Mag-log in****Excerpt**** “You see yourself as ordinary,” he said softly. “But entire worlds have crumbled and come apart for far less than a woman of your beauty.” He pushed his horn further again, filling her another inch. Her flame flared white-hot behind her ribs. Begging, pleading, clawing. “That’s it, my little whore. You like that, don’t you?” he preened against the corner of her mouth. His voice hit her harder than the horn. Dirty, cruel, worshipful. The word whore sent heat spiralling down her spine, making her clench around the invasion. She hated the word. She loved how he said it. “Please…” She started. He squeezed her throat, cutting off the rest of her words. Her breath hitched violently at the pressure, but she surrendered to the feeling. “Unless you are about to beg me to fuck your ass harder with this horn, I don’t want to hear how you can’t take any more.” He growled, low and threatening. A wave of want crashed into her so hard she whimpered. Adelaide should have been scared. In a way, she was. It wasn’t fear that made her heart pound, it was the terrifying realisation that she wanted exactly what he demanded. She wanted to feel the thickness of his horn deep inside her, wanted the stretch, the pain, the pleasure. She wanted all of what she knew he could give her. She leaned her head back to run her tongue over the seam of his lips. “Fuck me harder.” She said softly, the words barely a whisper. They carried the desperation, surrender, hunger, devotion, need. Her voice trembled with the weight of what she was giving him. Of what she was asking him to do to her. He growled. The sound vibrated through her, deep and possessive.
view moreTrigger Warnings
This novel contains mature, dark, and potentially distressing content, including:
Graphic violence
Sexual Violence
Voyeurism
Gore and gruesome injury descriptions
Supernatural warfare and battles in Hell
Use of weapons (blades, claws, fire, magical weapons)
Torture and physical brutality
Threats of dismemberment and monstrous transformations
Non-consensual power dynamics
Coercion, forced proximity, and captivity
Extreme sexual content with dark elements
BDSM themes, impact play, restraints, and pain-pleasure dynamics
Blood play and biting
Psychological manipulation
Terror, panic, and fear responses
Emotional abuse and degradation language
Self-loathing, trauma responses, and internalized shame
Body horror elements
Death, dying, and resurrection motifs
Depictions of Hell, suffering souls, and infernal environments
Injury, bruising, and rough physical encounters
Loss of bodily autonomy
Heavy atmospheric darkness, dread, and violence
(Adelaide)
The house was too quiet for the day before a sacrifice.
Adelaide felt the silence pressing against the walls, thick and heavy, like the air before a storm. Even the dust motes seemed to hang motionless, suspended between breaths, as if the whole house were listening for a sound it dreaded but knew was coming. No clatter of pots, no humming from the hearth. Just the creak of old timbers and the soft hiss of the fire in the stove. Somewhere in the roof, a loose shingle ticked faintly with the shift of the cold, a slow, irregular heartbeat.
“Stand still.”
Her mother’s fingers pinched at the back of her dress, tugging the neckline higher. Adelaide stared at her reflection in the warped bit of polished tin hanging on the wall. The girl looking back at her had restless eyes, a stubborn jaw, and dark hair that refused to stay pinned no matter how many times her mother spat on her fingers and smoothed it. A lock slipped free, defiant as smoke, curling along her temple like it had a will of its own. Adelaide almost smiled; even her hair refused to submit.
“You’re strangling me,” Adelaide said, voice flat.
“You’ll live.” Her mother yanked again. “You will not slouch in front of the Elders. Shoulders back.”
Adelaide rolled her shoulders anyway, deliberately loosening them. The linen rasped over her skin, rough and familiar, smelling faintly of lye soap and cold air
“They’re just old men in long coats, not kings,” she groaned in annoyance.
“Adelaide.” Her mother’s voice snapped like a whip. “You watch your tongue.”
From the doorway, her younger sister sucked in a breath. “Please don’t start,” the girl whispered.
Adelaide met her sister’s gaze in the tin. Lyra hovered there, fingers twisting in the hem of her own faded dress, big brown eyes already shining with unshed tears. She looked too small for fifteen. Too soft. Too breakable.
Too easy to choose.
Adelaide’s chest tightened. A strange, prickling heat crawled over her arms, like the moment before she touched a spark—an old, familiar warning she couldn’t name, only feel.
“Are you listening to me?” her mother asked sharply.
“I hear you,” Adelaide said. “You’ve been saying the same thing all week.”
Her mother stepped around to face her. There were new lines around her mouth this year, carved deep by worry. The candlelight made her look older than her thirty-odd years. She smelled of lavender soap and woodsmoke and the faint sour edge of sleepless nights. There were shadows beneath her eyes that hadn’t been there last winter, hollows Adelaide could fit all of her questions inside.
“This is not like every year,” Mother said. “This is a Selection year. The Devil’s decade closes at midnight tomorrow. The Elders will be watching every girl who’s come of age. They’ve already been…talking.”
“Talking about what?” Adelaide asked, even though she already knew. They’d felt the eyes in the market. Heard the whispers when she walked past. She could still feel the brush of those glances against her skin, a crawling sensation that clung long after she’d stepped out of sight.
