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Unbinding the Cuffs: Part 2

Author: Missy Smith
last update publish date: 2025-07-13 12:03:54

The cuffs hit the floor with a final, hollow clink. But before Mae could even pull her hands fully back, before her mind could register freedom. Ashar’s fingers brushed hers. Not intentionally. Not purposefully. An accident. A brief, harmless touch.

It should’ve meant nothing. Instead. It meant everything. The air fractured. Not visually. Not audibly. But physically, reality itself lurched. A deep pulse, like a heartbeat that didn’t belong to any living thing, rumbled through the floor. 

The walls trembled, not like stone, but like something unraveling and remembering it was never supposed to be this way. Light shifted. The twisted pillars, those warped, spiraled structures that defied geometry, snapped. Straightened. Realigned. Not violently. Not destructively. But like a deep, aching correction. Like bones setting back into place after being shattered for so long they forgot what straight felt like. The vaulted ceiling, once coiled and fracturing endlessly into itself, folded outward. Expanded. Flattened.

Cracks in the floor pulsed with radiant threads of energy-lines of gold and white that hadn't glowed in ages. The castle itself, breathed. Alive. Awake. Something whispered through the stones, not in words but in sensation. Welcome back. The shift was instantaneous. Powerful. And wrong. Or maybe, right. But only partially. Because as soon as Mae jerked backward as soon as Ashar pulled his hand away like he'd touched something white-hot, then the change stopped. Froze. Half-finished.

One side of the throne room stood corrected. Clean lines. Stable architecture. Walls that reflected light in angles that made sense to any being from a sane universe. The floor was smooth, solid, unmarred by the chaotic fractures of before. The other half, still broken. Still twisted. Shadows bent at impossible angles. Pillars curved back into themselves like serpents devouring their own tails. The boundary between the two was razor thin. A perfect line where reality simply couldn’t decide what it was supposed to be. Silence. None of them moved. Not a single one.

Even Kaine, ever the first to bark, threaten, curse, had stood perfectly still, his lips parted but no sound forming. Lucien’s hands trembled, just once, before he clenched them behind his back like he could crush the tremor into submission. Riven stared at the walls like he expected them to start bleeding. Sethis’s smirk was long gone, replaced by something that looked an awful lot like disbelief. Or maybe fear. And Ashar, Ashar just stood there. Staring at his own hand. Slowly, very slowly, he flexed his fingers, turning his palm, watching the faint glow fading from the thin web of lines that had momentarily appeared across his skin when their hands met.

His voice, when it came, was lower than usual. Rougher. “That’s-” His eyes flicked to Mae, no longer calculating. No longer cautious. Staggered. Raw. Awestruck.

“That’s not supposed to be possible.” Mae’s throat closed. Her arms curled around herself instinctively, but she couldn’t breathe. Wh-what did I just do? Her gaze snapped to the half-corrected room. To the line where reality itself had literally stopped shifting the moment they broke contact. The walls still shimmered faintly on that side, as if waiting. Expectant. Ready, if only the connection resumed.

No no no no no no. This wasn’t supposed to happen. I didn’t even do anything. I didn’t, I didn’t. Why, why does it feel like I did something really bad?

Ashar finally tore his gaze away from his hand, back to her. For the first time since she’d met him, he looked shaken. Not frightened. Not angry. Not confused.

But like a man who had just seen something so big, so vast, so unspeakably important, it cracked something inside him. “This place, hasn't shifted, hasn’t remembered what it was, since-” His voice caught. Almost unheard of for him.

“Since the fracture.”

A long breath dragged through his teeth. His jaw tightened. His hands flexed again.

“Since, my people died.” And then, silence. Barely a whisper. “Until now.” The others still hadn’t spoken. Not because they couldn’t. But because, what do you even say to that? Ashar stepped back once. Barely. Then sat down heavily, for the first time not like someone settling into control, but someone who wasn’t sure whether the ground was still going to be under him when he finished sitting. The silence that followed was a kind none of them had ever experienced. The silence of knowing nothing about the world would ever make sense again.

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  • Claimed by the Fallen Five   The Last Anchors

    The bridge marked with shadow and gold did not open. It trembled instead, holding its shape over the endless dark while the sealed aperture waited like a mouth refusing to speak. Mae stood before it with Sethis on one side and Kaine on the other, both men silent for once, both feeling too much to hide it well. The seventh pulse beat beyond the door with a patience that made her skin tighten. Then the entire hidden architecture screamed.The sound did not come through the air. It came through every line of light beneath the chamber, ripping across the walls in violent bursts of static and fractured signal. Lucien’s chains snapped upward, Ashar’s flames surged, and Riven’s wings opened with a sharp metallic scrape. Kaine turned first, gold burning hard beneath his skin. Sethis’s shadows wrapped around Mae before he even seemed to decide to protect her.The convergence sphere reappeared above the bridge, no longer calm, no longer elegant, and no longer waiting. Its surface fractured into

