The Chains of Fate Samantha Amstutz the Aelfyn Archives 2 2024 Starlight Fantasy Publishing LLC 73
The Chains of Fate Samantha Amstutz the Aelfyn Archives 2 2024 Starlight Fantasy Publishing LLC 73
The Chains of Fate Samantha Amstutz the Aelfyn Archives 2 2024 Starlight Fantasy Publishing LLC 73
SAMANTHA AMSTUTZ
Reading Guidance
Guide & Summary
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
Chapter 45
Chapter 46
Chapter 47
Chapter 48
Chapter 49
The story continues…
Thank you for reading!
Spice rack
Acknowledgments
About the Author
READING GUIDANCE
This novel is intended for adults with darker themes some readers may find
upsetting or disturbing. Please consider your mental health before diving
into this story if you have any concerns about the following content
warnings. This book ends on a brutal cliff-hanger.
Consensual sexual intimacy is on page. If you’d prefer to avoid or know
when to expect intimate content, please refer to the “spice rack” for
specific chapters.
This is by no means an exhaustive list or arranged in any particular order:
panic attacks, death, graphic violence/gore, fire injury, eugenics, sexual
encounters and suggestive themes, racism, adult language, DID, bullying,
memories of substance abuse/addiction, alcohol use, choking,
blood/bleeding, emotional/physical manipulation and abuse.
GUIDE & SUMMARY
The first few chapters of The Chains of Fate highlight significant events
that took place in The Aspect of Essence and most of the information below
comes through in narration. Refreshers and minor details about the
characters and the known magic system can be found within the next few
pages.
ESSENCE
The elves’ magical source of power, thought to be drawn from the stars.
Only pure-bloods have the potential to control all eight abilities (arch
elves). The Elven-blooded (those with human and elf blood) have an easier
time learning how to summon their talents by drawing on respective
emotions tied to each ability. Talents are innate and cannot be learned.
Well- The source where magic is drawn from. Wells can be strengthened
and expanded by continual use of magic. Strength is determined by the
number of abilities, not the size of the Well. Magic must be regenerated by
meditating (easier under starlight for most).
Rending - Destructive shadows that can either restrain a body, inflict
perceived pain, or totally obliterate (known emotion to draw from: anger).
Mending - Healing powers that appear as red threads of light, cannot be
used on the caster (known emotion to draw from: love/kindness).
Shielding - Violet crystalline wards that can serve as protective barriers on
objects or a person (known emotion to draw on: fear).
Force - The caster can use weights of objects or the earth’s gravity to push
and pull, appears as blue light (known emotion to draw on:
desire/determination).
Illumination - Any individual with elf blood possesses this ability. The
user can create a variety of colorful lights or distribute a portion of their
magical reserves to another to restore power (known emotion to draw on:
happiness).
Portaling - Rifts can be opened only to known locations unless a bond is
shared with another (corresponding emotion: trust and yearning).
Illusion - The ability to project realistic images, appears as turquoise light
(corresponding emotion not yet revealed).
Telepathy - Mind to mind communication. Those without telepathy can
still communicate so long as the person with the talent maintains the
connection. Jassyn has discovered that telepathy is used in coercion.
Compulsive magic is only able to be used by the king due to his strength in
power. King Galaeryn can influence others into not speaking. Lykor’s POV
has revealed that the king can also control actions with coercive magic
(corresponding emotion not yet revealed).
WRAITH ABILITIES
Warping - Can teleport from one location to another as long as the
destination in view is visible and unobstructed.
Venom - Their fangs have paralytic qualities.
Cloaking - Can conceal and obscure themselves in shadows.
PROMINENT CHARACTERS
Serenna (Sir-REN-nah) Vallende (Val-LEND-e) - an elven-blooded and
former princess of Allaenar, now an initiate at Centarya. Shares a bond with
Prince Vesryn that spontaneously manifested but is not fully formed until
they both accept the connection.
Essence abilities: rending, shielding, force, and mending (has yet to
manifest illumination and portaling)
Jassyn (JAS-sin) Raellyn (Rae-ELL-in) - a mender and researcher at
Centarya, half cousin to Vesryn
Essence abilities: mending, telepathy, shielding, illusion, illumination
Known shaman abilities: controlled plant life
Vesryn (VEZ-rin) Falkyn (FALL-kin) - prince of Alari, arch elf.
Commander of Centarya and the rangers
Lykor (Lie-CORE) - wraith leader whose consciousness split from Aesar’s
(Vesryn’s twin) at the hands of King Galaeryn during experiments with
Essence. Aesar is thought to have perished during the first wraith
appearance in an attack on Kyansari a century ago.
Essence abilities: shielding, rending, portaling, force (other talents were
stripped away and not returned).
MINOR CHARACTERS
Kal (CAL) - A wraith and Lykor’s captain.
Fenn (FEN) - A wraith, Kal’s son, one of Lykor’s lieutenants.
Elashor (e-LASH-or) Vallende (Val-LEND-e) - Serenna and Ayla’s father
and Alari’s General, arch elf.
Velinya (Vel-LIN-ya) - Serenna’s elven-blooded friend who was injured
during the wraith attack on Centarya and taken to Kyansari with other
wounded for healing.
Magister Thalaesyn (THAL-Aye-Sin) - Mender and researcher at
Centarya, Jassyn’s mentor and an arch elf
Galaeryn (ga-LARE-rin) Falkyn (FALL-kin) - Elven king of Alari,
Vesryn’s sire.
Ayla (EYE-la) Vallende - An initiate at Centarya, half niece to Jassyn, half
sister to Serenna via Elashor. Engaged to Vesryn.
Lady Farine (Fa-REEN) Vallende - Elashor’s mother and one of Jassyn’s
former contract holders.
Fynlas (FIN-las) Kovaer (COE-va-air) - an archivist who disappeared
decades ago. Had a study in Farine Vallende’s estate when he was one of
her live-in companions. Tracked human shaman lines. Jassyn discovered
both his and Serenna’s family tree among many other elven bloodeds’.
Queen Maraelyn (Ma-REL-in) - Vesryn’s mother who perished in the first
wraith attack, half sister is Jassyn’s mother.
Nelya (NEL-ya) - Jassyn’s peer and research associate at Centarya.
Flight Captain Zaeryn (Zare-IN) - Vesryn’s second in command of the
rangers
RACES
Aelfyn (ALE-fin) - The elves’ ancestors.
Elves - Ruling race, subjugated humans and elven-blooded.
Elven-blooded - Those with any amount of elf blood mixed with human
blood.
Humans - Natives of the mortal shores, provide resources to Alari.
Wraith - Two groups of wraith have been speculated on: “mindless” wraith
and “organized” wraith (Lykor’s).
Druids - An extinct race who perished in the Great War with the Aelfyn,
not much is known, but they were suspected to be shifters
Shamans - Ancient line of humans who had access to elemental power
(fire, water, earth, wind, lightning).
PL ACES
Centarya (Sen-TAR-e-ah) - The elven-blooded military academy.
Alari (a-LAR-e) - Elven realm
Kyansari (KEY-an-sar-e) - Elven capital
Frostvault Keep - Lykor’s haven with the wraith, a dormant volcano
thought to be an ancient druid capital.
Ranger Station - stables where the dracovae rides under Prince Vesryn are
based out of, in the plains of northern Alari.
Human Realms
Southern realm - Allaenar (Al-LAE-nar) Capital - Vaelyn (Vey-LIN),
Serenna’s former home
Northern realm - Nydoraen (Nye-DOR-ain)
Eastern realm - Halaema (Ha-LAE-ma)
Western realm - Dosythe (Do-SITHE)
CHAPTER 1
JASSYN
JASSYN
LYKOR
L ykor lurked, still like a shadow, silent as the night. Clouds obscured the
moons, threatening to smother the mountains with a late spring snow.
Tapping into one of his wraith abilities, he concealed himself in a
shroud of darkness—invisible to prying eyes.
At the rim of a frosty vale surrounded by pine trees, Lykor lingered fifty
paces away from a lone dracovae rider’s camp. A fire pressed back the
gloom against the starless sky. Tongues of flame reflected in each of the
dracovae’s slatey scales as it lay curled around the elf nestled against its
feathered shoulder. The beast huffed in its sleep, the heavy exhale unfurling
from its beak as a plume of steam.
Lykor had detected the dracovae’s silhouette against the horizon that
morning, soaring above the glacial edge of the continental shelf. He’d
opened a portal hundreds of leagues away from the safety of the wraith’s
stronghold for his people to tend their fishing nets along the frigid coast.
If he believed in such a thing, Lykor would’ve said that the stars had
aligned, positioning him in the same location as this elf. He’d been tracking
the rider the entire day while she made sweeping flights across the
northwestern border of the Timber Wilds.
Lykor doubted the dracovae would survive a journey to their hidden
fortress without freezing to death, but this elven patrol was still too close to
the Hibernal Wastes for his liking. Judging from the sheathed weapons and
the scaled armor bundled under her cloak, Lykor suspected the riders were
now warriors—a shift from when Aesar had simply managed curation of
the beasts’ population a century ago.
Now apparently involved in the elven military, Lykor anticipated this
rider had orders or information he could extract. Today marked three days
after their failed assault and her proximity was a threat to his people—
especially since she was inching closer to their remote borders. Hunting.
Intruding.
The wraith’s scouting parties had already discovered camps of
assembled humans spanning across every realm. An alarming number of
mortals had gathered along the fringes of the Wastes. It was only a matter of
time before they fanned out, scouring for the wraith under King Galaeryn’s
tyranny. Lykor knew that their time sheltering in the secluded stronghold
was coming to an end—if the presence of this rider and the human war
bands were any sign.
He knew the king wouldn’t simply forget about the wraith. Now that
Galaeryn had assembled his pawns, Lykor presumed the king would set his
sights on the Aelfyn homeland, to claim whatever their ancestors had left
behind beyond the sea. But only after tying up his loose end on this side of
the world—eliminating the wraith. In the prisons, Galaeryn had boasted to
Lykor about his ambitions. But what hope did the wraith have of stopping
him?
Reminded of those half-elves the king had bred for a gruesome purpose,
Lykor’s awareness brushed the bond-holder, who’d obviously surviving the
attack. Essence leashed this nuisance to him—one he deduced was some
half-elf spawn.
He contemplated using the connection to locate, abduct, and haul them
to the wraith’s fortress. If he could force their acceptance of the bond, he
could manipulate their magic and control their power. Then he finally
wouldn’t be stretched so fucking thin all the time as the only one among the
wraith with magic.
Sensing Aesar stirring, like one rolling over in sleep, Lykor’s hackles
rose. He assumed Aesar had perceived his intentions and disagreed. As
usual. Lykor shoved his other half into a recess in their mind. Perhaps he
could keep that meddling presence locked away indefinitely.
In some pathetic attempt at heroism, Aesar had unforgivably sabotaged
Lykor’s carefully staged assault against the half-elf army. He’d seized
control of their body, sounded the retreat, and then jumped from the highest
peak of a tower. As if his martyrdom would’ve solved anything.
Lykor clamped down on his fury, grinding his fangs. I DIDN’T
ENDURE TWENTY YEARS IN THE ELVEN DUNGEONS TO BE CAST
ASIDE.
Lykor hadn’t ripped away control of their body from Aesar in time as
they’d plunged to the ground, but he’d survived. Or rather, someone had
somehow halted his fall.
WHY DIDN’T THAT ELF KILL ME? Thoughts twisting with conflict,
contorting like vines, Lykor dredged up memories invaded by a pair of
striking amber eyes—one of the king’s half-elves.
Lykor’s mind tilled up an echo of that raven-haired male’s scoffed
words. I saved you.
WHY? AND WHY DID I NOT EVISCERATE HIM?
Perhaps he’d hesitated when crushing that elf’s throat after seeing the
despondency settling over in his face. The fear. Then the acceptance.
Something inexplicable had doused the murderous fire in Lykor’s veins.
Perhaps it was the way that elf had bitterly laughed in the face of death like
Lykor had done so many times to spurn the king.
Muttering to himself, Lykor steered his disconcerting thoughts away
from the elf who’d scattered his common sense like ashes on the wind. That
hadn’t been the only unexpected incident that night.
WHY WAS VESRYN THERE?
Lykor fled from the witless thought as soon as it emerged. His spine
spasmed in anticipation, expecting the king’s compulsive magic to invade
his awareness, reducing him to a bystander in his mind. The coercion
demanded the death of the prince, lest Vesryn wander into the wraith’s
prison a century ago and uncover Galaeryn’s plans.
Aesar’s twin never did.
Once Lykor had emerged, splitting from Aesar’s consciousness to shield
him from his sire, the king had flaunted why he hadn’t tortured Vesryn in
the same fashion—the torment that had reduced Lykor to a wraith.
Instead of harming the other prince, Galaeryn had maintained the
convenience of an heir and boasted about molding another type of monster
—someone star-bent on vengeance to hunt down the wraith he continued to
create. What better way to exert control over the realms than by fabricating
a conflict, crafting a convenient excuse to corral the mortals and frighten
the elves into compliance?
Lykor trembled, breath rattling in his lungs. Waiting for the coercion’s
dominance. Thoughts brushing Aesar’s twin always triggered the
destructive magic harnessed to Lykor’s mind. Against his will, rending
would uncontrollably whip out of him, as if seeking Vesryn out.
Except…
Nothing happened.
WHAT?
Blinking, Lykor frowned, tangled in a web of confusion, unable to
comprehend why the oppressive magic hadn’t overpowered him like it had
every other time his thoughts touched…Vesryn.
The realization chilled Lykor’s blood like the wind’s frigid bite. THAT
AMBER-EYED ELF FIDDLED WITH MY MIND.
The male had known of the coercion—he’d even asked, offered to help.
Frowning, Lykor tunneled inward, still sensing the dark magic latched onto
his awareness like a parasite. He released a breath. Perhaps the compulsion
was degrading. Surely Galaeryn’s power couldn’t endure until the end of
time.
COULD THAT ELF ACTUALLY HELP ME LIKE HE’D CLAIMED?
Lykor idly stroked the silver hilt at his waist, the metallic leaves and vines
framing the golden blade. Lykor couldn’t say why he’d pilfered the dagger
like it was some trophy, but its presence kindled a spark of foolish hope.
The tentative promise of freedom from the king’s coercion lured Lykor
down a treacherous path that would surely lead to disappointment.
He flinched, recalling how the monarch had honed his coercive magic,
shredding Lykor’s mind. Destroying any natural defenses he’d previously
possessed, stealing his ability to barricade his awareness. Leaving him
vulnerable.
If the king had discovered how to control Lykor absolutely, that
would’ve been the end of what little resistance Lykor had maintained over
the years. He could only assume that was Galaeryn’s eventual intent.
Absolute dominance.
Giving himself a shake, Lykor dispelled the suppressed memories,
shoving them back behind an obsidian door where he kept those horrific
thoughts.
He grounded himself to the present, snapping his clawed gauntlet into a
fist. The metal articulated with a squeal, the grating sound splitting the
tranquility of the night. Realizing the mistake, his attention flew to the rider,
ensuring she and the dracovae still slept.
This elven scout was obviously on the hunt for something. But so was
he.
Unsheathing the stolen blade, Lykor dipped into his Well, hauling out a
stream of Essence. He clenched the dagger. His wrath and hatred toward the
elves had only intensified after the failed raid—his greatest desire was to
keep his people safe. Like a serpent coiling around a branch, he spun a blue
tendril of force along the length of the silver hilt.
Lykor snarled at the sleeping rider, flaring his magic to expel his fury.
The dagger lifted from his palm, hovering in the air, turning as he aimed the
golden tip at the slumbering warrior. Releasing power in a streaking volley,
he sent the knife flying on wings of force.
Impaled in the shoulder, the rider startled awake with a cry of alarm,
magic tethered—stifled. She clawed at the hilt. Lykor tossed a hand up,
punching out a swarm of force, anchoring the blade to bone.
Shrugging off his invisibility, Lykor focused his awareness to his chest,
taking advantage of his partial-wraith form. Building a pressure near the
point of fracturing pain, he folded in on himself and warped across the
clearing.
Reappearing in front of the warrior, Lykor snagged her leathers, hauling
her away from the rousing dracovae. Unwilling to slay the innocent beast,
he tore open a portal and shoved the rider through before the dracovae
could aid its master with slicing talons and its razor-sharp bill.
On the other side of the gateway, in the bowels of the Frostvault Keep,
Lykor pitched the elf forward into a darkened tunnel, steering her toward a
set of stairs. He would’ve portaled to the interrogation chamber directly, but
the extinct druids—the former masters of the wraith’s volcano fortress—
had enough foresight to lace the brig’s stonework with gold. Traveling in or
out by rifts was impossible. An inconvenience now.
Essence unraveled wherever gold touched—one of the curses the druids
condemned on the Aelfyn before their downfall. But the wraith’s gold-firing
crossbows hadn’t been a tide-turning advantage during the assault like
Lykor had hoped, despite piercing through the elves’ magical shields. But if
the wraith had a power like the druids—
The rider charged at Lykor with daggers flashing, yanking his attention
back to the hallway. The silver blades reflected flames from the spiked iron
sconces. Spurred by irritation, Lykor flicked his gauntlet, a blast of force
spinning the knives out of her fingers. The weapons struck the stone walls,
clattering to the floor. Fueled by retribution, he shoved her down the
winding earthen steps with a burst of power.
The warrior went tumbling. Her screech morphed into a piercing scream
as she crashed to the bottom of the stairwell. Lykor strolled unhurriedly,
descending with heavy, booted footsteps that echoed against the stark
surroundings.
Strangled by heat collected from the Slag and spewed through the
labyrinth of vents, he yanked off his fur cloak, discarding it on a step.
When Lykor reached the dimmed halls of the dungeon, the warrior
struggled to stand, stifling a whimper of pain. Twisted unnaturally, one of
her legs bowed out like a broken branch, incapable of supporting weight.
One of the rider’s blood-soaked arms dangled uselessly, white bone jutting
through flesh.
After all these years, Lykor had finally captured an elven prisoner, and
he was ravenous for revenge. He’d balance the scales, destroying one elf’s
life at a time, repaying the debt for what the king had inflicted upon him. To
purge one of the king’s soldiers before her power could harm the wraith, to
extinguish her Essence before the king could siphon it and augment his
own. Lykor would pry words from her lips and uncover the elves’
immediate plans.
Baring his fangs, Lykor stalked to the elf sprawled on the ground. The
warrior’s boots scraped against the stone floor in her meager attempt to
shuffle away, her mangled leg preventing escape.
Reaching down, Lykor seized her auburn hair, the darker color leading
him to believe she was one of those half-elf spawn. Not that the difference
in blood mattered—they were all elves to him and would bleed all the same.
Leaving the cell-lined hallway, Lykor dragged her to an empty chamber
set up for questioning captives. He’d collected a plethora of tools for this
purpose, lining the chamber with every variety of weapon the wraith could
craft, plated with gold. All for show and intimidation—he wouldn’t need
them.
With an eruption of force, he slammed the elf against a wall. She sucked
in a labored breath as her back collided with stone.
Lykor snatched the golden chains swinging from the ceiling, shoving
the warrior’s broken arm into a manacle, drawing out a hiss. Shackling her
wrists and neck, Lykor left the knife tethering her power in her shoulder.
He prowled to the center of the chamber, pivoting on his heel to study
her. To think. Swept away in capturing the elf, he’d put no thought into
what questions he’d ask of a prisoner. Lykor supposed he should begin by
gouging out her knowledge of the king’s intentions, to bridge the gaps a
century had hollowed in his.
He had no doubts the elves were doing the same to those Aesar had
abandoned on the island. Lykor’s fangs drew blood from his gums, dwelling
on the wraith left behind. All those lives lost. Deserted. His people would
break under torture. Reveal the location of their fortress. Lykor’s objective
became clear—he needed to learn how much time remained until the elves
confronted them in force.
“What do you know of the wraith?” Lykor demanded.
The warrior dragged in breath through her nose before spitting at him,
the spittle hardly landing halfway across the room.
Lykor’s lip curled away from his teeth. In one step, he warped,
materializing in front of her. With his gauntlet, he snatched the elf by the
throat, lifting her to her toes. He wrenched her neck to make the restraints
cut into her collarbones, flashing his fangs at her insolence.
“I will ask one more time,” Lykor clipped, rage boiling beneath his ribs.
Shadows whipped around him in a tempest, fury evoking rending. “Answer
unsatisfactorily and I won’t hesitate to plait your entrails after I peel the
flesh from your bones.”
The warrior whimpered, eyes rolling with fear, but remained silent.
Lykor struck out with a sliver of darkness. Cutting like a blade, he
channeled the rending, splitting the female’s skin under his gauntlet. She
swore as he withdrew the metal from her throat. The flesh from her neck
sloughed away, stuck to the steel like sap dripping off a pine.
The way she stubbornly set her jaw had Lykor snarling. Eyes flicking to
her broken arm, he detected the next key to try to unlock her secrets. He
grabbed the exposed bone, twisting it farther in the wrong direction.
The female shrieked through her teeth as she panted. Eyes glazing over,
she slumped in the chains, passing out.
Lykor growled in disgust. With a flick of force, he wiped away the
sticky mess sullying his armor. He crushed his claw into a fist, letting the
squeal of the steel soothe him as he started pacing the room.
Like a bolt of lightning, a violent thought collided with him. His head
whipped back to the elf. During his imprisonment, he’d learned of dark
magic that the king and his general had meddled with. Lykor had no
reservations about exploiting those same techniques against their own.
He could take her power.
Like the king had done to him—to all the wraith—pilfering Essence
from the elves they used to be. Not anticipating an escape, Galaeryn had
returned a handful of talents to Lykor to see if he’d retain strength over his
abilities. The wraith wouldn’t have survived this long without the Essence
Lykor possessed, but he was far from the arch elf that Aesar used to be.
Ripping off his gauntlet and flinging it aside, Lykor exposed his
dominant right hand, the claw that belonged to some beast. Skin to skin
contact worked best. How many times had Galaeryn extracted and inserted
abilities while experimenting on him? Hundreds? Half hadn’t survived the
siphoning process, perishing from the unbearable agony of talents cleaved
from the Well.
Dissolving the horrors of the past, Lykor prowled forward as shadows
spilled from his claw like noxious fog. He yanked the golden blade out of
the elf’s shoulder, sheathing it back at his side before shredding her leathers
with a slash of rending. Lykor plunged his talons into the slumped warrior’s
chest.
And pillaged everything.
CHAPTER 4
JASSYN
J assyn shifted his feet at the edge of an outdoor training yard a quarter
mile from the massive dracovae stables. The midmorning sun glinted off
various weapons arranged on multiple racks. Perched in a mountainous
plateau near Alari’s northern border, the Ranger Station towered over the
far end of the practice fields.
“This isn’t necessary,” Jassyn said. One last attempt at a futile protest.
Standing in the center of one of the sandy circles, Vesryn tied back his
hair with a leather strap. “My face begs to differ.” The prince gestured to his
unmarred jaw, where an hour ago, Jassyn had healed the bruises he’d
apparently bestowed upon Vesryn in his previous incapacitated state. “I
need to teach you to throw a punch properly so you don’t fuck up your hand
again.”
Jassyn had awakened that morning feeling resurrected. Most of the
Stardust had vacated his system after two long days locked away in the
prince’s chambers.
Wary of Vesryn’s notorious lack of skill, Jassyn rubbed his bruised
knuckles, unwilling to allow the prince to mend him in return. Scattered bits
and pieces were all that Jassyn could remember—yielding his stomach,
attempting to escape, and even brawling with his cousin.
“And I’m not forgetting that you stabbed me!” Voice pitched high with
scandalization, Vesryn pointed to his shoulder’s unblemished skin, another
spot Jassyn had healed. “Seven concealed daggers is rather excessive, but if
you insist on carrying so many, then you’re going to learn how to use
them.”
"Shredding my leathers to recover the blades was completely uncalled
for,” Jassyn grumbled. “I had that armor broken in.”
He vaguely recalled the confrontation that had occurred in the middle of
the first night when he’d attempted to sneak out of Vesryn’s chambers,
intending to retrieve his supply of Stardust. Instead of slipping out of the
prince’s apartment undetected, Jassyn had tripped over his cousin, who’d
been sleeping on the floor like a guard dog.
While in his deranged state, knifing the prince had been the only
reasonable course of action. In a mad dash toward freedom, Jassyn had
made it halfway down the hallway before Vesryn had tackled him, dragging
him back into his lair.
Enduring his crazed assaults, the prince had dutifully played caretaker.
Vesryn’s dedication tilled up a twinge of guilt. I suppose I should be
thanking him.
As he inhaled the crisp mountain air, a breath of relief cleansed Jassyn’s
lungs. Now freed from the clutches of Stardust, the world sharpened around
him.
Jassyn studied the stable hands in the distance, too busy seeing to their
morning chores to bother looking over at the practice yards. No one else
remained at the Ranger Station—the warriors had departed at dawn to
patrol on their dracovae, hunting for signs of the wraith. Jassyn surveyed
the scattered clouds, but nothing more than an empty sky stared back.
“Relax,” Vesryn said, shaking out his wrists. “Nobody is watching. I
knew you wouldn’t want an audience—that’s why I brought us here instead
of staying on campus.”
Jassyn readjusted his white magus leathers, dismayed that it would take
weeks to get this new set pliable. But if a destroyed uniform and spending
more time with the prince was the price of losing dependence on the dust,
the bill came in much lower than he’d expected. Though Vesryn
undoubtedly would collect interest on the debt with whatever “training” he
had in store.
The sun skimmed the mountain peaks, warming Jassyn’s skin and frying
his nerves. He took one hesitant step from the grass into the training field
before obstinacy claimed him. “I was throwing up yesterday.” He crossed
his arms. “I’m not sure this is the best idea.”
“You’ll be fine,” Vesryn said, waving off his concern, obviously
determined to outmatch his stubbornness. The prince pulled an arm tight
across his chest, stretching. “Sweating out the residual Stardust hardly
compares to what you’ve already been through.” Tugging off his ragged
boots and socks, the prince sent them sailing to the edge of the ring with a
tendril of force. “Take off your shoes.”
Shoulders slumping in defeat, Jassyn let the argument drop. Bickering
would only prolong the inevitable and he might as well get this over with.
Judging from what he’d heard of Serenna’s “lessons” with the prince, he
expected that his cousin would have something ludicrous planned.
Like a wolf greedily defending a kill, Vesryn wasn’t likely to slacken
his hold now that Jassyn had consented to participating. How did I let him
talk me into this?
After peeling off his footwear, Jassyn joined the prince in the ring, feet
sinking into the gritty sand. Vesryn will probably throw me around and say
it’s for my own good.
He hadn’t made a habit of setting foot in the practice yards at Centarya
beyond the required magus training that Vesryn had implemented at the
start of the spring term. Exercise wasn’t at the forefront of his mind—he
was more comfortable diving into research.
Logically, Jassyn could recognize the practicality of honing skills and
training for combat. He reflexively touched the scabs scored in his flesh by
that elven wraith’s gauntlet. I was useless when I was pinned by my throat.
Perhaps that was why he’d agreed—he’d had enough of being at the mercy
of others.
“Since you’re not carrying any bulk around, I imagine you’ll be quick
on your feet,” Vesryn said, stretching out his other arm behind his head.
“But you’ll need to develop coordination for that. Find your balance,” he
commanded, demonstrating by standing on one foot, kicking his other knee
in front of him at an angle.
Jassyn copied the prince, wobbling shortly after holding the position.
Teetering and shifting his weight, he found maintaining the pose only
became more difficult as the seconds ticked by. Before Jassyn knew it,
sweat plastered his curls to his forehead.
“How long are we going to do this?” Jassyn gritted out, muscles
trembling in earnest.
Vesryn’s arched brow suggested his protest was dramatic.
The next half hour didn’t offer any respite while the prince ran him
through a series of contorting stretches that appeared much simpler when
performed by his cousin. Frustration spiked through Jassyn as he tried to
copy the forms, his new set of stiff armor hindering his movements. If I
would’ve changed into that cashmere he was waving around, my best
leathers wouldn’t be dismantled. Anchoring his feet in the sand, Jassyn
brought himself back to the moment, tracking time with his heartbeats.
“Summon your power and connect your magic to your body’s motion,”
Vesryn instructed, circling him. He used his toes to nudge Jassyn’s foot
back, correcting his stance. “Make your pretty lights dance or something.”
Legs shaking in protest from balancing, Jassyn channeled his awareness
to his Well—replenished by the prince that morning. Tonight, he’d be able
to regenerate on his own when the stars bloomed. For the first time in
weeks, Jassyn effortlessly seized Essence while Vesryn drifted a few paces
away.
A current of magic raced through his veins, saturating him with a clarity
and harmony that he hadn’t realized Stardust had deprived him of while
he’d spent the past few weeks living in a haze. Thoughts abruptly lurching
back to the drug, Jassyn wrestled with his mind, dragging in a slow breath
and releasing his desire for it on the exhale.
Refocusing on his magic and recentering his swaying body, Jassyn
raised his palms. Power fountained from his Well, spinning as a glittering
stream of Essence around his fingertips. Bending the power into his
illumination talent, he summoned a dozen hovering orbs of white light.
Flicking his wrist, the shimmering globes went whirling over Vesryn’s
shoulder.
A shift in the breeze stirred his curls, offering some relief from his body
heating with exertion. Senses tingling as his skin pebbled, Jassyn jerked his
attention away from the wind. He blinked against the sunlight cresting the
mountains, pointedly ignoring the unusual sensation.
I need to determine what that earthen power was before I accidentally
call roots out of the ground again. Or do something worse that I can’t
control.
The prince looped back in front of him. “Can you believe that even after
the attack, the council is still insisting on holding that ridiculous
tournament?”
Jassyn swayed, the question dragging him out of his thoughts. The
burning in his legs rushed back to the forefront of his awareness.
Stumbling, he caught himself before toppling over, abandoning the
balancing stance by planting both feet on the ground. Vesryn didn’t correct
him, seeming too absorbed as he tilted his head, waiting for Jassyn’s reply.
“Of course they are,” Jassyn scoffed, yanking in air to even out his
breathing. It was no surprise that the realm still expected the recruits to
bloody each other for the capital’s entertainment. “Like that’s where our
priorities should be.”
“I was the only vote against the competition—it was the majority of the
council’s idea, not mine,” Vesryn said almost defensively, kicking at a
clump of sand. “You mentioned the magus…respected me.” The prince
considered him while fiddling with a frayed thread on his armor’s dragon
sigil. “Where do you think their loyalties lie?”
Jassyn’s response was automatic, a conditioned response for
preservation. “To the council.” He narrowed his eyes on the prince,
suddenly unsure of what Vesryn wanted from him. “What other choice is
there?”
Vesryn seemingly agreed with a grunt but didn’t offer any further
words. Crossing his arms, the prince drummed his fingers. His attention
flicked to one of Jassyn’s drifting globes, as if recalling their training.
A pressure vibrated through the ring as Vesryn’s magic ignited.
Shadows rose around the prince like fog. He sliced through a few of
Jassyn’s shining orbs with a tendril of rending, extinguishing their light.
Jassyn wiped away the sweat beading on his forehead. Drawing in a
steadying breath, he flexed his hands, concentrating on keeping the
illumination out of the prince’s reach.
Feet stirring sand, Vesryn started pacing as his shadows spiraled around
them. “Do you think the magus would stand with me if the council
attempted to put someone else in command?”
Jassyn’s brows shot up as he studied the prince, who’d apparently
overlooked the fact that his position in the realm was second only to the
king. “Why would they appoint anyone else? Who would even fill the
role?” His quivering legs threatened to collapse at his conclusion, dread
pitching his tone higher. “Elashor?”
Vesryn didn’t answer, the silence expanding like his cloud of magic. He
formed a fist, punching out a wave of darkness, engulfing one of Jassyn’s
spinning lights.
Unease prickled Jassyn’s scalp. “You don’t think it’ll come to bloodshed
between us and the capital, do you?”
Vesryn’s gaze unfocused toward the mountains in Centarya’s direction.
“I won’t let that happen.”
An unexpected blade of fear punctured Jassyn’s chest, stealing his
breath as he imagined someone aside from the prince in command. He
inhaled sharply at the possibility of the council having direct control over
Centarya. Vesryn had been the only pure-blood and the only member of the
higher political circles to lift a finger during the attack.
He’s different from the rest of them. The prince had taken an interest in
the welfare of the elven-blooded and perhaps that was in part to the bond
that had formed between him and Serenna. Rebalancing himself, Jassyn
buried his toes in the sand. Scorching stars, it’s not even a decision. I’d
rather stand with Vesryn if it comes to that.
Jassyn’s tongue stuck to the roof of his mouth as he swallowed.
Straightening, he cleared his throat. “I can gather an idea of where the
magus’ loyalties would lie. If given a choice, I can’t imagine it’s with the
council.” Directing his illumination, Jassyn’s remaining spheres of light
dodged the prince’s pursuing magic. “I’ve kept to the fringes of the magus
community though because of…” He faltered when Vesryn’s eyes flicked to
his forehead, where the Vallende’s had tattooed their sigil, displaying
Jassyn’s servitude to their family before he’d had it erased. The prince
averted his gaze and Jassyn didn’t feel the need to explain further. Instead
he asked, “Where is this coming from?”
Vesryn studied his palm as shadows twined across his fingertips.
“Something happened in the dungeons with our wraith prisoners.” A glower
flashed across his face. “Elashor was there.”
Jassyn tensed at the admission. The prince normally annihilated the
creatures without taking prisoners and no one had questioned them before.
Everyone believed they were mindless beasts, so what was the point?
“I thought the capital couldn’t care less about what you do with the
wraith,” Jassyn said. He flared new droplets of light to replace the magic
Vesryn had extinguished, scattering the illumination around the yard like a
burst of rain.
“Exactly.” Vesryn punctuated the word by a jabbing finger. “Elashor
was too interested in the interrogation for my liking. The council has never
been involved before—that’s why I’m concerned now.” The prince frowned
off into the distance. The pressure of his magic coalesced, the whirlwind of
shadows twisting around the training ring. “I told Elashor to leave. I
commanded his soldiers to leave, but they…” Vesryn blew a breath out of
his nose. “They disregarded my orders when they should’ve complied, no
questions asked.”
Despite the warm sun, Jassyn shivered, alarm binding his stomach into a
knot. “The differences between the organized attack on campus and the
mindless wraith you hunt across the realms probably sparked the council’s
interest.”
But Elashor would go unchecked if he acquired more power, bypassing
the prince and taking a step closer to the king. If Vesryn was removed,
Centarya would be at the general’s mercy. Lungs seized by fear, Jassyn’s
breath came faster, heartbeat rampant. Vesryn’s protection won’t mean
anything if the council strips him of command. If Elashor had his way,
Jassyn would undoubtedly be sent back to Farine, forced to participate in
the twisted ways she found pleasure.
In a battle for breath, Jassyn wrestled every thought away from that
likely, horrifying reality. He yanked his awareness back to the coarse sand
embracing his feet. Clutching his magic like a lifeline, he channeled his
focus on the charge of power rushing through him, spinning the globes of
illumination faster around them.
Surfacing from the tide of panic, Jassyn returned to the prince’s
concerns, voicing his assumptions before his mind caught up. “I’m sure
Elashor didn’t want you alone with the prisoners and gathering answers
without his knowledge.”
The prince clenched his jaw, fingers twitching. “The general’s behavior
in the dungeons was a blatant disregard for my authority.” A pulse of
rending engulfed a smattering of Jassyn’s lights that didn’t scurry out of
reach fast enough. “And Kyansari’s soldiers didn’t acknowledge my
presence. Their eyes were…” Vesryn shook his head. “I don’t know. Dull.
Not bloodshot like yours were from Stardust. Just…blank.”
“Do you think they’ve been compelled?” Jassyn blurted, his tongue
recklessly loosened.
Vesryn frowned, taken aback. “My sire only used that magic on those in
the delegations sent to the mortal realms, but that practice shouldn’t be
occurring anymore since our world is open to the humans.”
As far as we know, the king is the only one with the strength to fabricate
compulsion. But the only flimsy proof Jassyn had of the king’s direct
involvement was a snarl from an elven wraith that could’ve been interpreted
as anything when he asked if the monarch was the one who’d compelled
him.
Flaring a burst of force at a weapons rack positioned on the perimeter of
the yard, Vesryn yanked two staffs toward him. He extended both palms,
catching one in each. “Why would you think there’s compulsion on the
soldiers?” he prompted, tossing Jassyn a sparring stick.
Somehow, Jassyn caught the staff, even though his entire body felt
ready to fray like Vesryn’s boots. Following the prince’s lead, he rallied his
strength and released his magic. Running his fingers along the smooth
grains, Jassyn clutched the middle, the width nearly the size of his wrist.
“I think I’ve detected coercion on campus.” Unwilling to divulge his
encounter with the wraith, Jassyn kept to himself that he’d sensed similar
telepathic magic on the warrior’s mind.
Silence thickened between them, broken by a dracovae’s piercing
screech in the distance. Vesryn tilted his head, silver hair mirroring the
sunlight. “What do you mean?”
Uncertainty tangled in Jassyn’s chest, coiling into a knot of hesitation.
Unsure how far he could trust the prince, Jassyn held his tongue. He hadn’t
disclosed his discovery of the telepathic web on Magister Thalaesyn to
anyone. Not even his peer Nelya, who he’d worked closely with for
decades. For weeks, he’d secretly inspected the compulsive magic snared
across his mentor’s mind. But he needed to trust someone eventually and
Vesryn was starting to look like the only option.
Squaring his stance, Jassyn moored his feet in the sand and ventured to
ask, “Would there be any motive for the king to compel Magister
Thalaesyn?”
As soon as the words rushed out of his mouth, Jassyn’s fingers tensed
on the weapon. The prince went still. His question bordered on an
accusation. Vesryn didn’t exactly have a close affiliation with his sire, but
that didn’t mean he had any reason to share in Jassyn’s suspicions.
With no warning, the prince rushed him. Jassyn locked his knees,
bracing for impact. Recalling training from a time in his youth that seemed
more like a dream rather than a memory, Jassyn pivoted on the ball of his
foot. Whipping the staff, he met the prince in a concussive clunk of wood.
The jolt rattled his elbows, shuddered through his arms, and vibrated
straight to his teeth.
“I can’t think of any reason why Thalaesyn would be compelled,”
Vesryn said, retreating a step and giving Jassyn an approving nod. “How
did you find out?”
“I found him incapacitated one afternoon.” Relaxing his shoulders,
Jassyn wiped his sweaty palms against his leathers. “I assessed him—
intending to mend him—and perceived a magic that I assumed was
coercion.”
Feet shuffling, Jassyn readjusted his grip on the sparring staff, orbiting
the prince as Vesryn looped around him. “That’s where I discovered the
Stardust,” Jassyn admitted, unintentionally revealing Thalaesyn’s vices with
his loose tongue.
Vesryn pursed his lips. “I’ve always had a blind spot with Thalaesyn,
but considering recent events, that’ll need to change.” The prince whirled
his staff low, like he aimed to sweep Jassyn off his feet.
Leaping back, the deep sand slowed Jassyn’s movement. “Blind spot?”
he asked, his voice strained from the effort. Anticipating another hit, Jassyn
clenched his teeth before he slapped Vesryn’s staff in a deflecting blow.
“Not meddling in someone else’s business doesn’t sound like you at all.”
He spun, using his momentum to drive the prince’s weapon away.
Jassyn was aware of the discord between the magister and the king,
coinciding around the appearance of the wraith. King Galaeryn had
banished Thalaesyn to Centarya after the elves had completed the
academy’s construction. Perhaps Vesryn knew more of the strife between
them.
“Do you have a history with the magister?” Jassyn gritted out, twisting
his wrists to meet Vesryn’s staff in a crash that jolted up his arms. Jassyn
didn’t bother attempting an offensive move. It was all he could do to parry
every thrust his cousin sent whistling in his direction.
Vesryn denied him any reprieve. “Thalaesyn and my mother…worked
closely together when the infertility crisis began,” he said, lunging again.
The prince’s staff cleaved the air—this time nearly clipping Jassyn’s
head. Rearing back, Jassyn reeled to halt the slash with a sloppy counter.
“Thalaesyn hasn’t allowed Stardust to interfere with his duties to any
notable degree before,” Vesryn said as their staffs met three times in a series
of wooden clacks. “I should’ve anticipated his habits affecting someone
else.” The prince frowned at his staff before adjusting his feet under his
shoulders. He twirled the weapon, sending it blurring in front of him like a
windmill. “After you’re feeling more like yourself, you’ll show me this
coercion. In the meantime, I’ll figure out how to address the magister’s
recreation.”
Jassyn faltered, regretting that he’d exposed the start of his addiction.
He never intended to cause trouble for his mentor. But Vesryn setting his
jaw had him reconsidering any protest.
“I suppose I can show you the magic on Thalaesyn’s mind—if he
agrees.” Jassyn yanked in breaths before Vesryn’s next assault, his thoughts
wheeling back to their previous conversation. “What did you find out from
the wraith?”
“Nothing,” Vesryn said, dashing forward. Their staffs collided in a crash
of wood. Once. Twice. Three times, a relentless bombardment of blows.
Vesryn spun. Jassyn leaped away as the butt end of the prince’s weapon
nearly punched him in the gut. “I killed them.”
Jassyn fumbled, snatching the staff before it clattered to the ground.
“What?”
Vesryn straightened from the onslaught, blinking rapidly. “One of them
said my name.” The prince’s voice lowered, suspended on the brink of
disbelief and bitterness. “I don’t know if it’s more unsettling that those
beasts can speak or the fact that it seemed to want mercy.”
Reclaiming his rebelling lungs, Jassyn’s eyes widened in stunned
silence even though he’d already discovered that wraith could converse.
The wraith probably heard someone address the prince and learned his
name.
The tendons in Vesryn’s neck strained before he slammed the staff into
the sand, leaning against it. “I lost control. I rended every single one before
I extracted any answers.”
Anger disintegrating, the prince scrubbed a hand over his face. “The
attack…dredged up memories I’ve kept buried for so long.” His fingers
tightened on the staff, grinding the wood further into the earth. “I couldn’t
lose Serenna like I did my brother. Even if we haven’t accepted our bond
yet, I don’t think I’d survive another connection breaking or failing another
person.” Vesryn slumped as he shook his head, staring at the ground. “I
ruined the only chance we had of discovering where those beasts came
from.” His words dwindled to a whisper, nearly dusted away by the breeze.
“I’m so tired of fucking up.”
Jassyn’s chest splintered in response, fracturing under the weight of his
own guilt. He almost confessed his encounter with the elven wraith,
informing his cousin that one of their number could wield Essence. But
Jassyn wavered, the scab of his shame still too fresh to rip back open. It
wouldn’t be any consolation to the prince anyway.
Jassyn hardly heard Vesryn as he spoke to the ground. “The night the
wraith killed my mother and brother… I wasn’t at the palace. I should’ve
been, but I wasn’t.” The prince swallowed. “I was at the Vallende estate…
out of my mind…” Vesryn cleared his throat, voice breaking as he traced a
whorl on the staff. “The only thing I remember was feeling split apart when
the bond shattered. I blacked out after it happened. I don’t know for how
long.” He blew out an unsteady sigh. “When I woke…Aesar was…just
gone.”
Jassyn’s heart stopped at the admission and then twisted painfully as he
watched Vesryn’s features contort, haunted by the pain of the past. An
overwhelming urge had him wanting to provide some measure of
reassurance that the prince wasn’t alone. Unsure of what to do, Jassyn
hesitantly stepped forward, reaching out to clasp his cousin’s shoulder.
“I’m sorry,” he said, knowing words were an empty comfort while the
prince drowned in regret. “I never knew the details of that night.”
Vesryn’s shoulders caved in. “If I didn’t foul myself with Stardust for
years, Aesar wouldn’t be dead.” He drew in a shuddering breath. “My
mother wouldn’t be dead. Along with so many others. The wraith left
nothing behind but shredded corpses. My sire didn’t even allow me to say
goodbye.” The prince released a bitter laugh. “All I have to remember my
brother are a shelf of his books, his glaives, and his boots.”
Sadness devoured Jassyn whole as he glanced at Vesryn’s shoes at the
edge of the yard—that offensive, tattered pair he’d always detested. He
blinked back an uncomfortable sting in his eyes, realizing why the prince
clung to the unsightly footwear. After decades, the leather was falling apart
—most likely only held intact by magic. We’re all broken in our own ways
and sometimes it’s only frayed threads holding our seams together.
“Thank you for helping me the last few days,” Jassyn said, squeezing
his cousin’s shoulder before pulling away. He wiped at a stray tear,
suddenly finding the distant mountains interesting to look at. We’ve both
failed those around us. Maybe we’re not so different after all.
Wingbeats thundered through the air. The prince tossed his staff to the
sand and rolled his shoulders. “Take a break and get some water. I need to
speak with Zaeryn.”
The weight of the moment dissipated. Jassyn turned, following Vesryn’s
gaze over his head toward the sky. The earth trembled, the vibrations
rippling up his legs as the rangers’ flight captain landed her chestnut
dracovae in a sprawling meadow.
Vesryn strode off while Jassyn stumbled to the watering rifts located in
the grass outside the ring, beyond grateful for the interruption. Two
horizontal portals spanning a pace in the air suspended an undulating
column of water, presumably drawn from a nearby mountain stream. Seeing
no other way to drink, Jassyn cupped his hands to catch the flow, splashing
water over his face.
Eyes unfocusing, he stared at the gushing fountain, dwelling on the long
road ahead—especially considering Vesryn’s star-bent notion to personally
oversee his fitness. But if outright war with the wraith is approaching, I
need to prepare.
As his body relaxed, Jassyn’s senses suddenly buzzed, his skin pinching
tight with his lifting hairs. Everything lurched into a vivid, crisp focus. The
wind sighed as it shifted. The grass thrummed under his toes. A stream of
water from the portal’s cascade began rippling toward him like a flower
turning with the sun.
Jassyn frantically squeezed his eyes shut, ruthlessly yanking his
awareness inward, away from the earth. The handful of times he’d allowed
his mind to drift recently, the surrounding world had seemed to beckon to
him. He hadn’t yet determined how to prevent it from spontaneously
happening. How am I supposed to tune out this magic when it’s always
around me?
Not having the head space to deal with how he channeled a power that
was supposed to be extinct, Jassyn shoved the thought away to dwell on at
another time. Instead, he focused on recovering his body, quenching his
thirst, and slowing his heartbeats along with his breaths.
Jassyn jumped when the prince’s voice sounded next to him. “Slow
down.” Vesryn swatted him away from catching the column’s water. “You’ll
throw up again at the rate you’re going. And I’ve had a lifetime’s worth of
hearing you retch.”