“About you.” Her mother didn’t soften the blow. She never did. “About your temper. The way you speak. The way you look.”
Adelaide’s skin prickled, as if all those unseen eyes had suddenly turned on her in this cramped kitchen. “What about the way I look?”
“You’re…not plain,” Lyra offered carefully. “That’s all she means.”
“Not plain,” Adelaide repeated, one brow lifting. “That’s what they think the Devil cares about? Looks?”
Her mother’s hand flew to the charm at her throat—a small disk of iron stamped with the old symbol of the sun, worn smooth by years of grasping. “Lower your voice.”
Adelaide’s lips twitched. “Are you afraid he’ll hear me?”
“Yes.” Her mother’s fingers tightened until her knuckles blanched. “I am always afraid he will hear.”
The words hung between them, colder than the draught seeping under the door. For a heartbeat, Adelaide imagined a presence pressed against the world just beyond their walls, listening the way the house was listening. A weight on the other side of a thin, invisible curtain.
Silence wrapped around them again. Outside, in the narrow lane, a cart creaked past, wheels crunching over packed dirt and stray pebbles. Somewhere, a dog barked once and was sharply shushed. The entire village of Fire’s Peak felt like it was holding its breath. Even the crows—usually noisy and quarrelsome at this hour—were quiet, perched like smudges of ink along the chapel roofline.
Adelaide glanced at the small square window above the basin. The sky beyond was white-grey, winter clouds layered thick like wool. Smoke from distant chimneys rose in thin columns, straight up, unmoving in the windless air. They said that was a sign—when the smoke rose like that, the veil between worlds thinned, and the Devil could slip through. As she watched, the smoke from their own chimney wavered, then speared skyward in a perfect line, as if something unseen had taken hold of it and pulled. A shiver dragged down her spine.
“If you can’t be modest,” her mother said, dragging her attention back, “at least try not to draw attention to yourself.”
“So you want me invisible?” Adelaide asked.
“I want you safe.”
“Being chosen is supposed to be an honour,” Adelaide said, letting the word drip with scorn. “Isn’t that what they teach us every Feast of the Veil? ‘To serve ten years is to shield the village for ten more.’”
Her mother’s face twisted. “That is what they say to sleep at night.”
Lyra’s breath hitched. “Mama…”
Her mother caught herself, closing her eyes briefly, as if pulling her words back inside. When she spoke again, her voice was softer, but no less intense.
“You both listen to me,” she said. “Tomorrow, when the bell rings, you will stand straight. You will keep your eyes down. You will not fidget. You will not speak unless spoken to. You will look like good, quiet daughters. Not…trouble.”
Adelaide’s mouth curved. “I’m not very good at that.”
“I know,” her mother said quietly. “That is what frightens me.”
The honesty in the admission struck harder than any sermon. For a moment, Adelaide saw past the stern lines and sharp words to the girl her mother must once have been—wild-eyed, perhaps, and unafraid to speak. A girl who’d learned fear the hard way. Adelaide swallowed against the sudden tightness in her throat.
Lyra stepped closer, the floorboard under her bare foot squeaking. “I’ll do it,” she said quickly. “I’ll be good. I’ll be so good they won’t even see me. They won’t have any reason to pick me.”
She pressed her hands over the iron charm that hung at her own throat, identical to their mother’s, her fingers trembling. Her wrists were thin, bones sharp beneath pale skin. Adelaide’s gaze lingered there. Tomorrow, those wrists would be tied with red thread—marking her as sixteen. Eligible. If she had been born just two days later, she would have been free. The injustice burned like swallowed coal. Two days. Two days was the distance between the girl and the offering.
Adelaide looked away. “No one is going to pick you,” she said, forcing certainty into her voice. “They have fifteen other girls to choose from.”
“Sixteen,” Lyra whispered. “There have to be sixteen.”
“Then you’ll be the seventeenth,” Adelaide said. “Too many. So, safe.”
“You know that’s not how it works,” her mother said tiredly. “The Devil does not care what the records say. Only who runs.”
“He only cares about one, doesn’t he?” Adelaide snapped. “One woman killed. One woman’s life taken, every ten years. One woman gone. And the rest of you call it mercy.”
Her mother’s hand cracked across her cheek before Adelaide saw it coming. The slap echoed in the small kitchen, sharp as a breaking twig.
Adelaide staggered back a step, hand flying to her face. Heat flared under her palm, the sting making her eyes water. For a heartbeat, no one moved. The fire popped, spitting a spark up the blackened stone. The scent of singed ash and hot iron flooded her nose, grounding her in the moment.
Her mother stared at her own hand, horror and regret chasing each other across her features. “I—Adelaide, I didn’t—”
Lyra made a small sound, like a wounded animal. “Mama…”
Adelaide tasted metal from where her teeth had caught the inside of her lip. The pain cut through the fog of dread that had hung over her all morning. Strangely, it steadied her. Pain she understood. Pain obeyed rules. Fear did not.
