Mag-log in"My sons."
The voice rolls through the opening in the tree like cold water down my spine, and I freeze with Cael's hand locked around my wrist, and the roots above us pulse with white light. The air smells like wet earth, old blood and pine from Cael's skin, and my heart beats so loud I hear it in my teeth. Through the split in the bark I see him, and my breath catches because he looks like an older, crueler version of Cael. King Roran stands on a stone altar, black hair threaded with grey, gold eyes unblinking, one boot resting beside Maya's head like she belongs to him. Maya lies unconscious on the cold stone, her skin is too pale, her lips drained of color, and her breathing is barely there. Roran smiles, but the smile never reaches his eyes as he spreads his hands wide. "Come closer," he says. "Let me see what twenty years of hiding bought me." Cael moves before I do, his shoulder slamming in front of mine, his growl vibrating through his chest and into my back. His eyes bleed from gold to black as I watch, and his hand finds the back of my neck, gripping hard. "Do not touch him," he snarls, and the sound cuts through the hall like a blade. Roran laughs, so low and patient. "Possessive already," he says. "Good. You were always meant to guard what is yours, Cael, even from me." Queen Lira pushes past the roots behind us, her hands shaking and her face pale, whispering my name and Cael's name together like a prayer. "Mother," I say, though the word feels strange on my tongue, it is true. She reaches for me, but she stops because Roran lifts one finger, the white light flares, and Maya arches off the stone with a silent gasp, then falls still. "Enough," Roran says. "You split them, Lira, and you lied. You smuggled my spare heir south like a thief and let Bren carry my firstborn back with his mouth shut for twenty years, and you thought I did not know?" Queen Lira goes still and does not deny it, and that tells me everything. Cael's grip on my neck steadies me even though I want to run to Maya, and I lock my knees because she needs me standing. "You ordered us dead," I say, and my voice shakes, but I do not step back. "The prophecy says twins are cursed. You wanted us killed at birth." Roran nods slowly, like he expected nothing less from me. "The prophecy says one heart must feed the tree," he says. "One twin must die so the kingdom lives. I did not order you killed out of cruelty, Aiden. I ordered it out of patience. I needed you both alive long enough to come of age." The words hit like ice and Cael snarls, the sound ripping out and echoing off the roots. "You let Varric take Maya," I say because the pieces slam together and my hands curl into fists. "You let the court give us three nights. It is all you." "Varric serves the old laws because I wrote them," Roran says, stepping closer to Maya until his shadow falls across her face. "The girl is pure, human, and untouched by wolf magic. The tree does not want your tainted twin blood. It wants hers." My knees want to buckle, but I do not let them. "Let her go," I say. Roran looks at me, and his gold eyes narrow, and for one second I see myself in him. I hate it. "You offered yourself as tribute to save her," he says. "Noble and stupid. While you walk north, my men walk south. I needed you here, and I needed her here, and the bond did the rest." Cael puts his whole body between me and the altar, his fur cloak brushing my chin and his scent flooding my nose. "He will not have you," he says quietly so only I hear it, and his hand trembles where it holds me, and that tremor shakes me harder than anything Roran has said. Roran lifts Maya's wrist and presses his thumb to her pulse the way someone checks on something they own. "The tree opened because you fought over who dies," he says louder. "That is the third way the old songs never wrote down, a willing heart offered freely and not taken by force." Queen Lira makes a broken sound. "No," she whispers. "Roran, please." He ignores her. "One of you walks to this altar and lays your hand on the root and gives your heart to the tree," he says. "The bond transfers, and the other twin lives, the girl lives, and the kingdom stands. Refuse and I snap her neck now and let the tree starve while you both rot." The choice hangs in the cold air, and my blood roars as Cael's grip turns bruising. I look at Maya and her eyelashes flutter, and I look at Cael, and his jaw tightens. I am terrified and angry and stubborn enough to not give him what he wants. "I will do it," I say, and I step around Cael because I am protective and Maya is my sister even if we do not share blood. Cael catches my arm and yanks me back, his eyes already black. "No!" he roars. "You do not get to decide alone!" Roran smiles wider and lifts Maya's head with one hand, exposing her neck. "How touching," he says. "The spare offers himself first. Just like your mother planned." He drops Maya and pulls a knife made of white bone from his belt, and the blade glows. "Choose," he says, and he points the knife at Cael, then at me. "Or I choose for you." The roots groan as the light pulses faster and the altar cracks under his boots. Cael steps forward, his shoulders blocking my view, and his voice low and quiet like something inside him has already given up. "Take me," he says. "I am the heir you raised. Let him go south with the girl and never come back." My heart stops. He is offering his life for mine. "Shut up," I snap, and I shove his back. "You do not get to play king with my life." Roran laughs as Queen Lira sobs. "Enough of this," he says, and he slams the bone knife down into the altar right beside Maya's throat, and the stone screams as it splits. "The tree is hungry now." White light explodes from the crack and hits my chest and Cael's at the same time, and the twin bond flares so hot I choke because I can feel his heart beating inside my ribs like it is my own. Maya gasps awake under the knife, her eyes flying open, and they are not brown anymore. They are solid gold, locked on mine, and when she speaks, it is not her voice at all. “Aiden, run!”I can hear Cael, but his voice sounds distant and strange, like it is coming from somewhere far above me. My face is still wearing a smile that is not mine, and when I try to speak, the voice that comes out is not my own.I try to call back to him, but nothing comes. My throat will not obey, and my tongue sits heavy in my mouth. The only sound I make is a low breath.The wood is still spreading through my hands. I feel it under my skin like something cold pushing upward, moving from my palms into my wrists, each pulse in time with the roots on the walls.The first root watches me with his white eyes, and his head tilts like he is listening to something only he can hear. He does not move to help Cael or look at Maya.My mother steps forward, her hands shaking as she reaches for my face. She does not touch the smile but the edge of my jaw, where the skin is still mine."Aiden," she says, and her voice breaks on my name. "Fight it."I want to tell her I am fighting, that I have been figh