Gut sloshing as he wiped his hands on his leathers, Jassyn sighed. The
prince probably had a point.
Vesryn helped himself to the draft, shoving his face into the flow with
the manners of an animal at a watering hole. “I think you should come to
the sparring ring in the evenings,” Vesryn said after he finished drinking,
wiping his arm across his mouth.
Jassyn released a humorless laugh. “I can hardly stand on one leg
without falling over, let alone be of any consequence to anyone who wants
to practice.”
“You have to start somewhere.” Vesryn shrugged. “Why not train with
the best?”
Too exhausted to fire back a retort, Jassyn settled on rolling his eyes.
The prince’s attention wandered over his shoulder. Twisting around,
Jassyn saw Flight Captain Zaeryn sitting in the grass, sharpening a knife
while her dracovae stretched out, brown scales absorbing the sun. She
waved across the field.
Vesryn nodded in her direction, raising a hand back. “She asked if I’d be
bringing you around more.”
Jassyn studied the prince’s second in command. “I have no interest in
joining the rangers.” He glared at his cousin. “You ruined the whole flying
experience for me.”
“You missed my meaning.” Vesryn smirked, apparently unrepentant for
inducing Jassyn’s fear of heights by shoving him off a dracovae in flight
decades ago. “She’s curious about you.” The prince caught water with his
hands this time, before guzzling from his palms. “Like…she’d be interested
in getting to know you.”
Jassyn’s lip curled in disgust at the stream of liquid leaking from the
corner of Vesryn’s mouth. He blinked, registering the prince’s insinuation.
“I don’t think so.”
“Why not? She’s a formidable fighter and has put me on my back more
times than I can count.” Vesryn elbowed him. “Those thighs of hers could
snap a dracovae’s rib. You should see how—”
“I’m not ready for something like that,” Jassyn snapped, his chest
constricting with discomfort. “And I doubt I’ll ever be.”
Vesryn’s mirth morphed to understanding before he brushed loose
fringes of hair away from his face, averting his eyes. “Right. Of course. I’ll
fend her off for you if it comes to that.” Clearing his throat, he quickly
backtracked topics. “But you should still consider training. I think working
your body to exhaustion in the evenings will be an excellent distraction
from the dust—to break your former routines.” The prince broke into a grin,
sidling closer to shake Jassyn’s shoulder. “In any case, I’ll be tucking you in
every night, ensuring you don’t slip up.”
If we keep this up, I’m sure Vesryn will think we’re friends. Jassyn
rubbed his temples, mouth pinching into a line. “Fine,” he breathed out in
reluctant agreement.
The prince’s eyes lit up, glinting with a wretched delight. “Really?”
“Don’t make me regret it.” Jassyn jabbed a finger at Vesryn’s chest,
pushing him back out of his space. “I’m sure your influence will be more
destructive than Stardust.”
Vesryn clapped Jassyn on the back, nearly sending him sprawling. “Oh,
I guarantee it.”
CHAPTER 5
SERENNA
SERENNA
LYKOR
“S top!”
A taloned claw seized Lykor’s wrist, wrenching him away from
the prisoner slumped in chains.
Concentration disrupted, Lykor staggered back from the intoxicating
rush of magic, blinking rapidly to reorient himself in the interrogation
chamber. His eyes slowly came into focus in the dim torchlight.
Essence boiled under his skin, scalding his Well. His senses crackled
like a lightning-charged tempest, chest pounding with an ocean’s worth of
power. He sucked in a breath against the overwhelming surge of magic
threatening to burst through his ribs.
Baring his teeth at the intrusion, Lykor ripped his arm out of Kal’s
grasp. Lykor’s power ignited alongside his rage. Shadows blasted around
the room, the darkness disintegrating where the magic touched the gold
woven into the walls.
Fenn, one of Kal’s brood—and one of Lykor’s lieutenants—drew
Lykor’s attention with his colossal height as he shifted nervously behind his
father’s shoulder. Claws shoved into his cloak pockets, Fenn’s crimson eyes
volleyed between them. The pair must’ve heard the screams when the elf
roused in the middle of the siphoning.
Ice clung to their fur overcoats. Lykor presumed they’d recently
finished a patrol shift on the tundra’s surface. Favoring the customs of the
wraith’s younger generation—those born in their fortress—Fenn wore his
frivolously long hair tied back, decorated with intermittent strands of thin
obsidian braids. Rings and studs trimmed the points of his ears, designating
his rank. As Fenn’s eyes widened, Lykor followed the lieutenant’s gaze.
The female rider was dead.
And she was no longer an elf. The warrior hadn’t survived the
transformation to wraith.
Dispelling his shadows, displeasure churned through Lykor. Reaping
her power too hastily, he’d squandered the opportunity to harvest
information.
Kal’s voice dropped to a shaken whisper. “What have you done?”
Ignoring his captain, Lykor swiped disheveled hair out of his eyes.
Torchlight glinted off the silver strands. Lykor stilled. Silver instead of
black. Back to Aesar’s original hue.
Mind ablaze with curiosity, Lykor tried to elongate his fangs. Nothing
happened. He ran his tongue along even teeth, detecting no trace of his
sharpened canines.
Assessing the power in his Well, Lykor inhaled sharply, snared by
surprise. His only intention had been to siphon the elf’s magic, augmenting
his current abilities in the process. He didn’t consider that she might possess
the innate talents that the king had severed from Aesar.
With all eight abilities returned, they were an arch elf. No longer
reduced, their form unchained from the suspension between elf and wraith.
Lykor glanced up at his captain, now standing a head shorter than Kal and
Fenn—restored to Aesar’s elven height.
Lykor idly wondered if he’d have to maintain an illusion to distort his
appearance in front of mirrors. If he saw Vesryn looking back, he could
only guess that the coercion would trigger him to kill himself. I DOUBT
THE KING ANTICIPATED THIS.
Inspecting his fingers, Lykor released a disgusted scoff. Despite
reversing to an arch elf’s body, the skeletal claw stubbornly refused to shift
back into an elven hand. He’d somehow known he’d never escape the
reminders of the dungeon’s horrors.
Kal’s talons clacked as his claws clenched at his sides. “This isn’t the
way.”
Lykor barked out a laugh, an expulsion of air at the useless objection.
“The wraith have no advantages.” Yanking a burst of force from his Well,
he snatched his gauntlet from the ground and shoved the armor back onto
his fucking claw. “I won’t hesitate to drain Essence from every stars-cursed
elf.”
“You’d be turning innocents into wraith.” Kal’s scarlet glare blazed with
fury. “That crime would make you no better than the king.”
“And what gave you the impression that I care? Perhaps I’ll redistribute
power like Galaeryn always spoke about.” Lykor took an aggressive step
closer to his captain, driving a gauntleted finger into Kal’s chest. “Except
I’ll give the elves’ magic back to the wraith.”
Before Kal could argue, Lykor diverted him with a sarcastic taunt.
“Don’t you prefer gazing upon this elven form, anyway?” Sneering, Lykor
gestured to his moonbeam complexion, plucking at his hair, silver like
frosted starlight. “Isn’t this how you remember Aesar?”
Kal retreated a step, landing next to Fenn. “Aesar would never steal
power.”
Fenn placed a claw on his father’s shoulder, talons tensing against Kal’s
cloak. A warning. Possessing more sense than the captain, the young
lieutenant averted his gaze, keeping silent.
“Perhaps Aesar’s weakness was why he fractured in the dungeons.”
Lykor rolled his shoulders, haunted by the impression of those golden
spikes Galaeryn had impaled into his spine so long ago. “None of us would
be here if I didn’t suffer all that fucking torture on his behalf.”
Glancing around the interrogation chamber, irritatingly dim now due to
loss of his wraith sight, Lykor seized Essence. Angling his awareness
toward Aesar’s sleeping presence, he tapped into Aesar’s knowledge.
Rummaging through his memories, Lykor flicked his wrist, igniting the
room with white illumination, a talent he hadn’t had at his disposal before.
Fenn cringed, shielding his eyes from the sudden wave of blinding light.
“Let me talk to him,” Kal demanded, his pupils swallowed by his
crimson glower.
Shadows combusted from Lykor, answering his fury. They all wanted
their prince. Even the elders, Kyansari’s citizens who Lykor had delivered
from the prisons after the king had reduced them all to wraith. No one
wanted him, the one who’d survived for them. Protected them. Endured all
the torments for them.
A chain of darkness lashed out, wrapping around Kal. Lykor yanked his
captain to him, reaching up to snatch Kal’s throat.
“Do you know where your precious Aesar is?” Lykor hissed in Kal’s
face, dragging him down to eye level. “He’s drifting. Thinking he’s still
plunging to his death. Taking the coward’s way out.” Lykor squeezed, the
metal joints in his gauntlet squealing. Shadows mobbed like ravens,
spinning in a gale. “He won’t be coming back.”
Lykor’s eyes flicked to Fenn, who was nervously chewing on a lip ring
in the same aggravating habit as his father. He eyed the rending but didn’t
retreat, scaled boots scraping against the stone floor as he shifted his
weight.
Kal gritted his teeth, fangs elongating. “Aesar was trying to save us
from you,” he gasped in a strangled breath.
“About time you’ve finally accepted that I’m not Aesar.” Lykor flung
Kal away, sending him stumbling. “It only took a fucking century.”
Disappearing, Kal warped before he fell. He reappeared next to Fenn,
lurching on his feet to regain his balance, the intricate braids in his midnight
hair swinging.
Lykor jerked his head in command toward the wraith in chains.
“Lieutenant, make yourself useful and clean up this mess.” With a pull of
force, Lykor yanked an iron key off the wall, hurling it at Fenn with his
power.
Fenn plucked the key from the air. Always eager to prove himself, he
obediently busied himself with freeing the chained prisoner.
“How can you bring yourself to steal Essence from another?” Kal
questioned, catching his breath and rubbing the indents in his throat. His
eyes darted to his son and then to the dead rider. “After the king plundered
from all of us? And from you, how many times?”
“I won’t hesitate to return Galaeryn’s terror tenfold.” Lykor pivoted on
his heel to leave. “Better that we pillage Essence from these half-elves he’s
bred before he can amass more power,” he growled over his shoulder.
Lykor stomped through the cell-lined hallway and back up the stairs,
footsteps echoing against the stone. Even if it meant succumbing to the
consequences—turning into a monster like the king—Lykor had no
reservations about embracing the same darkness to be the protector the
wraith needed.
Obviously never predicting their escape, Galaeryn had boasted his
ambitions while Lykor had been at his mercy. Powerless to stop the king,
Lykor steered his thoughts away from what he knew of Galaeryn’s plans.
He envisioned the obsidian door to the chamber Galaeryn had tortured
him in. In the safety of his mind, Lykor had stowed all of those horrific
memories, concealing them to shield Aesar. Vacating his thoughts of the
king, Lykor shoved everything back into that harrowing room.
“What happened to the male who led us from the prisons?” Kal asked,
storming up the stairs behind him. Lykor didn’t waste his breath on a reply.
“This vengeance against the king is polluting your judgment.” When he
caught up on the landing, Kal snatched Lykor’s arm. “How many deaths
will it take before you see that?”
Lykor rounded on him, erupting. “Aesar is the reason so many died!”
His voice crashed around the stairwell. “He meddled by sounding the
retreat. Those deaths are on him.” Lykor ripped his arm out of Kal’s claw.
“By now, they’ve extracted our location from the people he abandoned!”
Frustration immolating like a dry stack of kindling, Lykor twisted,
smashing his gauntlet into the wall instead of Kal’s face. The stone cracked
and shattered. Splintered rock chips tumbled down the stairs in a spray of
dust. “Aesar’s intervention compromised the safety of our fortress.” Lykor’s
chest heaved with the cataclysm of his fury. “He’s ruined everything.”
Kal’s eyes shied away from Lykor’s face before he bit out his words.
“What’s your plan then, Lykor? You put everything at risk by insisting on
that attack in the first place!”
“The elves forced my hand!” Lykor snarled, flinging out an arm.
“You’re supposed to be our military expert. Why else would they gather a
human army on top of constructing that island? They’re coming for us.”
Kal’s nostrils flared as he folded his arms across his armor. “You don’t
know that.”
Snatching his previously discarded cloak, Lykor shouldered it on. He
stalked forward to where the gold veins of the dungeon tapered off, no
longer hindering his portals. The tunnel’s maw opened up to a cavernous
chamber where offshoots spidered toward various areas of the keep.
Wrenching Essence, Lykor split a fissure in the air. “I’ll prove it to you,
since you refuse to believe me.” He tore a portal open to a mountaintop on
the edge of the Hibernal Wastes, where snow yielded to grass-covered hills.
Barging through the rift’s consuming darkness, Lykor knew Kal would
follow. His captain never missed an opportunity to infringe on Aesar’s
behalf.
Surrounded by rocky peaks, Lykor blinked against the sun’s sudden
glare. He veered to an overlook, boots churning through crusted snow.
Kal swore at his back when he emerged through the portal. Swiping
Aesar’s knowledge of Essence again, Lykor twined an illusion. Turquoise
light surged from his palms, shrouding them to appear as the mountainous
backdrop, obscured from any wandering eyes below.
“You knew the king wouldn’t tolerate our escape indefinitely,” Lykor
growled. He prowled toward the rim of the precipice, slicing through the
frigid breeze. “He’s sending the mortals after us like we’re an
inconvenience. A loose end. He didn’t bother sending his arch elves to
pursue us—their lives are too valuable.” He jutted his chin toward the edge
of the cliff, a demand for Kal to see for himself. “Our demise ensures his
plans remain veiled. As if any elf would believe us—we’re monsters in
their eyes. Galaeryn will never cease stealing power, and now he has a
continuous source of magic with those half-elves.”
Kal blew out a breath, his gaze swinging over the expanse before them,
a mile below. He studied the human camps scattered like waves in a sea.
“We can’t stand against so many.”
“What an astounding deduction, Captain. Observations like that have
me questioning your rank.” Lykor jammed a silver strand of wind-whipped
hair behind his pointed ear. “The humans will try to drive us out of hiding.
Why else would they be on our doorstep?” Lykor grunted his disbelief at
the thousands spread out before them. “We’ll leave the realms and take the
wraith somewhere safe—to the west, across the Hibernal Wastes. There’s
no other option.”
Kal frowned, spinning a ring in his brow. “We have no idea if anything
is beyond these frozen mountains. It could be the world’s edge or an icy
sea.” He drew his billowing cloak closer. “Galaeryn would’ve already made
the trek if he believed that direction to be a viable choice. The west is
impassable. I’m sure you know Aesar once tried to cross the expanse with
his brother. They attempted portal jumping with the dracovae but never
found the other side.”
Lykor sensed Aesar finally stirring, as if the repeated mention of his
name had roused him. Lykor’s voice was an irritated growl through fused
teeth as he willed Aesar to remain deep in slumber. “Then you also know
Aesar’s dusty books indicate that it’s possible the druids had lands on the
other side of the world. The Aelfyn obviously came from somewhere when
their ships crashed on the mortal shores.”
“Crossing the Wastes would be insanity. You’d lead our people to more
death.” Kal shook his head, braids swinging in the gale whipping around
the mountainside. “The wraith are restless, especially our younger warriors,
those ‘reavers.’ They won’t stand for something like this—they’ve been
questioning your judgment.”
“I’ll do it alone. Just like I’ve done everything else,” Lykor raged,
battling the inflamed tide of shadows threatening to torrent from his skin.
“I’ll portal jump from horizon to horizon, across that fucking snowscape, no
matter how many days or weeks it takes until I reach the other side. When
I’m done, I’ll drop a gateway back on your doorstep.”
To his credit, Kal didn’t flinch or raise his voice. The projected calm
only boiled Lykor’s agitation.
“What would kill you first, the exposure to the elements or your
dangerous habit of exhausting your power?” Kal demanded, a tendon
rippling along his neck as his face settled into a furious glare. “Some things
are beyond the capabilities of Essence—even for arch elves. What happens
when you push yourself too far, as you always do?” He emitted a laugh,
bitter like the wind. “How many times has your recklessness nearly cost
you your life? How many times has Aesar regenerated for you and dragged
you back to the fortress on the verge of collapse?” The red glow in Kal’s
eyes dimmed as he searched Lykor’s face. “Your plan is madness.”
Lykor crossed his arms. “I’m willing to take that risk. You and I both
know Aesar believes the druids may have left something behind—
something the wraith could use. If our stronghold is any evidence, that
ancient race could have more weapons or technologies that the elves don’t.”
Lykor paced the edge of the cliff, casting a scowl at the mortal camps
below. “If anything remains, we need to seize it before the king. Leaving
our fortress and heading west is our only option.”
“And do you think a thousand years have left the other side of the world
unscathed?” Kal dug the toe of his boot into the snow. “We don’t know if
anything survived their war. What if the Aelfyn still rule?”
“And what if those lands are empty and ripe for the taking?” Lykor
snarled. The metal of his gauntlet screeched when he clenched his fist. “We
could argue about unknowns all day. It’s only a matter of time until
Galaeryn’s forces discover us. We need to find a new haven.”
Kal heaved a frustrated sigh. “There could be another way.” His eyes
slowly lifted, meeting Lykor’s stare. “Aesar’s brother needs to know the
truth. I could warn him, tell him what happened to us. I know he’d help.”
“No.” Lykor scoffed, turning back to study the camps below, unwilling
to take the risk. “One person won’t make a difference.”
“But he’s involved in their military. What if he could combine forces
with us? We’ve been hiding long enough.” Kal’s voice grew desperate. “All
you have to do is open a portal to that island. Get me close. Now that you
have illusion again, you could disguise my wraith form.” Kal clutched his
shoulder. “I could even appear how I used to and—”
Lykor slapped his claw away. “I said no.”
“If you would let me—”
“Are you deaf?” Lykor bared his teeth, regretting the loss of his fangs.
“Which word didn’t you understand? No one can stand against the king or
his growing power.”
“But Vesryn—”
The coercion seized control of Lykor’s body, gripping his mind and
ransacking his magic. A bystander behind his own eyes, Lykor was helpless
as his Essence automatically reacted, triggered by the prince’s spoken
name. His spine went rigid, sundering the air in his lungs. Ice flooded his
veins, freezing his bones as solidly as the surrounding snowdrifts.
Even realms away, Galaeryn’s influence still shackled him. No matter
how far Lykor fled, he knew he’d never be able to escape. Even if the
wraith made it to the other side of the world.
Fingers twitching, confined in his own body, Lykor feverishly tried to
resist the magic. IF ANYONE GETS TO KILL KAL, IT’S GOING TO BE
ME AND NOT THIS FUCKING COMPULSION.
He didn’t know why he bothered. Any attempt to oppose the king's
relentless hold was as futile as grasping the wind. The corners of his vision
spotted—he only had moments until darkness extinguished his awareness.
Losing himself to the chaos, a fragile thought surfaced, a tiny glimmer
of hope that perhaps the amber-eyed elf could dismantle the coercion on his
mind. HE ALREADY LOOSENED THE MAGIC. Lykor ruthlessly crushed
the delusional notion of freedom. LIKE I TOLD HIM, NO ONE CAN SAVE
ME.
A funnel of midnight streaked toward Kal’s throat. This compulsory
reaction was completely avoidable—both of them had worked around the
king’s magic for decades. But Lykor had known that his captain’s flapping
tongue would inevitably lead to his demise.
A cloud of rending converged like a tempest. Surely, if there were
Essence wielders overseeing the mortals below, they’d sense the might of
his power. Lykor’s vision faded, submerging him into a sea of black.
Kal had no defense against the shadows. Eyes widening, he warped
away.
But he wasn’t fast enough.
CHAPTER 8
SERENNA
JASSYN
T he sun melted below the island’s horizon while Jassyn spent the quiet
evening sitting at the table on his private balcony—the first night back
at his quarters since his time with the prince. The floral scents from
the Infirmary’s lavender hedges fluttered up to the magus’ residence hall on
a breeze.
Brushing the stirred curls away from his eyes, Jassyn flipped through
the ancient volume Farine had granted him the final time she’d summoned
him to her estate. He’d scoured the tome multiple times. For all its tattered
pages, the amount of useful information from Fynlas’ research was scant.
Archivists hadn’t documented shaman powers—the control of fire, water,
earth, wind, and lightning—since the extinction of both the shamans and the
druids a millennium ago.
Farine intentionally provided a single book from Fynlas’ study to whet
my curiosity and have me crawling back for more. An incident at her estate
where she’d forced him to grovel at her jeweled slippers skirted the fringes
of Jassyn’s mind before he took a shuddering breath, forcibly shoving the
thought away.
She knows something I don’t and would be delighted if I begged for
what she’s withholding. Dread lanced and then twisted though Jassyn’s gut
as he considered returning to the Vallende manor willingly to obtain
answers. There’s knowledge in that estate, but I don’t have the strength to
pay the price she’s set.
Squeezing his eyes shut, Jassyn steered his mind away from the horrors
he’d endured at Farine’s hands, suppressing a sudden urge to bury the
memories in Stardust. Steadying himself, Jassyn opened his eyes and
directed his attention toward the screen of wisteria vines sheltering his
balcony from the neighboring magus.
Perception coasting like clouds on the wind, he stretched his awareness
out to the plants. The veins of the leaves hummed with energy, like they had
a heartbeat of their own. Jassyn tugged on the droning power and a cluster
of blooming flowers drifted to his extended palm.
I need to learn how to control this new magic. As the vines coiled
around his hands, Jassyn clenched the plants as a sobering thought flitted
across his mind. Regardless of the prince’s exclusive claim to his bloodline,
the elves would undoubtedly force him back into servitude if they
discovered that the elemental magic had awakened in him. Aside from the
Vallendes, some of the higher members of Alari’s society must’ve known
that the council had deliberately intermingled human lineages bearing the
ancient powers with prominent elven lines.
Jassyn wrestled for control of his breathing before fear compressed his
chest. I’ve hardly had two weeks of freedom. The last thing he wanted to do
was fall back into the council’s clutches.
I’m not alone though, Jassyn reminded himself. Many at Centarya had
the ancestral ties—including Serenna. Her name was inked at the bottom of
one of the family trees hidden away in Fynlas’ study.
He doubted that Elashor had informed Serenna about the shaman roots
in her mortal bloodline, considering she thought shamans were simply
human folklore. I have to tell her. She needed to be aware of the danger if
her powers suddenly manifested too.
Thoughts shattering, Jassyn’s muscles spasmed like he’d been struck by
a wave of lightning. He flinched, his control on the earth fracturing. The
vine wilted and drooped, no longer prodded by power. Jassyn tensed,
sensing a groping presence cling to his mind. Cringing, he knew the
incessant touch could only belong to the prince.
Come to my quarters, Vesryn commanded through the telepathic link,
confirming Jassyn’s suspicion.
I think we’ve spent quite enough time together lately, Jassyn clipped.
Assembling his mental barricades, he swiped the prince out of his head with
all the attention he would’ve afforded brushing dust off a shelf. Having only
retired to his chambers mere hours ago after joining the prince at the Ranger
Station, he wasn’t about to drag himself back to Vesryn’s rooms.
The prince redoubled his efforts, latching onto Jassyn’s mind like a
leech. Irritation compounding, Jassyn rolled his shoulders, hoping his
cousin would grow bored and relent.
Moments passed while Vesryn persistently battered against his barrier.
Exhaustion from the previous few days had Jassyn dropping his face into
his hands in defeat.
What could you possibly need? Jassyn snapped, abandoning his mental
shield. He scowled toward the peak of the Spire when the prince’s
telepathic presence flooded back into his awareness.
I took Serenna training and she came out with a few scrapes and
bruises. I thought you could heal her.
Seriously? Jassyn stretched in his seat, massaging one of his aching
calves, loosening a knotted muscle. Why can’t you handle mending
something so minor?
Do you really want me healing her on my own?
You’re right. Jassyn’s nose wrinkled in disgust, smelling his cousin’s
manipulation radiating from the top of the tower. I had to straighten that
last mess after you “mended” her finger into a useless hook. Blowing out a
sigh, Jassyn rose and gathered Fynlas’ research, returning indoors. His
watery legs already dreaded ascending the Spire. I’m on my way. Driving
his hands through his curls, he shoved the prince out of his mind.
Tucking the tome away in a bookcase, Jassyn wondered how he’d
manage to clandestinely exercise his new power. Since Vesryn was intent
on ensuring he didn’t relapse, Jassyn could only assume that his cousin
wouldn’t permit him to have any significant time alone.
A wave shimmered in the middle of Jassyn’s sitting room, unfolding
into a portal. He rolled his eyes to the ceiling, pleading to the stars for
strength. I see Vesryn made himself familiar enough with my living quarters.
At some point in the past few days, the prince had taken it upon himself to
root around in Jassyn’s belongings and dispose of his Stardust supply.
Lips thinning, Jassyn stomped through the rift. He could concede that
the gateway was a convenience, but he didn’t have to tolerate Vesryn's
unsolicited intrusion into his chambers whenever he pleased.
Half blinded by the glaring angle of the descending sun in the prince’s
apartment, Jassyn detected his cousin outside on his balcony, his silhouette
framed by the flowing waterfall. Vesryn wandered into the sitting room,
leaving the sliding glass door open to permit the evening breeze.
Unwilling to cultivate the prince’s gesture into a habit, Jassyn withheld
his gratitude for the portal that’d spared him the daunting climb. “I don’t
appreciate you slithering through my mind or helping yourself to my
quarters,” he announced as the rift disappeared. Jassyn surveyed the
apartment. “Where’s Serenna?”
As if summoned, the bathing chamber door banged open. Freshly
showered, mahogany hair hanging loose and damp down her back, Serenna
glided into the opulent sitting room. Nose in the air, she clearly was making
it a point to ignore the prince as she weaved around the couches, avoiding
him.
Instead of her leathers, she wore loungewear of that cashmere material
Vesryn favored. Jassyn frowned between her and his cousin, disregarding
the unsettling fact that she had a set of nightwear in the prince’s rooms.
After he processed Serenna’s outfit, Jassyn’s eyes darted across her,
assessing her split lip and the trenches gouged down her arms. He blinked.
Discolored skin peeked out from under her clothes, concealing further
injuries.
“Scrapes and bruises?” Turning to the prince, Jassyn’s question came
out strangled. “Scrapes and bruises?” He flung an arm out toward her.
“She’s more mangled now than she was after the assault!”
Jassyn whirled back to Serenna, gently tapping into her mind. What
happened? Did Vesryn do this? He kept half of his attention on his cousin
as they silently had a conversation before Vesryn noticed.
The prince, Serenna scathingly replied, glacial eyes flashing toward
Vesryn, insisted on training in the dungeons. He unleashed one of those
mindless wraith on me!
Jassyn gaped like a fish nicked from water. He what?
She silently displayed her arms. But I can’t feel anything—he’s
absorbing the pain through the bond.
That doesn’t excuse him. Jassyn clenched his fists as something furious
seared him like a hot iron, stoking his ire. Can you bind him with rending?
Serenna startled through the telepathic link. Why?
Just help me. This behavior of his ends now.
Jassyn launched in Vesryn’s direction, rolling one of his daggers to his
fingers as soon as he moved. Shadows raced across the floor, twisting
around the prince. For half a heartbeat, Jassyn feared the magic would
strike him until he sensed that the pulse of Essence emanated behind him
from Serenna. He jammed the golden blade against his cousin’s throat
before Vesryn’s eyes finished widening.
Serenna sucked in a sharp breath. Looking back at her, Jassyn saw her
wincing before she glanced at him for guidance. She cradled her arm,
continuing to spin her rending across the room. Since he’d negated their
bond by tethering the prince, it was obvious she could now feel her wounds.
He hadn’t considered that.
Vesryn’s gaze volleyed between them, eyes glinting with a sadistic
delight. “Well, this evening is proving to be more interesting than I
expected.” Unphased by the blood welling around the dagger’s edge, he
arched a brow. “I can’t say I’ve ever been magically restrained and tethered
before. You’ve outdone yourself with this added touch of knife play—”
Fuming at his cousin, Jassyn shoved his knife further into Vesryn’s
neck, if only to shut him up and get his attention. And maybe because it was
a little satisfying to dominate the prince for once.
“You said you would keep her safe,” Jassyn hissed, leaning into
Vesryn’s face, recalling the prince’s words when he’d disclosed the bond
with Serenna.
Vesryn tossed what little part of his head he could move, shaking silvery
fringes of hair out of his eyes. “Compared to a day in the Combat Yard, she
isn’t any worse for wear.”
Serenna scoffed her disagreement. “The magus don’t release wraith on
us!”
“Maybe I’ll have them start.” Vesryn didn’t bother muzzling his
unapologetic smirk. “How else are you going to master your fear?”
“I’m sure Jassyn would’ve had a better solution.” With a dismissive
sniff, Serenna crossed her shredded arms, grimaced, and then unfolded
them. “He would’ve shown me how to protect myself instead of throwing a
wraith at me until I figured it out.”
Why am I not surprised by this? A braid of exhaustion and irritation had
Jassyn rubbing his forehead with his free hand. He was amazed that a
headache hadn’t rallied in his skull while they started to bicker.
Interrupting their argument before they got carried away, Jassyn
addressed the prince with a savage stillness. “You do not get to summon me
every time Serenna gets hurt and expect me to clean up your mess.”
“I’m not doing anything wrong,” Vesryn fired back, his humor ebbing
slightly. “She couldn’t even feel her injuries until you intervened.”
“That’s not an excuse.” Glancing back at Serenna, Jassyn’s eyes pinned
on the cut across her neck that appeared to be caused by a blade, not talons.
Her cheeks flushed before she averted her gaze, clearing her throat. Jassyn
turned back to the prince, his eroding patience with his cousin transmuting
to determination. “I won’t allow this to continue.”
“You won’t…allow…” Voice pitched low, Vesryn’s jaw worked as if he
was slowly comprehending the word. “You won’t allow Serenna’s training
to continue?”
“No, I won’t allow you to exploit me for magic while you’re a capable
arch elf.” Jassyn applied more pressure at the end of his knife, marrow
boiling with a newfound resolve. “What if I’m not there to heal her every
time you snap your fingers?” He snapped in front of Vesryn’s face to drive
the point. A tendon strained in the prince’s neck. “If you’re putting Serenna
in situations where she’s getting hurt, then it’s going to be you healing her. I
can’t fathom why you think this is acceptable.”
Vesryn’s muscles trembled as he fought against Serenna’s shadows.
“You don’t get to—”
“Since you want everyone to train so badly,” Jassyn interrupted,
silencing the prince. “It’s your turn to practice.”
Throat tensing, looking to be on the verge of arguing further, Vesryn’s
nostrils flared as they wrestled each other with their stares. Heartbeats
passed in the expanding silence, shrinking the room.
Displeasure simmering in the air, Jassyn gritted teeth, his voice deadly
quiet. He punctuated his next word like a hammer hitting a nail. “Now.”
“Fine,” the prince snapped, his conceding growl cutting the thickening
tension. “Since you’re obviously taking lessons in defiance from Serenna
now.” Vesryn’s gaze flicked to her. His words came out rough, sounding
like someone forcibly pried them out. “Show me how.”
Relaxing at the surrender, Jassyn withdrew his dagger and wiped the
blade on Vesryn’s leathers. Sparked by petty triumph, he impulsively took
advantage of the body bind and patted his cousin on the cheek. Serenna
snorted a laugh as Vesryn’s mouth went slack. Stepping back, Jassyn
nodded at her, bidding her to free him from the rending.
“Are you sure?” Serenna’s eyes darted to the prince, likely gauging if
he’d retaliate.
Jassyn shrugged. He twirled the knife across his fingertips, offering her
the hilt. “Unless you want to stab him a few times first to make it even.”
Vesryn released a low chuckle wrapped in darkness. “While you’re at it,
you can slap me around because I must be dreaming. I think I’m falling in
love with this new Jassyn.”
Not dignifying the prince with a response, Jassyn rolled his eyes. He
shoved past Vesryn, clipping his shoulder. Serenna’s shadows receded when
she extinguished her power.
Jassyn tucked his blade back into a hidden seam, gesturing to one of the
leather couches. “Serenna, you might as well get comfortable.” He glanced
out the windows to the stars blossoming across the darkening sky. “I have a
feeling this will take a while.”
Serenna complied, stiff-backed, with a hand braced on the armrest.
Jassyn didn’t fault her unease. Vesryn wielded his magic with brutal blows
rather than a refined weaving. It was no surprise that the prince’s historical
attempts at mending did more harm than good.
Pursing his lips, Jassyn studied the single bruise next to the cut on
Serenna’s throat. Vesryn’s obnoxious mouth had obviously wrought that
one. A question nearly scorched his tongue, demanding to know what
exactly had happened in the dungeons before he concluded that he didn’t
really want to know.
Instead, Jassyn shot his cousin a disapproving scowl. As if sensing his
attention, Vesryn ripped his eyes away from the points of Serenna’s ears.
Jassyn had half a mind to cuff the prince upside the head but resisted the
urge, unsure how much further his luck would hold if he continued pushing
the prince.
“I’ll form a telepathic link to show you the healing lattices,” Jassyn
said. He reluctantly cast out a wave of telepathy toward the prince, skin
crawling at the disturbing way their minds seamlessly fused. He blew out a
breath, releasing the tension pinching his shoulders. “Unfolding my
knowledge into that thick skull of yours will be the fastest way for you to
learn.”
Vesryn smirked as Essence streamed from his fingertips. Pulling from
his Well, Jassyn’s own power sprang to life, surrounding him in a
shimmering wave. Summoning his mending talent, a ruby ray of magic
cascaded down his arms, pooling into his palms.
“Are you ready?” Jassyn asked Serenna. Vesryn joined him at her side.
Picking at one of her nails, she divided a glance between them before
nodding.
Touch her shoulder, Jassyn instructed. It’s easier for novices if there’s
physical contact.
The prince shot him a look at the slight but complied, resting a glowing
hand on Serenna, fingers skimming the bare skin of her neckline. Jassyn
considered slapping him away when he noted the way Vesryn’s mouth
quirked as she shuddered.
Jassyn speared a thought at the prince. If you’re quite finished fondling
her, can we get on with it?
Vesryn’s protest was scandalized. You told me to.
Wasting a withering look on his cousin, Jassyn directed the prince’s
attention toward Serenna’s less serious injuries. He fabricated the most
efficient mending lattices in Vesryn’s mind to demonstrate how to heal her
split lip and shallow scrapes. He hoped the prince would catch on.
Vesryn didn’t.
Their progress slowed to a crawl while the moons rose in the sky. Stars,
you’re going to give her a scar if you knit her vessels backward like that.
Jassyn hurriedly sent out a thread of mending to correct Vesryn’s attempt
before the prince caused permanent damage.
Take away the swelling with this simple lattice I keep showing you. It’s
not that hard. Jassyn cast out the same wisp of power for the third time.
And I don’t even want to know about this knife wound.
She tried to kiss me, Vesryn sent back, a pathetic attempt to defend
himself. Your annoyance is completely unjustified. I couldn’t let her take
advantage of me in the dungeons in front of a wraith. You really should
reprimand her instead.
I’m sure it’s still your fault, Jassyn snapped. Focus. Could you stop
rubbing her shoulder like that for a scorching second?
Vesryn halted the motion of his fingers, muttering several curses under
his breath. He wiped the sweat away from his brow with the back of his
arm.
Are you this relentless with the recruits? Vesryn snarled when Jassyn
corrected him once again.
Aren’t you? The initiates show more promise, anyway. You should’ve
learned these skills a century ago.
Finally, after Vesryn bumbled enough with his magic, Jassyn was
satisfied with the way they’d stitched Serenna back together. He couldn’t
sever the telepathic link fast enough as they each released the hold on their
power.
“Thank you,” Serenna said to him.
Vesryn scoffed. “I’m the one who healed you.”
Serenna sniffed and crossed her legs, angling away from the prince.
Jassyn wondered if they’d ensnare him in the crossfire of their
squabbling if he lingered. While he considered if he could shuffle to the
door without either of them noticing, Vesryn opened a portal, motioning
him through. An obvious dismissal, but convenient nonetheless. Jassyn’s
eagerness to remove himself from Vesryn’s apartments nearly had him
dashing through the rift. But I don’t want to leave Serenna alone with him if
she’s still upset.
Turning toward her, Jassyn assumed she’d appreciate an escape. “I’ll
walk you back to your quarters if you’re ready to go.” His gaze flicked to
Vesryn, but he wasn’t about to ask for permission he didn’t require. “There
are a few things I think we should discuss.”
Serenna leaped from the sofa and was out the door before Jassyn could
blink. Apparently she wasn’t concerned about walking across campus in
sleepwear.
Jassyn quickly organized his thoughts, assembling the best way to
disclose their shaman bloodlines. He’d at least inform Serenna of what he’d
discovered at the Vallende estate. He wasn’t quite ready to confess that the
elemental magic had manifested in him. Not yet. While he trusted her, he
wasn’t ready to risk the capital finding out if the knowledge became more
widespread.
The dejection in Vesryn’s face as he stared after Serenna disappearing
down the corridor almost had Jassyn sympathizing with him. Almost.
Jassyn patted his cousin’s shoulder before departing. “We really need to
work on your lesson planning.”
CHAPTER 10
LYKOR
AESAR
A CENTURY AGO
E yes sliding toward the hushed debate, Aesar glanced at his mother and
Thalaesyn sequestered in a corner of the library. Framed by an
expansive wall of windows that stretched the height of the research
tower, their table overlooked Kyansari’s glass spires.
Attendants bustled around the queen, categorizing what she and
Thalaesyn had determined to be helpful as they researched what had caused
the infertility of their entire race. The pair had been studying for decades,
organizing the archivists and investigating the affliction that evidently ran
rampant across their realm.
Shamelessly sparing a glance toward the library’s atrium, Aesar briefly
locked eyes with Kallyn. Heart abruptly banging against his ribs, he ripped
his gaze away, clearing his throat.
The youngest in their guard, Kal—as he preferred—was hardly a
quarter century older than Aesar and his twin. Despite his youth, Kal had
advanced through the warrior’s ranks.
Considering the shadow Kal’s older half-brother, Elashor, cast in the
court, their captain’s ambition came at no surprise. But Elashor’s influence
with the king hadn’t secured Kal his position. Kal had set himself apart,
training to be a weapons master on his own.
Aesar found the presence of their guards in the library more than a little
excessive with the capital’s peace. Even the uncivilized humans didn’t risk
crossing Alari’s closed borders.
Regardless, their presence was entirely Vesryn’s fault. The queen had
assembled a contingent of their personal wardens years prior, thanks to his
twin.
Vesryn had plucked every scorching pigeon from Kyansari’s skies with
nets of force, shooing the entire corralled population of birds through a
portal. Needless to say, the palace’s Winter Lunar Solstice that year was one
the nobles weren’t likely to forget. The servants were still cleaning up
feathers nearly a decade later.
Vesryn’s exaggerated sigh across from him had Aesar glancing at his
twin, who was picking at his nails with a jeweled belt knife. Fully aware
that Vesryn deliberately tried to elicit a response, Aesar ignored him.
His brother had yet another new pair of polished boots sprawled on the
table, his life’s ambition seeming to be never wearing the same clothing
twice. As if noticing his masked irritation, Vesryn’s eyes flicked to him.
Aesar’s attention inadvertently sauntered over his brother’s shoulder to
their captain again. Arching a brow, Vesryn twisted around, glancing at Kal.
If you need a private corner to slip off to, Vesryn said through the bond,
turning to face him with rowdy delight tugging at his mouth, the tenth level
has an excellent alcove tucked away in that labyrinth of bookcases. You
wouldn’t believe how effective those heavy curtains are at muffling sounds.
He ran the blade’s edge under a nail, amusement rippling off of him. There’s
a shelf at the perfect height for bending someone over. I discovered—
Aesar scowled and battled his mortification, his harsh retort cutting his
brother off as he fired back his own response. That’s hardly appropriate for
his position.
Are you implying you’re the one who’d rather be bent over? Vesryn
chuckled when Aesar rolled his eyes. If you’re too shy, I’ll ask him on your
behalf. I can’t handle these flirtatious looks for much longer. The tension
between you two is so thick, it’s making my—
Throwing out a hand, Aesar punched out a pulse of force. He knocked
Vesryn backward, sending him toppling over his chair.
Vesryn growled, picking himself up from the floor. “Are you finished
nosing through your books yet?” He sheathed his blade irritably with a rasp
of leather against steel. “I thought we were flying today.”
Aesar pointed at the tome open before him, tapping the picture.
Vesryn’s annoyance vanished, eyes lighting up before he rushed to his
side. “Did you find more pictures of harpies?”
Aesar swatted Vesryn’s wandering hands away from volume. He
switched to communicating through the bond, not wanting to attract
attention from his twin’s lack of modesty. I’m not showing you drawings
like that again since you can’t stop jerking off to those books.
I’m offended that you think I require books to help with that. Vesryn’s
attention darted back to Kal. It’s your fault, anyway. Your insistence to
maintain this stubborn celibacy simply because he’s our guard is driving me
—
Aesar rubbed his forehead, speaking out loud to interrupt his twin. “This
is more interesting than your concerning fixation on harpies.”
Aesar glanced at his mother and Thalaesyn, who were still preoccupied
with their quiet conversation. He lowered his voice anyway, directing his
brother’s attention back to the volume. “This tome has me questioning the
myth of dragons—I’ve never seen anything like it before.”
His twin retained his excitement despite the absence of those fabled
female shapeshifters. Leaning forward, Vesryn trailed his fingers over the
faded picture of a black dragon that appeared to be chained to the ground.
Vesryn tilted his head. “What’s wrong with it?”
Aesar pointed to depicted waves of glimmering light. “I’m not sure, but
it looks shackled by some type of magic.” He assumed it was Essence
connecting the dragon to the Aelfyn female holding a glowing prism above
her head.
As his twin peered closer, Aesar sensed Vesryn’s puzzlement through
the bond. “Does the crystal she’s holding look like the Heart of Stars to
you?”
A thrum of energy had Aesar’s attention whipping to the library’s
entrance. In radiant white robes outlined by silver threads, King Galaeryn
swept into the atrium, conversing with General Elashor. Aesar could only
assume they were discussing the pressures from the council, as they always
did. Divided by the prospect of diluting elven blood, discussions of
intermingling with the humans to preserve their race had been the only
topic in the palace for decades.
Aesar nudged his twin. “Let’s ask our sire about this—he knows
everything.”
Pushing back from the table, Aesar nearly dropped the tome in his
enthusiasm to discover what the king knew about dragons. Following
closely, Vesryn’s boots clipped his heels.
Essence-infused gems studded in the king’s ears splashed rings of light
as he turned from his exchange with Elashor. Their sire’s brows rose as they
approached him, a beam of sun glancing off of his silver hair. “I had hoped
you two wouldn’t follow in your mother’s footsteps. Surely there’s a better
use for your time than lurking among the shelves.”
Before Aesar could voice a defensive response about how the elves’
survival could very well depend on the queen’s research, Vesryn interjected.
“As soon as you can answer Aesar’s question about dragons, we’re flying.”
Vesryn shot him a glower. “Naru and Trella have been restless since they
fledged.”
The king’s jade eyes hooked on the open volume in Aesar’s hands
before darting to Elashor.
After that, Aesar’s memories were a blur. He didn’t even register the
lash of magic ripping the tome from his fingertips before darkness erupted
from his sire.
Shadows engulfed the library, blocking out the sun spilling in through
the windows as rending cleaved the air. Launched back with a blast of
force, Aesar landed halfway across the atrium, punched to the ground. Air
whooshed out of Vesryn, crashing to the marbled floor beside him.
A wave of pressure pinned them to the ground. Aesar’s panicked
thoughts collided with his twin’s as the library attendants screamed, the
room crumbling around them.
The darkness receded nearly as fast as it had appeared. Light reentered
the chambers as scattered papers fluttered like falling leaves. Vesryn had
thrown himself nearly on top of him, acting like an anchor in a storm. They
both were bound to the floor, prisoners to the king’s shadows.
Blade unsheathed—something Aesar had never witnessed before
outside of sparring—Kal had somehow reacted to position himself in front
of them. As if he could challenge both Elashor and the king. If Kal had
fabricated a shield, the king’s rending had sliced through the ward, claiming
him as a hostage too.
Aesar’s mind darted to Vesryn’s. His brother’s fear clashed against his
through the bond. Kal drew his sword on the king. A frantic terror
bludgeoned his chest. Aesar’s hearing droned to a muted buzz as he tried
and failed to summon his power. Essence sputtered like a guttering flame as
he struggled uselessly in the rending bind, unable to stand.
Galaeryn’s wild eyes rampaged around the atrium. He sneered, dividing
a look between the queen and Thalaesyn, now on their feet, surrounded by
their own shields. Their mother’s eyes blazed with wrath as her gaze landed
on them incapacitated on the ground.
The king had spared nothing, tearing apart the entire library. Shelves lay
broken on the floor, along with countless books ripped off the walls.
Aesar’s eyes popped, his stomach pooling with dread. His sire had even
shattered the windows, scattering glass everywhere.
Why did he do this? he asked Vesryn as silence encased the room.
The snowstorm of papers didn’t have time to settle before the king spun
on his heel, stalking out of the library with Elashor trailing behind, clinging
like a shadow.
CHAPTER 12
LYKOR
F reed from the memory, Lykor shuddered a rough exhale. The storm of
his heartbeat vibrated with a charge, his entire being poised to protect
Aesar from the king. Stifling the wild urge provoked by the vision,
Lykor detached his mind from the buried past.
Focusing on the chambers in front of him, Lykor watched Kal tense,
eyeing the rending billowing through the room. Dispelling Aesar’s lingering
fear, Lykor cracked his neck and surrendered the hold on his magic. Feeling
flooded back into his limbs in a prickling rush as he comprehended the
significance of possessing a Heart of Stars.
They were the key to freeing the dragons the Aelfyn had chained in the
war. Galaeryn had one Heart in his possession, and it was possible he’d
already located more.
There was a reason the king had targeted Aesar during that first staged
“wraith attack.” Aesar had learned too much of what Galaeryn and Elashor
attempted to conceal—though Lykor had yet to discover what the dragons
could offer.
WHAT WOULD IT MEAN FOR THE WRAITH IF WE COULD FREE
THOSE BEASTS FIRST? Lykor nearly shook Aesar out of sleep to question
him, but realized the answers didn’t matter.
If the king’s reaction to Aesar’s curiosity of the dragons was any sign,
then the creatures and the relics were important. With loathing engraved in
his bones, Lykor would retaliate and snatch away anything that Galaeryn
desired—just as the king had ruthlessly stolen everything from the wraith.
