LOGINZade
The crystal glass was cold in my hand, the deep red wine inside it still as a mountain lake. I stood beside the fireplace staring into the flames, but I did not see them. All I saw was that defiant pair of green eyes that had poisoned me with hatred barely an hour ago. "She has to learn," I muttered to myself and took a sip of the wine. "She needs to understand that the streets do not rule here. I am the law here." But the wine tasted like ash in my mouth. A strange tension vibrated in the air, something I could not shake off. It felt like the silence before a storm, when the birds go quiet and the earth begins to tremble beneath the surface. Then Noctis's scream exploded inside my mind. It was not anger. It was not hunger. The sound was a long metallic cry that tore through my nerves and dropped me to one knee. My hand trembled and the crystal glass slipped from my fingers. It shattered on the marble floor and the red wine splashed across my boots and white shirt like fresh blood. "Zade!" the dragon's voice thundered desperately inside my skull. "The light... it is fading! The little flesh... she is dying!" "What are you talking about, Noctis?" I snarled, my heart slamming so hard against my ribs that my breath caught. "The darkness!" Noctis's mind twisted wildly. "It is choking her! I feel the walls... I feel her terror... and now... now I feel nothing! Zade, the bond is thinning! You are killing her!" For a moment my heart stopped. Her claustrophobia. I had thought she was just a hysterical little thief trying to save her skin. I thought she had been acting so I would release her. But the dragon bond did not lie. Noctis felt her soul, and what he felt was pure unfiltered terror. I spun around and ran from the room. I did not call the guards. I did not care who might see me racing through the halls half dressed with wine stains across my shirt like blood. Only one image burned in my mind. Her face gripping the bars and begging. "Anything... just not the dark." Her words echoed through my head and for the first time in my life the icy grip of guilt tightened around my throat. I stormed down the stairs. My lungs burned but I did not slow. I rushed through the damp corridors, past the prison guard who flattened himself against the wall in shock. I tore open the iron door and burst into the cell corridor. "Little girl!" I shouted. Only my own voice answered. The torch in my hand flickered wildly as I reached the last cell. I looked through the bars and my stomach twisted. She lay on the ground. A small pale shape against the black stone floor. Her hair spread around her like the broken wing of an angel. She did not move. She was not visibly breathing. "Open it!" I roared to the guard behind me who fumbled with the keys in trembling hands. I snatched them away and turned the lock myself. The cell door creaked open. I rushed inside and dropped to the floor beside her. Carefully I lifted her into my arms. She was cold. Colder than ice. Her skin was pale as moonlight and when the torchlight fell across her face I saw the blood. A dark red stream flowed from her forehead just above her brow, running down across her face and over the old scar beneath her eye. She had struck her head against the stone. "Little girl..." My voice broke. I touched her neck. Her pulse was so faint I could barely feel it. Like the final dying heartbeat of a small bird. "Do not you dare die. Do you hear me? I did not give you permission." I lifted her. She weighed almost nothing, as if she were made of shadow instead of flesh. Her head fell back helplessly against my shoulder. "Save her," Noctis growled deep in my mind and I felt the dragon's immense sorrow. "If she dies something inside me dies as well." I ran through the corridors carrying her back toward my chambers. The guards stared in confusion but one look from me was enough to make them drop their eyes. I kicked open the door to my room and laid her not on the small narrow bed but on my own. The silk sheets immediately soaked through with her blood. "Water! And the healer! Now!" I shouted toward the hallway. I sat beside the bed and pressed a clean cloth against her forehead trying to stop the bleeding. The hand that had killed countless enemies without trembling now shook. As I looked at her lifeless face the anger that had driven me earlier vanished completely. Something else replaced it. A dark suffocating realization. I had tortured her. Not with steel but with her deepest fear. And she had chosen death instead, collapsing into the darkness just to escape it. "I am sorry," I whispered. I barely believed the word myself. I had never said it to anyone in my life. I lifted one of her limp hands and brought it to my lips. Despite the dirt and blood her skin still carried a faint sweet scent. "Wake up, little girl. I swear I will never lock you away again. Just come back." The dragon bond suddenly tightened. A small weak pulse came from the girl. Not words. Only an image. A white light in the distance. Noctis began pushing deep burning energy through me and into her. My body heated as I felt my magic and the dragon's fire flowing through my fingertips into her skin. The girl trembled. A soft painful moan escaped her throat. Her eyelids moved. "I am here," I whispered, leaning closer to her without releasing her hand. "I am here, little girl. Do not be afraid. There is no more darkness." I waited for her to open her eyes. And although I knew the first thing she would probably do was curse me to hell, in that moment there was nothing I wanted more than to see that deadly green fire in her gaze again.EiraThe world blurred into a dense, dark mass. I couldn’t tell where my dream ended and reality began. My ears rang as if I had shoved my head into a beehive, and my eyelids felt as heavy as lead.I was dazed. The final, desperate wave of poison and exhaustion crashed over me. The last thing I remembered was Zade lifting me into his arms on the terrace. After that, reality shattered into scattered fragments inside my mind. I felt someone’s hands touching me. Not roughly. Firm, yet careful fingers peeled the tight black combat suit from my body, the fabric already glued to my skin with sweat.I wanted to move. I wanted to fight against the touch. My instincts had always told me to. But my muscles had turned to jelly. A soft, cool linen nightgown was slipped over my body. Then a scent drifted through the haze of half consciousness. Leather, ash, and pine. Zade. Or perhaps it was only his pillows carrying his scent. Either way, the mere illusion of his presence was enough to drive the p