“That was for blasphemy?” she asked, voice low.
“That was because I cannot bear to hear you talk about it like you’re…above it,” her mother said, breathing hard. “You think you see clearly, but you are blind. You do not know what it is to wait for the day the Devil comes. To count the ten years not in seasons, but in screams in your dreams.”
Her eyes glazed over, staring somewhere past Adelaide. “I was your age when they called my name. I remember the way everyone looked at me. Some with pity. Some with relief that it was not them. Do you think I felt honoured? I was sick with fear. And yet I smiled, because that was what my mother needed to see to stay sane.”
(Adelaide & Cael) After some time, Adelaide drew a breath and said, “Test it.” Cael looked at her. “The bond?” “I refuse to walk all day pretending we’re not both thinking about it.” “We do not know what testing it might do.” “We also don’t know what ignoring it might do.” He could not argue with that. They paused beside a fallen trunk, its heart burned hollow by ancient fire, the blackened shell split wide to reveal a molten red seam pulsing like a vein beneath charred flesh. Adelaide drew her wings in, the heat radiating from them caressing Cael’s face from a distance, a warmth that threatened but never dared to scorch. He watched her, eyes lingering, measuring the risk against the hunger for understanding. “Start small,” he said. “Fine.” She closed her eyes. Cael waited. At first, nothing changed. The forest creaked around them, a low groan passing through the trees as wind moved somewhere above the smoke but did not reach the ground. Adelaide’s face tightened
(Adelaide & Cael)They finished gathering what little they had, the burrow slowly losing its sense of sanctuary as movement replaced stillness. Cael checked the entrance before allowing her near it, his posture shifting into the familiar shape of vigilance, shoulders loose but ready, weight balanced, one hand hovering near the blade at his side. Adelaide noticed it with a new ache in her chest, because now she could feel the emotional texture beneath the movement. Not fear. Not doubt. A steady readiness that had become part of him through centuries of survival. At the threshold, she stopped. The forest waited beyond. The burned trees stood in blackened ranks, their trunks split and hollow, branches clawing skyward through drifting ash like the fingers of damned souls reaching for a heaven that had long since barred its gates. The light beyond the burrow was dim, colourless, filtered through smoke that hung low between the trees, silver-grey in places, rust-red where the earth st
(Adelaide & Cael)The loss of contact rippled through them both, not pain, but a keen absence. A gentle severing of warmth, a sudden widening of air that felt like the world had grown colder in the space between heartbeats. Cael's gaze followed her for only a breath before he looked away with deliberate restraint, reaching for his discarded clothing. Adelaide felt the effort in him, not as rejection, but as discipline, and something in her chest tightened at the quiet respect of it. They dressed in silence for several moments. It was not awkward, not truly, though awareness haunted every movement. Adelaide drew her clothes back into place, the fabric rasping rougher against her skin, catching where heat had left her hypersensitive, as if her body still remembered the touch of fire. Her fingers moved more slowly than usual over buckles and seams, her mind drifting back to the red woven through her hair, to the dream, to the Queen’s spectral hand pressed against her chest and the u
(Adelaide & Cael)The unspoken realisation of fundamental change settled between them without language for a long moment, heavy and quiet and impossible to set aside, while Adelaide held the red strands of her hair between her fingers and Cael watched the colour shift beneath the low gold light of the burrow as though the fire itself had hidden inside her and chosen at last to show through. Neither of them moved immediately. The small hollow around them seemed to hold its breath, the packed-earth walls pressing close, the roots overhead tangled in dark knots that looked almost like ribs, bowed around a sleeping heart. Emberlight drifted through the cracks in thin, uneven veins, warming the shadows without banishing them, leaving the space soft-edged and intimate, still bearing the scent of heat, ash, skin, and something older that neither of them could name. It clung to the air in the aftermath of everything that had passed, not unpleasant, but undeniable, like the residue of a ri
(Apollo & Adelaide) The throne room did not empty. It bled out, slow and reluctant. It drained, slow as cooling blood. At Apollo’s dismissal, demons scattered like ash caught in a furnace draft. They retreated the way smoke does when cold air invades—slow, unwilling, eyes clinging to the throne,
(Apollo & Adelaide) The silence stretched. Not awkward, but weighted. Like the pause before a storm chooses whether to break or pass. Her brows drew together, not in disbelief, but in something closer to concern. “Apollo,” she said softly. “That isn’t funny.” “I am not laughing.” She swallo
(Caelum Ashborne) Slowly, carefully, he opened his hand. The ember bloomed instantly—not weak, not hesitant, but tight and furious, a compressed coil of gold-deep flame that snapped and writhed above his palm as if angered by restraint. It burned hotter than anything he had called before, its col
(Adelaide & Caelum)Her Emberflame responded first. Not flaring. Turning its attention outward, like an animal lifting its head. She opened her eyes and found Cael immediately, now standing near the other side of the pit.“Defence only,” Cael said. “Do not pursue. Do not answer force with force. Yo






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