If his people could somehow ally themselves with the dragons—if any
were still alive—they might have a chance at survival. First, they’d have to
collect the Hearts if the king didn’t already possess them all and uncover
wherever the Aelfyn had chained those beasts.
Lykor had no doubts that any remaining dragons were somewhere on
the other side of the world. Surely they would’ve been discovered long ago
if they dwelled in the mortal realms.
Lykor veered his attention back to Kal. He’d never voice it, but he
grudgingly acknowledged the benefits of Aesar’s intervention—at least Kal
was still present to manage the trivialities.
“Set Mara on organizing the search for the Heart that Aesar thinks we
might be sitting on,” Lykor ordered, rolling his shoulders to banish Aesar’s
lingering wave of dread. “Have her double the crews excavating the
collapsed chambers around the Slag.”
Trapped in a whirlpool of responsibilities, Lykor considered what to do
if the restless generation discovered his plans. He didn’t have time to
sacrifice by addressing the various factions sowing seeds of dissent.
“I don’t want those ‘reavers’ on the Heart’s trail,” he told Kal, clenching
his claw like he could prevent the wraith’s former unity from slipping
through his fingers. “Busy them with patrols and keep knowledge of the
Hearts between us. If the warriors are losing respect for me, perhaps they’ll
be more inclined to listen to you.”
Kal grunted, turning to leave without a parting word.
“Wait,” Lykor said, seized by an impulse.
Stalking to his captain, Lykor flared Essence and began ripping talents
out of his own chest, severing abilities from his Well. Unlike the king
siphoning magic against his will, offering power freely had no agonizing
effects. Pooling his magic, Lykor started to assemble a globe containing
illumination, telepathy, and illusion—those talents he could live without.
He couldn’t conceive why having all eight talents mattered—he’d never
been an arch elf like Aesar.
So drained from shouldering the burden of caring for his people alone,
Lykor hardly cared if his physical form balanced between elf and wraith as
he shifted from his arch elf appearance. Galaeryn had broken and remade
him too many times to count. Even after becoming whole again, his wraith
claw had still persisted. Lykor accepted the irreparable damage to his body.
Kal’s jaw went slack, eyes widening in alarm. He scrambled backward
toward the door when a radiant orb of light hovered above Lykor’s palm.
Kal held his claws up as if to fend Lykor off. “I already told Aesar I
didn’t want—”
Ignoring his protest, Lykor shoved the abilities into his captain’s chest.
Kal collapsed to his hands and knees as the invasion of light fractured
through his veins like fissures cracking through ice.
“Stars scorch you,” Kal swore, lurching back to his feet. He swayed, his
hair shifting to a bronze hue. “You never should’ve stolen Essence from that
elf. I’ve come to terms with the loss.” Igniting his magic, Kal clutched his
chest, wresting the power from his Well.
Snatching his wrist, Lykor yanked away Kal’s arm, halting his efforts at
withdrawing the talents.
“You will keep those abilities and make yourself useful,” Lykor
growled, his claw tightening around Kal’s now-elven hand, all traces of the
wraith talons eradicated. “Surely you see the advantages of both of us
having Essence.”
Kal’s crimson eyes blazed into his from a face reminiscent of the elf that
Aesar remembered—his body like Lykor’s now, in the middle of the
transformation between elf and wraith.
Skin crawling where they touched, Lykor flung Kal’s arm away. “Do I
need to spell out the benefits for you?” Frustration gnawed on his nerves.
Everything he did for the wraith was met by Kal’s combativeness and scorn.
“You can communicate with the warriors telepathically and illusions can
conceal us in daylight if the humans continue pushing closer to our patrols.
And then there’s whatever fucking use you can find for illumination.”
“Fine.” Kal’s glare burned a hole through him as he yanked on his boots
and crouched to lace the leather ties.
“I’ll leave a portal open near the surface lifts for today’s rotation,”
Lykor said, catching his reflection in a dressing mirror. Familiar scarlet eyes
framed by midnight hair scowled back at him before he turned his attention
to his captain. “I’m taking the wraithlings out to forage their goats. It might
be the final time we can do it safely with those humans encroaching. I want
Fenn’s squadron with us patrolling our mountain pastures. Have him
organize the scouts to hunt on the outskirts. There should still be migrating
elk.”
Ignoring him, Kal strapped knives next to the crossbow on his back.
Sheathing his longsword at his hip, he pivoted, leaving Lykor alone in the
silent room.
CHAPTER 13
SERENNA
S erenna entered her dim sleeping chamber after spending the fourth
afternoon in a row with the prince, forced to fend off the mindless
wraith in the dungeons. She wandered through the room to open a
curtain. I need to manifest illumination since Velinya isn’t here to brighten
our apartment with magic.
Her friend’s extended absence reminded her that Jassyn had planned to
escort her to Kyansari’s healing district. Now that a week had passed since
the attack, he wasn’t the only mender who found it unusual that the injured
hadn’t returned from the capital. Worried whispers had begun to circulate
around campus, settling into a layer of unease.
As Serenna reached for a drape, her door slammed shut. Before she
could spin around, a hand wrapped over her mouth. Panic consumed her in
a wildfire. Serenna’s mind exploded in terror, every nerve blazing to fight
for her life.
Flailing, she sent her fists and feet striking out at the sudden restriction.
Palm suffocating her scream, Serenna went wild, shrieking and kicking to
free herself. Stronger than steel, her assailant’s arm clamped over her
middle, yanking her back into their chest.
“Stars, relax. It’s me,” Vesryn said, close enough that the air from his
words skittered over the edge of her ear.
Serenna stilled, panting through her nose. Vesryn’s iron-clad muscles
slackened in response but he kept her spine locked against him. Serenna
considered blasting the prince away with her power or biting his hand if he
continued to smother her face.
Why don’t I sense him? There was only that faint silver cord—what she
assumed to be the unformed part of the bond—that drifted alongside the
bright light she’d come to recognize as Vesryn's presence. But it was gone,
like he wasn’t even there—like when Jassyn had tethered him earlier in the
week.
Vesryn released her. Serenna whirled to face him, racing heartbeat
slowing to a dull thunder in her ears. Speechless from fright, her mind
teetered between confusion and alarm.
Grinning, the prince wiggled his fingers in front of her face. A ring
flashed in a shard of sunlight slipping in through the curtains. “I masked my
presence using Jassyn’s trick with gold.” Vesryn’s triumphant smirk only
proved he lacked any remorse for nearly arresting her heart.
“Maybe I should whip a blade from my leathers and use one of
‘Jassyn’s tricks’ on you too,” Serenna seethed. “No wonder he stabs you.”
She’d watch the pair spar more than once in the evenings. And not because
Vesryn went shirtless in the late spring’s warmth.
“That was only once.” Vesryn’s glee slipped. “And it wasn’t my fault. A
lucky breeze unbalanced me. That was completely unnatural.”
“You deserved it.” Serenna noted the sore spot and tucked away the
information, intending to jab him with it again later. She irritably tossed her
disheveled braid over her shoulder. “Just because you know my chambers
well enough to portal doesn’t mean you have permission to sneak around.”
While she couldn’t deny the convenience of avoiding the Spire’s ascent
whenever the prince felt the need to summon her for training, Serenna
should’ve known that no good would’ve come from asking the prince to
attune himself to her sitting room. And now she was paying for her lapse in
judgment.
Vesryn tugged the ring off. With a catapult of his thumb, he flung it into
the air, catching it as it fell. His presence zipped in and out of Serenna’s
awareness during the brief moments the gold wasn’t touching his skin.
“Your first instinct wasn’t even to respond with your power,” he said,
like his theatrics were justification for scaring her. He sent the ring twirling
up again. “You obviously need more practice.”
“What do you want me to do?” Serenna slapped the ring out of the air.
“Splatter anyone who startles me?” The jewelry sailed across the room,
clattering to the floor with a satisfying clink before rolling to hide under one
of her dressers. “I don’t think a wraith is going to be lurking in my
chambers. Unlike you.”
“Maybe not,” Vesryn agreed, tracking the path of the ring before
glancing back at her. “Regardless, using the advantage of your power
should be your first reaction.”
Serenna rolled her eyes, stalking to her bed. “Is there a reason you’re
here beyond conditioning me with terror?” She dropped to the mattress to
unlace her boots. “Haven’t you had your fill of that this week?”
The grin Vesryn gave her was all shades of amusement. Raising a hand
to ignite orbs of whirling illumination, he cast her chambers in a dim glow.
“I have a different activity in mind for tomorrow instead of training in the
dungeons.” The prince lifted the side of her dresser to retrieve the ring. He
bounced the jewelry in his palm while she ground her teeth. “I figured
you’ve made enough progress and earned a break from fending off the
wraith.”
“How generous,” Serenna said, unweaving the braid in her hair.
“Considering you so admirably proved that I need more experience.”
Attempting to predict what the prince had planned, Serenna imagined
the worst scenarios. Through flashes of the bond between Vesryn tossing
and snatching the ring, she sensed him buzzing with anticipation, impatient
for her to ask.
Cheeks puffing with a blown out breath, Serenna’s question was
resigned. “What did you have in mind?”
Vesryn cocked his head. “Do you want to visit Naru and fly with me?”
“Fly?” Serenna’s hands froze in the middle of unraveling her hair. She
blinked, taking a moment to determine if he was joking. “As in, ride
Naru…in the air?”
“That would be the definition of ‘flying.’” Pursing his lips, Vesryn’s
humor faded. “I received word that one of the human settlements spotted a
group of three wraith skulking in the western realm.” He glanced at the
sliver of light spilling in through the curtains. “It’ll be dark soon, so we’ll
hunt at dawn.” Finally bored with the ring, Vesryn tucked the band into a
pocket. He shrugged. “But if you don’t want to go, I understand.”
Serenna dropped her freed hair and scowled. “Of course I want to go.”
Excitement spun through her at the prospect of soaring the skies, slightly
dampened by the thought of tracking down the wraith.
“In the meantime, there’s something we haven’t finished,” Vesryn said.
His attention flicked over her shoulder to the bed before he took a predatory
step forward.
Heart bolting, ready to combust from that heated look in his eyes,
Serenna scrambled to stand. Likely reading the effect he had on her, the
prince grinned. Serenna’s pulse pounded into a gallop as the bond flared
like a beacon, flashing his desire.
What little common sense Serenna possessed had her sidestepping
toward the closed door leading to the sitting room. Even though all she
wanted to do was grab Vesryn and finish what they’d mindlessly started on
the dungeon floor earlier in the week, Serenna was hesitant to encourage
him further. It didn’t matter what she wanted, she had to be realistic about
what could be between them. I’m not interested in being cast in Ayla’s
shadow as the prince’s courtesan.
Vesryn hadn’t mentioned the invitation he’d offered to the Summer
Lunar Solstice again, where—ironically—the king would announce the
prince’s engagement to Ayla. Serenna couldn’t say why she’d expected to
go, considering Vesryn was half dead and delirious when he’d brought it up.
Holding onto the last scrap of hope that she had a place in Kyansari was
foolish.
Jassyn had informed Serenna of her shaman ancestry and she had yet to
wrap her head around her ties to those ancient elementalists. With him
divulging the secret, it seemed her usefulness to the realm only existed in
her blood—and furthering the population like her sire had been so adamant
about. She didn’t know if she wanted to belong in that world anymore. Not
that she really had a choice.
Serenna retreated to the threshold of the room, facing the prince across
the bed chamber. “I—I’m not sure this is proper,” she stammered before she
lost her nerve in denying his advances.
Vesryn arched his brow, glancing at her bed. “And when have I ever
given you the impression that my intention is to be proper?”
The calculation in his tone sent Serenna’s pulse lurching as she directed
her thoughts away from being tangled in her sheets with him. Steadying
herself, she gripped the door handle. She didn’t want an argument, but she
had to be honest with herself—and him. Though trying to reason with
Vesryn is as pointless as sparring with the wind.
“You’re engaged.” An acidic question rolled off of Serenna’s tongue
before she could bite back the remark. “How many times do I have to ask
what that means for us and this bond?”
The prince’s eyes flashed with a look that could only be called
dangerous, making her reckless heart skip in her chest. Courage splintering,
Serenna opened the door, fleeing to the sitting room. Where it was brighter
and more appropriate for a conversation that would likely turn heated if she
didn’t leash her erratic emotions.
Vesryn’s boots struck the hardwood floor, sounding furious. Serenna
spun around in time for him to seize her shoulders. He dragged her back
into her bed chamber, shoving her against the wall. She squeaked as the
swift motion pinned her beside the door. Snatching her chin, Vesryn angled
her face to meet his eyes.
“You know that engagement means nothing to me.” The rumble from
the prince’s cadence reverberated through her chest, low and sensual,
flushing her with a wave of heat. His other hand trailed up her arm, palms
rough, but fingers gentle. Serenna’s magic shivered in response as static
built where their bodies touched.
Her protest was feeble. “That doesn’t mean you have the option of
ignoring your duty.”
“I’m handling it,” Vesryn growled, his hands tensing against her.
Struggling between the weight of the prince’s combative glare and her
established unworthiness of him, Serenna whispered, “I want to belong
somewhere, but I don’t have a place in the realm.” Blinking back a sting of
disappointment, she glanced away after the confession.
“Fuck the realm,” Vesryn snarled, his fury scorching her through the
bond.
Serenna tensed in his grip when he slammed the door shut. Her heart
rattled along with the wood shaking on its hinges.
The prince’s jaw tightened before he gently cupped the sides of her face.
Lowering his mouth to hers, he growled, “I’ll show you exactly how much
more you matter to me.”
CHAPTER 14
SERENNA
JASSYN
S ensing a surge of power, Jassyn jerked his head up from the tome he
was reading at the dining table. About time. He’d only been persistent
in bothering his cousin since Vesryn was stubbornly balking. Let’s see
how he likes being the one pestered.
As expected, the prince’s portal tore open in the middle of his sitting
room. Readjusting his plated ear cuffs from the sudden jarring, Jassyn
pushed away the remnants of his dinner.
Vesryn stalked through the portal, snarling. “This had better be life
threatening or I’m opening a rift to the Hibernal Wastes and tossing you
through.”
Folding his arms, Jassyn leaned back in his chair. He returned the
prince’s scowl, sweeping his attention over his cousin’s disheveled state.
Silver hair half out of his topknot, rumpled tunic, and—
Jassyn yanked his gaze up, clashing with his cousin’s eyes. His mouth
pinched further into a glower upon noticing that Vesryn’s excessively tight
leathers only highlighted his blatant erection.
“That’s not a bad idea,” Jassyn grated out through his clenched jaw,
thinking his teeth might crack. “You obviously need to cool off in a
snowdrift before we go anywhere.”
The prince’s nostrils flared as he released his magic, the rift fading
behind him. “I don’t know which part of ‘I’m giving Serenna the most
mind-blowing clim—’”
Jassyn slammed the book in front of him shut, cutting his cousin off. “It
was my mistake to assume you were simply being lewd.” His cheeks heated
with discomfort that he hoped the prince interpreted as anger. “I assure you,
it won’t happen again.”
Uttering something incoherent to himself, Vesryn ran his fingers
through his hair. Apparently noticing the sorry state, he untangled the
dangling leather strap, rebinding the top portion.
The prince’s lips twitched. “You said I needed to work on my lesson
planning. That delightful body lock trick sparked the idea of drawing
Serenna’s power out with a more…enjoyable approach.”
“Excuse me?” Jassyn could only express his disbelief through a scoff,
unable to form a response. He couldn’t begin to decipher how the prince
had been inspired when they’d had him tethered with a knife against his
throat.
Vesryn smirked. “Serenna struggled spectacularly.”
“I didn’t ask.” Jassyn’s ears singed. Regret assaulted him, making him
wish that he hadn’t bothered reaching out to his cousin this evening. “If
you’re quite finished informing me of”—he pointedly kept his eyes
fastened on the prince’s—“whatever you did with Serenna, can we discuss
why I asked you to come?”
“Thanks to you, I actually didn’t, but—”
“Scorching stars, I’m referring to the coercion on the magister,” Jassyn
all but pleaded, shoving his palms into his eyes.
“Why do you need my help with Thalaesyn?” Blessedly redirected,
Vesryn joined him at the table. The prince unceremoniously readjusting
himself had Jassyn rolling his eyes. “This really could’ve waited another
day.” Vesryn gripped the back of a chair, releasing a humored grunt. “Or
another minute. What I felt through the bond nearly had me—”
“Again, I didn’t ask,” Jassyn said, driving a hand through his curls.
“And quite frankly, I really don’t want to know.” Vesryn opened his mouth
and Jassyn silenced him by holding up a finger. “You’re the commander—I
figured the authority of your presence would be helpful in the event of
any…reactions on Thalaesyn’s part if I inquired about the compulsion.”
Vesryn snatched a slice of beef from the discarded dinner plate. Jassyn’s
lip curled as the prince shoved it into his mouth. With the hand he just had
in his trousers.
“Since you mentioned it,” Vesryn said around the mouthful, “I’ve been
trying to determine why there’d even be coercion on Thalaesyn. It’s
possible he might know something from the first time the wraith attacked
the capital.” A muscle jumped in the prince’s jaw before he grabbed
Jassyn’s glass of water and guzzled the contents. “He somehow survived
that night when so many others in the palace didn’t.” Shaking his head, the
prince dropped into the chair across from Jassyn, evidently intending to
finish the leftovers. “My sire banished him to the dungeons until the
completion of Centarya, but I never thought to ask why.”
Jassyn traced the binding on the tome, studying the way the prince’s
brows contorted as his eyes unfocused on the cold plate of food. “You have
a theory,” he prompted, hoping to guide Vesryn out of the canyon of his
thoughts.
The prince blinked out of his contemplation. “It’s more of a pattern I’ve
noticed with the wraith,” he said, rolling up a slice of cured veal. “I doubt
it’s related to the coercion on Thalaesyn, but it might be worth mentioning.”
Vesryn dipped the meat into a saucer of ground mustard. He paused,
seeming to realize that he was thieving the remnants of Jassyn’s dinner.
“You don’t mind, do you?” he asked, shoving the veal into his mouth.
Jassyn flapped his hand, urging him to continue.
“I’ve realized that the wraith have only targeted the elven-blooded in
recent decades. Those beasts haven’t attacked pure-bloods since the first
few raids on the city—before we even had the elven-blooded population.”
Vesryn tugged the plate closer to him, elbows mantling on the table like a
hawk hovering over a hare. “That alone is probably why everyone in the
capital has dismissed the threat.”
“But the wraith didn’t abduct anyone from campus like they do in
Kyansari,” Jassyn brought up. “They killed us indiscriminately.” Skin
pebbling, he stopped himself from feeling the memory of the warrior’s
gauntlet crushing his throat. Except I was spared. “Why would they drag off
citizens from the capital but not here?”
“I don’t have an answer for that, but it doesn’t sit well with me.” Vesryn
moved on to a crusty edge of bread, stacking slices of meat on the flat
surface. “The assault on Centarya only strengthens our theory that there are
two distinct groups of wraith. The repetitive raids on the capital and the
sporadic attacks in human realms have nothing in common with the
intelligent wraith who came here—or those organized wraith who nearly
killed me in the wilds.” As if reminded of that confrontation, the prince
rubbed the scars on the center of his chest.
“The disparities might point toward different levels of thinking—or
maybe motivation.” A disquieting feeling had Jassyn suddenly restless. He
rose, shelving the tomes behind him in one of his bookcases. “If the wraith
are after the elven-blooded specifically, it logically makes sense for them to
target Centarya.”
The prince’s eyes followed him, flashing with residual anger. “That
Essence wielder working with the wraith has obviously been on campus
before since they opened portals for the army.” Vesryn stood, finished with
scarfing down the rest of the meal. “I can only assume they’re someone
disgruntled from the capital and star-bent on purging the elven-blooded.”
He crossed his arms. “Even after a century, there are still those vocally
opposed to mixing elf and human blood.”
Jassyn averted his guilty gaze. I’ll have to tell Vesryn about that
encounter I had with the elven wraith so he’s not scouring the capital for
someone to blame. But the knowledge of that warrior using Essence
wouldn’t change anything beyond the prince’s theories, as the campus was
already preparing for a potential return. But the coercion on that wraith
might connect all of our questions.
Vesryn’s nomadic attention wandering around his sitting room towed
Jassyn from drifting into a sea of thoughts. “Let’s get this over with,”
Jassyn said, seizing the prince’s elbow before his cousin could fiddle with
his books. “And let me do the talking. Magister Thalaesyn doesn’t know
I’ve been assessing him and I’d rather be the one to tell him.” He steered
the prince out of his chambers before Vesryn shook him off in the hallway.
“How familiar are you with coercion?” Jassyn asked while they
descended the stairs, leading the way to the Infirmary.
The prince shrugged, picking something unsavory out of his teeth. “I
know my sire is the only one strong enough to wield it. I haven’t tried to
replicate that magic and wouldn’t even know where to start.”
Skimming his hand over the cool marble railing of the staircase, Jassyn
mentally organized his thoughts to settle the worry weighing on his
shoulders. “Do you think the king would know if we manipulated his
power?”
“You described the coercion like a shield made of telepathy and I’m
assuming my sire tied off the magic.” Vesryn nodded to a magus who held
an entrance door open for them. “I know his power is tremendous, but I
can’t imagine he can perceive every elf he’s placed under compulsion.”
At some point, Jassyn wanted to ask if the prince found anything
peculiar with the king’s increasing strength in Essence—something that
shouldn’t be possible. Regardless how expansive a Well to draw from was,
strength was determined by the number of abilities. One thing at a time.
Entering the magus’ courtyard, both rising moons hung as dim crescents
amid the scattering of stars. A warbling of birds roosting in the willows
ushered them along the cobbled walkway. The tranquil melody of their
evening songs warred with Jassyn’s nervousness for the coming
conversation with his mentor.
Vesryn suddenly skidded to a halt, his boots scuffing over the pathway’s
stones. His face went slack, horror widening his eyes. “What if I’m
compelled?” The prince touched his head, as if feeling for the strands of
magic. “Stars, do you think there’s coercion on my mind and I don’t know
it?”
“There’s not.” Jassyn strode ahead, anticipating what his mentor’s
reaction would be with both him and Vesryn showing up unannounced. “At
least there wasn’t a little over a week ago.”
The prince’s fingers started twitching as he worked himself up. “How
can you be—”
“I’ve already checked.” Jassyn waved for Vesryn to follow.
His attention hooked on a patrol of Kyansari’s soldiers, white plated
armor clinking. In his sweep of the warriors, Jassyn registered the blank
look in their faces that Vesryn had mentioned. They didn’t even
acknowledge or salute the prince.
Holding his breath, Jassyn couldn’t shake the unsettled feeling stirring
in his gut while they passed. He’d have to relay this to Nelya—at the
prince’s request, they’d begun organizing a ring of trusted magus to track
anything unusual.
“What do you mean you’ve ‘already checked?’” Vesryn asked, ignoring
the squadron and lengthening his stride to return to Jassyn’s side.
“I assessed you after that excitement in your bathing chambers.”
Rounding the empty Rending Field, a soft breeze whispered through the
Infirmary’s line of lavender hedges. “If you don’t remember, it’s probably
because you were busy going stupid staring at Serenna.”
“I was impaled. Multiple times,” Vesryn bristled, shooting him a scowl.
“And don’t you find that a little invasive?” Igniting his power, the prince
blasted the Infirmary doors with a pulse of force rather than bothering to
push on the handle.
“Like you’re someone who has any right to speak about personal
space,” Jassyn hissed, lowering his voice so as to not to disturb the few
menders closing the healing wing for the evening.
Winding through the Infirmary’s alcoves, Jassyn skated in front of the
prince when they arrived at the magister’s office. He intended to knock on
Thalaesyn’s door to give his mentor some type of warning, but Vesryn
shouldered past him, charging through.
The room revealed its chaotic state—scattered research amid a jungle of
clutter. Jassyn’s attention darted toward his cousin. Vesryn isn’t going to
know what to rummage through first with all the debris in here.
Surprisingly, the prince remained focused on Thalaesyn, sitting behind
his desk. Vesryn plowed around precarious stacks of books on the verge of
teetering over, waded over the crumpled scrolls bunched into waves of
paper on the floor, and avoided an overflowing wastebasket ringed by a
puddle of ink stained into the tile.
The magister rose and saluted the prince with a hand over his heart. Out
of his typical robes, his loose tunic hung over a pair of soft breeches. Jassyn
assumed their arrival had disrupted his evening routine. His attention drifted
to the sofa, unable to comprehend why Thalaesyn preferred to spend his
nights on the tattered couch rather than in the Spire’s comfortable
apartments.
Thalaesyn’s gray eyes sharpened on them. “Prince Vesryn.”
Jassyn noted his mentor’s bloodshot gaze as he closed the door,
hesitantly joining his cousin. He began clearing off the tomes and papers
drowning the chairs across from the magister’s desk.
“We have some questions,” Vesryn said. Flicking a hand, a wave of
Essence shimmered, unfolding into a portal in the only empty space.
“We can have our discussion here,” Jassyn protested, stacking the
volumes on the floor. Wincing at his mentor, he wanted to avoid giving the
impression that this was an interrogation. He suspected going to Vesryn’s
office might put Thalaesyn on the defensive before they had a chance to
gather any information.
“I’m not risking any of the menders walking in.” Vesryn slanted his
head to the rift, commanding the magister to go through.
Igniting his magic, Jassyn tossed a hand toward the exit, hastily
shielding the door. “Now we have privacy.”
Thalaesyn’s eyes volleyed between them before he drew himself up,
tucking a strand of golden hair behind a pointed ear. Vesryn blew out a
breath before scruffing Thalaesyn by the back of his shirt, steering him
through the portal.
Jassyn blinked as they disappeared. Did he seriously abduct the
magister?
CHAPTER 16
JASSYN
J assyn rushed through the gateway, gasping as icy rain pelted him from
every direction. Sheltering his face, he wiped the pouring water out of
his eyes. Having expected Vesryn’s portal to transport them to the Spire,
Jassyn spun around, orienting himself with the surroundings.
Lightning flashed over an endless expanse of churning waters,
momentarily stealing his sight. The gateway behind him faded as his focus
landed on the prince.
Standing under an overhang dangling from a husk of a building, Vesryn
clutched the magister’s arm as if expecting Thalaesyn to open his own rift
and flee. Desperate to curb the prince’s rash behavior before another
reckless impulse struck him, Jassyn darted across what looked to be the
ruins of a deteriorating stone dock.
Waves from the surrounding black ocean crashed over the ledge,
surging around his boots. Dashing toward the prince, Jassyn reined in his
confusion as he slid over the algae clinging to the slippery surface.
He raised his voice to be heard over the thunder warring with the wind.
“Why didn’t you portal us to your office?”
Every frantic heartbeat doubled his questions and dismay. To combat
the darkness, Jassyn flared globes of illumination, the wisps of light nearly
swallowed by the night. He flinched as another charge of energy gathered in
the air. Toppled towers flashed through the hazy mist, outlined by a
spinning barrage of rain. Thunder rattled the crumbled stones, the proximity
of the storm rippling a shiver across his spine. The lip of the ancient tiled
roof hardly offered any shelter from the ocean’s raging spray.
“You can’t abduct the magister,” Jassyn protested when Vesryn just
shrugged, despite knowing that no one regulated the prince. Every hair on
his neck lifted in alarm before a strike of lightning blasted into the sea, the
explosion of crashing waves drowned out by the thunder’s roar. “Where in
the bleeding stars are we?”
Vesryn swept away water dripping down his face and released his hold
on the Thalaesyn. He vaguely waved a hand around the ruins, ignoring the
magister’s tight-lipped fury. “What’s left of this isle is the remains of
Halaema’s first capital. It collapsed into the sea during a quake centuries
ago. No one will find us here. Although…” Vesryn studied the brewing
tempest. “We have little time. The Maelstrom seems to hunt Essence
wielders on its waters. You have until the storm gets closer to evaluate
Thalaesyn.”
“Evaluate?” Thalaesyn fumed, yanking his tunic straight from the
prince’s jostling.
“Closer?” Jassyn sputtered at the same time. He frantically scanned the
blackened horizon. “It’s already too close!”
An apprehensive chill drenched Jassyn’s chest like the deluge sluicing
over his skin. That crackling blue and purple lightning whipping through
the cloudy currents couldn’t be natural. Serenna had told him stories of
spring typhoons that periodically battered Vaelyn’s castle walls—a few in
her memory had even destroyed buildings that weren’t stone. The
monstrous whirlwind in the distance must’ve been hundreds of times the
strength of those storms.
Reading the question in Thalaesyn’s eyes, Jassyn swallowed down the
anxiety climbing up his throat. His attention bounced back to the prince.
“There’s no reason to be somewhere so dangerous. We shouldn’t be doing it
this way.”
Jassyn’s muscles locked as a charged buzz shuddered over his skin,
another wave of lightning forming in the air. Assessing Thalaesyn with the
added pressure of the storm threatened to fracture his focus. Wrestling his
nerves into submission, Jassyn slowed his breathing, counting the seconds
between the lightning and thunder.
Vesryn folded his arms, tipping his chin at the magister. “What can you
tell us of the coercion the king placed on you?”
Jassyn held his breath at the blunt force of the blow. I suppose with the
Maelstrom approaching, there’s no time to dance around subtly. Though he
honestly hadn’t expected much tact from the prince.
Thalaesyn wrung out his damp tunic, jaw silently working. “I’m aware
that the compulsive magic exists.” His eyes narrowed first on Vesryn and
then on Jassyn, as if processing their unusual dynamic. “How do you two
know about it?”
Jassyn readied a response, brimming with eagerness to release the truth
that he’d secretly been assessing his mentor’s mind for weeks. Vesryn cut in
before Jassyn could get a word out, his tone sharp. “And why have you said
nothing about my sire’s compulsion for a century? What did you do to
warrant it?”
“If I could even speak of what the magic prevents me from saying, who
would I have told? And who would’ve believed me? You?” Thalaesyn bared
his teeth. “The council’s hound who tracks down the wraith without asking
questions, not thinking twice about slaughtering those innocents?”
Jassyn tensed while Thalaesyn glared at Vesryn in a way that suggested
they shared more of a history than he’d assumed—aside from the magister
simply being present as one of the palace researchers. Eyes bouncing back
to the prince, Jassyn braced for Vesryn’s reaction.
Vesryn went still, a predator honed in on prey. His words were
dangerously quiet, unsettlingly calm like the eye of a storm. “Innocents?”
The prince suddenly lunged, driving a finger into Thalaesyn’s chest. “Has
the coercion degraded your mind so much over these years that you’ve
forgotten how many those beasts have stolen from us?”
“That’s where you’re mistaken.” Thalaesyn’s face contorted with anger,
but his voice didn’t rise to meet Vesryn’s outburst. “I know what the
coercion is concealing, but Galaeryn saw to it that I can’t discuss it.”
Jassyn shoved his trepidation aside. He hesitantly placed a hand on
Vesryn’s arm, hoping to temper the prince’s erratic behavior before he
harmed the magister.
“You wanted me to examine the magic,” Jassyn gently reminded him.
Vesryn’s muscles strained beneath his fingers. “It’s possible that I might be
able to untangle the power and Magister Thalaesyn can tell us what the king
has concealed.” The island shuddered under Jassyn’s boots, drawing his
attention back to their dwindling time as the Maelstrom pursued them.
Vesryn’s fists quivered at his sides before his shoulders relaxed. The
prince retreated a step, jerking his head at Thalaesyn, a muscle jumping in
his clenched jaw.
“May I assess the coercion on your mind?” Jassyn asked, ruthlessly
ripping his awareness away from the storm’s alarming energy. “If I can do
so safely, I’ll try to unravel the magic.”
At Thalaesyn’s nod, Jassyn hovered a hand by his mentor’s head. While
thunder rumbled, he hauled on his Well, spinning a wave of telepathic
power through Thalaesyn’s veins, channeling raw Essence toward the
magister’s mind.
Unable to take the lingering silence as his imagination cycled through
the countless horrific consequences they’d face if the king discovered they
were meddling with his magic, Jassyn asked, “Why were you banished?”
He’d never had the courage to inquire before, and occupying himself with a
conversation while he worked would also keep his attention off of the
impending danger stalking the coast.
“I discovered—” Thalaesyn’s brows collided with what looked like a
flash of pain before he cleared his throat. With a heavy exhale, he tried
again. “The king wouldn’t have known—” Thalaesyn seized, yanking in a
sharp breath, his words cut off.
The magister twisted a silver ring that glittered with Essence around his
finger before focusing on the prince. “Your anger and pain are justified, but
you’ve been misguided. You’re not the only one with regrets from that
night.” Vesryn flinched at Thalaesyn’s words, likely reminded of his
absence from the palace during the attack. “Your mother and brother
wouldn’t have perished if I hadn’t meddled in magic that I had no business
manipulating.” Thalaesyn’s voice was hoarse with remorse. “It’s all my
fault. The only reason Galaeryn hasn’t killed me—or worse—is because I
might still be useful in furthering his dark plans.” His gaze unfocused on the
roiling sea, bitter regret lingering in his words. “I don’t know why he didn’t
leave me rotting in the palace dungeons.”
“Your imprisonment disturbed too many in court,” Vesryn said, the war
in his eyes subsiding as he calmed. “Especially those loyal to my mother.”
His fingers started tapping across his arms while Jassyn directed his
attention into Thalaesyn’s skull. “The opening of Centarya allowed for a
more…acceptable exile.”
Jassyn jerked when Vesryn’s presence suddenly slipped into his head.
Could you not? Jassyn asked. Your hovering is bound to be distracting.
Show me what you’re doing, Vesryn insisted.
Resigned that the prince would only harass him until he relented, Jassyn
released a weary sigh. As long as you simply observe and don’t interrupt
me, he conceded, permitting the telepathic link to coil around his mind.
Jassyn embarked on an explanation, detailing everything he knew about the
knotted network of telepathy. I’ll attempt to unravel a knot of coercion—I’m
not sure what to expect.
What Jassyn didn’t divulge was how he’d accidentally untangled some
measure of compulsion before. Though the magic on the elven wraith
warrior wasn’t as extensive as the power snaring Thalaesyn—at least from
the muddled details Jassyn recalled.
I shouldn’t have attempted to use Essence while under the influence of
Stardust, he thought to himself. Guilt percolated into his bones like the
chilly rain seeping into his skin. Any mishaps could’ve caused irreparable
damage.
Jassyn targeted one of the countless snarls of coercion. He picked at the
magic like he was attempting to unravel a single thread from a long rope,
careful to not jumble the fibers in the other strands. Using his own telepathy
talent like a magnet to draw out and counter the weaves, he loosened a cord
of power.
The storm is getting closer, Vesryn warned.
Why did you bring us here? Jassyn wiped the beading mist and nervous
perspiration off his face. We could’ve worked in Thalaesyn’s office. You’re
rushing me and this isn’t something to be hurried.
Jassyn sensed Vesryn’s fingers twitching through their telepathic link,
likely wanting to try untwining the knot of coercion himself. The progress
of untangling a single strand of magic was painfully slow—unlike the
Maelstrom’s impending approach. Jassyn glanced at the turbid waters and
the windstorm barreling toward them.
What would happen if you cut the clump off? Vesryn asked, drawing
Jassyn’s attention back to the magister under his hands.
I don’t know what damage we could cause by simply unraveling the
magic, Jassyn said, continuing to pluck at the coercion. By doing it this way,
I can monitor Thalaesyn and make sure there aren’t any adverse—
A streak of rending penetrated the magister’s skull, slicing the coiled
telepathy in half.
Jassyn’s pulse skidded to a halt. He sucked in a shocked breath when
the cluster of coercion he was working on disintegrated like a wick burned
by a flame.
Thalaesyn staggered backward.
“Stop!” Jassyn shouted at his cousin, rushing to catch the magister
before he collapsed. “You have no idea what you’re doing.” He helped
steady Thalaesyn on his feet before rounding on the prince. “Stars, you can
hardly heal a scorching bruise! You have no business trying to free his
mind.”
“But did it work?” Vesryn asked, eyes bright with curiosity as his
shadows receded.
“I doubt it!” Jassyn said, grabbing fistfuls of his soaking curls. “There
are a hundred knots in that web.” Dueling waves of incredulity and disbelief
at Vesryn’s idiocy had Jassyn’s heart furiously flinging itself against his
ribs. “Don’t do that again. We can’t even begin to guess what effect
untangling the coercion might have on his mind.”
Thalaesyn’s hand trembled as he touched his head. “The wraith are my
fault.” He flinched at the admission, eyes darting between Vesryn and
Jassyn. Thalaesyn focused on the prince, his words spilling out in a rush.
“You need to stop killing them. They’re not the enemy—”
Shadows erupted from Vesryn, the black cloud around him mirroring
the Maelstrom’s wrath. Darkness seized Thalaesyn in a violent hold.
Without even thinking, Jassyn grabbed the prince. To do what, he had
no idea, but Vesryn shoved him off.
The prince snatched the front of the immobilized magister’s tunic.
“How can you say that?” he snarled, eyes blazing with outrage. “Those
monsters took everything from me!” Chest heaving, he shook Thalaesyn.
“They took everything from you!”
Apparently, Thalaesyn finally had enough of the prince and ignited his
own Essence in response. His rending hacked at the prince’s shadows but
Vesryn’s magic exploded, a hundred straps lashing to bind the magister
completely.
Using all his strength, Jassyn hauled Vesryn away. Sensing the prince’s
power flare in response, Jassyn tossed his hands up, frantically slamming a
shield around himself to avoid the restrictive hold.
“We need to listen to what Magister Thalaesyn has to say,” Jassyn
gritted out as Vesryn’s rending battered his ward. “He knows something.
That’s why we’re doing this—to get answers.”
A tendon in Vesryn’s neck strained as his shadows roiled like the waves
slapping the stones. The prince rounded on Thalaesyn. “Where were you
the night of the attack? How did you survive?”
“Galaeryn already had me tethered in the dungeons,” Thalaesyn
snapped. “I couldn’t even warn Maraelyn of what I’d done through our
bond.”
Jassyn blinked. He was bonded to the queen?
Releasing his hold on Thalaesyn, Vesryn started pacing, brow dented in
a furrow. The prince cut his hand over to Jassyn, pointing at the magister.
“Keep working.”
“We’ve had enough for one night.” Jassyn glanced at Thalaesyn before
studying the raging ocean as another echo of thunder crashed above them.
“The storm is nearly here. Let’s return to Centarya and we can figure out
how to proceed.”
“Now!” Vesryn barked at him.
Jassyn shook his head, struggling to keep calm, but urgency laced his
tone. “Vesryn, we need to leave.” The wind sped up, whipping curls in his
face. Visibly closer, the Maelstrom’s eerie lightning crackled and flashed,
ripping at the sea.
“He’s had enough,” Jassyn repeated, scalp prickling.
“I’ll do it myself,” Vesryn growled. He stalked toward the magister,
shadows angry, swirling in his wake.
Jassyn threw himself between them, realizing that his cousin intended to
sever the knots of coercion with the brutal force of rending. “You could
damage his mind. Irrevocably.” Jassyn’s stomach pitched in a sea of dread,
keenly aware of his inability to stop the prince. “We could lose everything
the king tried to conceal, not to mention Magister Thalaesyn’s sanity.”
Vesryn shoved past Jassyn’s shoulder, shadows coiling around his hands
as he grabbed for the magister. Jassyn had heartbeats to consider snatching
one of his golden daggers to tether his cousin. If he could have his mentor
restrain Vesryn like Serenna had with rending, they might jointly buy
enough time to settle the prince.
Before he could roll a blade to his fingers, Jassyn’s body seized, a
numbness zipping through his veins. An electrifying charge coalesced under
his skin, shooting down his arms. Vesryn’s eyes widened with his.
Lightning had hurtled from the clouds, straight into Jassyn’s fists.
Staggering away from Thalaesyn and the prince, Jassyn wrenched his
arms closer to his body. Horror crystalized in his chest as the wave of
sparks danced between his fingertips. This isn’t happening.
Jassyn’s gaze whipped to Vesryn, then to Thalaesyn, and then to the
light striking between his trembling hands.
“I—” The power flared, expanding to an orb the size of his head. Jassyn
stumbled out from the roof’s shelter, panic compressing his ribs. Every
muscle tensing from the effort of dragging in labored breaths, he frantically
considered what to do with the lightning twisting in his palms.
His eyes flitted to the sky, blinking back rain, like there would be an
answer in the storm. The earth’s magic left me when I released my hold on
the ground, but I have no idea how to dispel lightning!
“You need to get out of here,” Jassyn said, backing away further,
shaking water out of his face. “I—I don’t know what’s happening.”
Neither the prince nor Thalaesyn moved, both wide-eyed and staring at
the electric web.
Panting now, Jassyn extended his arms, the clash of magic surging
through his bones. Purple and blue sparks spilled out in waves instead of
dissipating like he desperately willed. If anything, the sizzling globe of
power surged in response.
“You need to portal out of here,” Jassyn pleaded, alarm rising in his
throat. “I don’t want to hurt you.”
Vesryn opened a gateway and unceremoniously shoved Thalaesyn
through. Closing the rift, he approached Jassyn, joining him in the rain.
“This is…unexpected.” The prince tilted his head, attention riveted on the
spinning sparks. “Care to explain?”
Stinging sweat and sea spray dripped into Jassyn’s eyes, but he didn’t
move for fear of this foreign magic spiraling even more out of control.
Terror had him blurting a confession.
“I channeled something in the earth.” Jassyn swallowed past his panic.
“During the wraith attack. I don’t know what I did, but I felt something. A
different power. I called roots from the ground. That’s—that’s what
happened in front of the Spire.” His chest constricted, waiting for Vesryn’s
reaction. “I…I think I can access elemental magic.”
Vesryn’s brows drew together, a sign of his intensive thinking. “Is it like
Essence?” As if charmed, the prince lifted a hand to touch the magic
bouncing around his palms.
“Don’t!” Jassyn yelled, jerking his arms away from his cousin. His
mind raced to process the question, fear sundering his lungs. “I think it’s
actually lightning.”
Vesryn’s eyes lit up with manic excitement, reflecting the blue glow
from Jassyn’s fists. The prince grinned, clearly not frightened like he was.
“Then wield it.”
CHAPTER 17
SERENNA
I n the dracovae’s valley, the sun crested over the mountaintops, quickly
burning off a faint layer of fog. Despite how occupied he seemed,
Serenna kept a wary eye trained on Naru’s razor-sharp bill. Settled on
the ground with his raptor-taloned feet tucked under his body, he idly
picked at the remaining scraps of rabbit. Serenna wrinkled her nose as his
rubbery tongue flicked over the grass, licking every drop of gore.
Vesryn swung a saddle over Naru’s feathered shoulders. When the
dracovae rose, the prince ruffled his obsidian neck, stirring out a puff of
dust from beneath his plumes. Even someone as tall as Jassyn could walk
under the beast’s chest without stooping. Beyond his front legs, Naru’s
feathers morphed into leathery scales, his fin-like lizard tail trailing on the
earth.
Serenna joined the prince at his side, watching him expertly cinch the
multitude of straps, fasten the buckles, and tighten the clasps on the
intricate contraption. She voiced her concerns about falling off, but Vesryn
assured her that if she slipped, he’d halt her descent before she splattered on
the ground. Which really did nothing to ease any of her anxious nerves.
“How do you steer Naru while you’re flying?” Serenna asked, noting
the absence of any type of halter or bridle.
“I ask him,” Vesryn said, tugging on a group of knotted ropes as if
ensuring their reliability. “By sending telepathic images.”
Serenna’s brows rose as Naru blinked his double eyelid, white iris
scanning her and the prince. “Does he listen?”
Vesryn released an amused snort. “When it suits him.”
“Sounds like you’re perfect for each other,” Serenna muttered. She
reached out to stroke the soft plumes on Naru’s neck. “What about rangers
who don’t have telepathy?”
“The dracovae are trained to respond to the pressure of your feet on
their sides and the way you shift your weight.” Vesryn adjusted loop lengths
on the stirrup ladder, running down from the peak of Naru’s back. “They’re
also intelligent enough to understand and follow a variety of verbal
commands.”
As the prince continued talking about whatever else the rangers did to
pilot the flying beasts, Serenna’s attention wandered. His nimble fingers
raced distractingly over the saddle’s straps, deftly tying the leather. Her
pulse skipped, recalling how rough his palms felt gliding against her body
last night and—
Vesryn’s hands halted, twitching over a buckle. He angled toward her,
an incredulous question scrawled across his forehead. Forgetting herself and
the inconvenient fact that the prince could read her reactions through the
bond, Serenna’s cheeks blazed with embarrassment.
She cleared her throat, struggling to recall Vesryn’s last few words.
“What was that?” Shifting her weight did nothing to alleviate the sudden
ache hammering between her thighs.
“Should I be concerned about your self-control?” Vesryn emitted a self-
satisfied chuckle, obviously detecting her feelings since she didn’t have her
mental barricades in place. “Perhaps you’d rather…” he trailed off,
amusement settling into his features as he glanced over her shoulder, “…
spend the day romping in the valley?” The prince’s attention veered back to
linger on her lips.
“Is—is that an option?” Serenna stammered, the flush now racing to the
tips of her ears for voicing the brazen question.
One side of Vesryn’s mouth quirked, drawing her awareness straight to
his dimple. Taking a predatory step closer, his eyes glittered like sea glass in
the sun. A shiver spiraled down Serenna’s spine when the prince curled a
finger under her chin. “Oh, I think you could persuade me,” he breathed,
hovering his lips above hers.
As Serenna rose on her toes to meet his mouth, the prince tapped the
end of her nose. “It is rather tragic that we have work to do first.”
Serenna crossed her arms with an irritated huff, forcefully expelling the
suggested images of her and the prince tangled in the meadow. Of course
he’s all business.
“Anyway,” Vesryn said, returning to finish fussing over the saddle
straps, cinching a girth over the scales behind Naru’s front legs. “The
Aelfyn intentionally bred the dracovae to fly with us, but ultimately these
featherbrains are the ones deciding who they’ll permit as riders.” Naru
wrapped his neck back to watch the prince, clacking his beak as if
interpreting the slight. “Luckily for you, Naru appreciated the rabbit treat
you prepared for him, so he doesn’t mind if you ride along with me.” After
securing a final knot, Vesryn gave him a pat, turning toward Serenna.
The prince slid his hands over her hips, tightening his fingers across her
waist as he reeled her closer to him. A swell crested and tumbled in
Serenna’s stomach, capsizing all coherent thought.
Vesryn’s eyes traveled over her face. “I can give you the best chance at
a fledged dracovae choosing you as its rider.”
Breaking free from the spell in his gaze, Serenna registered what he was
implying. It wasn’t like she had any better options, but she hadn’t yet
decided if she wanted to join the rangers or if that was just what the prince
desired.
