a haunted castle, not a school.”
The tall man’s mouth twisted in a humorless smile. “That’s because this place doesn’t teach the living. It trains survivors.”
My throat is dry.
I murmured, “And if I don’t survive?”
The younger agent with the disconcerting blue eyes leaned closer, too close. His breath ghosted over my ear. “Then you’ll be food.”
I flinched, but the woman silenced him with a harsh glare before opening the car door. “Rory Hale. Welcome to Obsidian Academy.”
I went out, my sneakers crunching on gravel, and immediately felt stares. Everywhere.
Students congregated in bunches beyond the gates, all clad in dark uniforms that appeared far too beautiful to be human. Their eyes caught the weak lightsome gleaming faintly gold, others crimson, a few even silver like flaming stars.
I grabbed my bag strap closer, whispered under my breath, “Stay invisible. Just… stay invisible.”
But invisibility was impossible here. I felt like prey dropped into a den of hunters.
A voice behind me ripped through the air. “She’s here.”
The crowd parted as someone walked ahead.
My breath hitched.
He was lovely in a way that was crisp, like glass. Tall, lean, hair like liquid silver spilling to his shoulders. His complexion was pale, too pale, but not sickly luminescent, almost gleaming under the storm clouds. His eyes were a striking shade of crimson, and when they rested on me, it felt like being stripped bare.
The woman’s tone shifted, official now. “Lucien, this is Rory Hale. She’ll be joining us.”
Lucien’s lips twisted in a slow, deadly smile. “So the rumors were true.”
I swallowed. “What rumors?”
He didn’t answer. He only stepped closer, his gaze fastened on me like I was the only heartbeat in the entire institution.
“You shouldn’t be here,” he muttered. His voice was satin and venom at once. “But gods, I’m glad you are.”
My knees trembled. “Why?”
His smile deepened, displaying the edge of something too keen to be human. His breath stroked my cheek when he leaned in, muttering low enough only I could hear.
“Because I can taste you already.”
I froze, blood turning to ice.
He pulled back slowly, eyes glinting with hunger, and for the first time in my life, I grasped what actual danger felt like not fists, not sadness, but someone who looked at you like you were a meal.
The woman cleared her throat. “That’s enough, Lucien.”
But his crimson stare never left mine.
My heart thundered, but I forced my voice to work. “If you touch me”
His laugh was soft, dark, and menacing. “Oh, little mortal. You don’t even know what you are.”
The word mortal shattered on me like lightning.
I wanted to yell at him, deny it, and demand answers. But the world spun anew, heavy with shadows and murmurs.
Kael’s admonition echoed in my head: Don’t trust anyone. Especially not the ones that smile at you.
And Lucien was smiling.
As Rory’s skin prickles with invisible fire, Lucien tilts his head, crimson eyes blazing into her soul.
“You’re the Marked One,” he whispers. “And that means you belong to me.”
The door creaked open, and for a second I thought maybe the wrong room had been assigned to me.
The walls were painted a deep shade of gray, velvet curtains pouring down like shadows. Candles flickered even though no one had ignited them. And sitting on one of the two beds was a female with fire-red hair, combat boots still on, and a sneer carved over her face like she’d been anticipating me.
“Well, look who finally made it,” she replied, flinging her hair over her shoulder. “The new girl.”
I halted in the doorway. “This is… my room?”
“Unless you plan to sleep in the hall,” she added, arching an eyebrow. “Name’s Maya. Maya Cross. And you’re Rory Hale, the one they won’t shut up about.”
My chest tightened. “People are already talking?”
She laughed, low and harsh. “Honey, you walked into this place glowing. Of course they’re talking.”
I froze, clutching my bag tightly. “Glowing?”
Her smirk softened, just a little. “Relax. I mean metaphorically. Sort of. Everyone here smells power. Some of us more than others.”
I shifted uncomfortably. “I don’t have power.”
“Sure,” Maya answered, reclining back against the headboard like she h
ad all the time in the world. “Keep telling yourself that. Maybe it’ll even come true.”
I chained her because I love her. I hate myself for it.I never feared war.I never feared death.But I feared this.Her chains shook. Her breaths came sharp and angry.And every sound was a sword in my chest.I chained the woman I loved.And I could not breathe under the weight of it.She lifted her head slowly.Eyes black. Voice cold enough to cut spirit.&nb
Lucien watched us like we were a promise bleeding.“You cannot run from what you are. Fighting your fate only feeds the darkness.”I spun to him. “So I should give up? Let it take me? Become something hideous and call it destiny?”“Or accept who you are and become ruler rather than weapon.”“I don’t want a crown!”Silence. Thick. Violent.Kael stared at me, voice low. “You think a crown is the danger? The crown is kindness. The throne is safe. The power is what will kill you.”
“You say that now,” Dark Kael mumbled. “Until she burns you.”“She won’t.”Rory muttered, “But what if he’s right? What if my evil demands something you can’t give?”“Then I’ll give it anyway.”Her eyes softened and darkened.“You would bleed for me.”“I already did.”“You would die for me.”“I already did.”“You would chain yourse
“There is a question,” Elias said suddenly, voice shaking. “A test. To see which path she stands on.”“Do not” Kael warned, but Elias continued.“You must ask yourself one thing, Rory. Are you here to love the world… or to rule over the ashes of it?”A slow smile curved my lips. Sharp. Curious. Honest.“Maybe both,” I said.Selene’s eyes gleamed in victory.Elias paled. “If you surrender to that path, everything burns.”“Fire cleans,” I answered. 
My vision blurred black at the edges. Power cracked the ground under my feet.“Kael,” she whispered, “breathe.”“I can’t.” My voice shook. “If I let go”“You break the world.”“Yes.”“And if you hold too tight,” she whispered, “you break yourself.”I laughed. Broken. “I am already breaking.”ThenA flash of silver.A blade.&
I did not fall alone.I took the balance of the world with me.And the last thought I heard was not mine at all:Now let them fear their chosen girl.Love should soothe. Ours sharpened teeth.War did not come in music or marching boots.It came in a name.Hers.“Where is Rory? ” I demanded.No one answered. They only stared some with fear, some with hate. As if the air had changed. As i