The brightness does not fade. It presses down on me from every direction, and I cannot move. I cannot feel the ground under my knees, and I cannot hear anything except a high thin ringing filling my ears.I try to call for Cael, but my throat makes no sound. I try to move my hands, but they do not answer. The only thing I feel is the tearing in my chest where the bond lives, slow and deep like a wound that will not close.The white light peels away in layers until shapes return. I am on my knees on cold stone, and the air is cold and still.I lift my head, and the pool is gone, the white trees are gone, and the sap is gone. I am inside a round chamber where roots cover every surface, thick as arms, pulsing with faint light that moves like blood under skin.I look around the chamber. To my left, Cael is on the ground, still breathing. His skin has gone pale, and when his eyes open, the color in them is not black or brown. It is a warm amber I have never seen in him before.To my right,
I do not open my hand. I close it. The wood of the handle bites into the fresh cut on my palm and the pain is sharp enough to clear my head. The knife pulses once against my skin, warm as a heartbeat, like it knows what I am about to do. It has only ever pulsed for Cael before. Now the beat feels wider, like it is listening for more than two."No," I say, and my voice cracks. The thing in front of me goes still and through the bond I feel Cael go still with it. He is not scared of dying. He is scared I will let go.Behind me Maya whispers, "Do not."The other me is on his knees, tears running down his face. "Please," he begs. "She will make it stop. I am tired of the dark."Roran laughs from the pool's edge, thin and cracked. "Give it to her, light-born. That is what mothers do."My throat closes. Part of me wants to believe this is her just to hear my name in that voice again. But I know where my real mother is. She lost her voice to the tree and she is not this.I think of the real
My palms sting where my nails cut them. Cael stops less than a foot from me and holds the knife out flat on his palm like he is presenting something sacred. His eyes are still solid black and his mouth is curved into my own smile.The sap around my arms loosens just enough for me to move my fingers, cold and wet, letting go of my right wrist first, then my left. I do not reach for the knife right away because my hands are shaking too hard."Take it," Cael says, and his voice is not his. It is mine, layered under something older, like Eryth is speaking through my throat. "The law wants a willing hand."Behind him, the other me still has the blade pressed to Maya's throat and has not moved. He watches me with my own brown eyes, and his face is blank. Maya is breathing fast and shallow, and tears are running down her cheeks, but she does not make a sound.Roran laughs from the edge of the pool and the sound rolls through the space around us. "Two hearts grown from one root," he says. "On
My breath stops. My own face is rising out of the pool behind Roran, smiling with my mouth. Sap slides off his chin, and his eyes are brown like mine, not gold.The cold sap is already at my knees, and it burns through my clothes. Maya is screaming my name and fighting against the sap holding her. Cael hangs next to her with his head down, and I cannot feel him anywhere in my chest.The other me walks out of the pool without effort, like the sap is nothing to him. He has nothing on, and dark sap drips off him to reveal skin that looks exactly like mine. He has every scar I have, even the thin white line on my left knee from falling out of the loft when I was nine.Roran throws his head back and laughs. The sound shakes the white trees. "There he is," he says, and his voice fills the space around us. "The one I kept."My hands go cold and numb and I have to look at them to believe they are still mine. My chest tightens and my breathing goes shallow. Eighteen years. He has been down her
My chest burns, and I cannot pull air in. Cold presses in from every side, and Cael keeps saying my name in my head. I cannot feel my hands or my feet, and I cannot tell which way is up.Then the cold lets go all at once. I fall and hit something hard, and air slams back into my lungs.I cough until my throat goes raw. I open my eyes, and I am lying on dark roots that pulse with white light underneath. White trees rise up so high I cannot see the tops. The air is thick and still and smells like something ancient. There is no wind and no echo. Sound disappears the moment it leaves our mouths. The light moves under the roots like something beneath is breathing, and it feels wrong. Cael is on his hands and knees next to me, coughing. Maya is a few feet away, curled up and not moving. My mother, Roran, and the thing made of sap are all gone. It is just us three in a place that feels alive.Cael looks up at me. He does not say anything out loud. I hear him in my head clear as if he were r
Cael and I stop breathing at the same time. My ribs go tight and his fingers find my palm and hold on like we are the only solid thing left in this place.I know those babies before my mind catches up. It hits me in the gut the way your own name hits you when someone calls it in the dark. One of th
Black sap runs down the white ice behind Roran and spreads like veins. It does not drip. It crawls.Roran stands in front of it, and his smile is calm and wide. That is not my father. That is something else wearing his face.Cael moves to my side, and he pulls the edge of his war cloak around my sh
Cael's hand crushes mine because he sees it too. He does not breathe for three heartbeats. Then his whole body shakes because the vision is still in front of us.The picture moves because the tree is not done. We are in a small hut in the south where the fire is low and my mother is sitting on a di
She whispers my name, and she does it soft like she did when we were little and she had a nightmare. She is not fighting anymore because she is tired. Her head drops forward because the vine is choking her.I remember her sleeping by the fire at home. I remember telling her no one would take her no