Stubbornly shaking her head, Serenna said, “I’d rather earn a position.”
Vesryn’s hands dropped away as she retreated a step, separating herself
from the bias he freely offered. A muscle flexed in his jaw, his silent
disapproval sparking a prickle of worry.
More words spilled from Serenna’s mouth to explain. “I imagine the
rangers who worked for their rank would object if I’m shown any favor or
given special privileges.” She glanced away, staring at Naru’s mate, Trella,
in the distance. The morning sun drenched her vibrant plumes as she
preened her white feathers. “You’ve already done more than you should’ve
by choosing me as your champion for the tournament. I’ve done nothing to
deserve it besides having random chance form this bond.”
Sensing the prince’s annoyance and displeasure twisting together,
Serenna hesitantly met his gaze. Vesryn held her stare for an uncomfortable
moment before his irritation spiked. Her breath snagged in a startled gasp
when he seized her arms, dragging her back toward him.
“This is the last time I hear you say that you’re unworthy.” The prince’s
words were a fierce growl, imbued with annoyance. “The stars chose to link
us.”
Serenna swallowed, scorched by his ire. Does he want me or this bond?
Her heart whipped into a whirlwind of confused emotions as he leaned
closer.
Vesryn’s hands tightened around her forearms. “Just because you
haven’t had the luxury of time to manifest your full power doesn’t make
you any less deserving.”
Letting go, the prince retreated, tapping on one of Naru’s legs. The
dracovae snapped his beak but lifted a clawed foot. Ending their
conversation as if he’d settled the matter, Vesryn focused his attention on
casting a sliver of rending to trim back Naru’s talons.
A small part of Serenna nearly asked if he ever intended to complete the
bond—or if he wanted to. But the last thing she wanted to do was pressure
him if he was hesitant to accept a bond for a second time. It didn’t seem like
a conversation to have while the prince needed to focus on corralling the
rogue wraith. It’s obvious I need more training, so a deeper magical
connection between us would only be a risk for him.
Serenna glanced back across the vale, letting the weight of the moment
reign until she couldn’t stew in the silence any longer. “What will Trella do
while we’re gone?” The female dracovae had wandered closer than the first
time they’d visited the pair. Rousing her feathers and scales in a clatter, she
tilted her eagle-like head, watching them with curious eyes.
“I’ll leave the portal open for as long as I can in case she wants to
follow.” Vesryn released Naru’s clawed foot. “She normally does.”
“Portal?” Fidgeting, Serenna readjusted the sleeves on her uniform,
pulling the material down to her wrists. Despite the comfortable weather
from the late spring day, they wore a full set of leathers to protect
themselves from the cooler elements in the skies. “Why do we need to
portal?”
“We’ll save flight time moving by gateway. I’ve traveled enough with
Naru that I can get us closer to the wraith’s reported location without having
to fly across the realms.” Vesryn secured his hair in a topknot, binding it out
of his face with a leather strap. “The hunts are going to become more
difficult if someone with magic is working with those beasts, but we should
be able to handle three wraith.”
“We?” Serenna followed the prince’s lead, wrapping her braid into a
tight coil on the top of her head.
“Why do you think we’ve been training in the dungeons all week?”
Vesryn’s attention finally flicked back to her, disintegrating Serenna’s
previous apprehension. “I wouldn’t put you in danger if I thought you
couldn’t handle yourself.” The prince kneeled to tighten the laces on his
boots, glancing up at her. “And besides, I remember you demanding that I
not hunt the wraith alone.”
Serenna sniffed dismissively. “It’s about time you decided to be sensible
for your safety.”
Lunging forward, Vesryn snatched the backs of her legs. Serenna
squeaked, stumbling into his chest. The prince’s hands glided down her
calves before refastening the laces on her boots.
“You don’t want any loose ends tangled up in the saddle,” he said,
grinning up at her, knowing exactly what he was doing to her pulse.
Serenna frowned as he knotted the leather into intricate loops, nearly
tight enough to cause discomfort. “How am I supposed to untie those?”
“You broke out of the rending binds last night, so I’m sure you’ll figure
it out.” Rising to his full height, the prince smirked. “But considering how
much you struggled, I imagine we’ll have to practice again.”
Serenna’s wordless bluster was lost as Vesryn turned and placed a boot
in one of the stirrup loops. Ascending the ladder, he climbed up the side of
Naru. At the top of the dracovae’s back, he settled into the saddle.
“Ready?” Vesryn asked, patting his thigh.
Serenna pinched her lips. “I’m not sitting in your lap.”
She stroked Naru’s neck, receiving a trilling chirp. Copying the prince’s
motion, she hooked her boot into a looped ring and pulled herself up.
Serenna unsuccessfully swatted Vesryn’s hands away when he snatched
her at the top. Seizing her waist, he squeezed her hips while dragging her
down in front of him.
“I’m helping,” he said defensively while Serenna’s blood jerked in
enough directions to give her whiplash. Crouching over her, the mountain
of his chest stacked against her spine. The prince suggestively ran his hands
down the tops of her thighs, steering her feet into a higher set of stirrups,
adjusting the loops over her boots. “Just guiding you in,” he said in a voice
that could only mean trouble.
To reinstate some shred of control, Serenna elbowed Vesryn’s abdomen
when his lips brushed against the point of her ear. “I can handle myself.” He
didn’t seem to notice her feeble protest through that wall of solid muscle.
Vesryn’s thighs clamped around hers, wedging them even closer. Not
giving him the satisfaction of melting into his chest, Serenna sat up straight,
putting more distance between them even though they both had ample
room.
Ignoring the gesture, the prince curved his arm across her middle,
hauling her back into the cradle of his lap. Sighing, Serenna let Vesryn win
this round and folded into him, not quite relaxing.
Naru tossed his head and stretched his wings, ruffling his feathers.
Trella emitted a screech, flapping in response. The female dracovae boldly
approached, seemingly not keen on being left behind.
Violet light flared as the prince fabricated a shield in front of them.
“This will dampen the wind enough so that the breeze won’t tear out our
eyes,” he explained, twining an inverse wave of illumination into the ward
to render it invisible.
He then extended a hand, opening a massive portal. Tossing his head,
Naru started prancing toward the rift. Lurching with his motion, Serenna
grabbed the swell of the saddle. She steadied herself, adjusting to the
dracovae’s foreign gait that dipped and swayed from side to side.
The last thing she registered before entering the portal’s embrace was
Vesryn’s lips skimming across the side of her throat. “Hang on,” he said,
mouth skating over the shell of her ear.
Serenna shivered as the inky portal swallowed the surrounding
mountain valley in darkness.
CHAPTER 18
SERENNA
SERENNA
A quick trip to the dracovae stables with their feral prisoners had the
wraith entrusted to the rangers. The warriors had modified a section
of stalls into makeshift holding cells, closing the doors and slats
leading to the hallway.
Flight Captain Zaeryn wove a shield around the walls to stifle the
sounds of the snarling and thrashing. She jabbed at the prince, saying that it
reminded her of when they’d locked him up. Serenna could only imagine
why, but didn’t have time to ask—or dwell on where that mindless wraith
had stolen an academy uniform from.
After the whirlwind of activity at the stables, Vesryn portaled them back
to his chambers. No sooner than Serenna stepped on the other side of the
rift, he grabbed her.
She sucked in a breath against the unexpected shock of his mouth
against hers, hot and demanding. Tongue sweeping past her teeth, a wildfire
roared through the bond, incinerating her every sense and thought. The past
few hours of hunting and retrieving the wraith flew out of her head—
nothing else existed while the prince’s lips were on hers.
“We started something last night,” Vesryn nearly growled into her
throat, snatching the base of her braid to angle her face further up to his.
“And I want to finish it.”
Toes curling in her boots, Serenna clutched the front of his leathers,
yanking him closer. “No interruptions this time?” she breathlessly asked
around the frenzied way their mouths met.
“I’m done waiting.” Vesryn’s teeth grazed her bottom lip. “I have
obligations in the capital tonight,” he said, nipping gently. “But I intend to
have you first.”
The desire woven into the prince’s words sent a wave of heat flooding
between Serenna’s thighs. Strong hands bracketing her hips, Vesryn’s
fingers tightened as he reclaimed her mouth, the pressure of his lips hazing
her mind. Before Serenna had time to conjure a coherent response, he
steered her through his sitting room.
Laced with ferocious want, their kiss turned frantic, searing her from the
inside out. Each of Serenna’s inhales became sharper, more urgent as she
dragged in serrated breaths against the prince’s mouth. Heart fluttering, she
walked backward as Vesryn herded her to his sleeping chambers.
Serenna’s pulse jolted when her back collided with a solid surface. Her
eyes flew open as the prince broke their kiss. She reoriented herself—still in
Vesryn’s sitting room, pressed against the balcony door. His hand snaked
around her waist, unlatching the sliding glass behind her.
Slightly puzzled about the location, Serenna swallowed, her head
obviously not keeping pace with her body. Looking up at the prince, she
saw the question in his eyes, felt his hunger devouring her through the
bond.
“Don’t stop,” she breathed, breaking through the wordless chaos of her
thoughts.
That was all the acknowledgement Vesryn required. Ripping the sliding
door open, he steered Serenna out onto the patio.
A curtain of water roared from the portal opened above the peak of the
Spire. The flow cascaded past the balcony, captured by channels and pools
below. Serenna’s middle lurched from the height but settled back into place
when the prince’s mouth crashed back into hers.
His hands circled her waist, their tongues returning to dance in the space
between their breaths. Fingers roving over Vesryn’s leathers in return,
Serenna cursed the concealing material, desperate for the touch of skin.
The fading sun splashed warmth over her already heated body, the
breeze winding around the tower doing nothing to cool her off. Serenna’s
heart battered against the confines of her ribs, every beat pounding with a
strange mix of nervousness and excitement.
The prince suddenly spun her around. Gasping in surprise, Serenna
caught herself on the stone parapet, eyes flying open to the horizon.
Driving his hips into hers, Vesryn pinned her to the ledge. Demand
fueling her desire, Serenna arched against him, their leathers too restricting
as they slid together.
Chest pressing against her back, fingers locking around the front of her
throat, Vesryn dragged his mouth up the curve of her neck to the point of
her ear. Lashes fluttering, Serenna squirmed against the prince as his teasing
lips swept back down to that sensitive spot where her shoulder dipped.
They were doing this. At the peak of the Spire. Overlooking campus.
Serenna’s head spun at the thought of them exposed at the top of the island,
but was relieved that the waterfall and height obscured them from any
potential observers.
Closing out the world hundreds of feet below, Serenna leaned into the
prince, angling her neck to give better access to her throat. She shuddered
when Vesryn’s hands began mapping her body, skimming down to her
curves, sliding across her stomach, drifting up to land on her chest.
A wildness reared its head as Serenna felt the swelling outline of his
arousal pressing into the base of her spine. Their leathers created a dreadful
distance, taunting the needy ache throbbing between her thighs. Keenly
aware that Vesryn was riveted on her reactions, Serenna silently begged for
more, tugging on the bond.
The prince must’ve registered her near-frantic desire, because his hands
roved lower, quickly unraveling the laces of her trousers. He was nothing
but efficient. Before Serenna knew it, Vesryn had her leathers and
undergarments shoved down to her ankles. Skin bared, curls of mist from
the crashing waterfall beaded on her thighs.
Not wasting any time, the rustle of leather behind her signaled that the
prince had freed himself in the same way. He prodded her legs apart with a
knee. Core tightening from the silent command, Serenna opened for him, as
far as the restricting uniform allowed.
Vesryn’s breath was uneven and rough against her neck as he planted
his boots next to hers. “That’s it,” he panted, wrapping his callused hands
around her hips.
Wishing the prince would’ve sacrificed seconds to shed the rest of her
clothing, Serenna nearly unlaced her bodice herself—until a deep groan
reverberated from his throat.
Her priorities quickly rearranged when Vesryn slid the rigid length of
his arousal between them. Serenna sucked in air through her teeth as their
hot flesh merged, the unyielding hardness of him gliding along the slickness
of her.
“Fuck,” the prince growled, the word butchered along its journey from
deep in his throat.
Rocking back and forth against her center, the tip of his length teasingly
sank into exactly where she needed him. The tantalizing pressure he swirled
around her entrance before retreating promised more.
Driven by a mirrored desire, Serenna rolled her hips with a whimper. A
wordless demand. Like the prince, she wasn’t interested in waiting and
reached for him behind her back. Wrapping her fingers around his solid
length drew out a satisfying shudder and a hiss against her neck.
Vesryn breathed a husky laugh. “I can feel how much you want me.”
Senseless now, Serenna pumped him from root to tip, guiding him
closer. She wasn’t the only one gasping and trembling when she pushed
herself on her toes to line him up.
The prince needed no further encouragement. One hand braced against
her waist, digging in his fingers, he seized a fistful of her hair, arching her
spine. His hips stroked forward, sliding into her a fraction. Serenna released
a moan as the first inch of him stretched her in all the right ways. Still
teasing. Still not enough.
She cried out in protest when Vesryn withdrew. He rubbed the length of
his shaft against the seam of her body. Back and forth. Sliding a palm to her
core, the pads of his fingertips circled that pulsing bundle of aching nerves.
Tightening his grip in her hair with the slightest sting prickling her
scalp, Vesryn’s voice was a rasp in her ear. “The stars made you for me.”
Serenna’s breath hitched as she writhed under his hand, smothered by
the flames of passion scalding her through the bond. The prince’s lips
clamped around the point of her ear and Serenna grabbed the parapet before
she collapsed, nearly undone.
Fingers strumming against her center, Vesryn delivered the pressure she
needed, cresting her pleasure alarmingly fast. Indecision had Serenna
snagged somewhere between seating herself fully on that length he was
tormenting her with or greedily leaning forward to grind into his palm.
Mouth returning to her throat, the prince’s arousal nudged her entrance
again, the tip dragging through her drenched flesh before diving further.
This time, he didn’t hold back. Vesryn rammed his hips into hers, claiming
her with one savage thrust.
The blissful stretch had Serenna’s head falling back into his chest when
he released her hair. Her body melted around him, absorbing every offered
inch.
Breath shuddering against Serenna’s neck, the prince grunted as he
plunged deeper, pinning her against the balcony’s ledge until he buried
himself to the hilt. For a few fleeting heartbeats, they both stilled, gasping
for air.
Vesryn suddenly retreated and then snapped his hips forward, sheathing
himself again with a vicious lunge. Catching herself on the parapet’s ledge,
Serenna’s fingers splayed as she braced herself against the stone. Fractured
whimpers escaped her as the prince set a demanding pace. He bucked,
driving into her again and again, each brutal slap of their bodies coming
together harder and faster than the last.
Vesryn’s hand cinched against Serenna’s hip, crushing her body further
into his while the other continued to coil that sensitive spot between her
thighs into a blissful knot. Heartbeat racing nearly to the point of
detonating, her world faded into oblivion under his expert strokes.
Somehow, the prince plunged even deeper, dragging out a sound
between a shriek and a moan from Serenna’s throat. The noise only seemed
to encourage his punishing rhythm, delivering blow after blow.
“Come with me,” Vesryn growled in Serenna’s ear, his hand continuing
to build that knotted bliss between her thighs.
While sooner than expected, the order still made her core clench. The
prince’s fingers swirled and strummed, dragging out spine-tingling rapture.
Knees trembling, Serenna ground herself against his palm, meeting every
one of his erratic thrusts.
A collision of sensations exploded through the bond. The prince
barreled over the edge, his arousal jerking and throbbing, spilling himself
inside of her. Vesryn swore against her neck, delivering one last wicked
stroke with a guttural groan.
Something about the prince finding his release crested Serenna over the
final swells, losing control of her movements as she climbed the same peak.
A tremor shuddered from her toes straight to her core as Vesryn’s hand
drove her body to the brink.
Serenna’s inner walls fluttered, clamping down. Climax crashing over
her, light streaked across her vision, sending her spiraling into a free fall.
Despite the wind whirling around them, she couldn’t catch enough air as
she finished panting the prince’s name.
Vesyrn’s fingers found Serenna’s face, tilting her head back toward him.
Lips meeting hers, this time he delivered a softer kiss, long and slow.
Heartbeat calming, she settled back down somewhere between the clouds
and the Spire.
Serenna gasped against the prince’s mouth, severing the kiss when he
suddenly pulled out, the absence of him evoking a different kind of ache.
Turning back to gaze across the island, she peeled her fingers away from
the ledge.
I suppose there’s no graceful way to do this. She clumsily hauled up her
leathers, hearing the rustle of Vesryn doing the same. Thinking about how
she was going to clean herself up, a nervousness began to root until the
prince spoke behind her.
“You can help yourself to the bathing chambers.”
Twisting around, Serenna met his satisfied smirk. The expected
awkwardness from the moment vanished. “I can’t say you’re a poor host.”
Vesryn grabbed the sides of her face, hauling her mouth back to his.
“Oh, there’s more to my hospitality that I have yet to show you.” His lips
swept over hers. “But that’ll unfortunately have to wait for another day.”
His eyes darted into his apartments. “I am rather…late.”
Hearing the dismissal, Serenna stiffened as he released her. Well, he did
say he has business in the capital even if this feels abrupt.
Serenna tried to walk normally rather than shuffling to Vesryn’s bathing
chambers. Since the prince was in a rush to leave, she swiftly tidied herself
up and rebraided her wind and passion-mussed hair.
Returning to the sitting room, she found Vesryn staring out of his
balcony windows, hands clasped behind his back. The setting sun
descended under the island’s horizon, throwing splashes of reds and golds
across his silver strands.
“Thank you,” Serenna said, hurriedly adding, “For taking me flying
today.” Cheeks heating, she didn’t draw attention to what they just did.
Vesryn turned toward her, one side of his mouth tugging up. “We’ll
make a ranger out of you yet.”
Sensing the prince barricading his emotions from the bond to close
himself off, Serenna froze. He absently thumbed his bottom lip, his focus
seeming to drift.
Worried that something had shifted between them, an anxious feeling
claimed Serenna’s mind. Silently chiding herself, she shook out the tension
in her shoulders. He obviously enjoyed himself and must be preoccupied
with his obligations tonight.
“I’ll…see you later,” she said as the unusual silence constricted the air.
Vesryn straightened and gathered his power. “I can portal you to your
rooms.” Essence unfurled, wending around him in a rush.
“No need.” Serenna said weakly, clearing her throat. “I’ll head down to
the mess hall. Dinner should start soon.”
The prince simply nodded, his attention wandering back to the campus
grounds. To assuage her mind, Serenna almost asked what was bothering
him. Instead, she swallowed her concern and left his chambers. I’m sure he
needs to inform the council about the wraith prisoners and doesn’t want me
sharing in his fretting.
Lost in thought and turning over the last few minutes, Serenna picked at
every word. She wove her way through the corridors, heading to the stairs
to begin her descent. An overwhelming haze of cloying perfume accosted
her nose as she rounded a corner.
Serenna staggered in her tracks, nearly running straight into Ayla.
CHAPTER 20
SERENNA
“W hat are you doing up here?” Serenna blurted, the words slipping out
as she skidded to a halt. She’d never observed anyone aside from
the prince’s staff and Jassyn at the top level of the Spire.
Ayla’s manicured brows rose. “I don’t need to explain my presence.
But, if you must know…” she trailed off, flashing her teeth. “I’m expected.”
Registering that her sister wasn’t in uniform, Serenna’s eyes popped. A
silky emerald gown cinched her slim waist, clinging to her generous curves.
Serenna’s mouth went slack at the plunging neckline. The dress was more
fitting for a night carousing around court than traipsing through the
hallways of the Spire.
Jewels glittering with Essence garnished Ayla’s creamy skin. Her
striking, flame-colored hair somehow both contrasted and complemented
her regal gown. Ruby locks coiled around a silver diadem studded with
matching magic-infused gems. Ayla looked more magnificent than the
gathered nobles that Serenna had seen at the start of the term—like she
belonged among the aristocrats in Kyansari’s courts.
Like their princess.
The thought plummeted her heart straight to the floor. A monstrous
weight of despair settled on her chest as she processed Ayla’s statement.
She’s going to Vesryn’s chambers.
“Getting an eyeful?” Ayla sneered, the question snapping Serenna’s
attention back to her face. “I know this might be taxing for someone like
you to imagine,” she said, venom dripping from her words, “but believe it
or not, some of us receive invitations to royal functions.”
Their sire’s eyes—the color of the sea that Serenna now despised
sharing—impaled her like a glacial shard of ice. Ayla pointedly sniffed, her
ruby lip curling as her gaze roved over Serenna’s sleeved riding leathers.
“I see you’re adopting the same disgusting habits as the prince and
spending time around those flying beasts.” Serenna flinched when Ayla
reached out and swiped a finger across the shoulder of her uniform, like a
disgruntled tavern owner inspecting the level of grime on the bar. “I thought
I smelled that reptilian rank from five floors below. I have no intention of
satisfying the prince’s every depraved desire if he prefers riding his females
like he does those creatures.” Ayla crossed her arms, the motion nearly
toppling the rest of her cleavage from her dress. “But I suppose someone of
your standing is suited for tending to those perverted needs.”
A sting of heat flushed the tips of Serenna’s ears as Ayla so graphically
described the activity she’d engaged in hardly minutes ago. Unsuccessfully
masking her dismay, Serenna silently convinced herself that what was
between her and the prince went beyond physical desires. He told me what’s
between us is more than a bond.
Ayla traced the delicate gems nuzzled against her chest. “I suppose our
sire gave you the same advice about getting close to the royal line.” She
emitted a breathy laugh, adjusting the jewels. “I have no qualms about
sharing, so long as you remember that your place isn’t in court.”
Serenna couldn’t say that the admission even felt like a threat. Ayla
didn’t so much as bat those excessively darkened lashes upon seeing her
departing the prince’s dwelling level.
Serenna was well-informed of her place, considering Vesryn had
escorted her to the dungeons instead of to a ball. Her nails dug into her
palms as she swallowed her disgust. I suppose his “obligations in the
capital” include entertaining his betrothed.
Serenna finally found her voice, unfurling her fingers before she broke
any bones. “I have no intention of partaking in any sharing of the prince.”
She wished she didn’t splutter like she was in the wrong, but the impact of
jealousy collided with her disbelief.
“That doesn’t surprise me.” Ayla flicked an ironed curl away from her
eyes. “From what I’ve gathered, your human upbringing interferes with
embracing our culture.” She picked at one of her lacquered nails. “A shame
really, since all our sire drones on about is how you’re squandering your
bloodline’s potential.”
Serenna blinked, wondering if her sister knew about her shaman
heritage. But she didn’t have time to worry about it as Ayla relentlessly
railed on.
“I’ll suppose we’ll be seeing more of each other up here.” Ayla’s
slippered foot toed the purple runner, nose wrinkling as if the rug offended
her. “Since you’re not involved in Kyansari’s inner circles, I’m sure you
have yet to hear that the prince and I will be wed at the Winter Lunar
Solstice. The king demands the stability of the Falkyn line by producing
heirs for the realm—especially now with the prince star-bent on leading this
silly war.”
A ringing started to mute Serenna’s ears as Ayla expectantly peered at
her from under a curtain of lashes, unblinking like a viper poised to strike.
“It would be a shame, really, if the prince perished before we produced
offspring. In fact”—Ayla tapped her painted lips—“after our dinner tonight,
I plan to have him.” She released a girlish giggle, lowering her voice
conspiratorially. “Is he as thorough of a lover as everyone in the capital
claims?”
Every sentence was a blow, every word a punch to Serenna’s gut. Ayla
patiently waited for her answer. As if Serenna had any hope of recovering
from that verbal assault. Vesryn warmed himself up with me so he could go
all night with her. Is this his way of “handling” the engagement? Serenna
flushed further, the rushed moments on the balcony now aggressively
ambushing her with regret.
Breaking Serenna’s silence, Ayla’s laugh chimed through the hallway.
“Well, no matter.” She dismissively waved. “I’ll find out for myself.” Ayla
fussed with her gems again before glancing back at Serenna, her eyes
widening with mock worry. “You know what?” She gasped. “While I’m
thinking about it, we might not be able to produce heirs since I’m nearly a
pure-blood.” Ayla closed the distance between them with a single step,
crowding over Serenna with her height. She lifted Serenna’s limp braid,
turning over the mahogany plait in her palm, as if inspecting the darker
human coloring. “Perhaps you’d like the honor of stepping in as a
surrogate.”
Serenna nearly released a bitter laugh, her inability to speak carrying the
weight of a thousand unsaid words. Ayla acted as if the likelihood of
Serenna conceiving was any greater than her own. She had to assume they
both shared a similar cycle as the other elven-blooded—twice a year.
The reminder of Elashor’s degrading expectations doused Serenna with
ice, freezing a lump of anger in her throat. Has my worth to the realm really
been reduced to bearing spawn for Ayla? I refuse to live in her shadow.
“Anyway, I must be going,” Ayla said, glancing out through the arched
windows. “I’ll inquire with our sire if he’d like to consider you as a
candidate to carry the prince’s offspring if we’re unable to reproduce—I
figure you have enough human blood in your veins.” Ayla slipped past her,
escorted by her mantle of fragrances as she glided away. “Enjoy your
night,” she said, flashing a vicious grin over her shoulder. “I know I will.”
Serenna stared after Ayla’s swaying hips, incapable of processing their
interaction. Vesryn rushed me out of his chambers because she was on the
way? Serenna forgot how to breathe as hot, anguished tears welled in her
eyes.
The joy from the most wonderful day dissipated faster than a plume of
smoke. She knew better than to assume that happiness was anything more
than a breeze—temporary and fleeting.
Serenna didn’t remember descending the stairs of the Spire, the steps
below her feet blurring. Her body gave an involuntary jerk when Vesryn’s
presence faded in the back of her mind, leaving campus.
Traveling to Kyansari.
With Ayla.
Serenna slapped a hand over her mouth, releasing a sob before she
could smother it. Her heart shattered and eroded to dust. How did I convince
myself this engagement meant nothing? The prince had danced around her
questions. She’d only wanted to discuss what would happen between them
with the bond—if he ever intended to fully accept the connection. She
needed some type of reassurance—to know something.
As her world turned upside down, Serenna’s thoughts sank like the
descending sun as she entered the Spire’s courtyard. She furiously scrubbed
away the dampness on her cheeks. I matter to him. Don’t I? Or does
everything between us simply exist because of this bond?
The trees and buildings pressed in against her as she rushed across
campus. Cutting through a lawn to avoid one of the patrols, Serenna fled to
her residence hall, wishing that Velinya was around. Maybe I’m taking
everything too seriously. It was obvious that she was still too attached to her
human notions of relationships for the elven realm. Velinya would have
advice. Her friend frequently entertained a handful of lovers with no broken
hearts.
Serenna toyed with the idea of seeking Jassyn out. She could ask him to
escort her to the capital’s healing grounds. And not because she was hoping
to run into the prince. I only want to talk to my friend and see if she’s okay.
Entering her apartment, Serenna stopped in her tracks. The setting sun
hooked on a prism on the table, scattering rainbows of light across the
walls. With a scoff, she approached the Heart of Stars perched in a
decorative box, a jewel on display.
That…that lout!
Serenna had completely forgotten that she’d mentioned to the prince
weeks ago that she wanted to inspect the relic again—to see if she’d
imagined the strange voice when she’d held it. Vesryn must’ve dropped off
the Heart without her noticing when he retrieved her that morning. He’d
distracted her enough by putting his mouth all over hers, so Serenna wasn’t
surprised that she hadn’t noticed the container before they’d left.
Snatching the box, Serenna’s hands trembled as she glared at the Heart,
recalling the time she first met the prince. Vesryn had remembered her
request, but it was ridiculous if he thought that she’d be pacified by jewels.
Unable to stop herself, Serenna pointed her awareness toward the east—
where Vesryn was in Kyansari. Hurt flashed through her chest like a
lightning strike. I hope he chokes on his dinner. Serenna slammed the lid
shut as her limbs chafed with fury.
Blinking against the fading sun, she focused all of her attention on
deciphering the prince’s location. Frowning, she perceived a pull, like a fish
dragging on a line. But from the west.
Did Vesryn portal somewhere else? The fainter silver cord weighed on
her perception—it never had before, not to any notable degree since the
prince’s presence was always glaringly bright when he was close. I thought
that thread between us would glow too if we ever accepted the bond, but
I’m not sure I want to now.
Serenna clenched her jaw, drawing the worst conclusions—recalling
their visit to the Cerulean Basin where his seduction had led to her
manifesting her force ability.
Did he take Ayla there?
A hot slice of jealousy shredded Serenna’s chest. She wasn’t resentful if
Vesryn took Ayla to the waterfall—a place he’d shared with her. That
wasn’t the twisted feeling in her gut. That wasn’t why a sharp breath of
bitterness constricted her throat.
A weight of indecision ricocheted against Serenna’s ribs, like the wings
of a bird battering a cage. I’ll ask him what’s going on. That was the
sensible thing to do—lay everything out in the open and avoid this tangled
communication.
I’ll ask him right now! Serenna squared her shoulders, deciding she’d
dwell on it no longer. I’ll shake him until his teeth rattle out an answer!
Angling her perception toward the twin silver threads, Serenna couldn’t
make sense of Vesryn’s location. He can’t be in two places at once.
Fingers clenching and unclenching around the box, Serenna paced the
sitting room while her thoughts festered. I shouldn’t be spending this much
time upset over a male who’s making me doubt what’s between us. She
yanked the bond’s cords in irate frustration. I deserve better than that.
Fueled by a desperate need for answers, Serenna seized her power,
intent on manifesting her portaling talent. I’ll use the bond to travel to
Vesryn. Reaching through their connection, she strained toward the nexus
hovering between them.
Serenna weighed her options, her decision volleying between the east
and the west. She couldn’t open a portal if he was at the palace—the rift
could slice a bystander in half. Blowing out a breath, she sent her entire
awareness toward the cord in the direction of the setting sun.
Diving into her power, Serenna’s magic rushed to her like a raging tide.
Essence whirled around the room. She ignored the nagging feeling that she
might be doing something exceptionally foolish because a male was
involved. But she refused to be strung along like some bonded pet.
Recalling a conversation about manifesting portaling with Velinya,
Serenna sank into the emotions that she knew would be needed to drag her
ability to the surface of her Well—trust and longing. She could snap herself
into a talent if she tried. I don’t need the prince prying my magic out for me.
Serenna tunneled into her Well, searching for her talent. I’ll trust the
stars. And I’ll trust myself too. Closing her eyes, she released a frustrated
huff, pouring every ounce of emotion into her power. Fine, I’ll use longing
for the prince but only because I “long” to know what’s going on.
Letting herself drift, magic burst from Serenna. Not a sputter, but a roar,
fountaining across the sitting room. Hauling herself away from tumbling
into a spiraling pit of emotion, she cleared her mind to rebalance herself.
A rift split the air, opening a dark portal. Serenna gaped, shocked that
she’d effortlessly called the talent on her own. Of course the only time I’m
motivated enough is when a male is involved.
Serenna wasn’t sure why she carried the decorative container Vesryn
had left behind. It might as well be her own stupid heart in the box. She’d
just throw it at his head if she didn’t like what he had to say for himself.
Serenna lifted her chin, stalking through the gateway to confront the
prince.
CHAPTER 21
SERENNA
B ustling out from the portal, Serenna strode into a wall of shadows. Her
body went rigid as she lost control of her limbs to the mob of rending.
The box she carried tumbled out of her numb fingers, bouncing to a
stone floor. Expecting gravel underneath her boots, she briefly frowned at
the silver veins threaded through the polished marble before glaring at the
shadows.
Compounding frustration toward the prince had her grinding her teeth. I
portaled for the first time and he’s still testing me?
Serenna couldn’t see anything beyond the midnight cloud, but she could
perceive Vesryn’s presence on the other side. Alarmed and irate.
Irritably drawing on her experience from practicing with the prince,
Serenna whipped a gale of her own rending. She sliced through the
shadowy shackles, incensed enough to summon the destructive talent
without a second thought.
Regaining control of her body, Serenna stumbled through the
dissipating magic, running into the longest table she’d ever seen. Her
fingertips skidded against the grains of ironwood as she righted herself.
Scattered papers, maps, and figurines—representing what she assumed
were cities or armies—lay arranged before her.
Did I portal to the capital’s war room? I thought I was going to the
waterfall.
An echo of boots thudded behind her. A deep voice growled something
she couldn’t understand, sounding like a threat of distant thunder. I’m sure I
disturbed something Vesryn didn’t want me to see. Sensing his furious
presence behind her, Serenna whirled to face him.
She met flaming eyes and flashing fangs.
With a shriek, Serenna stumbled backward, hips colliding into the table.
Her heart pummeled the inside of her chest as she hauled on her magic,
slamming a shield around herself.
Attempting to make sense of this dark-haired stranger who looked
impossibly familiar, Serenna’s mind whirred with questions. She stared at
his half-wraith appearance, analyzing him while her lungs hauled in air.
“Who—who are you?” Serenna stammered, scanning for an escape,
searching for the prince. Vesryn must know him, right?
Her eyes rolled wildly, taking in the foreign surroundings that could’ve
been carved from a rocky cavern. Sharp golden weapons festooned the
stone walls accompanied by flames flickering in strange, spiraled sconces
lining the edge of the room. Empty fireplaces somehow emitted rushes of
air, heating the space.
The entire wall at the head of the table was glass, curving halfway
around the room. The view opened up to a jagged mountain range where
the sun crawled below snowy, desolate peaks. Serenna’s eyes darted across
the frozen expanse, gaping at the unexpected landscape. I portaled farther
than I thought.
“Where am I?” Serenna asked, her focus hesitantly returning to the elf-
like wraith.
Judging from his spiked armor and the cunning look burning in his eyes,
Serenna assumed this male wasn’t like the mindless creature the prince had
unleashed on her in the dungeons. The seams of his black leathers cut edges
even sharper than his jawline. His trousers, the dark color impossible to
discern, shimmered with iridescence in the fading sun.
The male peered at her with the same calculating interest that Naru
provided the innards of a rabbit. But Serenna sensed that she repulsed him
instead, a cockroach to be crushed under his boot.
Her eyes widened, registering that she could perceive his revulsion.
Breath hitching on the revelation, the peril of her situation locked every
muscle in denial. Covering her mouth, Serenna stifled a wordless gasp,
fully identifying him in her mind.
It wasn’t Vesryn’s presence that had drawn her here. It was this
stranger’s. The bond that distance must’ve dimmed, the silver cord now
glaringly bright because of his proximity. It’s not possible. Fear had Serenna
refortifying her shield, the violet magic protectively flaring around her.
Flicking a wrist, shadows streaked out from the male’s metal gauntlet,
effortlessly slicing through her ward. Serenna’s body seized, snared in
another bind of rending.
The realization of the bond engulfed her in a mute panic, robbing her
ability to launch any counter strike. Chest drumming with paralyzed horror,
Serenna helplessly watched the elf-wraith approach her, the heavy steps of
his boots ominously echoing against the stone.
The stranger’s gaze dismissively passed over her before a pressure of
force whipped the box she’d dropped into his palm. He flipped open the lid.
Scarlet eyes reflecting torchlight thinned, veering to her before glancing
back at the displayed Heart. He barked out a sudden laugh, the booming
noise jarring Serenna’s pulse.
When he rolled his shoulders, it sounded like each vertebrae in his spine
cracked in half. Brows forming a severe ridge, his searing gaze riveted on
her. “I see this stars-cursed bond proved useful after all.”
He knows what’s between us too. Struggling to drive air down her lungs,
every fiber screamed at Serenna to flee from that intimidating stare.
Touching the relic, five colors sprang from the prism’s peak, confirming
the obvious fact that this male had Essence. He grunted, jerking his head at
the Heart. “How did you come by this?”
Serenna’s heart stuttered at his words as shadows continued to billow
around her, shackling her in place.
“Speak!”
Her voice fled when she opened her mouth. A burst of Essence had
Serenna’s body flying toward his outstretched claw, propelled by a blast of
force. Colliding with the metal of his gauntlet, he seized her neck like a
vise. The grip bit into her skin as sharp canines flashed in front of her face.
“If I have to ask two fucking questions to retrieve one satisfactory
answer,” he snarled, “then this is going to rapidly deteriorate into an
unpleasant experience for you.”
A tremor rippled all the way from Serenna’s head to her toes as she
swallowed the scream coiling in her throat. “I don’t see how this day can
get any worse,” she whimpered, her words hoarse around the fist
constricting her air.
His crimson eyes flared like stoked flames, an outpour of his loathing
assaulting her.
Serenna’s vision blurred.
Agonizing fire blazed through her veins as rending scalded every nerve.
Spine arching, Serenna released a strangled howl as the darkness threatened
to incinerate her bones. Heart thrashing against her ribs, her limbs
contorted, body twisting in excruciating and unnatural ways. Searing
anguish raged, the all-consuming torment dragging her toward
unconsciousness.
Released from the male’s gauntlet but still constrained by the shadowy
bindings, Serenna slumped, dazed and panting when the rampant
contractions of her muscles finally stopped. Blood flooded her mouth from
where she’d bitten her cheek. She stared unblinking at the floor, reclaiming
her breath as the memory of pain retreated.
Her power was there, in the crypts of her mind. Waiting. Finally,
Serenna’s instincts roused. She snatched at her magic. Moments. She only
needed moments to spin a portal to somewhere—anywhere—else.
Power erupting, Serenna blasted out a wave of rending from every pore.
As if ignited by her outburst, the fires in the lamps flared, casting wavering
shadows against the stone. Papers on the table shot in the air, the figurines
on the map scattering. The explosion of power crashed around the room,
rattling the sconces affixed to the walls.
Her magic bounced uselessly off of the male’s shield.
Unfazed by Serenna fighting for her life, he stood with his arms crossed
across his leathers, not appearing taxed at all. The arrogance was all too
familiar as something about his angled features clawed at her mind.
Gritting her teeth, Serenna channeled her hate along the nexus lurking
between them, the second silver cord in her Well connecting her to this…
this…abomination. His presence soiled her mind, scum clinging to a
stagnant pond.
Warring to break out of rending’s hold, Serenna hurled shock waves of
Essence at the male, her chest heaving from the effort. She threw her entire
Well against him, hacking at the darkness constraining her.
His lip curled, shearing her magic with a slash of rending, affording her
no more attention than one would a bothersome gnat. Serenna felt just as
insignificant. Just as helpless. Recognizing her power was futile against his,
she slowly let her shadows dissolve.
“Release me,” Serenna demanded through clenched teeth with all the
authority she could muster.
The male stepped forward, stooping to growl in her face. “It was you
who opened a portal and breached my fortress.” The words he released
flayed her cheek with a repulsive heat. Steel edged the low tenor of his
voice, promising more pain. “You have no right to make demands.”
“I have every right!” Serenna shrieked, her voice shrill with despair.
“You wraith brought war to us! For no reason!”
As soon as the statement left her mouth, realization clubbed her like a
blow. He must be able to portal. This…wraith thing had sensed her
presence and traveled to Centarya—that was the only explanation. He used
the bond to cross the realms, just like she did. She was the reason the wraith
were able to attack the academy—the reason so many had died.
It’s all my fault. Heart sinking below her ribs, Serenna blinked back
tears of guilt. Have I really been so stupid not realizing I had another bond?
“You elves—half-elves—whatever you scourge are, forced my hand
with your military island.” The male’s gauntlet squealed as it snapped into a
fist. “I can only imagine it will be a matter of time before your kind scours
the lands for us. Destroying my people. Hunting us like animals.”
Serenna’s arms twitched against the restrictive shadows as she battled
for her freedom. His words prompted a scathing remark, her chest
constricting with a panicked storm. “We wouldn’t even have a military
academy if it wasn’t for you monsters attacking Kyansari!”
The muscles in his jaw flexed as he gritted his fangs. “We have never
attacked Kyansari.”
“You’re lying,” Serenna seethed.
“Read the bond,” he sarcastically taunted, sneering. “You’ll find I’m
not.”
“I don’t want to touch your filthy mind.” Rage bubbled up in her throat.
“Dissolve this connection and you’ll never see me again.”
“Oh, you’re not returning to your elven kin.” He straightened, cracking
his neck.
The blood drained from Serenna’s face. He can’t keep me here…
“Now, I am going to ask a final time.” His eyes burned with an
unnatural glow. “Why do you have a Heart of Stars?”
His persistence regarding the relic left Serenna bewildered. Heartbeats
stretched in the silence between them. To avoid being on the receiving end
of rending again, her stubbornness fractured.
Serenna swallowed and quietly admitted, “It was given to me.”
“And who so freely bestowed an Aelfyn artifact to a half-elf grunt?”
The male’s eyes pinned on her. “The king?”
Serenna lifted her chin. “Prince Vesr—”
With no warning, the male ripped off his gauntlet. He shoved a
grotesquely clawed hand to her chest, sundering her words. Talons shredded
her leathers, gouging into flesh, splitting into skin.
A scream ravaged Serenna’s throat when pain like nothing she’d ever
known detonated within her Well as he started flaying her power. Agony
radiated from the depths of her body as he plucked, slashed, and unraveled
the fibers of her magic. White-hot anguish thieved Serenna’s sight as her
mind caved in on itself, Essence threatening to rip her apart.
Something inside of her shattered and snapped.
Knees buckling, reality disintegrated into splinters as Serenna crashed
to the ground. Like a wounded animal whose limb had been cleaved by a
trap, she lay panting, unable to process the injury. Unable to comprehend
the loss.
The male had taken something. Something that was hers. Mind racing,
Serenna frantically dove inward, assessing her power.
There was a hole. A gaping hole in her Well.
Portaling.
Her ability was gone. Serenna’s heart careened in fear at the
incomprehensible emptiness. Disbelieving, she looked up in horror. The
male’s concentration focused on a globe of white light hovering above his
claw.
Devastated by a thousand warring thoughts, each one more terrifying
than the last, Serenna’s mind howled, processing that he’d somehow stolen
her talent.
“NO!” she screamed as he shoved her ability into his chest. Through the
bond, she sensed his exhilaration at the surge of power. “NO!” She
stumbled to her feet.
Serenna shook loose hair out of her eyes. Black hair. Trembling, she
held up her hands and nearly vomited. The impossible truth pulverized her,
crashing into her like a boulder. She didn’t have claws, but her fingers had
elongated. Gruesomely so.
Her panicked voice rang around the chambers. “What did you do to
me?”
With a snarl, he lunged and snatched her leathers. A cloud of rending
reared behind him, spreading like dark wings. “Now you will know what it
means to be wraith.”
Serenna’s vision went white when he started plundering the rest of her
Well. Thoughts fragmenting, all she knew was pain. Her body convulsed
through the endless wave of agony, sanity unraveling. Every nerve on fire,
she screamed, calling out for help. For the prince. For Jassyn. For anyone to
stop the butchering of her magic.
She distantly heard other voices in the chamber.
“Lykor!” a male yelled. Boots pounded into the room.
Sight blurring, Serenna blinked to see a golden-haired half-wraith
dragging the claw away from her chest. He shoved back the male who was
raiding her magic.
Blinking again, Serenna discovered she was curled on the ground,
having collapsed at some point. She gasped for air as the waves of agony
subsided.
“I’ve got your she-elf,” a male voice said behind her.
Serenna flinched when a warm hand touched her shoulder. Gently
lifting her under the arms, he hauled her to her feet.
Disoriented, Serenna staggered as a wave of dizziness rocked the
ground beneath her boots. Regaining her balance, she went rigid upon
seeing the hulking warrior—the only full wraith in the room—restraining
her arm with a wicked claw. Torchlight glinting off of the shining rings
pierced into his face only intensified his utterly barbaric look.
Eyes swiveling back across the chamber, Serenna watched the half-
wraith clench the arms of the one who’d stripped portaling from her. He
restrained the one he’d called Lykor, their boots scraping against the floor in
a scuffle.
Sensing his frenzy to kill her for reasons she couldn’t comprehend,
Lykor’s gaze was fastened on her. When Serenna instinctively angled her
perception toward him, she met a void where she expected his presence to
be. He’d gone wild casting out an explosion of Essence, shadows snaking
up the walls.
Fear erupted, stealing Serenna’s breath as some of that darkness
streaked toward her. Forced to include the wraith gripping her arm, Serenna
wrenched another shield into place. She channeled her entire strength into
the ward, knowing that the rending battering her barrier would obliterate
her to blood and bone.
The male wrestling with Lykor gritted his teeth, fangs elongating.
“Aesar, now would be the time to take over.”
A lance of shock nearly jolted Serenna’s power out of her grasp. What
did he say? Her gaze volleyed between everyone in the room as her
confusion compounded.
Serenna’s eyes locked for a fraction of a second with the wraith holding
her arm. He appeared to be nervously spinning one of the rings in his brow,
attention bouncing between her and the surrounding shield.
An icy chill suddenly trickled down Serenna’s spine as she sensed a
shift through the bond. Another entity taking over, a calm that was distinct
from Lykor’s rage, as different as the moons were from the sun. He can’t be
Vesryn’s brother. It’s impossible.
Rapidly blinking at the male holding him, Lykor’s fangs retracted as the
shadows receded. Chest heaving, he slumped, disheveled midnight hair
slipping over his face. The elf-wraith helped steady him on his feet,
brushing away the strands in front of his eyes.
Lykor trembled as he touched the male’s cheek with a tenderness
Serenna didn’t expect these…beings to possess. His eyes traveled over to
her, going round. Serenna sensed his startlement spinning through the bond.
His attention whipped to the wraith restraining her. “Fenn, get her out of
here. I can’t—” he doubled over. The other male lowered Lykor to the
ground as he jerked in a fit.
Serenna couldn’t begin to guess what was unfolding, but she knew she
needed to escape—flee to somewhere safe. If there was anywhere safe. But
it wasn’t going to be around Lykor, or whatever bedlam she’d foolishly
wandered into.
How am I supposed to leave without portaling? She’d have to rely on
the prince sensing her location to retrieve her.
Gathering Essence in a rush, Serenna dropped her shield and slammed
her palm against the monstrous male holding her. A shock wave of force
punched the wraith across the war room. She didn’t wait to see if he crashed
into the table or a wall. Eyes latching onto the double doors the warriors
had entered from, Serenna sensed freedom and ran.
She almost made it.
A shadow unfolded in the entryway, materializing in front of her.
Serenna collided with the leviathan’s chest. Seizing her, the brute caught her
before she fell on her back. As soon as Serenna tried to extricate herself out
of his talons, cold metal snapped around her arm.
Essence fled.
A single golden manacle clamped around Serenna’s wrist, tethering her
magic. A renewed surge of terror at the defenselessness capsized her gut.
Writhing against this Fenn creature’s hold, Serenna shrieked, resorting to
fighting with her fists and feet.