  • Claimed by the Fallen Five   The Seventh Pulse

    The seventh heartbeat changed the air. Mae felt it ripple through the architecture like a signal waking in a sealed network, too steady to be an accident and too alive to be dismissed. Sethis stood beside her, shadows trembling against his wrists as if they wanted to hide from the sound. Far below them, the newly awakened structures burned with soft gold, violet, and something colder that had no color at all. The hidden architecture no longer felt like a chamber beneath reality; it felt like a body taking its first full breath.Mae turned toward Sethis, but he was already staring into the distance. His face had gone still in that careful way men wore when something inside them was breaking, and pride refused to let it show. “That one is different,” he said, voice low. “The others feel alive, but this one feels like a door.” Mae’s chest tightened because she had felt the same thing. The first six pulses had carried warmth, distance, and recognition, but the seventh carried waiting.The

  • Claimed by the Fallen Five   What Remains

    Nobody touched the sphere after that. The words remained suspended at its center, glowing softly against the darkness of the chamber. Every few seconds, the distant heartbeats echoed through the fracture, steady and alive. The silence that followed felt heavier than any battlefield they had survived.Mae could not stop staring at the words. Parental Access Available. The phrase felt absurd and impossible, yet every instinct inside her insisted it was true. She had spent so long grieving what was lost that the possibility of something surviving felt harder to accept than death.Ashar stood beside her, saying nothing. His fire burned low beneath his skin, reduced to faint embers that glowed through the cracks of old scars. For once, he looked tired enough to let the world see it. The sight unsettled Mae more than she wanted to admit.Riven eventually broke the silence. He shifted against the crystalline wall and folded his wings tighter around himself. “We’re seriously not going to talk

  • Claimed by the Fallen Five   Signals

    The chamber stayed quiet long after the sphere dimmed. No one hurried to offer explanations or comfort. The distant pulse Mae sensed still hovered at the edge of her mind, calm and persistent, refusing to disappear. The more she concentrated on it, the more convinced she became that it had been present all along.Ashar broke the silence first. He crossed his arms and stared at the sphere as if intimidation alone might force answers from it. "I don't like unknown variables," he said. "Especially ones hiding behind reality itself." The low fire beneath his skin burned brighter in response to his frustration.Riven snorted softly and folded his wings tighter against his back. "You don't like known variables either." He leaned against one of the crystalline supports and glanced toward Mae. "The difference is these haven't tried killing us yet."Lucien ignored both comments. His chains drifted through the air around him, tracing invisible paths and collecting data only he seemed capable of

  • Claimed by the Fallen Five   Echoes Without Source

    The chamber no longer felt empty. Mae noticed it first as a subtle change in pressure, like the quiet shift in air before a storm breaks, except nothing in the environment visibly moved. The convergence sphere still rotated in its slow, deliberate rhythm, yet the light within it seemed thicker somehow, layered with faint distortions she could not fully track. Her chains warmed beneath her skin, responding to something she could not name.Ashar noticed her tension immediately, stepping closer without touching her. His flames remained controlled, a low burn that cast steady amber light along the crystalline walls. “You feel it,” he said quietly, not as a question but as confirmation. Mae nodded once, her eyes still fixed on the sphere.Lucien’s chains shifted in measured arcs, testing the air as if scanning for unseen resistance. Each movement produced faint ripples across the architecture, as though reality itself acknowledged his presence. “The structure has altered its density,” he s

  • Claimed by the Fallen Five   Convergence Variables

    The sphere did not stop rotating. It adjusted its speed in subtle increments, as if measuring the rhythm of Mae’s breathing, making her feel a deep connection to its unfolding possibilities. Each turn revealed fractured glimpses of possible futures, none fully stable, all waiting for something that had not yet happened. Mae stood motionless before it, her chains alive beneath her skin in quiet synchronization with the pulsing light.Ashar remained slightly behind her, close enough that she could feel the heat of him without contact. He did not interrupt her concentration, but she could sense the discipline it took for him to remain still. “It is showing probabilities,” he said carefully. “Not destiny.” Mae nodded faintly, though the distinction felt dangerously thin.Lucien circled the outer edge of the chamber, white chains gliding across the air like careful instruments. Every movement he made caused faint shifts in the sphere’s surface, as though structure itself responded to obser

  • Claimed by the Fallen Five   Sacred Bond(s)

    “She’s not light, somebody grab her already,” Kaine snapped, stepping forward. His hands slid under Mae’s arms, ready to haul her up like cargo. “We don’t have all day for her to wake up out here.” “No!” Riven’s shout cracked across the air like a whip. His boots scuffed as he lunged forward, hands

  • Claimed by the Fallen Five   Waiting for the Storm

    The warped silence inside the castle pressed heavier than any sound. The hum of fractured energy had quieted, but something lingered beneath it, a feeling. A shift. Like the world itself was holding its breath. None of them spoke. Not Lucien, whose usual sharp tongue was buried behind furrowed brows

  • Claimed by the Fallen Five   Fault Lines

    The doors groaned open like they had not been touched in centuries. Outside was not the dead wasteland Mae expected. It was worse. The ground twisted in ways the eye rejected. Horizon lines bent wrong. Stone spires floated, some sideways, some inverted. Clouds spun in spirals, not across the sky but

  • Claimed by the Fallen Five   Cracks in the Foundation

    It started small. A tremor in her hands. A shake in her knees. But the spiral was fast. Ruthless. Mae’s breath hitched, then broke. Her lungs wouldn’t pull enough air. Her chest constricted so tightly it hurt. Her vision tunneled, and her pulse roared so loudly in her ears she barely heard Lucien’s

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