ZadeThe silence that fell after she was pinned to the wall didn't last long. Eira stepped back, lowered the dagger, and a wild, defiant light flashed in her eyes."Don't hold back," she said, and her voice wasn't a request, but a command. "If you spare me, I'll never learn to survive Caspian."I nodded. The morning air was still cold, but my blood was already boiling. I picked up my sword, and she twirled the two shadow steel daggers in her hands. Her movements in the black clothes were ghostly; the fabric absorbed the light, so only her face and hands flashed white in the grayness.Our first clash was sharp and fast. Eira didn't wait for me to make a move. She rushed at me with a speed I hadn't seen from her even before she was poisoned. The blades of the daggers clashed against my sword. Sparks flew as I parried a slash aimed at my neck, then stepped aside from a thrust directed at my stomach."You're faster," I grunted approvingly, trying to keep her at bay with a wide sweeping st
Zade The dawn was still gray and relentless when I stepped out onto the private training terrace. The wind whistling from the mountains was ice-cold, but I did not feel it. The fire inside me, fueled by Noctis and my own restlessness, was enough to keep the chill at bay.I was swinging my customary heavy sword, but my thoughts were not on the arc of the strikes. The memory of the night haunted me. The moment I handed the weapons to her. The silence that followed. I did not know what to expect this morning. Would she come out? Or would she lock herself in her room and let the walls consume her again?Noctis was watching tensely from the depths of my consciousness. "She is coming," the dragon murmured, and I felt his anticipation, which ran through my spine like a shiver.The heavy, iron-bound wing of the terrace door creaked.I turned around. I was prepared for the defiant gaze, the baggy trousers, the thief's rags I had seen her in until now. I was prepared for the resentment.But no
ZadeDeep inside the forge, the heat was almost tangible, and the air was heavy with the smell of coal and the sulfurous aroma of glowing metal. I watched as the royal armorer's hammer struck the anvil with a rhythmic, metallic ring. With every blow, sparks danced in the gloom, but in my mind, it wasn't the metal taking shape; it was Eira's face, exactly as I had last seen her: distorted by pain and humiliation.You want to own me. Her words echoed inside me like a slow poison. Noctis acknowledged my inner turmoil with a low growl at the edge of my consciousness. My dragon didn't understand human complications; he only knew the bond, the wild, ancient desire to protect what was his. But Eira wasn't an object. Not a dragon's hoard to be locked away in a cave."They are ready, my prince," the blacksmith spoke, breaking my thoughts.He slid a dark velvet-lined wooden box across the table toward me. I opened it.Six daggers lay inside, arranged in two rows. They weren't ceremonial weapons
EiraThe following days passed in a strange blend of silence and throbbing pain. The bruise on my face turned from dark purple to toxic green and dull yellow, but I still felt the weight of Zade's punch in my bones. The prince barely left the room. He sat over his maps or compulsively cleaned his sword, but his gaze lingered on me every minute.I was no longer terrified of him; Noctis's comforting purr in the back of my mind suppressed the visceral panic, but the tension hadn't disappeared. It merely transformed into something heavy and unspoken, stretching between us with every bowl of food and every bandage change.That evening, I sat in the armchair by the window, wrapped in a warm blanket. The fire in the hearth danced on the walls, and Zade took a seat opposite me. Not chivalrously, but like a wild beast ready to pounce even while resting: his legs stretched out, whittling a piece of wood with his dagger."You should eat your soup," he spoke softly, not even looking up from his w
EiraThe world throbbed. Every single heartbeat was a hammer blow to the left side of my face. A metallic, salty taste spread in my mouth, the taste of my own blood. The cold stone of the floor pressed against my face, but the heat of the embers radiating from the fireplace only made the throbbing more unbearable.Slowly, trembling, I opened my eyes. My vision was blurred; the room lay in ruins around me. And then I saw him.Zade knelt there a few steps away from me. He was not the man who had cooled my fever over the past few days. His hair was disheveled, and his eyes... those dark blue irises still vibrated with rage, but there was something else in them, too. Something that made my stomach tie into knots.As soon as he moved toward me, my body reacted involuntarily. I pressed my back against the wall and reflexively covered my face with my hands. My breath hitched, and the terror I had tried to bury for so many years pounded in my throat. The dark alleys, the depths of the cellars
EiraMy knees trembled, not from panic, but from the immense height towering before me. Noctis's back didn't look like an animal's back; it felt like I had to climb up a moving mountain ridge. Zade was already up there, sitting in the saddle, and he reached out his hand to me. His gaze was ruthless
Eira The darkness did not leave easily. It retreated in long heavy waves, and every inch it abandoned left behind a dull aching pain. My head throbbed as if an anvil had been placed inside my skull and someone kept striking it in steady rhythm. When my eyes finally opened, the first thing I
Eira The slam of the iron door was not just a sound. It felt as if the entire world had split in two and I had been left on the worse side. As the echo of Zade's footsteps slowly faded and disappeared, the silence settled on my shoulders like heavy black lead. I was alone. Alone with noth
Eira The silence in the room was not peaceful. It was suffocating. I listened to the prince's steady deep breathing from the massive bed across the room, and every beat of my heart told me the same thing. Run. Now or never. I waited. It felt like hours before I dared to move. Moonlight st