The warrior’s claw tightened on her arm, holding her at a distance. “File
my fangs,” he yelped, dancing out of range of her flailing.
Dashing forward, Serenna snatched the hilt of a long knife at his belt,
ripping the dagger out of its sheath. With all of her strength, she lunged
with the weapon pointed at his ribs.
“That,” the wraith growled, snagging her hand before the blow landed,
“was uncalled for.” He twisted her wrist, sending the blade clattering to the
floor. “I’m not going to harm you.”
“Says the red-eyed cretin who tethered me!” Serenna aimed an
ineffective kick at his knee.
Fenn spun her around. Serenna’s back slammed into his chest, arms
pinned to her sides by his.
Knowing she couldn’t fight a monster two feet taller than her without
her magic, Serenna’s focus scurried around the chamber, searching for
something else she could use. The wall of windows overlooking the frozen
expanse was her next best chance at freedom. She just needed to break out
of this restrictive ogre’s hold. But how can I run away if he appears out of
thin air?
Lykor was still on the ground having some type of seizure while the
other male hovered over him. Serenna didn’t think anymore of it, furiously
weighing her options. I need to get out of here before Lykor steals the rest of
my magic. She’d take her chances jumping out of the window to the snow
drifts below and braving the cold. I’d rather die out there than be torn apart
by these wraith.
Panting out of her nose, reining in her fear, Serenna’s mind tumbled
over how to escape Fenn’s grip. Her eyes latched onto the snow swirling
outside the window, caught in a gusty draft. I know I saw something in the
wind when we were flying today even though I don’t understand how.
A second stretched as Serenna caught her breath, stilling in the warrior’s
hold. She contemplated if she could wield the extinct magic of her shaman
ancestors. Without the presence of Essence, she could almost feel vibrations
from the air rippling on the other side of the glass, waiting to be called. Like
a dracovae finding a warm current to soar on, she cast out her perception.
Serenna’s fingertips began to tingle as she reached out with her mind.
Snow swirled faster and faster, whipping into a spiraling flurry.
The claws holding her tightened as the weather began to rage outside.
“What are you doing, she-elf?” Fenn moved her arm, seeming to confirm
that the tether was still touching her skin.
Serenna yanked the wind toward her through the window, bending it to
her will.
Glass exploded in a spray of shards. A gale howled as a torrent of snow
bombarded the room.
The broken slivers streaked at her like a thousand jagged arrows,
propelled by the screaming wind. Serenna gasped, unable to assemble a
shield without her magic. Unable to stop the shattered fragments racing
toward her.
“Wind magics?” Fenn all but groaned behind her. “Stars, slay me.”
The mountains in Serenna’s vision swam out of view as the warrior
whirled her around him. The motion wrenched her feet out from under her
legs. Smashed to the ground, Serenna landed on her back, air bursting from
her lungs. Before she could draw in a breath, the wraith dove on top of her
in a tangle of limbs.
Flogged by strands of his black hair, Serenna’s heart stopped as his
fangs extended in front of her face. Her thoughts flashed back to the assault
on Centarya, memories resurfacing of these creatures nearly ripping her to
shreds. He’s going to tear out my throat!
Fenn’s arms wrapped above Serenna’s head, body imprisoning hers like
a cage. The hailstorm of glass collided into his spiked armor, leathers
absorbing the force of the blow. The barrage of razor shards crashed into the
floor, sounding like a thousand crystals breaking.
Fenn snarled, sucking in what sounded like a hiss of pain as eddies of
snow and the broken window settled around them. His expelled breath
strung together a curse of colorful words, uttering exactly what he thought
of “she-elves.”
Serenna’s senses came flooding back a moment after the slap of wind
subsided. I summoned magic without Essence. With the elemental powers
that Jassyn said ran through our bloodlines.
A small mote of hope rose in Serenna’s chest. If she could reach the
open window, she could… What? Jump? Run through the snow? To where?
She had no idea where she was and the prince wouldn’t either now that she
was tethered. Serenna’s heart fell at the realization that she was stranded
here.
Trapped under this mountain of a warrior’s chest, Serenna drew in
ragged breaths. She battled to fill her lungs beneath his smothering bulk,
assailed by scents of cedar and the frigid air. Fenn’s ember eyes burned into
hers as the wind subsided, black blood welling from a slice on his cheek.
Serenna blinked, ripping her attention away from his unnerving stare.
Why did he protect me? Before she untangled that thought, she thrashed
wildly like a snake pinned by a spade. “Get off me!”
Fenn’s lip curled around his fangs despite his eyes not matching the
scorn as they swept over her, like he was concerned. Clambering off of her,
broken glass slid from the back of his armor, clinking to the stone.
Pushing herself to sit on the floor, Serenna jumped as a boot thudded
next to her hand. A bolt of terror shot down her spine, impaling her to the
ground.
Lykor.
CHAPTER 22
LYKOR
L ykor burrowed his claw into the elf’s armor, yanking her to her feet
before dragging her through a portal. On the other side, the volcano’s
sunless depths swallowed the cavern’s dim torchlight. He closed the
rift before Kal or Fenn could follow.
As if provoked by the darkness, the elf went rabid, striking out with her
limbs. The girl began to fight in earnest, like she wouldn’t let him take her
alive.
DRACOVAE’S TITS!
Lykor’s vision pulsed while she screeched like a strangled bird, the
shrill sound bouncing around the stone hallway. He would’ve used rending
to restrain her, but Aesar had restricted his access to that ability.
Again.
Lykor swiped at their Well, attempting to snatch control of his shadows,
but to no avail. He resorted to steering the girl ahead of him so that her
flailing fists couldn’t connect with his face.
I intervened before the coercion did any lasting harm, Aesar said.
You’ve already done enough damage by stealing her magic.
YOUR INTERFERENCE WASN’T REQUIRED.
Allowing the elf access to portaling wasn’t an option. Not after she
knew of their location. Besides, her loss was their gain, but Aesar refused to
recognize the benefits. Augmenting an ability they already possessed only
strengthened that talent. With her added power, he’d be able to stretch his
reach further across the horizon when the time came to portal jump across
the Wastes.
But before Lykor could siphon the rest of her Well, the girl had called
out for Vesryn, helplessly plunging him into the compulsive magic’s
nightmare.
You will give portaling back to her, Aesar fumed, irritably cramming a
strand of silver hair behind a pointed ear.
Even if the visual of Vesryn in his skull didn’t trigger the destructive
magic, Lykor still flinched before his irritation began to boil. The increased
frequency of the other meddling presence had come with unfortunate side
effects.
Instead of being content with simply nagging as a disembodied voice,
Aesar had begun appearing in their mind more frequently in his original elf
form. He’d become more of a problem—especially now, with this mention
of Vesryn piquing his interest.
Between the screaming girl flailing in his grip and Aesar battling to
seize control of their body, Lykor’s frustration was ready to combust. He
savagely rammed Aesar back into a crevice, unable to concentrate on
fighting them both.
The elf stopped moving her feet, refusing to cooperate. Overriding her
pathetic resistance, Lykor dragged her down the stone staircase leading to
the dungeons. He briefly considered launching her to the next landing
simply out of spite. But any broken bones from the fall would only
inconvenience him if he decided to untether her. Not that he planned on
letting her have access to his defenseless mind through the accursed bond.
When they reached the bottom level, Lykor towed the thrashing girl
through the cell-lined hallway and into the interrogation room. She stilled
under his claw—finally shutting up—as her eyes orbited around the
chamber. Flames from the pronged torches glinted off of the instruments of
torture. The veins of gold scrawled into the stone walls and ceiling reflected
a gleaming, mirrored light.
What are you doing with her? Aesar demanded. Within the shared space
of their mind, Aesar recreated his memory of the palace library, appearing
in the vaulted atrium.
Lykor ground his fangs at the interfering reemergence and the
alarmingly vivid surroundings that Aesar had constructed—a testament to
his increasing strength. It was just one fucking thing after another today.
Lykor released the girl’s arm. Taking advantage of the freedom, she
bolted to the opposite end of the chamber before tearing at the golden
shackle clamped around her wrist. The tether had been quick thinking on
Fenn’s part. Nearly noteworthy.
Before Aesar could nag at him again, Lykor erupted. WOULD YOU
GIVE ME A SCORCHING MINUTE TO GET ANSWERS ABOUT THE
HEART? THAT’S WHAT YOU AND KAL WANTED ME TO DO. STARS, I
WON’T HARM YOUR BROTHER’S PLAYTHING. THOUGH,
CONSIDERING YOUR MEMORIES, I DOUBT HE’D NOTICE IF HE’S
MISSING ONE.
Aesar bristled, shoving his hands into his pockets. In their mind, he
paced in front of the expansive windows overlooking the capital. Waiting.
Hauling his attention back to the dungeon, Lykor’s ears perked at a
whistling, like wind howling around a crag. He frowned, turning to face the
noise emanating from the hallway.
Lykor staggered as something bashed him over the head, blotching his
sight. He shook the stunned feeling out of his skull before whipping his
eyes to the elf, his mind reeling to catch up.
Her mouth was slack for a moment before her face twisted into a glare.
The girl stretched out a hand, forming a fist. The flame from a torch
streaked toward him like a fiery arrow. Instinctively, Lykor threw an arm up
to protect his face, realizing a moment too late that he should’ve used a
shield. Pain ignited in his palm.
WHAT THE FUCK? Lykor stared at his claw, angry and blistered.
Bubbled and burned.
He bared his fangs at the elf, eyes pinning on the tether to confirm that
it was still latched to her wrist. Ignoring him, she dashed to the wall of
hanging, gold-plated weapons.
Lykor heard chuckling. He tunneled inward to confront that bane in his
skull, materializing in their mindspace. Aesar was in his library, doubled
over, laughing at him.
WHAT? Lykor snarled, keeping half of his attention on the girl, who
was jumping to reach a golden mace. She couldn’t lift that one anyway.
So Kal’s sire curated those human shaman lines with elven blood after
all. Aesar wiped at a stray tear, eyes shining with mirth. What are the odds
that we share a bond with one of them? He flapped a hand and burst into
another cackling fit, plopping down onto a reading couch.
YES, FUCKING HILARIOUS. Lykor lingered at the threshold of
Aesar’s atrium, crossing his arms. WHAT’S YOUR POINT?
Elbows perched on his knees, Aesar leaned forward. What if all of those
half-elves have elemental power? That striking male you’re obsessed with
could too.
I AM NOT OBSESSED. Aesar’s unexpected jab had Lykor’s rebuttal
more defensive than he’d intended.
Redirecting his thoughts away from that amber-eyed elf, Lykor cycled
through the possibilities of having elemental power at his disposal, doubting
that he could siphon those powers from the girl and use them himself. Not
that Aesar would allow him to attempt it without a fight.
Lykor voiced his conclusion. SHE COULD USE THAT MAGIC FOR
US TO AID IN CROSSING THE WASTES.
Aesar’s amusement faded. The king has more of a head start than we
anticipated if he’s already resurrected shaman power. He stared at the sofa’s
armrest, tracing a seam. I wouldn’t be surprised if he intends to control the
abilities of these half-elves or those with shaman blood. My guess is that
he’ll attempt to subdue the Maelstrom and brave the sea to reach the Aelfyn
homeland.
Lykor scoffed. THAT’S ABSURD.
She might know something. Aesar glanced at him, thumbing his chin.
We have no idea what she could be capable of but you’re lucky she appears
just as startled as we are by those powers.
Lykor studied the girl as she finally gave up on reaching for a weapon.
His conversation with Aesar occurred in heartbeats while she glowered at
him from across the room.
LET ME GUESS. YOU WANT TO BE THE ONE TALKING TO HER?
I could get more answers than you and not terrify her at the same time.
Aesar folded his arms, kicking an ankle over a knee. I don’t know if the
stars finally decided to balance the scales, but we could use the help of her
elemental magic. And for the record, I don’t agree with keeping her hostage.
Lykor dug his fists into his eyes, a bone-deep weariness clinging to his
marrow. WOULD YOU LIKE TO RISK HER INFORMING THE ELVES OF
OUR LOCATION?
Fine, Aesar conceded, pursing his lips. If she’s staying, then maybe you
can bring yourself to be civil and rectify this situation. Aesar pointed an
accusatory finger at him. How about you start by healing where you sank
your talons into her flesh?
I’M NOT A SAVANT LIKE YOU, Lykor fired back. I DON’T KNOW
HOW TO MEND.
Stop being such a prick, Aesar reprimanded, his tone withering. Use my
knowledge. You have no qualms about helping yourself to my head with
everything else.
Muttering to himself, Lykor summoned Essence. He sifted through
Aesar’s mind, curling mending light around his palm. He flung the magic at
the girl.
Red threads sailed across the chamber, twisting together like an array of
comets. Flinching, the elf stumbled away and gasped when the scarlet
tangle collided with her chest, stitching the gashes left by his claw.
So refined. Aesar rolled his eyes. Lykor was surprised that he didn’t lose
them on their journey into the back of his skull. Now, try asking her name.
Closing the distance, Lykor stalked up to the girl and barked, “What’s
your name, you shaman twat?”
Aesar slumped into the couch, throwing his head back with a frustrated
sigh.
The girl’s eyes went wide before she scowled, cerulean irises cold
enough to frost the room.
ANY OTHER CLEVER SUGGESTIONS?
Don’t mind me. Aesar arched his brow. I’m content with watching you
screw this up. He flapped his hand. I’ll be here when you’re ready for me to
intervene.
The girl tilted her chin, folding her arms. “I don’t know anything about
the Heart if you’re going to ask again. Prince Vesr—”
Lykor warped the few remaining feet in front of her. She shrieked,
scrambling back to hit the wall before she could finish that damning word.
He wrapped his fingers around her mouth and growled through his teeth.
“Don’t say it.”
Lykor yanked his hand away when she bit him. “Don’t say his name,
you shaman spawn.” He seized her leathers, shaking her instead of wringing
her neck like he would’ve preferred. “Do you want to fucking die?”
The girl’s nostrils flared, her defiance obviously coalescing. “You’re
going to kill me anyway, so what does the timing matter?”
“One way or another, you’re telling me everything you know about the
Heart. It’s your choice on how much you’d like to endure first.” She shrank
back when Lykor elongated his fangs.
Stop scaring her. Aesar scolded, rising to resume his pacing across the
library.
“Answer me or I’ll start peeling layers off your eyeballs with rending.”
A bluff since Aesar still had that portion of their Well locked away. But the
elf didn’t know that.
Do you have to be so needlessly graphic?
Lykor sensed Aesar poised to spring, undoubtedly ready to throw his
full strength against him and battle for control if Lykor went any further
than intimidation.
Regardless, Lykor flared Essence. The unformed magic glittered like the
gold in the stones, billowing around the chamber. The elf stiffened,
plastering herself against the wall before her eyes darted to the torches.
Lykor flashed his canines. “Try it,” he taunted, fists tightening against
her leathers. “I’ll play with your fire.”
“The Heart spoke to me,” she said quickly, apparently thinking better of
any more rebellion.
The way she claimed something so asinine dragged an incredulous
laugh out of Lykor’s throat. She yanked her shredded armor straight when
he released her.
“What did the Heart say, then?” Lykor sarcastically mocked. He
placated Aesar by releasing his magic before that meddler got any ideas
about wrestling their entire Well away. “And don’t bother wasting your
breath if you’re going to say something even more ridiculous.”
She faltered, teeth dragging over her lip. “I—I don’t remember.”
Lykor snorted. “How convenient.”
“I’m not lying.” The elf straightened, glaring up at him with those
unnerving eyes. “Let me hold the relic without this tether and I’ll prove it to
you.”
A wave of uncertainty had Lykor flashing his attention to Aesar before
he thought better of seeking his advice. THIS COULD BE HER ATTEMPT
AT MANIPULATING ME INTO TAKING OFF THAT MANACLE.
Aesar shrugged, apparently not seeing any harm. Obviously, he was
more trusting since she had some type of association with his twin. She
doesn’t seem to know any more than we do about the Hearts’ role in
shackling the dragons.
Cracking the aggravation out of his neck, Lykor entertained the notion.
The girl’s claim was too bizarre to be a jest. If she was foolish enough to
summon her power, he’d finish ripping the talents from her Well and rid
himself of this bond’s affliction.
Lykor drew out his key and the Heart of Stars from his trouser pocket.
He extended the gleaming crystal, dropping the relic into her palms. Seizing
her wrist, he unlocked the shackle, letting the metal clatter to the floor.
Unable to barricade from the bond, Lykor braced himself as her
awareness flooded into his. The connection’s blazing silver cord circled the
surface of his Well—threatening like a noose.
Gritting his fangs, Lykor exhaled through his nose before residual dread
strangled him. He shoved down memories of the king hacking away the
natural defenses of his mind, hoping the elf was too oblivious to take
advantage of his vulnerability. Lykor readied himself to react if she ignited
her magic.
Frowning, the elf studied the artifact glowing with her talents. Lykor
almost thought she wasn’t going to speak until she went rigid, her attention
fixed on the Heart. The girl’s words suddenly flowed out in a rush.
JASSYN
SERENNA
LYKOR
L ykor snatched the girl’s arm. Repulsed beyond all belief for solidifying
the connection, he burrowed his awareness through the bond. The elf’s
Well was as much his now, their power linked like an inlet connecting
two bays.
Sliding over the nexus to access her magic, Lykor exploited Aesar’s
knowledge. He rummaged through her abilities, hunting for illumination—
another talent he’d witlessly bestowed upon Kal. Sparking the girl’s side of
their Well, he hauled the ability to the surface, snapping it into place.
“What are you doing?” the elf asked, tensing under his grip. Attempting
to pull away, her despair morphed into alarm through the bond.
Lykor’s fingers tightened around her arm, gut heaving in unease that his
power so effortlessly merged with hers. Exposing him. If she possessed a
morsel of knowledge, she’d be able to tap into his magic as freely as he
accessed hers.
Lykor ignited four orbs of light in the debris-strewn room, casting
shadows on the walls.
The elf’s shock crashed against him. “How did you manifest my
ability?”
Lykor ignored her, intending to withhold any information related to
their connection. He wrenched the entire source of the elf’s magic toward
himself like an approaching hurricane sucking a shoreline’s water out to
sea. Compared to the amount of Essence he was capable of holding, her
Well of power was a fucking puddle.
The elf gasped as a burst of light erupted from her chest, shimmering
around them before rushing into his. From Aesar’s recollection, the sudden
tapping of Essence was an unpleasant experience of feeling wrung and
wicked out. Lykor released her arm after absorbing her magical stores,
doubting that the minuscule crumbs would be enough to escape from this
tomb.
Still fuming about Lykor’s decision, Aesar appeared, pacing the
library’s atrium. This could’ve been avoided if you’d learn to regenerate
before nearly depleting our power, he all but scolded. His heeled boots
struck the marble in their shared mindspace, clipping furiously. Why didn’t
you have her excavate the rubble instead of completing the bond to pilfer
her magic?
Lykor scoffed. Permitting her access to his mind wasn’t an option. He
had no intention of depending on this half-elf grunt to deliver them from the
wreckage.
Aesar began to chastise him further, but Lykor sensed the girl moving
and ripped his attention back to the dungeon.
The girl drove her palms into his chest in an attempt to shove him. “You
can’t steal my magic!”
Igniting a glittering stream of Essence, Lykor bent the power to refortify
the shield. He pushed her away along with her protest. “I can take whatever
I want.” Retrieving the manacle, he wrestled with her flailing limb to
retether her, nearly sighing in relief when her presence vanished from his
head.
She balled her hands into fists, looking like she was about to swing one
at his face. “Why did you force me to bond if you hate me so much?”
“Since you’ve failed to manifest illumination on your own,” Lykor
dismissively snapped, harnessing Aesar’s chiding tone of offering an
explanation, “a fully formed connection was the only way to access your
power.” He sneered. “And since they clearly teach you nothing at that
floating island, I’ll enlighten you that the bond doesn’t have anything to do
with feelings.”
She glowered, curling her arms around her waist.
Why bother keeping her tethered if you drained her Well? Aesar asked,
roaming the library, appearing to contemplate which aisle of bookcases to
wander through.
I’M ALREADY FETTERED TO ONE UNWANTED PRESENCE. AT
LEAST I CAN STIFLE THE CONNECTION WITH HER. Lykor rolled his
shoulders, the attempt at relaxing his spine doing nothing to ease the brain-
splitting headache pounding in his skull.
Striding to where the hallway used to be, Lykor inspected the fallen
stone barricading them in the collapsed brig, hoping the damage to the rest
of the keep was minimal. Their fortress had never quaked before, the
volcano centuries extinct.
Lykor extended tendrils of Essence through the rockwork, avoiding the
gold-threaded stones. Twisting his magic down the corridor, he analyzed
how the ceiling had crumbled, determining the most efficient way to use his
limited supply of power to burrow out.
Their predicament would turn dire if he couldn’t unearth them before
his Well depleted or the shield deteriorated. Lykor plucked a stone from the
rubble and flung the rock behind him. He’d resort to manually clearing the
debris until he reached the point in the hallway that hadn’t collapsed.
Aesar meandered through the shelves in his library. Perhaps the girl
could use her shaman powers to help.
Lykor rolled his eyes. YOUR CONFIDENCE IN HER ABILITIES IS
CONCERNING.
Then I guess we’ll suffocate if you can’t get us out of here, Aesar
muttered, extracting a tome from the meticulously filed books.
THAT’S THE PREFERABLE OPTION IF I’M DESTINED TO
ENDURE YOUR ETERNAL, INSUFFERABLE COMMENTARY. Lykor
cracked his neck, ignoring the throbbing in his burned palm as he continued
to work.
“I want to talk to Aesar,” the girl demanded behind him.
Having half-forgotten about the elf, Lykor pivoted toward her. The
audacity of this girl. And yet another person preferring Aesar—and she
hadn’t even spoken to him.
You could be more approachable if you tried, Aesar grumbled, leafing
through the book. You’re the one who won’t let anyone get close.
FUCK OFF.
Lykor might’ve let that slip out loud, judging from the way the elf’s
eyes flashed in the whirling illumination.
Placing her hands on her hips, she said “Is Aesar also—”
Lykor stalked toward her, cutting her off. She scrambled away until her
back collided with the rubble.
“I don’t think you understand how this works,” he snarled, leaning into
her face. “You do not make demands of me. If I so much as hear a whisper
of a command, I will sever your fucking tongue.” He would do it too, if it
brought him a moment of peace.
Aesar slammed the book shut, the crack echoing in Lykor’s skull. You
could try.
The girl’s nostrils flared. Her cerulean eyes iced over, but she didn’t
lower her gaze. Lykor smirked, nearly amused by her stubbornness. That
academy should be thanking him for removing this elven brat from their
ranks.
Lykor pivoted back to the exit. He continued excavating the gold-laced
stones one at a time. The blister from the burn she’d inflicted on him had
ripped open, oozing all over the rocks. Suffering through the pain, Lykor
gritted his fangs. Discomfort was nothing to him anymore.
“Get over here and do something useful,” he barked over his shoulder.
The elf pursed her lips but complied. “What are you going to do with
me?” she asked, picking up stones and tossing them behind her. “Just use
my magic as your spare Well?”
“Don’t flatter yourself. I piss more than your thimbleful of power.”
Lykor readied a scathing threat, detailing how he could remove her vocal
cords and braid them through her flapping mouth if she didn’t silence
herself, but Aesar confined his words.
Let me talk to her. Aesar squared himself in the library’s atrium,
apparently ready to bicker over something so trivial. I’ll explain everything.
Since you won’t.
Shoulders sagging, Lykor blew out a breath before resting his head
against the cool stone wall. If only he could take strength from the rocks.
He was going to die here. He’d survived an eternity of torture, had his
magic ripped away over and over, but he was going to die in this vile crypt
with an intolerable elf and Aesar’s endless prattling for company. It was a
wonder Kal hadn’t begun talking to him telepathically. All three of them
would make a perfect fucking clan, combining their efforts to wear him
down like water eroding stone.
Not possessing the will to prevent Aesar from taking over, Lykor
slackened his hold on their body. He hadn’t disappeared or faded into
nothingness—like he’d feared would happen—when he’d relinquished
control before.
Drifting toward the sea of unconsciousness, Lykor wondered if he’d
ever be free from the king’s controlling magic, from Aesar’s influence, or
from his worry about the future of the wraith.
THAT AMBER-EYED ELF LOOSENED THE MAGIC. THAT MUCH IS
OBVIOUS, BUT COULD HE DO MORE?
Unsolicited, Aesar answered his thought. This girl might know.
AND I’M SURE YOU’LL DO US BOTH A FAVOR AND FIND OUT.
Perhaps when he resurfaced, this fucking nightmare would be at an end.
CHAPTER 26
JASSYN
“I know Thalaesyn can assist with untangling the coercion if your wraith
captives are under telepathic influence,” Jassyn said, arguing with
Vesryn on their way to the Infirmary—where he suspected the
magister would be sleeping.
He’d spent the entire walk reasoning with his cousin before the prince
had finally conceded to bring Thalaesyn with them to the Ranger Station.
Rather than attempting to extract answers from the magister, Jassyn pleaded
his case to involve his mentor with assessing the wraith for coercion.
“Thalaesyn is perhaps the only arch elf we can trust,” he continued. “We
can’t depend on the capital since it’s possible that the king has also
compelled Elashor’s soldiers.” Jassyn lowered his voice as they passed a
patrol, tracking their vacant stares. “I agree with you, something isn’t right
with their behavior.”
Vesryn grunted a noncommittal noise, shouldering open the Infirmary’s
doors. Without the use of his power for once, since he’d recklessly
exhausted his magic in the Hibernal Wastes.
Jassyn surveyed their surroundings, the late hour leaving the healing
wing vacant. “The king locked away something important in the magister’s
mind.” He gently closed the door so that it didn’t slam. “We need more
allies.”
“Stars, fine,” Vesryn interjected when Jassyn drew in a breath. “You’ve
made your point.”
Even though his cousin was wound more tightly than a coiled rope,
Vesryn muttered his assurances to Jassyn that he’d calmed himself enough
to regenerate. Leaving Jassyn to explain their intentions to the magister, the
prince continued up to the roof to replenish his Well.
Really, the best way Vesryn can help is by making himself scarce, Jassyn
thought, knocking before letting himself into his mentor’s office.
Despite his cousin’s maltreatment of Thalaesyn the prior night, the
magister readily agreed to assist with the wraith. Adamantly eager to dive
into further study, Thalaesyn seemed to take the potential coercion on
Vesryn’s prisoners almost personally.
As to not rouse suspicion of the campus patrols, Vesryn fabricated a
portal straight from the magister’s office when he returned from
regenerating his magic. In the dracovae stables on the other side of the
gateway, the prince dispatched one of the sentries to collect Flight Captain
Zaeryn from her apartments.
The barn’s illumination had been extinguished for the evening, allowing
the dracovae undisturbed sleep. A glass skylight permitted the light of the
moons. Soft, rumbling snores and chirping chuffs escorted them past the
stalls.
“You need to find something else to do while we work,” Jassyn urged as
they strode down the dirt-packed hallway, igniting three globes of soft light
to guide their way.
“Absolutely not,” Vesryn bit back, steering the three of them toward the
end of the corridor.
Jassyn seized the prince’s arm, dragging him to a halt. Thalaesyn raised
his brows but ignored their scuffle. A slow-blinking gray dracovae roused
to hang its head over the stall door that they stopped in front of. The
magister busied himself with stroking its feathery cheeks.
“You are not going to rend the coercion if there’s any present,” Jassyn
insisted, tightening his grip around Vesryn’s taut muscles. “This needs to be
delicate work. What if we manipulate the telepathy improperly and damage
their minds?”
Vesryn opened his mouth, presumably to argue that they were feral, but
Jassyn interrupted. “The king could’ve incorporated magic that prohibits
anyone from tampering. If we provoke a reaction, we could lose all
opportunities to obtain answers—or possible locations of where they came
from.” The conclusion sounded painfully obvious to him, but Jassyn
assumed the prince could benefit from more pointed reasoning. “As
unlikely as it seems, what if they’re not actually mindless and they’re
compelled to act in that manner? We know there are higher thinking wraith,
so it’s possible. We’re doing this my way or we’re not doing it at all.”
“Do you even care about getting Serenna back?” Vesryn elbowed his
arm out of Jassyn’s fingers. “If the wraith are hiding in the Hibernal Wastes
like we’re suspecting, then that means those beasts likely have her—and
who knows how many others who’ve disappeared over the years.” The
prince’s eyes flashed with what looked like anguish and devastation. “I
won’t hesitate to flay their minds if it gets me answers.”
“I know you’re worried. I’m worried too, but you need to trust me on
this.” Jassyn blew out a breath, releasing his pent-up frustration with his
cousin.
With an indecipherable expression chiseled into his features, Vesryn
clenched his jaw, looking away. He didn’t meet Jassyn’s gaze, staring at
Thalaesyn petting the dracovae.
Jassyn lowered his voice. “You heard how the magister said everything
was his fault. We need to discover how. If we can untangle the coercion on
the wraith, I should be able to use the same techniques to dispel the rest of
the magic on Thalaesyn’s mind. We’ll figure out what secrets the king is
concealing.”
Vesryn’s shoulders slumped, like wind vanishing from sails.
“I need his help—this is unfamiliar territory and magic we’ve never
studied before,” Jassyn said, sensing he was finally wearing the prince
down. “But it is possible to unravel the compulsion. Elashor dispelled it on
me before I returned to Centarya.”
Vesryn yanked a thread off of his uniform. “Elashor should be the one
we seize to pry answers out of. He’s closer to my sire than anyone else.”
The prince shook his head, fingers twitching at his sides. “I can’t stand here
and do nothing.”
“Then dispatch your rangers.” Jassyn placed a hand on Vesryn’s
shoulder, knowing he needed to convince the prince to concentrate on
something else—so as to not disturb the sensitive work. “You have
Serenna’s general location. Organize your warriors so they can start
patrolling in the morning. Let us handle this part. You focus on what you’re
good at.”
Vesryn blew out a sigh. “Fine.” He jerked his chin down the stall-lined
corridor. “Our command room is down there. You’ll inform me if you
discover anything.”
Jassyn relaxed, watching the prince hide behind a mask of annoyance to
conceal his unease. “Of course.”
“I’ll leave you to it then.” Vesryn pivoted on his heel, prowling down
the hallway.
CHAPTER 27
LYKOR
F inally liberated from the gold portion of the dungeons, Lykor punched
out a volley of force. The remaining rubble blasted out from the top of
the prison stairs, crashing into the caverns. Strangled by a cloud of
debris clogging the air, he and the girl both broke into a fit of coughing.
Her name is Serenna, Aesar chided, clearly still furious that Lykor had
snatched back control, interrupting the recounting of his complete life story.
As if the elf cared about every moment back to the second of his
conception.
WHATEVER.
Lykor figured that Aesar had droned on enough that the elf was now
sufficiently informed of the wraith. In return, the girl had filled the gaps in
their knowledge of what little she knew of the elves’ activities these past
few decades.
Lykor lifted his eyes when the sting of flying sediment receded, the air
hazed from fallen stone. Barnacled to the rocky walls, mushrooms, lichens,
and moss shimmered with glowing cyan hues, eliminating the need for
illumination. A winding channel flowed ahead, feeding the various
underground lakes within the volcano’s depths.
Striding toward the crystal water, weariness rippled off Lykor like the
waves skimming the surface. Exacerbated by Aesar’s prattling and the stars
knew how many hours ticking by since the elf had portaled to him, Lykor’s
throat felt drier than the settling dust.
Staggering, the girl stumbled past him like her life depended on
reaching the gravel shore first. She peeled off her boots at the water’s edge
and glanced back at him. Uncertainty and grime streaked her face.
“Is it safe to drink?” she asked.
Lykor’s boots crunched on the shale as he approached the creeping
stream. Curious how she’d react, he considered saying no.
In their mindspace, Aesar whirled from a window overlooking
Kyansari’s spires. Do you have to be such a prick?
DO YOU HAVE TO MONITOR MY EVERY MOVE?
What else is there to do? Aesar muttered.
YOU DON’T FIND HER A LITTLE IRRITATING?
Less so than I find you. Aesar flopped to a couch, growing silent as he
opened a tome. Lykor nearly asked what the fuck he could possibly be
reading, but settled on a different question that had been needling at his
mind.
WHY THE LIBRARY?
Aesar’s head whipped up.
Lykor vaguely waved around the atrium. OUT OF ALL THE
LOCATIONS YOU COULD CREATE, WHY CHOOSE THIS MISERABLE
PLACE?
Aesar frowned at the book in his lap before glancing back at Lykor. I
feel like I’m forgetting something. Something important. I don’t know where
else to look. His eyes widened, aimed over Lykor’s shoulder.
Twisting around, Lykor watched that damning obsidian prison door
flicker in and out of existence—likely concealing the answers Aesar sought.
A thud drew Lykor’s attention back to Aesar, who had shot to his feet,
the tome fallen to the floor. What is that? he demanded, storming across the
chamber.
Lykor crushed his fist, hurriedly abolishing thoughts of that room. IT’S
NOTHING, he said, shoving the memories deep into a recess in his space of
their mind. Lykor’s heartbeat thrashed in his ears, his fatigue obvious since
his control was slipping its leash.
Aesar placed a hand on his hip, flapping his other wrist at the now
empty atrium. That was more than “nothing.” He scrutinized Lykor, jade
eyes sweeping over him. Analyzing him. Seeing through him.
Relenting, Lykor bared his fangs. IT’S EVERYTHING I SUFFERED
THROUGH SO THAT YOU DIDN’T HAVE TO. Aesar flinched. YOU
DON’T WANT TO GO IN THERE.
Blinking, Aesar wilted. I never thanked you for—
Lykor ripped his awareness away from their mindspace, thinking better
of continuing with a conversation he couldn’t care less about.
In front of him, the elf appeared on the verge of crying if the water
wasn’t potable. Lykor nodded curtly, withholding that snowmelt fed this
particular current. His mouth twitched with devious amusement when she
sprinted into the stream, the frantic dash soaking her leathers. She
resurfaced, gasping and squealing.
Regardless of the near-freezing temperature, the temptation almost
swayed Lykor to submerge himself in the same idiotic fashion. His dry skin
itched from the plastered grit, the filth unearthing memories of being soiled
in the squalor of Kyansari’s mountainous dungeons.
Collapsing at the edge of the shore, Lykor cupped the water, greedily
drinking and then rinsing his hands and face. The agony in his burned palm
had him grinding his fangs into his gums.
Clenching his jaw, Lykor inspected the injury. Rock dust crusted the
shredded skin in a mangled, bloody mess. Clearing the rubble had only
aggravated the wound, now pulsing with searing pain.
Sensing the girl’s attention, he glanced up. Chewing the inside of her
cheek, the elf studied his claw—a wraith’s talon-tipped hand.
When she didn’t peel her prying gaze away, Lykor raised a finger out of
his fist. She scowled, apparently registering that he’d silently told her to
fuck off.
Giving him a pointed sniff—like that did anything—the girl spun
around. She waded through the current toward dangling luminescent moss
on a rocky shelf. Idly tracing the leaves on the dagger sheathed at his belt,
Lykor considered her shaman powers.
Aside from her peculiar connection to the Heart of Stars, surely there’d
be an advantage for the wraith if she could manipulate the frozen elements
of the Wastes. And he had just the trifling task in mind to determine her
capabilities. Kal had telepathically informed Aesar that one of the volcano’s
surface lifts was jammed with snow from the quake.
Before Lykor could assign the girl to the chore, he needed to find
someone to supervise her—he certainly wasn’t inclined to burden himself
with this dreadful elf. After gaining knowledge of the wraith, the girl
seemed agreeable enough with Aesar that Lykor doubted she’d pose any
type of threat. But he couldn’t say his people—especially the reavers—
would take well to this half-elf in their midst.
You could appoint Fenn as her guard.
With reluctance washing over him, Lykor scrubbed more water over his
face. Granting the overeager lieutenant yet another assignment he’d
interpret as a special privilege already had exhaustion dragging on his
limbs. Keeping Kal’s enthusiastic son at arm’s length required nearly as
much energy as dealing with the captain himself, but the pool of reliable
options was shallow.
A fragment of intrigue distracted Lykor from his deliberation when the
elf pulled down a strand of glowing moss. “What are you doing?” he asked
before thinking better of it.
The girl aggressively wrung out the plant. The sharp look suggested she
wished she could wring his neck in the same manner.
A mutual feeling.
“That wound will get infected if you don’t treat it,” she said, words
snappy. “This moss will help prevent that. Since I doubt you’ll untether me
so I can regenerate and mend you.” The elf approached him, water swirling
around her knees. “Not that I care about your well-being since you’re the
one who rended me, stole portaling, and then forced—”
Slapping the water, Lykor splashed her, irritation from this whole
fucking situation driving him to juvenile actions. “I didn’t ask for this
accursed connection or to be governed by coercion. And I certainly had no
desire for you to appear.”
She flicked the water off her face, eyes flashing. “Can’t we reject the
bond?”
“Yes,” Lykor growled, disgusted. “And I plan to when I no longer have
a use for your magic.” Exasperation had him fusing his teeth. “But until
then, you’re staying tethered.”
“I figured my ‘thimbleful’ of power wouldn’t be worth the
inconvenience,” she said, tossing drenched hair over her shoulder.
“It’s really not.” Lykor unfolded his legs and rose, ready to move on—
both with this conversation and to find a reprieve from this vexing girl.
“Give me your hand,” she demanded, extending the moss between hers.
When he did nothing beyond narrowing his eyes, she shook the plant at
him. “Do you want to lose that claw? Your skin is nearly flayed to the bone
and needs to be treated.”
“I hadn’t noticed.” Lykor’s lip curled into a sneer. “Does being a half-
breed also render you a half-wit?” The agitation knotting in Lykor’s
shoulders had him cracking his neck. “What do you intend to do with that
pile of seaweed?”
The elf scowled. “Like I said, this ‘seaweed’ will fight infection.” She
added defensively, “I learned about plants from my friend Jassyn—he’s a
healer.”
Heart thumping in his throat, Lykor cleared his features. “And explain
to me how that’s relevant?”
“I’ve watched how you can’t keep your fingers away from his knife.”
An angry color flushed up the girl’s cheeks as she bit the words off of her
remark. “I thought you’d want to know more about him.”
Lykor yanked his hand off the dagger as if burned again. Jaw screwed
tight, he pivoted and stalked away before he witlessly revealed anything
else.
Water sloshed behind him. The elf grabbed his wrist, the contact lifting
every one of his hairs in alarm.
“Don’t touch me,” Lykor snarled, ripping out of her grip.
The girl flinched when he raised his arm, as if expecting a backhand
blow. Eying a wild motion of her hands, Lykor realized with an unwelcome
jolt that she instinctively attempted to fabricate a shield. Between the tether
and her empty Well, the gesture was pointless.
Chest constricting, Lykor’s thoughts fled back to his own helplessness
in the king’s prison—defenseless to Galaeryn’s every depraved, torturous
whim. He lowered his claw, fingers slowly curling into a fist, pinioning the
reactive flash of fury. Like a window slamming against howling wind, his
reflexive rage abated. Ribs surrendering his lungs, there was enough space
to breathe again.
On second thought… Lykor shoved her.
Shrieking, the elf lost her footing, reeling backward. She landed with a
splash before jumping up, spluttering and swearing.
“Why are you being so stubborn about this?” she spat, wiping water out
of her eyes.
Ignoring her, Lykor gestured curtly, a master calling a hound. “Get out
so we can leave.”
She pointed an accusatory finger at him. “You’re the one who pushed
me in!”
Lykor’s eyes pinned on the water suddenly rippling like a flood of
raindrops collided with the surface. The elf glanced at him and then at the
roiling stream, obviously considering retaliation.
A torrent of violent words wrestled up Lykor’s throat. He bared his
fangs. “Don’t you fucking dare.”
Aesar blew an amused snort out of his nose, towing Lykor’s attention
inward. He lounged on a reading couch, throwing Lykor a satisfied smirk.
She’s probably only using that power because you’re pissing her off.
The girl lifted her chin. With a whoosh, the channel reared up in a wave
behind her. Poised and waiting.
Despite Lykor’s mild curiosity to discover how else she could
manipulate the water, he pivoted on his heel.
I wouldn’t turn—
Before he could make it two paces, water crashed into him, the deluge
smashing him like an ocean’s swell. Lykor ripped Essence from his Well.
I’M GOING TO KILL HER.
Aesar had the nerve to wag a finger as rending billowed around him in
the library—under his control. Lykor snarled at him and then rounded on
the girl.
You know, I think we’d both be able to channel our magic
simultaneously if you loosened your grip and didn’t oppose me so much.
AND WHY THE FUCK WOULD I WANT TO DO THAT?
Aesar shrugged. He smugly coiled the shadows across his fingertips,
effectively locking that part of their Well away. The only reason we’re alive
is because I shielded us during the cave-in.
WHAT DO YOU WANT? MY THANKS?
Leaning forward on the sofa, Aesar braced his elbows on his knees.
Give me tonight with Kal.
Lykor’s explosive laugh bounced off the damp cavern walls. The girl’s
eyes widened as she faltered in her furious splashing to the water’s edge.
Let me have dinner with his clan. Aesar rose from the couch. Clenching
his fists, darkness whirled through the atrium. It’s not like you ever keep
company, so I’m not interrupting your plans of lurking in the Aerie alone.
An icy ball of irritation coalesced in Lykor’s chest. HAVE YOU
CONSIDERED THAT IF I DIDN’T HAVE TO WAKE UP IN KAL’S BED,
I’D BE MORE AMENABLE TO LETTING YOU TWO FUCK AROUND?
Lykor blinked. The elf had made it to the shore, stalking toward him. He
swiped sopping hair out of his eyes, now as thoroughly soaked as her.
Aesar’s brow furrowed before dipping his head in agreement. Very well.
We’d be more effective if we worked together.
THAT WASN’T A BARGAIN, Lykor scoffed. I DON’T NEED YOUR
HELP. WHY CAN’T YOU HIDE LIKE YOU WERE CONTENT TO DO
THESE PAST DECADES?
There’s too much at stake now. Aesar squared his shoulders, still ready
to quarrel. We have one Heart, and it’s possible another is somewhere in
this fortress. I think there could be one in the druid jungle too.
Lykor crossed his arms. AND YOU’RE SHARING THIS REVELATION
WITH ME NOW?
I’ve been thinking about it. It makes sense, doesn’t it? Aesar paced the
atrium, shadows billowing around him. That unnatural pocket of trees in
the Hibernal Wastes has to be important. Vesryn and I suspected it was an
abandoned druid city when we discovered it. He traced his lower lip, lost in
thought. Have Serenna help—she’s tied to this now. If we could bring more
than one Heart to—
SHUT UP, I GET IT. STARS, I NEED TO DEAL WITH THIS SHAMAN
SPAWN BEFORE SHE TRIES STRANGLING ME WITH THAT FUCKING
MOSS.
The elf straightened when Lykor’s attention focused back on her. He
tracked her cautious steps until she stood in front of him.
“If you ruined these leathers,” Lykor growled, leaning down to her
level, “I’ll patch them with your skin.”
Lips pursing, she wore an attempt at a brave face before swallowing.
Holding out the glowing plant, she asked in a voice pitched with false
sweetness, “Would you let me bind your hand?”
Lykor flashed his fangs before glancing over her head at the water
receding back into the channel. Fed up with her persistence, he thrust his
fist into her chest, knocking her back a step.
She glared at him before taking his claw, roughly coiling the moss
around his palm. Lykor clenched his teeth at the pressure, releasing a hiss
when she tied the plant into a knot. Tighter than it needed to be.
Torchlight flickering from one of the tunnels drew Lykor’s attention
away from the elf. Kal’s hovering illumination and his band of warriors
entered the caverns. Wordlessly leaving the girl behind, Lykor prowled to
the group. The soldiers parted around him like a shoal fleeing from a shark.
Searching the wraith, he locked eyes with Fenn. Lykor jerked his head for
the lieutenant to join him.
Fenn stooped to hear his words. Lykor lowered his voice anyway, so it
didn’t pitch to the others. “Take the elf to the Aerie and consider yourself
elevated to her personal guard. Keep her tethered and away from Mara. I
don’t want the girl learning of her presence.” The last thing he needed was
the two females putting their heads together behind his back. Mara already
meddled enough on Aesar’s behalf.
Lykor provided a brief update of the elf’s earthen abilities he suspected
—and figured out firsthand—that she possessed. He left Fenn with orders
of determining whatever else she could do with those shaman powers along
with extracting any information about the elves’ military. Fenn rivaled his
father at useless driveling—surely his ferreting would get the girl talking.
Retrieving the knife at his belt, Lykor sawed the slimy moss away from
his palm, discarding the plant. “Douse the torches in my tower.” He didn’t
glance over his shoulder as he strode away. “I don’t want her fucking
around with any fire.”
CHAPTER 28
SERENNA
JASSYN
W
eariness clung to Jassyn’s limbs from spending the small hours of
the night meticulously untangling knots of coercion. When he’d
begun to sway on his feet, Thalaesyn had shooed him off, urging
him to rest. The magister had busied himself with instructing the
rangers to prepare more comfortable accommodations for their prisoners.
Well nearly depleted, Jassyn skirted inside the door of the command
room to wait for the prince. While exhausted, he was still buzzing with
energy, like a lightning storm was caged in his chest. Brimming with new
information, Jassyn was eager to share what he and Thalaesyn had
discovered. Those three wraith weren’t the mindless creatures they used to
be—that much was clear.
Finding a place along the wall to observe the meeting, Jassyn
swallowed a yawn as the gray dawn snuffed out the setting moons through
the windows. It was hard to believe that only a few hours had passed since
Vesryn’s rampage through the snow.
The prince’s eyes flicked to him before returning to the ten assembled
officers, arranged around a crescent table. Jassyn scanned Vesryn’s
handpicked soldiers, a motley group of Alari’s elite elven-blooded warriors.
He recognized Flight Captain Zaeryn at the far end of the table, angled to
face both his position by the door and the prince. Silver-haired and
sunbaked like Vesryn, her toned arms bulged from her leathers in a manner
equally as intimidating as his cousin’s.
Too late, Jassyn realized that he’d inadvertently been staring. They
locked eyes across the room. Recalling that Vesryn had mentioned Zaeryn’s
interest in him, he yanked his gaze away.
Shifting his feet, Jassyn briefly considered shuffling to the back of the
room—out of her line of sight. The pitching in his gut subsided when he
assumed her curiosity had nothing to do with his bloodline—and that was a
realm’s worth of difference from what he was accustomed to.
Vesryn paced in front of an expansive map draped across a wall’s entire
length, distracting Jassyn from his unease. In their century-long search for
the elusive wraith, the rangers had pinned every location they’d scoured—
nearly every corner of all the realms. Jassyn noted the glaring gaps
beginning near the foothills of the Hibernal Wastes. No markers extended to
the western edge of their known world.
Vesryn cast a circle of illumination over the mountains. “I intend to
portal each officer’s squad to this location,” he said, tapping the highlighted
area Jassyn assumed they’d traveled to in search of Serenna. “We’ll fan out
from here.”
The prince drifted to the center of the table, leaning forward on his
knuckles. The rangers remained focused, absorbing his orders. “Our
advantage is the dracovae, but their safety needs to be prioritized. As you
know, they’re incapable of journeying far in the glacial air—even if we’re
using shields. But I still want detailed sweeps of those mountains.”
Vesryn pushed around a stack of reports, not glancing at their contents.
“I’ll leave this to your discretion, but I’d like each of our warriors to
seriously consider forming bonds with a trusted comrade.”
Jassyn’s mouth dried to dust. While obviously not a ranger, the request
still struck him like an arrow, piercing him with unease. Zaeryn and the
other officers tensed in their chairs, nearly suffocating the room with a
collective held breath.
The thought of sharing his magic and a space in his head had Jassyn
anxiously twisting a curl dangling in front of his eyes. Some days, he could
hardly haul himself out of his own tumultuous thoughts—let alone worry
about burdening someone else with the inner turmoil caged in his mind. He
could only hope that the prince didn’t request the same of the magus at
Centarya, even though some of his peers had begun experimenting with the
bonding magic on their own.
Vesryn squared his shoulders, looking ready to battle the quiet
resistance. “This binding doesn’t have to be indefinite, but there are
advantages.” His hawkish stare roved over the warriors, punctuating the
silence. “They’ll be able to draw from a shared Well—use each other’s
abilities if they’re lacking in any talents—and communicate without
telepathy. Among other benefits I won’t waste time spelling out.”
Vesryn’s jaw tightened to a block of steel. “I know this isn’t a common
practice, but we need every edge we can get.” He fiddled with his uniform’s
stitching, ripping a thread free, eyes unfocusing on the string in his fist. “I
don’t want anyone engaging with those beasts if their base is located.” The
prince blinked, then thoughtfully frowned at Jassyn. “We’ll plan our assault
and utilize Centarya’s forces.”
Jassyn gave his cousin an approving nod, respecting that he had enough
clarity to keep his warriors safe. After the prince dismissed his officers,
Jassyn and Zaeryn joined Vesryn at the map.
The prince clenched his fingers, knuckles blanching before he spoke.
“Remind the rangers that those monsters have gold-firing weapons. Their
unusual arrows can tear through our shields, so we’ll need to avoid fighting
them from the air.”
“We’ll find a way to bolster our weaknesses,” Zaeryn confidently said,
resting her hand on a short, curved glaive at her side. “In the meantime, I
think it’s a risk to fly so deep into the Wastes.”
“I know.” Vesryn raked a hand over his mouth, staring at the illuminated
area on the map. “But it needs to be done. We’ll have to trust the rangers to
not push the dracovae—or themselves—too far before portaling back to
safety.”
“If the dracovae permit it, we could always assign two to each,” Zaeryn
offered. One side of her mouth tugged up as her azure eyes pointedly
studied Jassyn. “The second rider could be primed with Essence as a
reserve.”
“We don’t have anyone else to train as riders.” The prince sighed,
shoulders sagging as if burdened by command. “The recruits at Centarya
aren’t ready. The magus…”
Vesryn joined in Zaeryn’s glance toward him. Jassyn’s eyes widened as
he met the prince’s gaze. He stubbornly shook his head, ready to launch into
an argument about how his skills were better suited on the ground and not
thousands of feet in the air.
“You’re right,” the prince finally said, agreeing with Jassyn’s silent
objection. “If the wraith return, I need the magus at Centarya.”
The clamped pressure released from Jassyn’s chest, though he could still
feel the weight of Zaeryn’s attention.
Vesryn dragged a hand over his face, the dark circles smudged under his
eyes betraying his fatigue. “I have little faith that the capital’s soldiers on
campus will be of any aid. We’ll have to work with the numbers we have
here.”
“Speaking of numbers,” Zaeryn said, her eyes finally sliding away from
Jassyn. “One of our riders assigned to this coast is a week overdue.” She
pointed to the northern edge of the map. “Those we’ve sent on
reconnaissance haven’t located her or the missing dracovae.”
After blowing out a long breath, Vesryn instructed the flight captain to
dispatch additional rangers to that area. The location wasn’t close to where
they’d searched for Serenna in the Wastes, but the prince wouldn’t dismiss
any potential leads.
Vesryn nodded to Jassyn but spoke to Zaeryn. “We have more to
discuss, but Jassyn is going to assess your mind before I can inform you of
anything else.”
Jassyn straightened. That was news to him, but he couldn’t argue with
his cousin’s unexpected logic. It wasn’t beyond belief that some of the
rangers might be under the king’s control.
After Jassyn verified that the flight captain wasn’t coerced and
demonstrated to her how to detect the compulsive weaves, the prince
divulged their suspicions of the magic influencing Kyansari’s soldiers.
“I want every ranger inspected when they return from their patrols,”
Vesryn ordered. “Send word to me immediately if any of our warriors are
coerced.”
Crossing his arms, the prince stared at the map. “And there’s more—
something I have yet to inform the magisters or magus of.” A muscle
twitched in Vesryn’s cheek before he turned his attention back to Jassyn and
Zaeryn. “Elashor informed me that the injured Centarya sent to Kyansari’s
healing grounds have been reassigned. They won’t be returning to campus.”
“Why?” Jassyn blurted, alarm racing through him. “Where?”
Scoffing, Vesryn shook his head. “The council took it upon themselves
to dispatch those initiates somewhere undisclosed on the mortal war front.”
Rage flashed in his eyes, the harbinger of an impending storm. “I was under
the impression that Centarya and the rangers would remain under my
command.”
“We’re on our own then if the capital can’t be trusted,” Zaeryn said,
squinting against a shard of sunlight cascading into the room.
“So it seems.” The prince rubbed his temples in a way that seemed to
say, But haven’t we been all this time? “Do you have anything to report
from our prisoners?” Vesryn asked, focusing on Jassyn.
Pulling his fidgeting fingers away from his plated earcuffs, Jassyn
relayed the information he’d been waiting to divulge. “Magister Thalaesyn
and I were able to confirm that the wraith are compelled.” Vesryn’s nostrils
flared at the validation of their assumptions, but he didn’t look surprised.
“We were able to remove a layer of coercion,” Jassyn continued. “And…”
he trailed off, eyes darting between the pair of warriors. “The wraith are
mute, but they aren’t aggressive anymore—you should see for yourself.”
The prince left Zaeryn in the command room with instructions to
organize the flight squads. Jassyn hesitantly led Vesryn back down the stall-
lined corridor to the captive wraith. Stable hands hurried by, starting their
morning chores. A handful of dracovae roused, leaning over their doors,
curious eyes watching them pass.
Vesryn mumbled something about thinking he’d sensed Serenna’s
presence flicker in his mind once more when they’d been in the war room.
While it may have been a figment of Vesryn’s exhaustion, Jassyn
clutched onto the shred of optimism for his cousin’s sake. She’s alive, he
assured himself. Vesryn would know if the bond shattered—he’s felt it
before.
Entering the wraith’s stall, Jassyn held his breath, waiting for Vesryn’s
reaction. Eyes stinging, he struggled to swallow past the stench of
unwashed bodies. Dust from the straw glowed in the streams of sunlight
squeezing in through the open windows.
With the night’s work finished, Thalaesyn had unraveled the rending
binds he’d previously placed on the wraith. All three sat slumped on the
floor, their ragged clothing torn and hanging off their gaunt limbs. Two
were still weeping as Thalaesyn stood among them.
“What the bleeding stars is this?” Vesryn demanded, Essence igniting
around him. His eyes ricocheted between the loose wraith and the magister.
“Like I said,” Jassyn reiterated, ready to intervene—somehow—if the
prince failed to remain calm. “We removed a layer of coercion that
apparently made them aggressive. As you can see, they’re…” He glanced at
the wraith. “Subdued.”
“I was able to untangle a few more knots of magic that restricted their
speech,” Thalaesyn said, kneeling next to a female who was staring at the
ground. He cast healing light over her talons, mending the bed of nails
she’d injured in her mindless state. “They have awareness of their
surroundings now.”
“They can talk?” Jassyn asked as confusion wrestled through him.
Thalaesyn made more progress than I anticipated.
Not giving the magister time to answer, Vesryn stalked to the middle of
the stall. “I want to question them.” The heat in his voice nearly singed the
air. “Now.”
“That’s not necessary,” Thalaesyn said. Rising, he skimmed his fingers
through his golden hair. “Velinya here—”
“What?” Jassyn and the prince both snapped in unison. Jassyn’s
attention flew to the female wraith.
She glanced up at the sound of their voices. Her scarlet eyes widened,
meeting his. Faster than Jassyn could blink, she shot to her feet and dashed
across the room in a blur, ramming into him. Losing his balance, Jassyn
stumbled from the collision, her swift movement stealing time for him to
process any alarm.
Vesryn was the first to react, shadows spinning out from his fist.
Another pulse of magic rippled across the room. Thalaesyn threw a current
of darkness to intercept the prince’s power, slicing through the rending
before Essence reached the wraith sobbing against Jassyn’s chest.
Vesryn snarled, rounding on the magister. “Explain.”
“They won’t harm us and there’s no need to harm them.” Shadows
churned around Thalaesyn as he combated the prince’s rage with a stoic
calm. “I fear these three won’t be the only recruits your rangers collect from
the realms.”
Recruits? A beat of silence passed as Jassyn reeled from the named
wraith. If she really was Serenna’s curly-haired friend, all trace of her was
gone. Pulse droning in his ears, Jassyn’s thoughts spiraled.
Drawing away, the female sniffed, wiping the back of her claw across
damp cheeks. Her crimson eyes searched his, silently begging him to see.
Stomach pitching like he’d toppled forward into empty air, Jassyn
loosened the breath barricaded behind his ribs. His voice broke into a
hoarse whisper. “Velinya?”
She nodded frantically before bursting into a fresh wave of tears.
Grabbing him again in an embrace, she wept into his shoulder.
Shock careened through Jassyn, his reality unraveling as he processed
the impossible. Something that went against everything he knew, the
inconceivable calcifying into a horrifying dream.
“The wraith were created,” he whispered, “with our own people.”
Vesryn hit the floor. He leaned against the wall, drawing both palms
over his face, his dread a mirror to Jassyn’s. The prince didn’t even have to
ask the question as his eyes flicked to Thalaesyn’s.
Nodding, the magister’s gaze fell as he dropped down to mend another
despondent wraith. He’d been aware the entire time—a prisoner to the
knowledge for a century.
The prince’s hands muffled his words.
“Fuck.”
CHAPTER 30
SERENNA
SERENNA
S erenna nestled further into the downy blankets, tossing a cover over
her face to thwart the sunlight streaming across her eyelids. Didn’t I
close the blinds? she groggily wondered, rolling away from the streak
of brightness.
This bed chamber had been one of six in the rounded upper level of the
Aerie, carved into the mountain’s peak. Evidently, Lykor wasn’t concerned
with her poking around. Serenna had wandered into a bedroom with a tiny
portal permanently opened on a windowsill—a rift she assumed could only
be for Aiko. She quickly located different sleeping quarters, selecting one
as far away as possible from her captor’s.
The edge of Serenna’s bed sank before something nudged her shoulder.
“She-elf,” a low voice crooned.
Flooded with alarm, Serenna’s heart exploded against her ribs. Twisted
in the blanket wrapped over her head, she yelped, flailing to untangle her
limbs. Arms swinging to free herself, Serenna threw the covers off. She
slammed her back against the headboard, meeting the gaze of the offending
wraith.
“What are you doing in here?” she hissed at Fenn, yanking the sheet up
to her chin.
“I feared you’d slumber all day.” He glanced out the window that he
most certainly had opened.
Serenna rubbed her eyes against the blinding intervention. “That was
the idea!” She scowled as he sat there, settled in more comfortably than he
had any right to be on her bed.
“That’s a shame, considering you’re more radiant than the sunrise.”
Pausing for what had to be a dramatic effect, the points of Fenn’s fangs
flashed in a mischievous grin.
Serenna ignored him with a pointed, disapproving sniff, disregarding
the way his lofty words felt like a compliment. The last thing on her mind
was encouraging any pathetic attempts at flirtation. I don’t need another
problem added to my list.
Not taking offense, Fenn continued as he turned back to the mountain
view. “Daylight is burning across the sky.”
“Who cares?” Serenna bundled the covers under her chin, concealing
the oversized silken garment she’d found in a dresser—the closest thing to a
nightgown. “This is wildly inappropriate. You can’t be in here.”
Fenn looked around the room as if searching for the meaning of the
word “inappropriate,” obviously not seeing any issue with his presence.
“Someone had to rouse you because it seemed you weren’t going to do it
yourself. Lykor is already gone for the day and my sisters stationed below
were too nervous to come near you.” He spun one of the rings in his brows.
“So that left me.”
Serenna blinked, wading through the unexpectedness of the wraith now
being afraid of her. Strange. I spent so much time being afraid of them.
“That doesn’t explain why I need to be woken up,” she protested.
“We’re going to the surface to excavate a lift,” Fenn explained, tapping
the stack of material next to him. “I brought you some wraithling leathers
that I think should fit.”
“Right. I’m a captive and yet Lykor expects me to earn my keep.” Still
damp from her bath hours before, Serenna untangled her braid, knotted
from sleep. “I don’t understand why your leader insists on keeping me
tethered, but also requires that I use my elemental power.”
Is it truly because Lykor doesn’t want to sense me through the bond?
While thinking she should feel insulted, Serenna couldn’t decipher which
emotion would be appropriate. Regardless, having her magic forcefully
suppressed did conveniently eliminate the risk of Vesryn showing up at an
inopportune time.
The spikes on Fenn’s armor nearly grazed his cheek when he shrugged.
“Lykor thinks those ancient magics might help the wraith.”
Serenna shoved a strand of midnight hair out of her face—the same
shade as Fenn’s. “And why should I help?” She leaned back into the
pillows. “I didn’t ask to be here.”
Fenn frowned, cocking his head. “You’re the one who portaled across
the realms to be with Lykor.”
Serenna gaped before spluttering, “That is not what happened.” Well, it
is, but that wasn’t my intention and Fenn doesn’t need to know that. “I don’t
want to be with Lykor.”
“You’re the first to dwell in his tower,” Fenn argued, tracing the cut
along his cheek. “I thought he decided to keep you here because he
intended to pair with you or keep you close as a partner.”
Having enough clues to guess what Fenn was implying, Serenna’s
irritation boiled over. Detesting the assumption—which had to be wraith
gossip at this point—she threw a pillow at his head. “Get out!”
Deftly intercepting it, Fenn tossed the cushion back to the headboard
beside her, fluffing it after he rose. His lips tightened, but he complied,
silently striding to the door.
No longer distracted by the towering wraith seated next to her, an entire
host of wafting aromas drew Serenna’s attention to the nightstand. Lunch,
she suspected, if the intensity of the glaring light was any sign. A perspiring
glass of water stood next to a tray featuring steaming breads, meats, and
something that smelled earthy.
The considerate gesture smothered the indignant heat in Serenna’s
chest, making her regret lashing out. She highly doubted Lykor ordered
anyone to bring her breakfast in bed.
“Fenn, wait,” Serenna quickly pleaded to his retreating back. It wasn’t
his fault she was upset and stuck in the Hibernal Wastes. Clearing her
throat, she asked, “You…brought me something to eat?”
Turning around, Fenn’s eyes danced like flames, glowing with their own
light. Returning to the nightstand, he plucked a round piece of bread from
the tray. “The scorpion-tail pastries are my favorite.” Serenna wrinkled her
nose even though her stomach rumbled. “You should try them.” Fenn’s
sharp canines pierced the flaky loaf as he chewed with more etiquette than
she expected. “I helped myself to the others from the breakfast you slept
through.”
“Enjoying yourself?” Serenna muttered as he perched back on the bed.
I’m surprised he hasn’t made a boast about this food being from his kill.
When Fenn’s claw snaked out for another helping, Serenna snatched the
remaining piece of spongy bread before he could pilfer it.
He patted her foot through the covers. “I’m simply ensuring the kitchen
staff didn’t lace your meal with poison.”
Serenna froze, the pastry not making it to her mouth. She drew her legs
up to her chest. “Why—why would they do that?”
“Your presence makes some of the wraith nervous.” Fenn’s humor
dissolved. “Especially the reavers. They might try to subdue you. Or force
you to use your magics for them.”
“But I’m tethered!” Serenna flung her shackled wrist in front of Fenn’s
face, her heart skipping an unsettled beat. Aesar had mentioned there was a
fierce faction of younger warriors who clashed with the elders.
“You still have earthen magics.” Fenn’s gaze flickered to the unlit
sconces, almost looking curious. “I imagine by now the clans have heard
how you wove the winds and blasted out the windows in the war room.”
“And what happens if you’re poisoned and they come after me?”
Serenna asked, nibbling on the pastry. She almost had herself convinced
that it was only grains and dough. It tasted more like the earthiness of
mushrooms than anything else.
Fenn reached into the neck of his armor, drawing out a chain. An iron
key dangled between them, glinting in the sunlight. “If something
unforeseen occurs—hopefully not my demise—I imagine Lykor might
forgive me if I need to unlock your tether.”
The bread soured in the bottom of Serenna’s gut. Of course my jailer
has my freedom dangling around his throat, just out of reach. Restraining
her annoyance as much as she could, Serenna gritted out, “Lykor doesn’t
seem like the forgiving type.”
“Very true. But if any harm comes to you, it’ll reflect on me.” Fenn
plucked a plum off the tray, somehow not scraping the flesh with his razor-
sharp talons. “I’d rather take my chances with poison than risk Lykor’s ire.
Especially since you’re claimed by him.”
“I do not belong to Lykor.” Serenna tore the bread in her hands before
angrily chewing, biting back any further words. I don’t know why the stars
connected my Well to the Falkyn twins, but this link to Lykor has been
nothing but an inconvenience.
“Aesar informed my father that your magics are bound to theirs.” Fenn
bounced the fruit in his palm before pocketing it. “Are you saying that you
only intend on sharing this bond and not Lykor’s bed?”
Serenna coughed at the second time he’d insinuated such a thing, nearly
choking on her mouthful of food. “If you’re so interested in Lykor, you’re
welcome to take my place,” she snapped, pointedly dragging the tray across
the table, setting it on the bed next to her when Fenn tried to snatch a sliver
of meat. “If you had Essence, you could choose to bond with him. I didn’t
get that option.” She snatched the glass of water from the nightstand,
glaring at him as she drank. “Did Aesar fail to mention that Lykor forced
me to accept the connection?”
“I’m sure Lykor had his reasons.” Fenn’s voice grew quiet. “The clans
owe him everything and he’s often burdened with difficult decisions.”
Curling the blankets in her fists, Serenna blew air out of her nose as the
wraith in front of her kindled her agitation. She clenched her teeth to
restrain her tongue, grinding her anger down. I won’t win any arguments
with a zealous soldier.
Serenna’s eyes snagged on Fenn’s canines as he opened his mouth—
readying further defense for Lykor’s actions, she could only assume.
Cutting off whatever excuses that he planned to voice, she spoke first.
“What’s wrong with your fangs?”
Brows pinching together, Fenn straightened, drawing himself up. His
response was quicker than she expected. “There’s nothing wrong with my
fangs.”
“You don’t keep them extended like Lykor.” Sensing she had him on the
defensive, a little triumphant thrill had Serenna picking at him further. “Are
they stubby or something?” She ignored the firsthand experience of his
canines flashing in her face when he’d crashed into her, shielding her from
the broken glass in the war room.
Fenn glanced at her sideways before the corners of his eyes lifted with
his smirk. “Oh, I assure you, my fangs are longer than Lykor’s.”
Fenn moved so fast he blurred. Swiveling across the bed, his fangs
extended, suddenly flashing in front of Serenna’s eyes. Her heart launched
into her throat, shoving out a startled squeak. Braced against the mattress,
she leaned back, distancing herself from his sharp teeth.
“I thought you required a closer look,” Fenn said, chuckling with wry
amusement, clearly entertained by pinning her against the headboard with
fright. “I’d hate for you to be misinformed.”
Serenna’s stomach lurched as he lifted a dangerous talon to her foolishly
exposed neck. Her entire awareness fastened to the point where his finger
hovered above her flesh, prickling where the unnatural heat of his skin
lingered over hers.
Serenna cleared the burst of fear clogging her throat. She intended to be
sarcastic but her words came out timid. “Consider me well-informed.”
Something shifted in Fenn’s eyes, like he only now registered her alarm.
“However,” he said, curling his claw into a fist before pulling away, “we
deem it…improper to discuss fangs.” He rose, canines retracting with a
click before busying himself with opening the remaining curtains. “At least
in public,” he quipped with a wink over his shoulder.
Losing all the ground she thought she’d gained, Serenna huffed,
crossing her arms, too embarrassed to voice any witty rebuttal. Females
have fangs too, so I don’t know what he’s so proud of.
Drawing on a chain, the strange flat shades covering the domed glass
ceiling slid back to the walls, folding closed like a fan. Serenna scowled as
more sunlight splashed across her face. Blinking, she directed her glower at
Fenn, but her annoyance only seemed to bounce off the spikes of his armor.
“If you show too much interest,” Fenn said, glancing at her, “you might
discover some wraith all too willing to sink their fangs into that pretty elven
neck of yours.”
Serenna clapped a hand under her ear, eyes drawn to the markings on
Fenn’s throat that she’d mistaken for battle scars. She didn’t bother
tempering the revulsion in her words, now realizing they were punctures
left by teeth. “Do you drink each other’s blood like bats?”
Fenn blew out a scoff. “Don’t be disgusting.”
Profoundly curious for reasons she couldn’t explain, Serenna asked.
“Why did you let someone bite you?”
“Our fangs have venom.” Fenn folded his arms, leaning against a
dresser. The points of his canines peeked out of his grin, giving Serenna the
impression that he was humored by the perplexity plastered on her face.
“The paralytic is pleasurable in small doses and enhances the mingling
experience.”
Serenna’s eyes widened. He’d provided her with more information than
she’d bargained for. “Oh.”
She ripped her gaze away from Fenn’s neck, seeing the plentiful
evidence of such mingling encounters proudly displayed. In the blinding
light, she noticed some were fresh. Probably from last night since he
couldn’t stop talking about that Lagoon.
Fenn was obviously taking delight in steering her thoughts in an
inappropriate direction. He answered a question she wasn’t even going to
ask. “I suppose this new assignment as your warden will limit my preferred
recreation with my partners.”
Serenna rolled her eyes, uninterested in learning any more personal
details about this crude wraith. If he’s this forward, I can use that against
him. Maybe it wouldn’t be so difficult to wrestle that key from his neck.
Her thoughts circulated, whirling around a plan of reckless hope. If
Lykor’s habit was disappearing during the day, she might be able to
summon the prince with no catastrophic repercussions. Since her key was
going to be hovering as close as her bawdy guard, freedom didn’t seem so
far out of reach.
Fenn unfortunately interpreted her silent reflection for interest. One of
his fangs extended, his tongue suggestively circling over the point. “If
you’re curious and wish to find out—”
Serenna threw another pillow at his head. “Get out!”
CHAPTER 32
SERENNA
SERENNA
LYKOR
L ykor drew to a halt at the top of the iron staircase before descending to
his sitting room. Voices. Aiko shifted on his cloaked shoulders with a
contented purr, head-butting his cheek. Lykor scratched behind her
tufted ears, grumbling his complaint before stomping down the spiral
staircase. It was too early in the morning to tolerate whoever decided to lay
siege to his dwelling.
He’d roused in his own bed at least. For the first time in weeks. Lykor
could only assume that was Aesar’s attempt of currying a crumb of favor by
executing his “bargain” to earn more control during the day.
Losing a battle to intrigue, Lykor burrowed inward, wondering if there
was any other explanation for the change. He blew out an exasperated sigh
as he delved into their mind, detesting Aesar’s chosen landscape of
Kyansari’s library. Having endured enough confinement to last a lifetime,
Lykor would rather exist somewhere under an open sky.
He materialized in their mindspace. Silent like a wolf on the prowl,
Lykor approached the couch containing Aesar’s sleeping form and hovered
a hand over his silvery hair. Cautiously slipping into Aesar’s slumbering
awareness, Lykor skimmed through his recollection of the previous
evening.
Rummaging backward in time, he passed over flashes of Aesar freeing
the snow-buried lift before returning to the Aerie. WHY DIDN’T THE GIRL
ACCOMPLISH THAT TASK? Lykor nearly ground his teeth to dust. Fenn
had one fucking simple order to follow.
Half of his attention on winding down the stairs to the lower chamber,
Lykor continued his search. Sifting through memories, conversations with
Kal, Fenn, and Mara filtered in and out. Gathered in Kal’s residence, Lykor
relistened through Aesar’s ears.
Reavers. The younger warriors boiled the blood in his veins. He
couldn’t control them. The turbulence was beyond repair. Amplified by
Aesar’s intervention—foolishly withdrawing from the assault.
Aiko pawed at his face. Lykor spared his vulpintera a half-hearted
exasperated look before pinning his attention on his sitting room. Staring at
him, Kal, Fenn, and the girl had made themselves comfortable, apparently
having a communal breakfast in his suite.
Rolling his shoulders, Lykor didn’t know—or care—how long he’d
been standing there, diving through Aesar’s mind while the rest of the
world drifted by like dust on the wind. Flicking a strand of hair out of his
eyes, Lykor strode toward them.
In the middle of the table, the Heart of Stars glittered like some prized,
decorative jewel. Lykor swung his glare to his captain, assuming Kal had
conceived the brilliant notion to hear for himself what the girl could parrot
back. Aesar had deduced that her tether wouldn’t interfere with whatever
she heard, the relic’s secrets tied to her shaman heritage instead of Essence.
Lykor seized an empty chair with his gauntlet. “What the fuck is this?”
Kal waved a hand around their plates. “It’s breakfast.”
“I can see that, you lackwit,” Lykor growled. With a lash of force, he
swiped an apple out of a basket, shoving the fruit into one of his cloak
pockets. “Is there a malfunction in your clan’s quarters that prompted this
invasion of mine?”
“We wanted to have a discussion.” Kal patted the seat Lykor gripped.
An invitation.
“A discussion?” Lykor swept his glower to Fenn and the elf, seated
across from Kal. “Like we’re some fucking council now?” Agitation
rumbled through his throat as he muttered to himself. “I don’t think so.”
Aiko’s leathery wings rustled when Lykor abruptly pivoted on his heel.
Intending to leave, he slashed open a portal.
“Lykor.”
Screeching to a halt, Lykor twisted around with a snarl. “What?” Aiko
flew off his shoulders this time, gliding to a sunny spot on her preferred
couch.
“Join us.” Kal’s smile turned brittle, as strained as Lykor’s patience.
“Please,” he added like an afterthought, his jaw latching shut.
Lykor roved his gaze over the other two. Fenn averted his eyes while
the elf scowled at him, clenching her fork. Fascinated by an odd kinship
with her contempt, Lykor smirked at her.
Kal dragged Lykor’s attention back, spewing more of his nonsense. “We
need to talk about what happened yesterday.”
Releasing his power, Lykor dissolved the gateway. He shed his cloak
like a snakeskin, flinging it on a sofa before stalking to the table. “You’ve
already discussed the reavers with Aesar.” He ripped out the chair at the
end. “What more is there to speak of?” Dropping into the seat, Lykor flared
his magic, yanking boiled quail eggs and dried fruit toward his plate. He
jabbed his gauntlet at the elf. “She doesn’t need to be involved in this.”
“She does now since the reavers want her,” Kal said, his voice rolling
with practiced soothing. “And I wanted to talk to you.”
Suspicious of the inclusion when Kal had already conferred with Aesar,
Lykor thinned his eyes in his captain’s direction. So it was brazen
manipulation this morning.
“I have nothing more to add to Aesar’s blathering about the reavers,”
Lykor growled, frustration scorching his veins. “Their rabble are the least of
our worries with the humans encroaching on our fortress.”
A glass slammed on the table, rattling the silverware. Lykor glanced at
the girl, folding her arms and sitting straight-backed in her chair. “If those at
Centarya knew the truth about your origins, this conflict wouldn’t be
happening—we’d have no reason to fight.”
Lykor deduced her ties to that so-called academy was why Kal wanted
her involvement. Another in favor of bleating their secrets to the captain’s
second-favorite prince.
“The elves will never see the wraith as anything but abominations,”
Lykor said, steel creaking as he drummed his gauntleted fingers. “We won’t
be safe so long as they can reach us.”
“That’s not true,” the elf argued. Her gaze dashed to Fenn’s before
finishing her tirade. “There’d be no need for the wraith to leave if we stop
this war.”
“Speaking of,” Lykor said, turning his attention back to Kal. “Start
assembling the clans for departure. If yesterday was any indication of how
close the mortals are intruding, it’s past time we move on.” Lykor cracked
his neck, his taut spine twinging with a flash of pain, protesting the motion.
“Have Mara assist with the preparations, as I’m sure she’ll have opinions
about our organization.” If he could keep her busy with something trivial, it
was likely she’d be too distracted to seek out the girl.
“And what new harborage have you found?” Kal challenged, the
corners of his mouth fusing into a frown.
“You only need to concern yourself with my orders, not my
undertakings.” The metal in Lykor’s gauntlet squealed as he ground his
hand into a fist. “But if you require an explanation in order to give me a
moment’s peace,” he said through his clenched teeth, “I’ve had other
matters to attend to before I locate another haven for us.”
Those “other matters” being that he’d recklessly ventured back to the
military island under the cover of darkness in search of the amber-eyed elf.
While Aesar was asleep, Lykor had concealed that knowledge from him,
caging the memory behind the obsidian prison door.
He knew he should focus on the safety of his people, but Lykor couldn’t
curb his fixation. If the elf the girl had named as Jassyn could unravel the
coercion latched to his mind, he’d be free at last from the king’s touch. No
longer a helpless passenger, steered by Galaeryn’s influence.
Since Aesar had divulged his suspicion of a Heart of Stars hidden in the
druids’ jungle, Lykor intended to search that vile forest before he began
portal jumping across the Wastes. If the wraith could take more than one
Heart with them when they departed these wretched realms, that’d be one
less relic for the king to possess.
While Kal and Mara were busy organizing the clans for departure,
Lykor planned to set Fenn and the girl on the trail for the artifact
supposedly in the keep. Then again, if the lieutenant couldn’t manage
directing the elf to complete one simple task, Lykor would have to do it
himself. Like always.
Fenn spoke, bringing Lykor’s attention back to why they decided to foul
this morning with a fucking intervention. “It doesn’t matter where Lykor
leads us,” he said, spinning one of his brow rings. “The reavers won’t
remain with the elders.”
Lykor shrugged, biting into an egg. “Then let them stay. Their absence
would solve more than one problem.”
“We can’t divide our people,” Kal said. “We’re stronger together.” He
reached out, but apparently thought better of resting a hand on Lykor’s arm.
He’d learned long ago that his touch got him nowhere.
With an irritated blast of breath, Lykor threw his head back. “What
would you have me do? Shall I step down and permit that swine Larek to
direct the wraith?”
Kal’s voice sharpened, cutting like a blade. “There’s a way that might
appease everyone.”
“By letting Aesar take over,” Lykor spat, his words hostile. Acting on
impulse while his temper threatened to boil over, he added, “How
convenient for you.”
Kal stared him down. Fenn cracked his knuckles under the table before
speaking again. “That’s what the elders desire.” He shook head, piercings
swinging with the motion. “Aesar in command won’t pacify the reavers.”
Kal and the girl swiveled their attention toward Fenn. Curiosity had
Lykor listening. The young lieutenant never spoke against his father.
“The reavers want to rule themselves,” Fenn claimed. “There’s too
many warriors aligned with Larek now for you to manage. They’ve…tried
to recruit me over the years.” Fenn chewed his lip ring. The same
aggravating habit as Kal. “Larek proved that the reavers are going rogue.
They won’t take orders.” He picked at a biscuit on his plate. “They have no
intention of crossing the Wastes to the west like you do. Instead, they would
travel to the east—to the mortal realms.”
Idly tracing the lifted vines on the hilt of the dagger sheathed at his side,
Lykor waited for Fenn to run himself out of breath. “Lieutenant, enlighten
me as to why we shouldn’t let them go.”
“The reavers would survive by raiding farms and supply lines to Alari—
they have no qualms with harming the humans.” Fenn’s eyes darted to the
girl in a peculiar glance before continuing. “What the reavers did to the
mortals yesterday was worse than that raid where they ‘practiced’ with their
crossbows on the farmers.” Tracing a scar on his cheek—courtesy of
helping Lykor restore order that day—Fenn studied him, as if weighing his
words. “They’ll only terrorize the defenseless if they have free rein.”
“That behavior was corrected,” Lykor growled, crushing his gauntlet to
restrain the storm of his temper.
Fenn’s face went ashen, likely recalling how Lykor had used Essence to
rip out the offenders’ fangs and talons. Displays of magic always made the
younger generation nervous.
Diving into Fenn’s silence, the elf slapped her silverware to the table.
“Clearly, you failed to correct it.”
Lykor’s lip curled. “Remind me, who invited you to this conversation?”
The girl glanced at the lieutenant, exposing the blame. Something Lykor
couldn’t place sparked and then burned in Fenn’s gaze.
“Larek tried to seize her yesterday,” Fenn growled, fangs extending.
“The reavers would force her to use her magics to navigate the Wastes.”
Lykor cocked his head, wondering how Fenn had overlooked that he’d
require the same of the elf.
“Do you have a suggestion to make, Lieutenant?” Lykor demanded,
eyes pinning on Fenn’s fangs. “Or do you simply have your father’s habit of
sucking down air?”
Fenn blinked, abashed, before retracting his teeth.
Lykor continued without permitting him time to answer. “If the reavers
cross the frozen expanse, they’ll run into that human army.” He leaned
forward, putting his elbows on the table. “What would it be? A few hundred
of them against thousands of mortals? They would be crushed.”
Including the captain in his scorn, Lykor swung his gaze to Kal. “Even
if the wraith remain united, we wouldn’t survive against such a force—
those ants would overrun us with their numbers alone. And if the elves
portal in their Essence-wielding army, they’d level this entire forsaken
wasteland.” He raked his attention back toward Fenn. “Or do you not have a
head for the obvious, Lieutenant? If that’s the case, perhaps I should
reconsider those rings in your ears.”
Fenn dragged his talons away from the jewelry in his lobes. “The
reavers wouldn’t focus on the gathered army,” he argued, the cords in his
arms flexing. “They’d terrorize small farms and villages.”
“I’m waiting to hear your point.” Lykor scoffed. “The reavers’ plans are
as witless as they are worthless. They’d draw too much attention to
themselves, forcing intervention from the elves. We have the advantage of
portaling after raids. They do not. Their ambitions would be their demise.”
Lykor stretched his shoulders, dispelling his exasperation by popping the
joints. “The humans aren’t our concern. Let those half-elves like her”—
Lykor slid his eyes in the elf’s direction, meeting her glare with his own
—“busy themselves with pursuing the reavers. The distraction would allow
us ample time to relocate to somewhere safer.”
“And portaling across the Wastes is still your plan?” Kal countered. He
tipped his head at the girl, the bronze in his hair glinting in the sunlight
stabbing over the mountains. “You’d have her use that elemental power and
risk both of your lives in the process to reach the other side?”
Weary of this circular argument, Lykor beat his gauntlet against the
table. “If you disagree, then you can remain here or leave with the reavers.”
Kal’s plastered congenial look disintegrated. “We don’t know if
habitable lands even exist to the west. Across the Cerulean Sea it’s possible,
but anything toward the setting sun could be frozen snow.”
“How do you expect us to cross the ocean? By swimming?” Lykor
loathed the strain in his voice, but he was forced to argue the obvious facts.
“Navigating through the Wastes is our only option, unless you miraculously
have Galaeryn’s schematics for the Aelfyn galleons stashed up your ass.”
Earning a glower in response, Lykor flicked the Heart, the metal of his
armor pinging against the crystal. “You were so star-bent on finding these
baubles. But now we have one and you want to sit here instead of searching
for the dragons. They’re somewhere. And I intend to find them before the
king.”
“Dragons?” the elf chimed in, a glass of water halfway to her mouth. “I
thought they went extinct along with the druids.”
“Who else do you think that voice in the Heart belongs to?” Lykor
asked, rolling his eyes. “Or do you have another mind leeched onto yours
like I do?”
With a calculated deliberation, the girl set her drink down, swallowing
what he assumed was a retort. Entertained by the potential imagination of
her insult, Lykor nearly goaded her into speaking it.
And to discover if his prodding would lead to the lieutenant flashing his
fangs—like Fenn was her self-appointed guardian. I SHOULD’VE
PREDICTED HE’D BECOME POSSESSIVE OVER A CHARGE.
Lykor expected the girl to back down. Instead, the elf stubbornly held
his gaze, making her displeasure known. A wrinkle formed on her upturned
nose before she dismissed his question, turning to Kal instead.
“The dragons”—she shot him a glare—“mentioned the Hearts bound
their power in chains. So returning the Hearts will free them?”
Lykor released an explosive sigh, interrupting whatever Kal was going
to say. At this rate, the girl wouldn’t understand if a dragon flew through the
trinket and bashed her over the skull. Having their instructions implanted
directly into her head apparently wasn’t enough.
“There are five Hearts,” Lykor clipped, enduring the explanation. He
held up his fingers so that she could count. “And those five Hearts,” he said,
pointing to the tips of his digits, “each have a dragon bound—perhaps the
last of their kind.” Struck by a ripple of generosity from her rapt attention—
well, mostly from her silence—he offered more of Aesar’s conclusions.
“Your connection to the earth through your shaman blood is likely the
reason you can hear the echo of their words.”
“Aesar believes these relics are keys,” Kal said, before the girl could
start bickering back. He rested a hand on top of the Heart, igniting the three
colors of his talents.
“And though we only have one,” Lykor growled, “surely unbinding the
might of a single dragon would be better than nothing.”
“But I have elemental power.” The elf’s brows creased with her furious
thinking, looking between them. “Doesn’t that mean the dragon’s magic has
already been freed?”
“Shaman power differs from dragon power,” Kal gently explained. “You
can’t conjure the elements like they could. We don’t know the extent of
what your human line might be capable of, but it’s obvious you can
manipulate elements if they’re present.” The captain nodded at the pitcher
of water, and Lykor assumed that the girl had performed her tricks before
he’d arrived.
The elf frowned, twirling her hair around a finger. “Then I don’t
understand why the earthen powers have only now appeared again after all
this time.”
Lykor dug a fist into his eye, seriously regretting joining this wretched
conclave instead of portaling away.
“The druid sterility curse finally going into effect two centuries ago
likely triggered the elements to stir—that’s what Aesar believes, anyway.”
Kal glanced at Lykor. “Dragon power slumbered alongside shaman power.
Having their magic go dormant was perhaps the only way to protect the
mortals. The Aelfyn would’ve had no reason to target them.”
“The king has prepared for the return of elemental magic,” Lykor grated
out, sneering at the girl. “Aesar presumes Galaeryn’s aspirations extend to
controlling shaman spawn like you in order to subdue the Maelstrom. The
king will cross the sea and harvest whatever is left of the dragons’ ancient
magic for himself—or try to.” Thinking of Galaeryn accumulating even
more power had Lykor’s gut twisting into a sour knot. “That’s why we need
to earn the beasts’ favor by freeing them first. If they’re alive.”
“What about the druids?” Fenn asked, his interest always piquing at the
extinct flying shifters. “Could they be guarding the chained dragons?”
“We have no way of knowing since the war took place across the sea,”
Kal said, twisting a thin braid between his fingers. “If there were any druids
left, they wouldn’t have permitted the Aelfyn to rule. If the dragons can’t
stand against Galaeryn, then there’s no hope for us.” To Lykor’s annoyance,
his captain had voiced what he was about to say. Kal glanced at him, a
residual thunder flashing in his eyes. “Then it won’t matter what scorching
end Lykor leads us to.”
DRACOVAE’S TITS, I DON’T HAVE THE STRENGTH TO DEAL
WITH THIS SHIT, Lykor snarled inwardly to Aesar, who he sensed stirring.
Aesar arched a brow, swiveling to hook his knees over an armrest,
lounging across a couch in his library. They’re including you.
NO, THEY WANT SOMETHING FROM ME. I NEED TO—
Yes, yes, Aesar flapped a hand. I know you want to search that jungle,
but you should address what’s in front of you too. He waved a cup of
steaming tea into existence on an end table. There could also be a Heart
somewhere in this fortress. Use the resources you have. You don’t have to do
all of this alone.
Lykor directed his scowl at Fenn and the girl.
“Lieutenant, you and the elf scour the keep up until the second the
wraith are ready to abandon this stronghold. If there’s a Heart here, I want
you to find it.”
Fenn straightened, swelling with apparent pride for being assigned to
the task. Lykor knew how to deflate him. “That doesn’t mean rousing
suspicion by flapping your mouth at the Lagoon.”
Fenn flinched, the excited glow in his eyes dimming.
“And what will you be doing while we carry out your bidding?” Kal
demanded, his unblinking stare conveying his disagreement to trek across
the Wastes.
Shoving back from the table, Lykor almost rejected the question as
beneath him.
“If I have your permission, Captain,” Lykor hissed, “I’m going to search
that jungle.” Shoulders twitching, irritation nearly had Lykor’s skin bristling
off his spine. “If the druids claimed any Hearts in the war, we prioritize
searching their ancient capitals first—that’s all we have to go on. We have
weeks at best before we need to abandon this place.”
Kal crossed his arms, sweeping his gaze over Lykor. “And what about
my suggestion of portaling me—”
“No,” Lykor snapped. “This is the final time you’re bringing that up.”
Kal hadn’t relinquished his scheme of urging Aesar to transport him
back to the military island. The captain intended to spin an illusion and seek
Vesryn out, appearing fully as an elf, since his sharper features and skin
tone still favored the wraith. Aesar wasn’t inclined to put Kal in that danger.
Not that Lykor would’ve permitted the risk anyway.
“What do we do about the reavers in the meantime?” Fenn asked,
fiddling with one of his eyebrow rings.
“Let them stay, let them go. It matters not to me.” Flaring his power,
Lykor snatched his cloak with a whip of force. “If they refuse to follow my
lead, then they don’t have a place with the wraith. I can only suffer fools for
so long.” He twisted open a portal, speaking over his shoulder. “Keep a
guard on the girl. I don’t want her magic falling into their hands.”
CHAPTER 35
JASSYN
SERENNA
T hree weeks blurred in the search for the Heart of Stars. Serenna and
Fenn had explored tunnels darker than pitch, ransacked ancient
storerooms, and rummaged through uninhabited dwellings in what felt
like every corner of the Frostvault Keep.
They’d managed to avoid entanglements with the reavers while they’d
scoured the districts Fenn had deemed safer territory. But more than once, a
contingent of his clan’s warriors had accompanied them when they’d
ventured where the restless wraith had a heavier presence.
A dracovae patrol had been spotted by a scouting group two days prior,
stirring the reavers into a frenzied hunt, the bloodthirsty warriors
determined to fell the beasts and elves. After the sighting, Kal had
surrendered to Lykor’s plans of abandoning the fortress, organizing supplies
and mobilizing the clans for departure.
Serenna spun the golden tether on her wrist. I need Vesryn to find me
before the reavers harm his rangers. Or before Lykor drags me too far
across the Wastes. The key dangling around Fenn’s neck was her best
chance at freedom.
But she was well aware Fenn would “file his fangs” before he
disobeyed an order and removed her manacle—especially for no apparent
reason. Except… Serenna studied the lieutenant in his spiked armor. Today
he seems to be toeing a line.
Fenn had brought her to one of the crossbow firing ranges after they’d
spent yet another fruitless morning and afternoon hunting for the Heart. The
open caverns at the base of the volcano crawled upwards, the crevices
outlined by jagged stone. A sluggish stream of magma bubbled and churned
a winding perimeter, shrouding the chamber in a comfortable warmth.
Glowing light from hissing flames scrawled shadows across the rocky
walls.
Sore from the endless walking in a new pair of wraithling boots
provided by Fenn, Serenna shifted her weight. She was tempted to sit on the
ground and rub her feet while enduring his long-winded demonstration.
Obviously, fiddling with these contraptions was his favorite hobby.
Well, aside from mingling. And Serenna was past tired of hearing about that
Lagoon, so she’d suffer through this. Oddly enough, Fenn’s infectious
excitement sparked her interest as he explained the function of every single
pin and gear.
“And you crank this lever,” Fenn said, his claw working in a circular
motion, winding the cords back until it locked with a click. He strummed
the string with a talon before nodding. “The druids left behind schematics
of their weapons and we were able to replicate their craftsmanship to create
our own.” He placed a gold-tipped bolt into the grooved center channel,
aligning the indents in the shaft with the posterior string before offering it to
Serenna.
She hesitantly took the loaded mechanism, eyeing the wicked gilded
end warily. This tiny arrow really brought Vesryn down?
Turning to Fenn, Serenna asked, “What do I do now?”
Fenn yelped. “Don’t point it at me!” He shoved the front of the weapon
toward the wooden targets.
“That’s how you handed it over!” Serenna readjusted her grip. “You’re
the one who insisted that I learn how to fire it today.”
“Because it’s past time we did something fun.” Fenn jammed his claws
into his trouser pockets. “And you owe me a debt for making me swim
across that underground lake yesterday.”
“I wouldn’t consider your floundering to be ‘swimming.’” Serenna
released a snort at his expense. “You would’ve drowned if I hadn’t
displaced the water for you.”
Fenn shot her a sizzling glare, the magma’s glow catching in his eyes.
He scuffed a booted toe on the rippled black ground—dead lava, he’d
claimed. “That shoreline was one of the few places we hadn’t searched,” he
mumbled, an attempt to defend what dignity hadn’t capsized in the lake.
Serenna’s arms strained with the effort of holding the crossbow. “I
didn’t think a big wraith warrior like you would be scared of a little water.”
Her gaze glanced off the fang marks on Fenn’s neck—a fresh pair that
certainly hadn’t been there the day before. “I figured you knew how to
swim since all you talk about is that Lagoon.”
“The Lagoon has me versed in the crafts of pleasure, not this”—Fenn
made a wild motion with his claws, poorly imitating what she’d tried to
teach him—“swimming.” He smirked. “You would know that if you’d
accompany me for once.”
Having already warded off multiple invitations to join him and stars
knew how many of his partners at the Lagoon, Serenna sniffed her
disapproval as an answer. But her thoughts warred.
She was running out of time to get the key away from Fenn’s neck. But
she couldn’t exactly untether herself around so many wraith and have
Vesryn appear in the middle of…whatever occurred at the Lagoon.
Aggravation writhed inside of her. On second thought, since the prince
probably had the same habits as Fenn, Serenna was sure he’d be delighted
to join. At least Fenn isn’t secretive about what he does in his free time.
Hefting the cool metal on the underside of the bow, Serenna asked, “Are
you going to show me how to shoot this?”
Fenn reached around her, his dangerous claws surprisingly gentle as
they wrapped over her hands. “First, you’ll want to aim it.”
Serenna’s spine locked when his chest nudged into her back. She
smothered the impulse to squirm away from the contact. He was making it a
point to fluster her since he’d made a fool of himself at the lake.
Lifting the crossbow to her shoulder, Fenn slid her fingers further down
the grip. “Press this lever when you’re ready to fire.”
Rattled by her racing pulse, Serenna clenched her teeth, resisting the
urge to wipe a bead of sweat gathering on her neck. “Do you get this close
and personal with everyone you train, Lieutenant?”
“If they permit it.” Fenn’s chuckle rumbled through her shoulders. “But
only the wraith I find attractive.” He skimmed a talon up her arm. “And
apparently feisty she-elves who require intimate instruction on weapon
handling.”
Serenna bristled, refusing to let embarrassment silence her. “And I
suppose you’re the type of male who thinks the way you handle your
‘weapon’ is as impressive as the length of your fangs.”
“Careful, she-elf.” Fenn’s claws tightened against her. “You almost
sound interested in finding out.”
Aware that Fenn would only need the slightest encouragement to press
any advance, Serenna’s instinct was to skirt away from the dangerous
flirtation. How can I be upset at Vesryn for sneaking around with Ayla if I’m
hardly fending off someone else’s interest?
The absence of the bond these past few weeks—and being apart from
the prince—had dulled the shock of Ayla’s presence. Now Serenna
regretted irreparably overreacting. But I wouldn’t have discovered the truth
if I didn’t accidentally portal here.
Serenna blew out a breath, calming that flurry of snowballing turmoil.
Focusing on the wraith in front of her, curiosity tingled like an incessant
itch. She wondered what Fenn found attractive—since his comment implied
she was in a different category.
She innocently asked over her shoulder, “So since I’m not a wraith, you
don’t think I’m pretty?”
Fenn suddenly squeezed Serenna’s finger over the trigger, yanking her
attention back to the firing range. She gasped as the crossbow jumped, the
support of Fenn’s chest behind her dampening the recoil. The bolt sailed
across the chamber, smacking into a target.
“I think attraction encompasses more than physical features,” Fenn said,
releasing her hands to spin a ring in his ear. “But since you’re inquiring
about superficial attributes, I suppose you’re not what I’d typically find
alluring since I’m more accustomed to wraith.” Serenna turned toward him
as he drew another arrow from the quiver at his waist. “For one, you have
no height or fangs to speak of.” His gaze swept over her. “And your breasts
and hips are rather…exotically proportioned.”
Serenna scoffed, jabbing his ribs with the crossbow. “My figure is
simply more human than that of you lanky wraith.”
Fenn cleared his throat, quickly correcting himself. “That’s not to say I
don’t appreciate your ample curves.”
Doubting he was making a vicious comment about her body, Serenna
fought the urge to laugh at his straightforward observation. “Thank you for
pointing out how exotically proportioned I am,” she said while he took the
crossbow and then recranked it.
Fenn returned behind her, placing the ready weapon back in her hands.
Letting her hold it steady, he loaded another bolt. Serenna glanced back
when he remained silent.
He scrutinized her with a serious intensity. “The points of your ears are
pleasing.”
“Your compliments astound me,” Serenna said, hopelessly trying to
curb the heat racing up her neck. “Is your skill with words what impels
everyone to your bed?”
Inhaling sharply, she nearly dropped the weapon when Fenn glided his
claws down her ribs to envelop her waist.
“I have a unique skill set for that.” His chuckle was dark, offering no
other explanation than suggestively shoving the length of his body against
her back, talons scoring into her leathers.
Serenna’s fingers seized the trigger. The bolt launched, soaring clear
over the target.
Fenn chuckled, pinching one of her ears. “I like how you turn red when
you’re flustered.”
Jolted from the unexpected pressure, a stray nerve shot down Serenna’s
spine. She swung the crossbow at Fenn like a club, swatting away his pesky
talons.
Cackling, Fenn warped to her other side before the blow connected.
“It’s a shame you have no snow drifts down here to catapult at my head
with your magics.”
Serenna simmered with irritation. She wouldn’t admit it, but he’d bested
her this round. Setting the crossbow on the ground, she trapped the stirrup
with her boot and copied his previously demonstrated motion, cranking the
lever to restring the weapon.
Glaring at Fenn and then scanning the flames spurting from the volcanic
stream, Serenna countered, “Maybe I’ll try to channel that magma and set
your leathers on fire. You can’t warp as fast as you think.”
Fenn grinned at her empty threat, eyes sparking with challenge. “Allow
me to finish admiring you before you descend into pyromania.” He drew
another quarrel from the holster at his hip, twirling the bolt around his
talons.
Serenna pursed her lips, thoughts snagging on the sharp edge of guilt. I
shouldn’t have encouraged him.
“You dismantle me with the skies in your eyes.” Fenn’s gaze flared as it
lingered on hers. “The color reminds me of a glacial waterfall near the
outskirts of our fortress. When the moons shine on it just right, it’s a sea of
starry ice.” He fidgeted with the arrow before returning it to his holster. “I’d
be happy to show you sometime. But there’s more than your features that I
—”
“You forgot to mention my fingers,” Serenna interrupted, unsure what
to do with the compliments she might as well have blatantly asked for.
“They’re longer now since Lykor stole my magic and wraithed me.”
Bitterness seeped into her words as she deflected his attraction, brandishing
her palm in front of his face. “Do you find them alluring too?”
“Wraithed you?” Fenn asked, his mouth twitching, showing the points
of his fangs. He snagged her waving hand, inspecting her nails. “Your
talons are still stubby.”
“I don’t have talons yet.” Serenna yanked her wrist out of his grip.
“Maybe I will if Lykor plans on taking more of my power.”
Grin swept away, Fenn’s humor faded. “My father said not everyone
survives a siphoning of magics…” He twisted one of his braids. “The
torture nearly destroyed Aesar. That’s why Lykor appeared. He endured
years of torment so Aesar and the elders didn’t have to.”
Heart stilling, Serenna blinked dolefully up at Fenn. I never wondered
how they came to be.
“But it doesn’t make what Lykor did to you right.” Fenn’s voice
softened. He gently rested a claw on her shoulder, the gesture igniting an
emotion Serenna couldn’t place. “We heard the screams and… I’m sorry
my father and I weren’t able to stop him.” Her pulse skipped when he
snarled, fangs shooting down. “Maybe the magics on Lykor took away his
control, but I won’t let—”
Fenn’s talons abruptly tensed against her. His eyes flashed, a fire in the
night, burning a trail across the chamber.
They weren’t alone.
CHAPTER 37
SERENNA
“A re you training Lykor’s pet with our weapons so she can join your
miserable clan, Lieutenant?” Larek asked.
Despite the heat in the chamber, a shiver of foreboding shuddered
down Serenna’s spine. A band of nearly thirty reavers armed with
crossbows, maces, and knives filed in, spreading across the cavern.
Trapping them.
Larek strode to the center of the firing range, crossing his arms over his
spiked armor. Breath tight, Serenna glanced around, scanning the wraith.
She didn’t see Fenn’s sister, Taryn, among their number. But that didn’t
mean another reaver wouldn’t try to snatch her this time.
“If you have a problem with her presence,” Fenn said, clacking his
talons before cracking his knuckles, “you can take it up with Lykor.”
“And where has Lykor been these past few weeks?” Larek sneered, the
streaks of his face paint glinting red in the magma’s light. “Planning his
next blunder?”
Fenn ignored him and growled, “What do you want?”
Larek’s attention flicked to Serenna. “I’m taking Lykor’s elven scum.”
Serenna flinched when he took a step forward, flashing his fangs. “Hand
her over and I’ll forgive our previous…disagreement. I’ll even let you join
us when we abandon this cesspool.”
Fenn clasped Serenna's hand, calculating eyes scouring the firing range,
likely hunting for any clear path to warp away. Bracing herself, Serenna’s
stomach clenched in anticipation of the spin.
The weightless feeling never came. There was no way out.
Instead, Fenn’s guttural growl lifted every hair on the back of her neck.
His extending fangs glinted in the magma’s glow. “If any of your clan lays a
talon on her again, I will sever every offending claw.”
With a twisted smile, Larek’s gaze narrowed in a dark promise. He
signaled with that eerie whistle through his teeth.
Fenn reacted before any of the reavers, vanishing from her side. He
collided with Larek in a clash of talons, his knee jerking upward to smash
Larek under the ribs.
Terror strangled Serenna’s throat as the other wraith blurred into
shadows, converging on Fenn. None of the warriors bothered drawing their
weapons.
Disappearing and reappearing around the center of the closing ring,
Fenn was a thunderhead of spinning darkness. Distorting into a tempest of
smoke, he whirled and dodged the reavers, kicking out, swiping at legs.
With brutal bashings of his elbows, Fenn shattered the arms of those daring
to get close before ramming them back into the circle of wraith. His
lightning fast talons snatched blows, twisting wrists in sickening crunches
of bone. Snarls ricocheted across the caverns, punctuated by grunts when
fists smacked against flesh.
Despite Fenn’s claws flying, jabbing, deflecting, and counter-striking,
the reavers caged him in, a cruel vice tightening. Time seemed to slow as
Serenna watched in helpless horror, knowing he was going to be
overwhelmed by so many.
She gasped as Larek landed a devastating punch square in Fenn’s gut.
Off balance, Fenn stumbled, doubling over. The reavers seized him as
he struggled to wheeze. Still refusing to surrender, Fenn’s motions became
choppy and uncontrolled.
Restraining him, the swarm of wraith rained down blows from every
direction. A handful of reavers held Fenn up while others beat the resistance
out of him. Larek’s fist connected with Fenn’s face. He sent another rapid
hit under Fenn’s chin, snapping his head back. A spray of black blood
spattered into the air.
Serenna took a step forward, not feeling very brave at all as she faced a
pack of ravenous wolves.
Everyone forgot about me. Or rather, they didn’t find any point in
watching her. Her stomach hollowed out at the helplessness.
Serenna’s nails dug into her slick palms as Larek landed repeated strikes
against Fenn’s middle, depriving his lungs of air. Her eyes ricocheted
around the stark chamber, searching for anything to use. Fenn’s crossbow
lay at her feet, but the weapon was worthless against so many and without
the quiver of bolts at his side.
A stir of air brushed past Serenna. She felt like slapping away the
useless aid. There were too many reavers to bother with what little she
could do by weaving the wind.
Flames spurted from the sluggish magma, tugging on her attention.
Chewing a hole into her cheek, Serenna winced at her only option. Of
course Lykor insisted that I practice with everything except fire!
Desperation to buy time had Serenna’s voice ringing out in the caverns,
shrill with her panic. “Are you so scared of Fenn that it takes a horde of you
to face him? Do the reavers have no honor?”
Every blazing gaze pinned on her, raptors targeting a rabbit. Fear knifed
through Serenna’s gut as fangs flashed. Fenn sagged in the warriors’
clutches, knees giving out as he coughed up a mouthful of blood.
Larek warped to her side. Serenna attempted to scurry back, but he
viciously seized her arm.
“What do elven scourge know of honor?” Larek asked, his wicked nails
scoring into her flesh. “Only the strong survive. Fenn is insignificant
without the backing of his pathetic clan.”
If Serenna had one foolish tactic she could always rely on, it was
running her mouth. “Funny how it takes thirty of your pathetic clan to bring
him down.” She whimpered through her nose as Larek’s tightening grip
drew more blood in response, feeling as if his talons burrowed down into
her bones. Warring against the dizzying pain, Serenna clenched her teeth,
fanning the cinders of her defiance. “Did you already forget how fast Fenn
outmatched you in front of the fortress?”
Larek’s canines flashed in her face. “And for that, your lieutenant is
going to take a stroll through the stream.” Snatching her shoulders, Larek
swung Serenna around as the reavers hauled Fenn back to his feet. They
herded him with a barrage of blows, steering him toward the magma.
Gritting his fangs, agony contorted Fenn’s bruised features. He
struggled, attempting to twist out of their claws, but his opposition only
provoked a harsher beating. What air remained in his lungs whooshed out
as he folded over, breath bubbling in his throat.
“Stop it!” Serenna shrieked. Terror clanged against her skull the closer
the reavers dragged Fenn to the molten shore. Larek is bluffing, she told
herself. He just wants to prove he bested Fenn.
Larek’s talons shackled her arms, forcing her to watch. With each
passing moment, Serenna doubted more and more that this was merely an
act. She thrashed in his grip, as helpless as a fish protesting a hook. “Don’t
hurt him!”
Larek scoffed against Serenna’s back, his claws digging in further. “It
would seem the lieutenant is good for more than regurgitating Lykor’s
drivel. Perhaps we’ll keep him around as…motivation for your
compliance.” He spun Serenna around, lowering his face to hers with a
growl. “But he needs a reminder that disrespect comes with a price.”
Serenna’s lungs pulled in air faster than she could breathe as Larek
leaned forward. In a shock of biting pain, she sucked in a hiss as he grazed
her neck with his fangs, peeling a layer of skin. The silent threat conveyed
that he had the power to effortlessly end her life.
Despair weighed on Serenna like lead, sinking her into an ocean of
dismay. Fenn will only suffer more if I oppose them.
“I’ll do it.” Serenna’s voice shattered on the agreement. Blood trickled
down her chest as she tried to recoil. “Whatever you need to cross the
Wastes. Just…don’t harm him.”
“I’m feeling generous.” Larek smirked, releasing her. “I’ll let the
lieutenant keep half of his toes. This time.”
He warped back to the cluster of warriors still wrestling with Fenn.
Serenna flinched when Larek seized a fistful of Fenn’s braids, shoving him
forward to the churning flames.
Mind exploding in terror, Serenna stared across the chamber, every
fearful breath straining her lungs. She swallowed her screams as the reavers
dragged Fenn closer to the smoldering fire.
Twisting around in the cacophony of the fray, Fenn frantically searched
the cavern. Dangerously close to the scorching heat, sweat rolled down his
battered face. His eye that wasn’t swelling shut met Serenna’s with an
intensity that pierced through the chaos. A moment stretched as his gaze
darted to the trail of blood trickling down her neck and arms.
Outrage washed over Fenn’s features before he went truly feral. Claws
flying, he somehow connected a blow with Larek, fangs snapping as if he’d
rip out his throat.
Something inside of Serenna cracked, carving into her heart. Fenn
wasn’t battling to escape the magma or the reavers. He was fighting to
reach her. To protect her, even though he was the one in danger. The one
who was hurt.
Hands trembling uncontrollably, Serenna crushed her fingers into knots,
fists leeching white. Blood from the gashes Larek had scored into her flesh
crept down to her wrists, dripping off her knuckles. Fury crystalized in the
fractures of her chest, forging fear into something else. Something stronger.
Forcing a calming breath down her throat, Serenna released her terror.
“Let him go,” she commanded, her words echoing across the cavern.
The reavers didn’t acknowledge her.
Disbelief punched Serenna in the gut like the blows pummeling Fenn.
They don’t see me as a threat.
She took in another breath.
The world went still.
A gentle breeze stirred, the wind beckoning to her. Flaming plumes
pulsed, beacons flaring to life.
Serenna channeled her perception into the stream of magma.
In the space of a heartbeat, the earth answered her call. Magic uncoiled
in her chest, singing through her veins as the ancient power rose in
response, spreading its wings.
Serenna heaved on the inferno. A burst of flame streaked out of the
magma, racing into her palm. Too busy wrestling with Fenn, the reavers
didn’t notice. She stared at the fire dancing above her fingertips before
riveting her focus on Larek, his attention still on beating Fenn half-
senseless.
Serenna’s fury simmered, boiling over.
Throwing out her hand, she launched the fiery comet across the cavern.
The flaming orb punched into Larek’s back. He roared, stumbling
forward. The fire fizzled out, disintegrating into his shoulder in a hiss of
burning armor and flesh. Spinning around, Larek’s volcanic eyes latched
onto her with blood-lusting wrath. Serenna bared her teeth, tearing more of
the blaze toward her.
Whipping a column of twisting flame from the magma’s depths,
Serenna forced the magic to separate. Five. She could manage five flaming
spheres. It would have to be enough. She flung the fiery orbs at the reavers.
Dodging the flames, the wraith warped out of the way, evading the
smoldering globes before any could land. Serenna wrenched the fire to a
halt before the conflagration converged on Fenn, who had collapsed near
the fiery river. Whipping her hands around, Serenna searched for her target.
Larek unfolded from a shadow in front of her. Serenna’s stomach
heaved as the smell of cooked flesh snaked up her nose.
Larek snarled, seizing her throat, forcing Serenna to scramble to her
toes. Her control over the fire guttered, the flames snuffing out as they
plunged to the floor.
Gasping to fill her lungs, Serenna’s vision blurred as Larek’s claw
tightened. He yanked her off her feet, his superior strength forcing her body
into compliance.
Serenna snatched at a jet of fire at the edge of her vision. A blazing
whip cleaved the air with a crack, wrapping around Larek’s neck.
He dropped her. Back arching, Larek clawed at his throat, scorching his
hands on the flaming noose as he emitted mindless, strangled screams.
Serenna fell to the ground, catching herself with her palms. Coughing,
she panted to catch her breath. Her eyes dashed around the chamber to
account for the reavers. Clearly still believing their leader would be the
victor, they circled her like a cloud of vultures, waiting for an impending
death.
It wouldn’t be hers—she wasn’t finished.
Swaying to her feet, Serenna riveted her gaze on Larek, reattuning
herself with the scorching heat. Greasy fat glistened as it weeped from his
seared flesh. Clutching his charred, blistered neck, Larek’s eyes widened
with a wild terror.
A column of fire reared up behind Serenna, flickering and crackling.
Consumed by instinct, her rage flared like a spark igniting oil. With a blast
of power, she twisted the inferno into a violent assault.
Larek didn’t have time to warp.
Channeling the flaming whirlwind, fire collided with the reaver. The
other wraith warped out of the way, scattering like shattered glass. Serenna
stoked the torrent with coils of wind, engulfing him in a spinning vortex.
Conjuring another gout of flame, she punched out a tidal wave, forcing the
other wraith further back with the threat of the same fate.
Howls echoing around the caverns, Larek thrashed like he could throw
the flames off. His body smoked and writhed while the cyclone spiraled
around him, consuming him, spurting hissing black smoke. The stench of
burning leather and flesh invaded the air as his armor charred, skin melting
and sloughing off bones.
The flaming funnel of death smothered Larek’s screams too soon.
Pulse thrashing frantically in her head, Serenna poured her entire
strength into the fire. Her breathing turned ragged as the chamber flickered
in her vision, faded slowly, like the beat of Larek’s dying heart.
Serenna heard Fenn stumbling to her. He reached out, pulling her away
from the flames threatening to lick her boots. The reavers had fled, leaving
the caverns as quiet as a tomb.
Fenn grimaced, clutching his ribs, weaving his fingers through hers.
With a squeeze, the offered comfort anchored Serenna’s senses back to her
body, cooling the firestorm in her blood.
The world came back into focus one breath at a time as her erratic
heartbeat settled. Emerging from her trance, Serenna felt no whisper of
remorse, no regret for her actions. I should’ve ended Larek sooner, before
he harmed those starving humans. His death was bound to give life to
others.
Wincing, Fenn wiped the blood away from his broken nose. He glared
at Larek’s charred corpse, the splashes of fire dying around his blackened
bones.
Turning back to her, Fenn retracted his fangs, giving her a crooked
smile. Serenna cringed as his lip split further and then lunged forward to
steady him as he staggered.
Something like reverent pride and awe glowed in his unswollen eye.
Fenn hooked an arm around her shoulder, still grinning, his words mangled
in his swollen mouth. “I’m in your debt, she-dragon.”
CHAPTER 38
SERENNA
JASSYN
SERENNA
S erenna busied herself with poring over one of Aesar’s tomes. Even
though he would’ve already gleaned anything important, she had
nothing better to do than to search for any clues as to where one of the
remaining Hearts of Stars might be.
A few hours had passed since Fenn had peeled himself off the bathing
chamber’s floor and shambled out of the Aerie for the evening. With those
injuries, he’ll need weeks before returning to the—
A heavy cloak dropped onto the table. Serenna reared back in her seat.
Having been so absorbed in skimming Aesar’s translations, she hadn’t
heard anyone enter the sitting room.
Across from her, Fenn loomed with folded arms. Uncharacteristically
out of his armor, his dark trousers glittered like scales, catching the light
from the moons. His own cloak enveloped a loose tunic, unlaced halfway
down his chest. Flaunting her tether’s key.
“What’s this for?” Serenna asked, touching the garment’s furry hood.
“We’re going outside.” Fenn crouched to indulge Aiko, who padded
over from a sofa to reap his attention—which she’d refused to tolerate from
Serenna earlier with a flick of her tail. “Bundle up.”
Evading reminders of what the eclipsing moons’ glaring light meant for
tonight, Serenna had selected a seat facing away from the open sky. She
twisted around, looking out a window. “But the sun just set. I can’t imagine
it’s pleasant out. And besides, you’re…” She frowned, examining Fenn’s
completely healed face more closely. Her question was beyond skeptical.
“Did Lykor mend you?”
“Aesar did. We discussed what happened.” Fenn engrossed himself in
scratching Aiko’s tufted ear, coaxing out a purr that vibrated throughout the
room. “In an unrelated matter, he thought you might enjoy watching the
elven eclipse with company.”
Fenn’s comment was a flaming arrow punched into her gut. Serenna’s
heart tumbled, thinking about the prince performing his duty in Kyansari.
Aesar’s books had been an escape, a way of avoiding thinking about what
the Summer Lunar Solstice meant.
Serenna closed the tome in front of her, intending to decline. “And I
suppose you volunteered because you have nothing better to do tonight?”
“I certainly didn’t imply that.” Fenn rose, his unbound hair spilling over
his shoulders, softening the planes of his cheekbones. He tilted his head,
earrings clinking. “As I’m still indebted to you, I was hoping this service
would be repayment enough.”
When Serenna narrowed her eyes to see through his flimsy motivation,
Fenn suggestively raised his brows. His painfully obvious gaze drifted to
the center stairs, leading up to the sleeping quarters before he said, “Unless
you had an impulse to engage in a different activity this evening.”
The insinuation kindled a cursed, molten thread of intrigue. Scowling,
Serenna crossed her legs and shoved her arms into a knot. Unamused by the
spark of hope glowing in Fenn’s eyes, she battled his smoldering stare.
She could remember when this warrior had intimidated her just because
he was a wraith, but now… Now she wrestled with a shameful thrill heating
her blood. Unsure how to navigate this straightforward, relentless interest
she’d never received before, skirting the fringes of flirtation was Serenna’s
only defense.
Knuckles braced on the table, Fenn extended his fangs—likely to
intimidate her—leaning forward to combat her defiance. “I had planned on
spending the evening at the Lagoon, but now, rather than getting my—”
“Put those fangs away,” Serenna snapped, her exasperation coming out
more forcefully than she intended.
Rising, Serenna decided that she wouldn’t squander this presented
opportunity to annoy Fenn. She shouldered on the cloak, since her guard
seemed determined to drag her outdoors. It seemed pointless to mention
that they could watch the moons more comfortably from inside the Aerie.
“For your information,” Serenna said, tugging on her boots, “I didn’t
ask for you to sacrifice your time at the Lagoon.”
“It’s a chilly night.” Fenn shrugged. “I’m open to warming up there
afterward.”
Serenna’s heart banged against her ribs while she made every effort to
avoid envisioning what that entailed. She yanked her hair out from under
the cloak, tossing the strands over her shoulders. “I wouldn’t want to
intrude.”
“Hard to intrude when I’m inviting you.” Fenn had retracted his canines
by the time he opened the sliding glass door leading to the balcony. He
stretched, scraping the obsidian stone of the doorway before waving her
through. His eyes locked on hers before she passed the threshold. “Perhaps
I have an interest in spending time with a particular she-elf.”
Serenna’s pulse stilled from his claim, any clever response she hoped to
form crumbling to dust. He’s shameless. But I like that about him.
Pointedly ignoring him as she sidestepped outside, Serenna surrendered
her arguments about how they spent nearly every waking moment together
as it was. Fenn’s low chuckle said that she’d only lose whatever ground she
hoped to gain.
Light streamed down from the full moons, hovering over the jagged
mountains, drenching the valley like beacons in the night. “Should we move
some of the furniture out here?” Serenna asked, drawing the furred hood
around her neck.
An errant gust swirled a flurry of powdery snow, flakes gliding
aimlessly through the icy air once the draft subsided. Fenn brushed the
stirred hair out of his face, smirking too smugly. “I have a more secluded
place in mind.”
“Naturally,” Serenna said, nervously laughing as her heart picked up
speed. So it’ll be just the two of us. Alone somewhere.
Placing his palms on the balustrade, Fenn leaned over the edge to
inspect stars knew what. Safe from his view, Serenna studied him. From his
towering height and wraith lankiness, to the way his indigo skin glinted
with shimmering iridescence, highlighted by moons. When he turned back
before she could get any further, Serenna whipped her eyes up to the sky.
Realizing how they were going to get there, she emitted a defeated sigh.
“And I suppose you’ll be jumping off the balcony and warping us to this
mysterious place.”
Fenn tilted his head. “Do you not trust me?”
“Of course I do,” Serenna answered automatically, grasping the claw he
extended.
Eyes dancing like the stars, his slanted, cocky grin was irritatingly
charming. Serenna pinched her lips and flushed.
She squeaked when Fenn suddenly swept her off her feet, cradling her
across his chest.
He pulled himself up to stand on the parapet, teetering on the ledge.
Serenna’s stomach clenched. Knowing her objection was futile, she still
asked, “Can’t you simply hold my hand when we do this?”
“I could.” The chilly gale whistled past, yanking at Fenn’s unbound
hair. “But I like this position better.”
“I figured,” Serenna muttered, clutching his cloak. The precarious
height and the blustering breeze snagged the breath in her lungs.
Anticipating the whirl of his teleportation, she squeezed her eyes shut.
Fenn’s chest rumbled when he spoke. “I think I can make it there in ten
warps.”
Serenna jerked in his arms, squawking with alarm. “Ten!” Her eyes flew
open to see Fenn scanning the horizon. “Wait—”
They disintegrated into a twisting nether of darkness, her protest
snatched away by the wind.
CHAPTER 41
SERENNA
JASSYN
R egretting every foolish decision he’d made the night before, Jassyn’s
body shook as he gripped the edges of the porcelain sink. He studied
his bleary reflection in the bathing chamber mirror before digging his
palms into his eyes.
Reminded of the dreadful experience of withdrawing from Stardust,
Jassyn massaged his pounding head. Since dawn, he’d been yielding his
stomach, thoroughly convinced that what he was going through now was
worse. Much worse.
Why in the bleeding stars did I let Vesryn convince me to drink so
much? They had no reason to help themselves to the Vallendes’ wine stores.
And that certainly hadn’t been his idea—no matter what the prince had
claimed when they were drowning themselves in the spoils.
Opening the door out to his sitting room, Jassyn halted in his tracks. On
his hands and knees, Vesryn was retching through a portal in front of the
couch. Gut clenching with another wave of nausea, Jassyn clamped his
teeth, fighting the urge to dive back into the bathing chambers to do the
same. At least he opened a rift.
Every rain drop pelting the windows resounded like a gong in his skull.
Dodging mountains of tomes and scrolls stacked on the floor, the sitting
room spun as Jassyn stumbled to a water pitcher perched on an end table.
Wispy memories of Vesryn shoving Fynlas’ research through a gateway
faster than a squirrel stashing a horde of nuts floated through his mind.
But there was more than books and scattered parchments. The prince
had stolen nearly everything that had been in Fynlas’ study. The easels with
human family trees tracing the shaman lines, every single paper, inkpot, and
quill—Vesryn had pilfered it all. They’d even filched a chair. But it was a
nice chair. White oak, intricately carved, with a lovely cushion as soft as a
downy pillow. Maybe I grabbed the chair, I don’t remember. Stars, my
scorching head.
Jassyn swayed as he poured them both glasses of water. Somehow still
holding Essence, Vesryn crawled up the couch, struggling more than
someone pulling themselves over a ledge. Jassyn collapsed on the sofa next
to his cousin, offering a cup.
The prince waved him off. “Don’t worry, I threw up…” Vesryn frowned
at the portal by his feet before releasing his magic. He drew a hand over his
face. “I actually have no idea where I opened that.” Bracing his elbows on
his knees, the prince groaned, gripping fistfuls of hair. “Can you”—he
tapped his head, wincing as his throat bobbed—“use your healies?”
Jassyn swallowed hard before attempting to grapple with his power. He
blinked against a streak of lightning flashing through the windows, eyes
throbbing in protest at the cruel slash of light. By the time Essence swirled
around him, darting in and out of his control, Jassyn was panting.
Vesryn chuckled and then cringed. “Stars, you’re still drunk.”
“We are never doing that again,” Jassyn gritted out. Threads of mending
light unraveled, slipping through his fingers. “And you’re healing me after
I’m finished with you.”
Vesryn clutched his middle with a groan. “You’re suddenly very trusting
of my healing.”
“The way I see it,” Jassyn said as he regathered Essence slowly, like
clouds rolling in ahead of a storm. He shrouded Vesryn with a curtain of
power, easing his stomach and dispelling the inflammation in his skull.
“You can’t do any more damage to me than you’ve already done.”
“You have me there,” Vesryn said, sagging in relief.
After the prince returned the favor of setting his body back to working
order, Jassyn frowned at the books scattered across his sitting room floor.
“Did we really…”
“Yup,” Vesryn said, eyes now bright and alert. He plucked a tattered
tome from the top of a pile on the floor. “We raided the Vallende estate.”
Jassyn snatched the volume, swatting away his cousin’s wandering
fingers. The prince grinned, reaching over to ruffle his curls. When Vesryn
leaned down to rifle through a stack of family trees, Jassyn gave up on
trying to defend the fragile research.
“What can we do for those with shaman blood?” Jassyn asked, leafing
through a text so ancient that he feared the pages would disintegrate.
Vesryn gnawed on a thumbnail, frowning as he studied the parchment in
his hands. “It’s likely the king has plans to compel those like you.”
Jassyn’s thoughts darkened, twisting like the clouds outside. “To what
end?” He scowled when the prince flicked his severed nail to the floor. “To
somehow use us as a conduit to control the elements?”
Vesryn shrugged. “It’s obvious now that coercion does more than
restrict speech. If that compelled guard we ambushed at the Vallende estate
was any sign, that magic can dictate someone’s actions.”
Jassyn blinked. “What guar—” His eyes widened as the isolated
memory rematerialized. Stomach rolling over, bile crept back up his throat.
“You had me untangle coercion. While drunk.”
Jassyn tugged at the surrounding air, corralling the smallest breeze.
Directing the delicate zephyr, he gathered the disgusting growing pile of
Vesryn’s shed nails and hurtled them into a wastebasket. “Stars, that was a
senseless thing to do. I could have destroyed his mind!”
“But you didn’t,” Vesryn argued. “I knew you were capable if you had a
little encouragement.” The prince jabbed him in the arm. “And thanks to the
information from our new friend, we now know that Elashor has the skill to
compel—at least to some degree. So it’s not just my sire like we previously
thought.”
“Which is alarming.” Jassyn set the tome aside. “That coercion wasn’t
as extensive as the magic on Thalaesyn or the wraith we’ve worked on.” Or
that mysterious elven wraith I saved. “But it’s an understatement to say it’s
disturbing that we’re seeing magic govern actions now.” After Jassyn had
restored that guard’s faculties, the prince had portaled the warrior to the
safety of the Ranger Station.
Ignoring his apprehension, Vesryn traced the names on the family tree.
His mouth worked silently before he glanced at Jassyn and then back to the
parchment. And then back at Jassyn.
“What?” Jassyn finally asked.
“Are these…” Vesryn trailed off, rapidly blinking before scrutinizing
the paper again. “All of these are your offspring?”
If he was still drunk, Jassyn immediately sobered up from the verbal
punch. He began tumbling. Falling. No, drowning. Suddenly there wasn’t
any air. He couldn’t think, couldn’t remember how to breathe as a weight
like an anvil settled on his chest.
Sound swam away while memories came flooding in, throwing Jassyn
back in time. The sleepless nights. The way his skin had crawled, feeling
the weight of someone else’s body on his. Head spinning, spots flecked
across his vision. Everything was going dark. No, it was too bright. The
only thing he saw was the parchment in Vesryn’s hand.
Jassyn lunged for it, tearing it into pieces. If he could destroy it, erase
the evidence, he could—
He couldn’t move. Panting, Jassyn struggled against the shadows that
had shackled him. Vesryn was in his face, gripping his shoulders, wrestling
him back into the couch. The prince’s mouth was moving, but Jassyn heard
nothing beyond the ringing in his ears.
Breathe. Vesryn shoved the command into his mind. Breathe. You’re
safe. Just. Breathe.
Jassyn latched onto the phrase as an anchor, using it as a mantra as he
hauled in gasping breaths. Breathing in through his nose and releasing the
air out of his mouth.
Breathe.
Minutes slipped by, the splashing of rain against the windows filling the
silence between Jassyn’s struggle for air. Another ragged inhale. Another
unsteady exhale.
Assembling the remnants of his broken composure, Jassyn began
reconstructing himself. It felt more like he was fumbling, scraping, shoving
the shattered fragments back at all the wrong angles, lacking enough pieces
to make himself whole. I’ll never get over this.
Vesryn stood at his side, keeping a silent vigil. Fingers twitching, he
reached out more than once only to retreat before finally touching Jassyn’s
shoulder.
“What can I do?” the prince asked, voice soft with concern. He released
his hold on Jassyn, letting the shadows dissipate.
Jassyn’s focus slid to his family tree, torn on the floor. “Get rid of it. I
don’t want to know.”
Vesryn gathered the shredded paper. He folded the scraps, tucking them
into his leathers before hesitantly meeting Jassyn’s eyes with something that
looked like pity.
“We need to know who they are,” the prince said quietly. He glanced at
the other scattered parchments detailing the lines with shaman ancestry
before touching his tunic. “I’ll keep this one safe. They’re my kin too.”
Jassyn buried his face in his hands, craving Stardust. He longed to take
enough to forget everything—to forget how he’d been forced to play his
part like a puppet on a string.
“The capital likely has copies of these lists,” Vesryn said. The section of
couch next to Jassyn dipped and he felt the prince scoot closer. “We’ll start
keeping track of those identified on these trees. That’s all we can do for
now. They’ll need our help someday.”
Mustering the strength to pull himself out of his misery, Jassyn studied
the rain outside the windows and the wind chasing the clouds across the
sky. How am I supposed to help anyone else when I can’t even help myself?
Vesryn drained a glass of water. “We’ll begin moving our wraith to the
jungle for their safety. And Thalaesyn. Elashor’s soldiers have already
noticed his absence.” The prince crossed his arms, drumming his fingers.
“I’ll assign a few rangers to keep the group protected and provisioned.
We’ll need to keep a close eye on the recruits here to make sure no one goes
missing. We simply don’t have the resources yet to relocate everyone.”
Thankful for the distraction of Vesryn developing a course of action,
Jassyn clung to the conversation. “I imagine it’ll only be a matter of time
before the elemental powers begin manifesting in others. We don’t know—”
Jassyn’s spine stiffened. Too scattered to have his mental barricades in
place, a telepathic link coiled around his mind. Upon registering it was
Nelya’s presence, he relaxed. She’d been directing their ring of trusted
magus, managing the network of watchers and relaying anything peculiar
back to him.
Jassyn, the portal attendants sent a missive that General Elashor is
bringing additional soldiers to campus—more than the prince permits.
Alarmed, Jassyn tensed at her words. This was more than a routine
report. How many?
I’m not sure, but a hundred have already come through the gateways.
The general is ordering the entire island to gather at the Spire.
Towed into a riptide of dread, Jassyn’s eyes darted to his cousin.
Vesryn’s brows rose, reading his anxiety.
Do you know why? Jassyn asked.
They’re looking for the prince.
Jassyn swore in the solitude of own mind, wondering if the Vallendes
knew he and Vesryn were the ones who’d plundered their estate.
“What’s going on?” Vesryn asked.
Jassyn flapped a hand, gesturing for his cousin’s silence. Make sure the
magus in our circle join those gathering so their presence isn’t missed.
I’ll…inform the prince.
Swallowing back a tide of uncertainty, Jassyn ran his fingers through his
curls, delivering the message.
Vesryn scoffed, gaze roving around the room, landing on his boots.
With a pull of force, he ripped them toward himself. “Elashor goes too far if
he thinks he has any say over me or our operations at Centarya.” Stomping
into his shoes, the prince aggressively tied the laces.
“What do you want the magus to do?” Jassyn asked, rising to retrieve
his own footwear. His mind immediately began inventing increasingly
alarming scenarios of what would unfold.
“Nothing.” Vesryn pushed off from the couch, yanking his wrinkled
leathers straight. “I don’t want this secret coalition you’ve cultivated to
commit a blatant act of treason. Not yet.” He grunted. “I have a better idea.”
He patted Jassyn’s cheek, but his grin looked forced. “I’ll simply to tell
Elashor to fuck off.” And with that, the prince pivoted on a heel and
prowled out of Jassyn’s apartment.
“Wait!” Charging out of his quarters, Jassyn hurried to catch up to
Vesryn in the hallway. “If the capital is here in force, I don’t think it’ll be
that easy. I have a bad feeling about this.”
“I won’t be returning to Kyansari if that’s what they’re here for,” Vesryn
growled, tying his hair back.
“Then shouldn’t we portal away now?” Jassyn’s pulse began to race as
he kept pace with the prince, descending the stairs two at a time.
“I need to make an appearance so Elashor doesn’t interrogate the magus
about my location.” Vesryn flared a ward, shielding both of them from the
shower of rain as they left the residence hall.
That’s oddly logical of him. Gusts tore at the manicured trees edging the
cobblestone pathway, whipping leaves into the air.
Vesryn scanned the courtyard, taking in every magus and recruit on
their way to assemble at the Spire. “I’ll need you here on the inside. As my
silent watcher, working from the shadows.”
Feeling backed into a corner, Jassyn didn’t know which direction to
dart. Campus certainly didn’t feel like the safe option if Vesryn wasn’t
going to be around. I can do more good helping Thalaesyn and freeing
those already coerced.
Jassyn’s words broke past the clump of worry beginning to clog his
throat. “I’m coming with you.”
Vesryn glanced at him as they hastened down the stone pathway, the
island hazy with rain. “Are you sure? We won’t be able to return to
Centarya after this. Or maybe anywhere civilized.”
Fear began to tangle in Jassyn’s chest, but he nodded. A crack of
lightning in the distance lifted the hairs on his arms. He swallowed,
knowing the choice would be irreversible, a blind step off a cliff. “We’re in
this together.”
The prince gave him a conspiratorial grin. “I was hoping you’d say
that.”
The watery assault from the sky had Jassyn’s awareness of the earth
sharpening. The last thing he needed was for sparks to jump into his hands
again and reveal that his powers had manifested. I have to stay in control.
“What if we make our stand now?” Jassyn’s heart quickened even
further when Centarya’s population came into view, organized into lines
across the Spire’s lawn.
Vesryn shook his head, the breeze lashing the fringes of his hair. “This
is between me and the general. If Elashor’s soldiers are compelled, then
they’re innocent.”
“There’s more of us,” Jassyn said, unsure why he was insisting beyond
knowing that the king would transform more elven-blooded into wraith if
no one put an end to it. He studied Kyansari’s white-armored force as they
surrounded the initiates, stationing themselves like bars on a cage. “We’re
supposed to be the capital’s army. What if we turn against them?”
Vesryn kept his attention pinned on Elashor, positioned at the base of
the Spire. “I’m not putting our half-trained recruits at risk by initiating a
bloodbath.” He switched to sending a telepathic thought once they
approached the edge of the gathering. Relay to your peers to keep silent and
let me handle this.
Breaking away from the prince, Jassyn encompassed himself in his own
shield, warding off the rain. He reached out to Nelya’s mind,
communicating Vesryn’s orders. His boots sloshed through the sodden grass
as he found a place to stand among the magus assembled twenty paces
away from Elashor—much closer than he wanted to be if a confrontation
was about to unfold. He nearly reached out to Vesryn, realizing that they
hadn’t discussed exactly how they were going to stage their departure.
Rain bounced off of the prince’s shield as he sauntered through the
ranks, proceeding like everyone standing at attention was gathered in his
honor. Lightning sheared across the sky and an accompanying clap of
thunder rumbled through the air. Vesryn stalked across the courtyard to face
Elashor, a panther ready to taunt a bear.
Elashor’s hand rested on the hilt of the longsword at his waist, barring
entry to the Spire. “The king requires your presence at the capital.”
Roving his gaze over Kyansari’s small army, the prince ignored the
general. He addressed the assembled magus and recruits. “Return to your
classes and duties. This doesn’t concern you.”
The slant of Elashor’s jaw tightened as his surrounding shield flared. He
opened his mouth, but Vesryn cut him off. “Unless my sire demands the
entire population of Centarya to accompany me to Kyansari, they have
other responsibilities.”
Elashor clicked his tongue in annoyance, but made no further objection
as everyone dispersed.
Unsure where to position himself as his peers departed, Jassyn’s chest
constricted before he decided to join Vesryn in his solitary stand. He tried to
ignore the way Elashor’s eyes slid to him. Always calculating.
Vesryn snarled, dropping all semblance of civility. “My sire sends his
favorite hound to retrieve me?”
The general pulled his shoulders back. “The king found your absence at
the Lunar Solstice to be unacceptable. You’ve left him no choice but to strip
Centarya from your command.” Elashor crossed his arms, a humorless
chuckle shaking his chest. “Perhaps once you return to the capital, you’ll be
reminded of your duties to the realm.”
Jassyn tensed, gauging that the unstated threat was that the king would
compel Vesryn into compliance.
The prince’s fingers twitched at his sides. “If my sire desires a
succession beyond me, then he can be the one who ensures it.” His lip
curled. “But let’s do ourselves a favor and stop pretending like he’ll ever
relinquish power.”
Elashor smirked, smiling cooly. “The king has taken matters into his
own hands, but I assure you, your insolence will not go unpunished. Too
long have you openly defied him.” The general lazily stroked the hilt of his
sword. “His orders are to retrieve you. You can come willingly or as a
prisoner.” With a sneer, he jabbed, “So what will it be, Prince?”
Vesryn’s jade eyes glittered in a flash of lightning, his ire appearing to
gather like the storm. His attention roamed over the surrounding soldiers,
edging closer. They didn’t seem to breathe as they waited for Elashor’s
command.
“What I want,” the prince said, his focus pinning on the general, a
hunting falcon honing in on its prey, “is to know what magic you two are
fucking with. Care to explain how my sire’s power has increased or how the
years have slipped from his bones? I have a feeling it has something to do
with our ‘reassigned’ recruits.” Silence loomed like the clouds, the rain
continuing its steady drumming. “This campus is under my protection.
You’ve overstayed your welcome.”
Face devoid of expression, Elashor unsheathed his sword. In unison,
Essence pulsed, shimmering around the capital’s warriors as they readied
their weapons.
Fists clenching at his sides, Vesryn scoffed dismissively. “I have no
interest in killing your thralls.”
Elashor shrugged, unbothered. “There’s more where they came from.”
A muscle rippled in the prince’s cheek as he went still. Jassyn swore
even the wind held its breath.
His eyes flicked toward his cousin. Vesryn’s ticked toward him. As
something unspoken passed between them, the prince formed a telepathic
link, wrapping around Jassyn’s mind. They rapidly fabricated a plan while
Elashor undoubtedly waited for them to submit.
Vesryn spoke first. Elashor will be an issue. I haven’t gone toe-to-toe
against him, but even I’m not stupid enough to underestimate him. I’d
prefer not to kill any of the soldiers if we can avoid it.
Stomach roiling, Jassyn’s knees locked. If we’re taken to Kyansari, you
know they’ll compel us—or worse.
That won’t happen. I don’t think these mind-controlled warriors will be
any match if Elashor has to direct them.
The general took a step forward. Magic flared from every direction—
shields flexing, shadows rising, force strengthening. The air warped with a
hum of energy.
Hold the soldiers back with your shields, Vesryn ordered. I’ll subdue
Elashor and assist you after. Then we’ll—
One amendment, Jassyn interjected before the prince became too carried
away with a complicated plan that would fall apart as soon as anyone
blinked.
Vesryn arched a questioning brow at him. Before Jassyn even realized
he’d made the decision, something inside of him snapped.
Elashor is mine.
CHAPTER 43
JASSYN
SERENNA
SERENNA
A t the base of the fortress, not too far from the residential district,
Fenn’s sisters shuffled Serenna into a tunnel. Swaying like curtains in
a breeze, glowing vines dangled from the cave’s yawning mouth.
Serenna ducked under a pair of low-hanging stalactites looming like fangs
—fitting for the wraith. Dim teal light emanated from shimmering lichens
anchored to the walls, illuminating the way.
Steady drumbeats pulsed through the rocks, nearly pounding in time
with Serenna’s thudding heart. This absurd idea of Lykor’s could’ve waited
until the morning. She hadn’t intended to ever visit the Lagoon. And that
wasn’t curiosity creeping into her thoughts about what occurred here—
she’d already gleaned enough from Fenn to know.
Wading through steam, wispy tendrils coiled up to Serenna’s waist.
Fenn’s sisters herded her into a cavern, opening up like a gaping maw.
Assaulted by activity, Serenna’s eyes couldn’t go any wider. Dragging her
feet in protest was pointless—one of her guards hauled her steadily along
by the arm.
Serenna began sweating, smothered by the trapped humidity. Brighter
than Vaelyn’s turquoise beaches, chalky hot springs twisted around
stalagmites, flowing as streams.
Nerves firing, Serenna’s attention ricocheted across the gathered wraith.
Heat scorched her cheeks, and it had nothing to do with the stifling
temperature.
She didn’t know where to look. No location was safe. Everywhere her
eyes skipped, her gaze bounced off scantily clad or completely naked
bodies, barely obscured by the cyan waters.
Some of the pools contained groups of raucous wraith, puffing and
passing thin, smoking sticks. The sweet floral aromas twined with the
cavern’s earthy moisture. Wobbling, Serenna’s pulse quickened as her
breaths became erratic. She suddenly felt weightless—obviously addled by
the fumes.
Most of the couples and clusters of wraith were engaged in mingling.
The writhing bodies and animated moans of pleasure only burgeoned
Serenna’s embarrassment into a flustered tangle.
Ripping her astonished stare away from a position that she didn’t even
know was possible, Serenna felt the heat of Fenn’s gaze burning into her
before her eyes landed on him in an adjacent pool. He had an arm thrown
around a male wearing an eye patch, who could only be his partner Koln.
Serenna spun to her escorts before she witnessed anything else.
“Can’t you bring Fenn to the entrance?” she squeaked. A pathetic plea.
“I—I doubt I’m welcome here.” While no face-painted reavers were in
sight, her presence would surely be unwanted—regardless of what Fenn had
claimed.
Fenn’s elder sister tightened her claw on Serenna’s arm, denying her
retreat. Her eyes glittered, reflecting light from the luminous plants dotted
on the ceiling. “Lykor was very explicit about bringing you to our brother.”
Neither of her guards had the right to look so pleased by following the
order.
Serenna pulled against Fenn’s sister and said, “Well I’m here, so
retrieve the lieutenant.” She staggered, not expecting to actually be
released. “I’ll be in the tunnel.” Recovering herself, Serenna fled from the
erotic chambers before they forced her to go any further.
Or rather, she tried.
Serenna slammed into a solid and wet shadow materializing in front of
her. Stumbling back a step, she registered Fenn. Shock nearly punched all
the air from Serenna’s lungs. He scarcely wore anything beyond her tether’s
key, dangling between the gleaming rings pierced in his chest.
A pillar of carved muscle that could’ve been chiseled from midnight
granite, Fenn’s sinewy form would’ve put a sculpted statue to shame.
Serenna’s heart thrashed against her ribs like it was the first time she saw
him without a shirt. Sharp muscles cut with an excessive number of dips
and curves drew her traitorous eyes over the length of his stomach,
sweeping over the proudly displayed network of scars.
Mind jumbling into a chaotic knot, Serenna inhaled sharply as the
angles of his body yanked her awareness further down. His soaked
undergarments were useless at concealing—
Ears on fire, Serenna whirled away before she even braved meeting
Fenn’s gaze. She couldn’t decide if it was more distressing to witness the
wraith in various stages of passion or to know that Fenn was essentially
naked and aroused behind her. Well, what did I expect to see in an obscene
environment like this?
She’d beg Fenn’s sisters to return her to the Aerie. That’s what she’d do.
Serenna didn’t spare any worry if that made her seem frantic. Looking up at
the females, she winced, a petition of desperation. Caging her discomfort
between them, Serenna’s unhelpful escorts provided her with wicked grins.
The older sister rolled a braid in between her talons. “You’re back on
duty, Fenny.” She shot her brother a smirk over Serenna’s head. “Lykor’s
orders are no rest until you find the Heart.”
“Wait!” Serenna pleaded, but her guards vanished, warping away. Eyes
wildly searching, running around the steamy chamber like a mouse trapped
in a grain bin, she found them shedding their armor, apparently intending to
take Fenn’s place in the pools.
Serenna crunched her hands into fists, deciding she’d draw on the entire
Lagoon and spout all the water into the air to stage her escape. She jerkily
revolved in a turn, a marionette on a frayed string. Keep your eyes on his
face, you stargazer. The exit was behind Fenn. She simply had to dodge
around him. And past—
Fenn’s scarlet eyes shimmered in a firestorm of roguish delight. “This is
an unexpected but welcome surprise.” His carnal stare extended through the
space between them, clutching Serenna like a vice.
Her stomach swooped from that predatory look. Clever plans
dissolving, Serenna battled the urge to run, shamefully wondering what
would happen if she were caught.
Excruciatingly confused by what she wanted, Serenna’s voice cracked
over a hoarse protest. “Lykor made me come.”
Grin spreading wider, Fenn tilted his head. His loose hair dripped at the
ends, leaving droplets of water sparkling on his waist. He stepped closer,
the smolder in his eyes pinning her in place. The room started to spin as he
pulled Serenna into his gravity.
“And since you’re here…” Fenn grazed her wrist, skating his talons up
her arm. “Perhaps you have an interest in coming again?”
Serenna sucked in a broken breath, her heart pounding significantly
faster than the beating drums. She shuddered when Fenn’s claw curled
around her shoulder, encompassing her with his unnatural warmth.
The flush from Serenna’s cheeks raced down her spine, kindling coals
far too low in her belly to be unease. Her wandering eyes drank in the beads
of water glistening on the rippled planes of Fenn’s abdomen like they were
parched. And then lower.
Serenna gouged her nails into her palms, anchoring her stupid fingers to
her hands so that she wouldn’t reach out. She swallowed, focus riveted on
the scraps of clothing plastered to Fenn’s hardened body. The temptation to
touch him had her clenching her thighs, a futile attempt to smother the heat
stoking in her core. The outline of his arousal twitched, as if preening under
her attention.
Head emptying faster than water discharging from an open dam,
Serenna’s eyes flew back to Fenn’s face. “What?” she breathlessly asked,
thinking he must’ve said something.
Fenn gave an amused chuckle, jutting his chin toward the cavern’s
depths. “Do you want to take a dip in the pools?” He slid a claw across her
shoulder, fingers wrapping around the base of her neck. “If you’d prefer
privacy,” he said, his deep cadence strumming a wild chord in her chest, “I
know a place.”
Serenna was nodding before even processing his words. Her heart
nearly burst through her ribs when Fenn extended his fangs. She blinked.
“No! I mean…” Serenna cleared her throat, the pause not providing enough
time to recover her wits. “Lykor wants us to go to the Slag.”
“So…not a no.” Fenn’s palm swept down her back, a distracting
pressure guiding her closer to him, a gentle ebb tugged by the sea. “I don’t
think the lake of fire will be as pleasurable as the location I have in mind.”
Ignited by his blazing fingers, Serenna felt primed to combust. She
forced herself to stare straight into the flames dancing in his eyes. “We’re
supposed to search for the Heart,” she whispered, trembling under his
touch.
They were having a perfectly normal conversation. That’s all they were
doing. Her skin was so hot because of the proximity to the thermal pools.
Not because Fenn had circled his claws around her waist. They were
discussing their orders. Though Lykor could choke on his commands for all
she cared.
For whatever reason, Serenna’s hand developed a mind of its own,
planting against Fenn’s chest. Obviously, she couldn’t think clearly—the
fumes from those smoking sticks were muddling her thoughts.
As his heart beat against her fingertips, Serenna’s attention tumbled
down the length of Fenn’s body again, determined to catalog every inch. He
was concerned about our height difference? I’d be more worried that he
wouldn’t fit— Serenna ruthlessly sundered those dangerous thoughts.
Something primal—something she refused to consider—sent the blood
roaring in her veins.
It was just the atmosphere with everyone engaged in this lascivious
activity. She interrupted Fenn and that’s why he was so worked up. And
now she was too, but that wasn’t her fault.
It took more strength than she cared to admit, but Serenna forced herself
to peel her hand away. Fenn’s fingers cinched tighter around her hips,
drawing her gaze back to his. Her insufferable guard smirked, like he knew
his exposed body was making her brainless.
Fenn leaned in, skimming his fangs along the shell of her ear. Serenna
quivered, warring with every urge to grab him again. His voice rumbled
through her, his breath fanning against her neck. “So, you want to go to the
volcano’s core instead of…” he trailed off, allowing her to choose.
Lykor wouldn’t know if we didn’t hunt for the Heart tonight. Serenna’s
inhalations came fast and shallow as reckless desire clouded her thoughts.
Some part of her scattered mind broke through the circulating haze of lust.
“I—I didn’t mean to interfere with your evening,” Serenna whispered,
feeling like she was tumbling through open air. “We can start our search in
the morning.”
Releasing her, Fenn cleared his throat and straightened. “Well, since we
have orders, let me retrieve my clothes.”
Essence shimmered and pulsed around him. Stretching out a claw, a
blue tendril exploded from his palm, streaking behind her. Fenn’s clothing
flew into his fingers, hauled by force.
Holding Serenna’s gaze in that wraith way of his, he didn’t blink as he
dressed. She lost their silent standoff, her traitorous eyes diving to his
middle as soon as he slipped a leg into his trousers. Fenn gave her a fanged
grin before retracting his teeth, crouching to tie his boots.
“Come on she-elf, we’d better leave if you’re going to insist on looking
at me like that.” Rising, he bound his hair into a tail at the base of his skull.
“Otherwise, I might be tempted to defy that order of Lykor’s and discover
just how loudly I can get you to scream.”
CHAPTER 46
SERENNA
S erenna screamed.
At her expense, Fenn had warped them with more jumps than she
assumed were necessary to avoid the reavers’ presence—just to hear
her squeal. From the Lagoon, they teleported through twists and turns of
various tunnels and caverns, traveling deeper into the heart of the fortress.
In the pauses between sending Serenna’s stomach catapulting up her
throat with his warps, Fenn rattled off the names of the different locations.
From the weapons ranges, to the smithies, past furnaces collecting heat and
distributing the warmth, he followed one current of magma like a fish
swimming upstream.
Fenn finally placed Serenna back on her feet. Bright light exploded
around her when she opened her eyes. Teetering on the edge of a craggy
precipice, she locked her knees with a gasp.
Serenna looked out over a vast lake of fire at least the size of one of
Centarya’s training rings. Magma churned below in bubbles of blacks,
yellows, and oranges, popping like tar. Channels of sluggish, molten rock
webbed out like veins, feeding various rivulets before disappearing through
underground tunnels.
A wave of heat rose over the surface, shimmering like liquid metal
poured from a forge. Fed from a source somewhere deeper in the volcano’s
dying heart, the Slag slowly cooled as the centuries wore on, solidifying
into stone.
Scaling a path along the cavern walls like one of those pocket goats,
Fenn wound up a carved trail hugging the rocky ledge. He angled toward a
slender natural bridge, stretched across the length of the chamber.
Serenna balked, placing her hand against the stony wall. “That can’t
hold us,” she protested, wiping her back as a trickle of sweat snaked down
her spine.
Completely showing off, Fenn warped to the middle of the suspended
rock. Sitting on the edge, he swung his legs over the simmering flames a
hundred feet below.
To delay joining Fenn in his precarious position over the magma,
Serenna surveyed the domed cavern reaching hundreds of feet above. Pitted
cavities reminding her of dips in coral sporadically dotted the rocky walls.
Whips of snowy air danced through the chamber like streamers in the wind,
ushering in minimal relief through holes honeycombed into the rock.
Serenna reached her perception up to snatch at a coil of air, drawing on
a whirlwind of snow. The flakes briefly danced around her before melting,
the frosty breeze a fleeting reprieve.
When Fenn beckoned to her from his perch, Serenna tentatively
followed his route—minus the warp. She paused, placing a foot on the
archway. Narrow, and no more than eight feet across, she was skeptical of
the bridge’s ability to support their weight.
I’m sure the druids have magic in place holding it up. Fenn had
mentioned that something they couldn’t perceive preserved the entire
fortress. We’d be boiling alive in this cavern if that wasn’t the case. Serenna
almost had herself convinced as she scurried forward to reach him.
Head swimming, she settled next to Fenn. Serenna tucked her legs up to
her chest, reluctant to dangle her feet over the ledge like him. “What now?”
she asked, surrounding them in a steady swirling of icy wind.
Fenn shrugged. “You moved water in that lake with your magics.” He
shot her a scowl, evidently still touchy about that shared experience. “Why
not shove this magma around in the same way?”
“And the Heart will conveniently be sitting underneath the fire?”
Serenna raised her brows. “I doubt it’s that simple.”
“Well that’s not the right attitude to have.” Fenn reached out, catching a
drifting snowflake. “Lykor wanted us to search here.”
“Lykor is also the one who didn’t want me practicing with fire.”
Serenna scoffed at her captor’s absurd expectations, binding her hair away
from her neck with a leather tie. “All I’ve ever managed was pulling flames
from magma—and that was under stress.”
“I think you can do anything she-elf,” Fenn said, his certainty making
something in Serenna’s chest catch. “You’re twice as fierce as any warrior,
even though you’re practically half our size. I don’t know anyone more
terrifying than you.” Spinning his lip ring, Fenn backtracked with a
considering frown. “Well, aside from Lykor. But you always grumble about
how I—”
“Always state the obvious,” she finished for him.
The heat broiling upward had Serenna wiping beads of perspiration
away from her face. She abandoned her efforts of hauling in the outside air
—it was a losing battle anyway. Wobbling to her feet, Fenn rose to join her.
Teetering on their rocky perch, Serenna suppressed a shudder—open air
was the only thing separating them from plunging to a flaming death. She
glanced at Fenn. He can warp us to safety if this bridge collapses. Probably.
Turning back to study the expanse of roiling molten rock, Serenna drew
in a deep breath, sending her focus below. This shouldn’t be any different
than pushing with force or manipulating water. She simply had to move the
burning sludge instead.
Scattering her perception like pollen on the wind, Serenna dissolved
into the heartbeat of the earth. Enveloped by her surroundings, the elements
thrashed in time with her pulse.
Serenna snatched at the fire, bending the flames to her will. Using her
hands to direct the pressure building in her chest, she parted the magma
clear across to the edge of the lake. A hissing blaze fountained like a
miniature geyser, bubbling faster. Small, disturbed swells rolled, slapping
against the rocky wall.
Gritting her teeth, Serenna wrestled with the inferno to keep the
laughably narrow channel clear. She and Fenn both scanned the now-
exposed steaming floor, observing nothing but bare black rock, solidified
into wavy ridges.
Serenna released her grip on the earth. The sluggish flames retraced
their disrupted path, crawling back to consume the empty space.
“This seems ridiculous,” she protested, wiping a fresh sheen of
perspiration from her brow. “What if the Heart is buried beneath that layer
of rock? I don’t think I can move stone.”
“You would surrender so easily? I know you possess more
determination than that.” Fenn waved a claw, as if trying to cut through her
doubt. “Lykor won’t permit us to rest until we find the Starry Heart.” Like
that was supposed to be motivation for her.
“I doubt that,” Serenna insisted. “Lykor isn’t painfully literal like you.”
She scowled up at Fenn. “You could help, you know.”
“I fear I need to regenerate first.” He tugged at his lip ring, shifting his
weight. “My magics are running low.”
Serenna rolled her eyes. “You found enough time to go to the Lagoon.”
To speed up this mission of theirs, she nearly offered to replenish his
Well with her reserves. But persuading him to unlock her tether felt like a
battle she didn’t have the energy for.
Serenna decided to appeal to his vices instead. “Lykor said we have to
start searching tonight—and we did. He didn’t say we have to finish. We
can continue tomorrow. If we leave now, you can return to your…activities
before the night is over.”
“Maybe I’m right where I want to be,” Fenn all but growled at her,
snagging her hand, fingers tightening over hers. “I find it difficult to believe
that the druids would bury the relics in unreachable locations.”
“But they also wouldn’t make it easy for the Aelfyn to reclaim them.”
Serenna pursed her lips. “And we’re only chasing Lykor’s interpretation of
possible locations.” Out of principle, she wouldn’t allow herself to be
swayed by Fenn’s logic.
Rings swinging in his ears, Fenn jerked his head toward the lake of fire,
ordering her like he would his subordinates. “Keep trying, she-elf. If you
need an incentive, I promise to take you back to the Lagoon once we find
the Starry Heart.”
Serenna huffed but swallowed her protest, letting the retort die in her
throat. When Fenn stubbornly shoved his talons into a pocket, she knew
there’d be no swaying him.
With a defeated sigh, Serenna extended her hands again, shifting the
bubbling magma one sliver at a time. Working around the chamber, rotating
like the stars wheeling across the sky, she drove away the flames in
sections, revealing the rock underneath.
While Serenna funneled all of her focus on manipulating the fire, Fenn
searched the exposed slabs. When he found nothing of note, he’d give her
arm a squeeze, signaling for her to move on to the next segment.
Exhaustion began to tug on Serenna’s limbs as she maintained a steady
connection with the earth. Sweat poured down her face from the exertion
while the chamber’s heat threatened to singe every pore. Never having
tested the limits of her endurance, she was uncertain how long she could
channel her shaman power.
“Wait,” Fenn finally said nearly a half hour later, fingers tensing against
her. “Right there.” He pointed with a talon almost directly below, frowning
as he peered over the edge of the bridge. “Is that a hatch?”
Fighting against a weary haze, Serenna blinked the chamber back into
focus. Gulping in breaths, she swayed, a flickering flame on the cusp of
being snuffed out.
Steam coiled above the exposed rocky surface. Smooth, flat metal as
large as a door gleamed like a silver mirror in the sun, somehow unharmed
from the magma.
“How am I supposed to move that?” Serenna asked, arms shaking as she
held the flaming tide away from the revealed strip of earth.
In answer, a burst of Essence whirled around Fenn—a sight Serenna
still wasn’t accustomed to seeing from a wraith. He punched out a claw,
casting down a blue stream of force. Forehead furrowing in concentration,
the pressure of his magic hummed in the air. On silent hinges, the metal
trapdoor swung open, revealing a darkened cavity burrowing further into
the ground.
Fenn’s eyes widened, glancing between her and the pit of darkness
disappearing below. He asked, “If I warp down there, can you keep the
magma back?”
A strike of unease flashed in Serenna’s chest. “Take me with you. What
if there’s more fire down there?”
She bit her cheek, restraining her worry that he’d be charging into the
unknown alone—that line of thinking would only encourage him to prove
that he could.
Fenn chewed his lip ring, studying her and then the open hatch—
weighing the risks to her safety, she had no doubt.
“I might lose my control for a moment after we jump,” she admitted,
trembling from the strain of holding the magma back. “But I should be able
to keep the flames away from us if we go down that entrance.”
Taking matters into her own hands when Fenn continued to hesitate,
Serenna clasped his claw. Pulse thrashing in anticipation, she met his
apprehensive gaze with an encouraging nod.
His fingers curled around hers, the pressure providing a familiar
warning. Bracing herself, Serenna sucked in a breath as he hauled her into
shadows.
The world tilted on its axis before her feet hit the ground next to the
open hatch. Vision swimming, Serenna reoriented herself, throwing her
palms forward. A burst of energy streamed from her fingertips as she drove
away the magma sloshing toward the tunnel’s mouth.
“Let’s hurry,” Serenna gritted through her teeth, preventing the fire’s
advance by flinging a steady pressure against it. Wrestling the heat of the
swell for much longer would surely stretch her to her limit.
Compulsively scraping his talons against the lip of the entryway, Fenn
stooped as they walked down a set of stairs into the tunnel’s darkened
depths. Guided by him as they disappeared below the lake, Serenna walked
backward down the steps to keep the fire at bay.
Focusing on the magma’s dim light when they reached the bottom,
Serenna talked over her shoulder. “Do you see anything?” She didn’t dare
break her wavering concentration by glancing around the dark cavern that
had opened up around them.
Fenn’s voice came from beside her. “There’s a pedestal at the center of
the chamber crowned with the Starry Heart.”
Serenna’s head whipped toward Fenn to gauge his sincerity. His eyes
flared, glowing as he peered into the darkness. Fires slipping out of her
control, Serenna riveted her attention back toward the entrance, redoubling
her efforts. She thrust back the creeping magma from the steps, expelling it
from the tunnel.
“Well, go get it,” she excitedly urged, waving him on. It was that
simple? Brimming with a swell of smug triumph, Serenna couldn’t wait to
rub in Lykor’s face that he’d been sitting on top of a relic this entire time.
Fenn’s grin matched her own before he melted into the shadows. A
breath later, he warped back to her side. Proudly holding the retrieved
Heart, blue light from his talent blazed from the crystal.
The ceiling groaned, the only warning before it caved in.
Dropping the relic, Essence exploded from Fenn. A fountain of force
erupted, aimed straight up at the falling stone. He collapsed to his knees,
punched down by the weight of the chamber.
Boulders crashed to the ground outside of his dome of power,
entombing everything but a small pocket of space around them and the
stairs leading out. Stony chips crumbled to the floor, streaming in a rush of
pebbles. The surrounding rocks quivered, held back by his magic.
Terror spiked through Serenna’s ribs when magma seeped in through the
shattered roof, dripping like flaming honey. Whirling her hands, she shoved
away the fire’s slithering advance.
“It must’ve been rigged with magics.” Fenn’s body shook as he waged a
war, wrestling his power against the disintegrating earth. “I didn’t know.”
An arc of blue light surrounded them, holding back the bottom of the fiery
lake. “She-elf, grab the Heart and travel up that staircase before more
collapses.”
“What are you talking about?” Serenna looked frantically at him, then
back toward the cavern’s exit.
“That’s an order,” Fenn barked, palms up, magic billowing out from
him in waves. “Return the Heart to Lykor.”
Serenna bristled at his sharpened tone. “I don’t take orders from you.
Get up before more fire comes in and the rest of these boulders fall on our
heads.”
Fenn’s voice was strained. “I can’t move. You have to go before my
magics deplete.”
The blood drained from Serenna’s face. Her eyes bounced around the
cavern, now lit by Essence and the fire oozing along the rocks.
“I won’t be able to return to that bridge without you,” she whispered,
silently meaning that she wouldn’t abandon him to a gruesome death.
Fenn growled matter-of-factly, “Move the flames, walk across the bared
stone, and scale the walls.” His chest heaved, muscles wracking in waves.
“There are enough ledges to climb out of the Slag.”
Serenna shook her head, unable to form any words, clenching her fists
to clamp down her fear.
More magma seeped in through the cracks in the ceiling as the weight
of the lake trickled through. Splitting her focus, Serenna rushed to block the
fresh wave of fire from raining down.
“This is not a debate,” Fenn snarled. “Lykor needs that Heart. Go.”
“Let me untether myself and call him through the bond.” Fear festering,
Serenna’s mind darted around a way out. “Lykor can come retrieve his
precious relic and portal us out.”
“Are you even capable of mind-speaking across such a distance?”
Fenn’s fangs extended from the strain, held immobile as if chains wrenched
him down. “My Well is draining while we’re arguing. Move those flames
from the entrance and leave.”
Serenna gasped as the roof caved in further, sending another cascade of
small rocks tumbling to the ground. Magma hissed, splashing onto stone.
Nearly on the verge of her own collapse, Serenna moved the lurking fiery
sludge away from the exit, clearing the path up to the lake.
Ensuring she had a grip on her power, Serenna crumpled next to Fenn
and grasped his arm. “Warp us out of here.”
“She-elf,” he said as an exhaled plea, an attempt to reason with her. “I
can’t hold the boulders back and shadow walk at the same time.”
“You haven’t even tried!”
“Some things aren’t possible for magics.”
“Says the person who’s had Essence for a week!”
The fear in Fenn’s eyes mirrored her own. “I won’t risk you being
crushed.”
“I’m not leaving you!” Serenna shrieked, her voice echoing against the
silent squeeze of stone. Horror twisted through her gut, breaths coming in
too fast as her panic spiraled out of control. “I’m not moving until you
make me.” She swallowed against the tightness in her throat, choked by
everything she’d left unsaid—the truth. “And you’re only going to do that if
you warp us away.”
Fenn released a dark chuckle through his clenched fangs, clearly at the
end of his battle. “Take the key around my neck and release yourself. Don’t
you have shield magics? Wrap one around yourself and get out of here.”
Serenna snatched the Heart from the ground, clutching it to her chest. “I
don’t know if I can tap into both powers at the same time—it’s something
I’ve never tried before.”
“And yet you’re asking the same of me,” Fenn growled, a rightful
accusation.
“I’ve seen Lykor warp and wield Essence.” Serenna chewed at her lip,
considering Fenn’s argument while his body strained under her fingertips.
“So you’re capable too.”
Fenn’s eyes dashed around the cavern, searching for another option.
“Warp us, Lieutenant,” Serenna hissed, on the verge of tears, her voice
clogged with emotion. “I’m going to lose my hold on the magma as soon as
you jump us, but you have time before the fire floods this chamber.” Her
fingers tightened against his arm. “Use it.”
The cavern shook. Fenn’s power faltered, rocks slipping past his
wavering control of force. “I’ve told you before to not ask of me—”
“I’m not asking. I’m telling,” Serenna snapped, struggling to see
through the burning in her eyes. “Two jumps,” she said, squeezing him
tight. “One to the top of the stairs. And one up to the bridge.” A tear fell
and she angrily wiped it away. “Fenn,” she whispered. “Please.”
Something broke in his gaze, and it shattered her heart. Serenna knew
she had him. This was her fault, manipulating him to the point where he’d
accepted her power. And now she was pressuring him beyond what his
capabilities might be.
Serenna moved her palm to cradle Fenn’s cheek. Her chest caved in as
his eyes searched hers, silently pleading. Unable to speak, too scared to put
her thoughts into words, she did the only thing that made any sense in the
chaos of her confusion. It could fracture his concentration. But if she was
going to die here, she wouldn’t do it without—
Serenna kissed him.
Fenn sharply inhaled sharply against her mouth. A part of her almost
wished that he’d push her away. Scorn her. She didn’t deserve his feelings
for her. Not after selfishly using him to twist together a plan that failed to
unfold.
But his lips pressed back into hers, stealing the air from her lungs. The
way their mouths met was soft. Sweet and tender, soothing like a spring
rain. It was easy. Carefree. Just like everything else about him.
Somehow, despite the peril, Serenna felt safe in a way that she never
had before. And those complicated thoughts she’d kept buried—denied all
these weeks—bubbled up in her chest like the magma threatening to
envelop them.
Serenna flinched as she heard the chamber crash in around them.
CHAPTER 47
SERENNA
LYKOR
W
ith a slash of rending, Lykor hacked through a vine in the
wretched jungle. The infernal heat in the humid forest only
intensified his deteriorating mood. Despite the overwhelming
desire to eradicate this unnatural pocket of life in the Hibernal
Wastes, he refrained—such destruction might endanger the Heart of Stars.
The clearing he sought was where the wraith had taken refuge after
fleeing from the prisons. His muscles spasmed in protest. Those whispering
grasses harbored too many torturous memories.
After Kal and Mara had excavated the golden spikes from his spine in
the squalor of the dungeons, an infection had ravaged and burned his body.
When the fire in his back had become unbearable, Lykor would collapse in
a stream near that fucking glade. His shoulders had never fully recovered—
the flesh around his bones a gnarled mess like the knobs on the surrounding
trees.
Hauling his mind away from the past, Lykor scowled at the darkening
night stretching through the endless forest. In hindsight, he should’ve
dumped the elf and Fenn off here and remained in the keep.
Water dripped from monstrous leaves, splashing into his face. Swiping
the obnoxious moisture away from his eyes, Lykor’s boot snagged on a
root. He cursed as he lost his balance, stumbling forward. Spinning around,
he blasted the offending plant into the next realm with a punch of force.
The spray of soil showered Lykor’s armor as he strode off through the
vile jungle, aiming for the clearing that he’d ironically avoided the entire
time. It was the only “shade of a glade” that he could think of—assuming
what the girl had heard through the Heart was correct. He and Aesar had
been scouring this forest for weeks without a clear sense of what they
should be looking for.
Lykor doubted his luck would have another relic gallivanting into his
lap like it had with that shaman spawn. He could only hope the elf and the
lieutenant’s fucking around would finally lead to something productive—
ideally locating the artifact that might be in the keep. Between the
encroaching humans, the elven patrols, and the restless reavers, the wraith
were overdue to abandon this side of the world.
A dim glow from the moons bled through the canopy of leaves,
scattering splotched pools of light across on the loamy forest floor. Flashing
glowbugs whirled around Lykor like overbearing chaperones. He slapped
the audacious insects away from his face, staining his gauntlet with streaks
of their luminous entrails.
An unexpected pulse of magic flared to his left. Alarmed, Lykor
pivoted, wrenching on his entire sea of Essence. Darkness exploded from
him, a veil of death, ready to defend.
Lykor’s heart impaled itself on a rib. Power slipping from the shock, he
ruthlessly refortified his control. Shadows churned like a raging whirlpool
while he gaped.
It was him.
The elf who’d saved him, the one haunting his dreams. The one he’d
recklessly been visiting the military island in search of during the dark
hours of the night when Aesar was deep in slumber. The elf that the girl had
insisted was called “Jassyn.” If the blade in Lykor’s possession had actually
belonged to her friend.
Exiting a colossal tree that was presumably an ancient dwelling, the elf
skidded to a halt. He dropped the tome that he was carrying before a violet
shield slammed around him.
Aesar had insisted that this location was secure—his twin being the only
other with knowledge of this place. Searching the jungle was a risk they’d
both agreed to take—surely Vesryn would have no reason to venture here.
But much could change in the century they’d been absent from the
realms. The king could very well be dispatching his soldiers to every corner
of the world to hunt for the Hearts—or the wraith.
Lykor stalked forward. “How did you get here?” he demanded. A
witless question wasting words. Of course the elf had portaled to this
miserable jungle. “Are there others with you?”
Surrounded by floating globes of illumination, the elf glanced around
and backed away. Raven curls skipped over his forehead as he silently
shook his head in response.
Lykor’s shadows thrashed, ready to flay the elf if he so much as moved
a hand too quickly. He didn’t temper the growl in his voice. “Did the king
send you?”
The elf’s eyes widened before hardening. “This is the only place I could
hide from those like him.”
He wasn’t here for the Heart then.
Still on his guard, Lykor’s shoulders marginally relaxed from the
reassurance. He retracted the threatening darkness along with his fangs.
There wasn’t any reason to act like a feral beast. Judging from the elf’s
shifting gaze, he was already nervous enough.
When Lykor stepped forward, the elf retreated another step. Something
Lykor didn’t have a name for twisted through his chest like one of those the
accursed vines strangling a tree. A strange uncertainty needled at him for
being the source of fear. He’d never thought twice about intimidating others
before—it was all he knew, birthed from the necessity to instill order when
the wraith had turned savage in the prisons.
Cautiously stepping forward to retrieve the dropped tome, Lykor
resisted the impulse to leaf through the pages to see what the elf was
reading. He extended the volume, offering it back. The elf hesitated, his
attention hooking on Lykor’s gauntlet clamped around the book.
Detesting the constant reminder of what he’d endured, Lykor was seized
with the temptation to hide the clawed monstrosity behind his back.
The elf’s gaze swept over him, appraising the rest of his armor, flicking
over the raw Essence blazing around him. Lykor felt systematically
deconstructed, analyzed, and then assembled again. His breath hitched as
those fascinating amber eyes lingered on his, the surrounding illumination
highlighting flecks of greens and golds. Ears burning with an unfamiliar
warmth, the unusual attention made Lykor feel seen for once instead of seen
through.
The elf dropped his shield to claim the presented tome. “What can I call
you?” he asked.
Lykor blinked, the question slashing through his guard. No one had ever
asked him that before. He couldn’t number the years he’d spent raging that
he wasn’t Aesar.
“Lykor,” he said, shifting his feet. His spiked boots suddenly felt
distractingly heavy.
Following the elf’s lead, Lykor reluctantly released his magic and
fumbled for something else to say, drawing on what guidance he assumed
Aesar would offer if he were awake. He doubted there were any normal
questions to ask a stranger in a forgotten jungle.
Lykor settled on stealing the elf’s words. That had to be an acceptable
response, but his pulse raced faster, fretting that it might not be. “And…
what can I call you?”
“Jassyn,” the elf said, his long fingers tightening around the book.
So the girl was right. Lykor unclenched his fists, not knowing when
they’d snapped shut.
“I’m going to the glade.” The statement sounded like a pathetic attempt
at engaging in a conversation—uncharted territory. “Were you…heading in
that direction?” A stupid query to fill the silence.
“Are you searching for something?” Jassyn asked, rather than
answering the question. A considering frown flashed over his face before he
set the volume near the entrance of the tree.
Despite his bewilderment at the elf’s presence, Lykor retained enough
sense to avoid prattling everything to this stranger. It was unknown where
his loyalties truly lay—or how he’d gained knowledge of this jungle.
Lykor cracked his neck and admitted, “Yes—something for the wraith.”
Twisting on his heel, Lykor picked his way along a stone path that
wound from the ancient dwellings to the clearing. The rocks encased
glimmering gems, carrying a luminescent glow of their own as they
shimmered against the forest floor like stars in the sky.
While feigning a scan of the jungle, Lykor stole a glance at Jassyn. He’d
followed, long strides keeping pace at his side. Height exceeding his own
by a hand, Jassyn was much taller than Lykor expected of an elf—let alone
one with mortal blood.
Feeling oddly aware of his body’s every unwieldy movement, Lykor
focused on the ground so he wouldn’t trip over his own fucking feet. The
moss-carpeted floor spread out like a blanket beyond the stones, glittering
with hues of lustrous cyans and verdant greens.
They silently snaked their way around an undergrowth of ferns and
various gargantuan leaves before the foliage opened up, spitting them out at
the edge of the glade. A gurgling stream carved a path through the clearing,
mirroring the cold radiance of the stars.
“I’ve been thinking about you—” Lykor drew to a halt, jaw screwing
tight as he severed those words. His statement sounded absolutely
ridiculous, that of a blathering simpleton like Kal.
Swallowing what he hoped were the last remnants of any further idiotic
remarks, Lykor corrected himself. “I’ve been thinking about what you said.
That you could…help me?” He searched Jassyn’s eyes for something. For
hope, even if it was foolish. “You could release me from the king’s power?”
Lykor’s pulse droned in his ears, louder than the collective chorus of the
jungle’s insects. He turned away sharply, his desperate words lingering
between them for far too long. A feeling that had to be mortification nearly
drove him to slash open a portal and flee—anything to avoid this
uncomfortable silence tightening the skin over his bones.
He must’ve misremembered what Jassyn had said that night, fabricating
this delusion in his head. After all, Lykor was the one who’d attacked his
home, the wraith most likely killing his comrades. Why would Jassyn want
to help him? A barricaded breath loosened from Lykor’s lungs when the elf
finally spoke.
“It’s a slow process,” Jassyn said. Lykor turned back hesitantly,
watching him drag a hand through his curls, twisting one that was
determined to land in front of his eyes. “It depends how extensive the web
of coercion is. I…” he trailed off, eyes ticking around the clearing before
orbiting back to Lykor. “I have reason to believe the king had a hand in
creating the wraith.”
Lykor flinched at the memory of Galaeryn mutilating his mind,
experimenting with the compulsive magic. His reaction must’ve been all the
confirmation Jassyn needed.
Jassyn folded his arms across his white leathers, shoulders slumping
like he was trying to occupy less space. He glanced away when he spoke.
“I’ll help you if you’re willing to tell me everything you know.”
Despite being the one who’d asked for aid, a wave of indecision rippled
through Lykor like water disturbed. If he permitted Jassyn to delve into his
awareness, he’d be defenseless—at Jassyn’s mercy.
The king had ensured Lykor would never be able to form mental
barriers again by utterly eviscerating his mind. Everything would be on
display, ripe for the taking—Aesar, the wraith’s location, and his future
plans.
An icy fear crawled out of Lykor’s chest at the potential exposure, the
armor around his ribcage constricting his air. Steadying himself with the
grating of steel, Lykor crushed his gauntlet into a fist at his side.
They both had their secrets, but the offer was one Lykor didn’t think he
could refuse. He wasn’t sure what business Jassyn truly had in the jungle,
but the elf hadn’t demanded an explanation for his presence either.
“If… If you can assure me that all you will do is unravel the coercion,”
Lykor finally said, his spine tensing from the risk, “I’ll tell you all I know of
how the wraith came to be.”
Jassyn’s eyes examined his with a clever intensity. “But you’re not
wholly wraith.” His arms abandoned their folded defensive position as he
hovered an orb of illumination over his fingertips.
Lykor decided to offer a fraction of his knowledge, to bridge some sort
of trust. “Galaeryn returned a handful of my talents.” Voice wavering, he
focused on digging the toe of his boot into the grass. “I was among the first
transformed into a wraith.” Not quite the truth since he’d emerged after the
king had tortured Aesar, but unpacking everything concerning his other half
was a tedious tale for a different day.
Another moment stretched too long. Lykor glanced up, the scars down
his back twinging from the motion. Those fascinating eyes trapped him like
a fly in honey, prolonging the awkward silence.
Breaking free and rolling the tension out of his cramped muscles, Lykor
said, “In the dungeons, I learned what Galaeryn intends to do with the
magic he’s plundering. He’ll redistribute Essence—if he hasn’t already. To
the pure-bloods, creating arch elves of those who aren’t, augmenting the
powers of those who are.”
Aesar’s residual anger roiled in his gut at what his people had endured.
Innocent citizens who’d been in the wrong place the night Galaeryn had
become drunk on power.
As Jassyn’s calculating eyes absorbed every word, Lykor nearly felt
compelled to mindlessly spew more. “I think the king encouraged the
breeding of half-elves to exploit as a source of magic.” Lykor gripped the
blade at his side—the one he’d stolen. “Collecting enough Essence will
grant him immortality—”
“And he either hasn’t harvested enough yet or it requires replenishment
over time,” Jassyn finished. Tilting his head, he idly trailed his fingers over
a vine dangling from a tree. “What if we could work together? Our people
could unite against the elves’ oppression.”
Now he sounded like the girl. “The wraith can’t stand against the king
as we are.” Lykor tightened his grip around the dagger’s hilt. “We need an
edge. Our own source of power.” He glanced at the surrounding jungle as it
suddenly became eerily still. “I’m taking my people away—hopefully to a
place the elves can’t reach. You could come with us.”
The words slipped past Lykor’s flapping tongue before the thinking part
of his brain had any hope of catching up. Heat stained his cheeks. He
couldn’t believe he’d suggested something so absurd. To someone he didn’t
even know.
Lykor averted his gaze, attempting to recover with an explanation. “As
an Essence wielder, you could help the wraith.” Still wildly unbalanced,
another inadvertent admission skidded out. “I was going to take your friend
Serenna—”
Jassyn moved so fast that Lykor had no time to react. Pain streaked
through his shoulder as Jassyn shoved him, crashing his back into a tree.
Instincts flaring from the impact, Lykor ripped Essence toward him.
Except… There was nothing there. His attention flew to a golden blade—a
sister to the stolen one at his side—protruding from a weak point in his
armor. Black blood spilled over the hilt. Before he could tear the weapon
out, vines erupted from the ground, wrapping around his wrists, legs, and
torso, rooting him in place.
Shock mauled Lykor’s chest as he sucked in a broken breath. Jassyn had
shaman powers too. Of course he fucking did. Lykor nearly laughed at his
own sheer stupidity for not predicting this.
Jassyn drew himself to his full height. “Have you harmed her?” he
demanded, towering over Lykor. “Where did you take her?”
This was about the girl? Lykor scoffed. “She came to me,” he hissed,
writhing against the restricting plants. His agitation and fear careened into
anger. “Release me.”
Lykor flinched when Jassyn’s hands rose to the sides of his face. His
skin buzzed in alarm from the proximity. The vulnerability. Essence
churned around them, a riot of whirling magic.
“Don’t fucking touch me,” Lykor snarled, extending his fangs. Every
muscle strained as he struggled against the vines. Yanking in progressively
more panicked breaths at the constriction, the jungle’s oppressive air
threatened to smother him.
Jassyn hesitated, fingers hovering next to Lykor’s temples before he
grabbed him. A thought assaulted Lykor, diving into his mind. A command.
Coercion. Show me where she is.
Lykor’s spine went rigid as telepathic power penetrated his skull. The
past repeated itself, drowning him in a whirlpool of horrific memories.
Galaeryn invading his mind. Breaking him. Shattering him. Reforging him.
Binding him with orders. Rendering him powerless. Tethered and shackled
to a cold stone table. Alone. Left for dead time and time again after every
transformation from elf to wraith and wraith to elf.
Recoiling from the flashbacks, Lykor furiously wrenched his awareness
back to the glade. Jassyn clutched his face, impaling telepathy further into
his brain, lodging the magic like a spike.
Lykor snapped his fangs in an attempt to reach him. To stop him. He
had no other defense now than to tear out the elf’s throat. His pulse thrashed
in his head as coercion tunneled into him, burrowing into his thoughts.
“Get out!” Lykor barked, grappling the restraining plants with all his
might.
Disregarding him, Jassyn’s fingers tightened around his face. Where is
she? His eyes glazed over as he delved further, invading the depths of
Lykor’s mind. What else do you know?
Lykor was a fool, believing this elf had wanted to help him. Jassyn’s
true intentions were clear now—exploiting him to discover what the king
had tucked away, concealed from the world.
“I am not a curiosity for you to poke and prod,” Lykor snarled.
An animalistic rage erupted at the helplessness. Lykor went wild ripping
at the vines—a rabid beast chained, fighting for freedom. He was unable to
toss Jassyn out, unable to assemble a mental barricade, unable to do
anything but stand there as the elf rifled through everything.
Jassyn barreled through those obsidian doors where Lykor kept his
memories concealed from Aesar. Nothing was hidden. Everything was on
display. Aesar, the wraith, their stronghold’s location, the girl, the
compulsion to kill Vesryn. Everything.
Jassyn released him, staggering back with a gasp. The surrounding
plants wilted, slackening their hold on Lykor.
HE KNOWS. HE KNOWS EVERYTHING ABOUT US. WHAT HAVE I
DONE?
“You…” Jassyn trailed off, face frozen in disbelief. Rapidly blinking,
comprehension of all he’d reaped spun in those amber eyes that Lykor was
going to rip out of his skull. “You’re—”
Lykor bared his fangs. Lunging forward, he tore free from the vines,
sinking his canines into Jassyn’s neck. An explosion of coppery blood
curled Lykor’s tongue, hauling bile up his throat.
Ice slithered out of his teeth. Lykor didn’t hold the toxins back—didn’t
know how—didn’t care if the venom stopped Jassyn’s heart.
Lykor dodged to the side as Jassyn stumbled forward and collapsed, a
boneless fish flopping to the ground.
Lykor spit profusely before yanking in a breath, inflamed by the assault.
The violation. He savagely scrubbed his mouth as an uncomfortable swarm
of emotions crawled over his skin like a horde of fleas.
The wraith would have to leave immediately. There was no more time.
Not now. Not when he’d foolishly allowed this elf to get so close.
Wild with rage, Lykor’s chest heaved as he stared at the elf’s crumpled
form, paralyzed by the venom. He ripped the blade out of his shoulder,
flinging it to the ground.
Clarity returned to Lykor, one breath at a time. The elf wouldn’t be able
to inform anyone of his secrets if he was dead…
No, Aesar answered, panicked and alarmed. And now, inconveniently,
awake. He hauled rending away before Lykor could obliterate the elf,
greedily clutching the talent. Withholding retribution.
IT’S A RISK KEEPING HIM ALIVE, Lykor snarled. DON’T TRY TO
STOP ME. Lykor wrestled with Aesar, forcibly shoving him into his
precious library, locking him behind the atrium doors. HE WILL DIE FOR
INVADING MY MIND.
Like scruffing a pup, Lykor seized the back of the elf’s white leathers.
Dragging his limp body across the glade, Lykor dumped him face down into
the stream. Bubbles broke the surface as he floated along the water,
releasing his last lungful of air.
As an afterthought, Lykor plucked the stolen dagger from his belt.
Whipping it through the air, he impaled the elf’s shoulder, lest he try to use
Essence to save himself.
Which reminded him… Lykor stepped forward, intending to siphon his
power.
Aesar remerged, warring to reassert his control over their body to aid
the drowning elf. But Lykor’s grip was too strong, his fury too bright.
You’re no better than the king if you do that. Aesar’s accusation was quiet,
but his words sliced deep.
AND HE’S NO BETTER THAN THE KING FOR RAVAGING MY
MIND. IT’S A WASTE NOT HARVESTING HIS MAGIC FOR THE
WRAITH.
Sensing Aesar rallying, Lykor pivoted, cleaving the air to tear open a
portal. Uninterested in a battle of wills, he retreated to the Aerie.
Abandoning the search for the Heart.
He’d foolishly put the wraith at risk, but he wouldn’t make the same
mistake again. And as punishment for stupidly seeking help, Lykor had
endured another breach of his mind. It was no less than he deserved for
having such an idiotic weakness.
For putting his trust in a stranger. Believing that he could be saved.
It was too late for that.
CHAPTER 49
SERENNA
If you enjoyed The Chains of Fate, please consider helping other readers
discover this series by leaving a review or a rating on Amazon or
Goodreads. Independent authors appreciate word of mouth
recommendations—we couldn’t spread awareness of our books without
your help! Thank you again!
SPICE RACK
All of these chapters can be skipped without impacting the story beyond
relationship building. Important plot points that may occur do come through
in the following chapters.
Chapter 14- Full chapter intimate encounter
Chapter 19- Approximately the first 3/4 of the chapter is an intimate
encounter
Chapter 45- Heavy sexual themes and environment, no intimate
encounter between the main characters
Chapter 47- Full chapter intimate encounter
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
A huge thank you to every reader who has picked up an unfinished series
from a debut author. Your support means the world and I’m so grateful for
the time you’ve taken to read this story. I truly couldn’t do this without your
support.
To Michael, who has spent countless hours listening to me brainstorm.
Thank you for reading my manuscript multiple times and going above and
beyond helping shape this story into what it is today (and thinking of better
banter).
To my author friends Roxie, Lacey, K.L, K.C., and Amarah. I love our
group chats and you all have taught me so much about publishing! I
wouldn’t know what to do without all of you! Your friendship means the
word.
To my alpha readers Craig and Pieter, thank you so much for reading a
messy early draft and helping me mold this into a story. Both of you had
input that changed the direction for the better!
To my beta readers Kaitlyn, Brooke, Michaele, and Eden, thank you for
taking the time to comb through the early stages of the story and offer your
feedback. I definitely was able to work out some wrinkles from all of your
help!
To my ARC team and everyone who has shared my story, thank you
being my biggest fans and cheerleaders! I’m so grateful to have you all on
board.
The series is starting to gain plot momentum and I can’t wait to share
what’s next!
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Samantha Amstutz is the author of the Aelfyn Archives and is inspired by Wheel of Time, World of
Warcraft, Star Wars, Lord of the Rings, the entire romantasy genre.
In her novels, you can expect immersive magic systems, different races, plot and intrigue, slow-
burn romance, diversity and inclusion, and believable characters with flaws.
She is honored and beyond thrilled you're reading her work and she hopes something in her
created world resonates with yours.