LOGIN(Adelaide)
When all sixteen stood ready, the attendants lined them up and led them through the back corridor toward the platform. Adelaide’s bare feet slapped softly against the cold stone. Every footstep echoed, stacking on top of the last until it sounded like a crowd was walking with them—ghosts of every Offering that had come before.
As they emerged outside, the night hit her—sharp, cold, smelling of pine sap, woodsmoke, and something else beneath it. Something metallic. The air tasted like the moment before lightning strikes; charged, expectant, holding its breath.
The entire village had gathered. Torches crackled on tall iron poles, casting orange light across the crowd. The platform was draped in black cloth. Bells tolled. Wind stirred the hem of Adelaide’s thin white dress, and the cool breeze pebbled her nipples. The thin material rubbed against her perked pink nipples, teasing her. Heat licked low in her belly, unwanted and out of place, fury mixing with the humiliating awareness of her own body under so many eyes.
It made Adelaide want to tear the dress off, stand before the village naked and bare, exactly like the sacrificial goat they believed her to be. If they insisted on pretending this was holy, she would have liked to strip it of every illusion and make them look at what they were really doing.
The wind rose again, whipping strands of her damp hair across her cheeks. She lifted her chin, refusing to show even a flicker of fear.
The crowd parted as the girls were led onto the stage. Sixteen white dresses. Sixteen bare feet. Sixteen scented bodies. The wooden boards beneath them creaked faintly, as if straining under the weight of all that dread.
The Elders stood before them, hands raised in solemn greeting.
“My people,” Elder Thane proclaimed, voice booming unnaturally loud in the cold night, “we gather for the sacred Offering. A ritual older than our oldest stones. A pact that has kept our village safe for a thousand years.”
Adelaide’s nails dug into her palms. Safe? That’s what they call this? Safe? Her fingers bit crescents into her own skin until she felt the sting, the tiny beads of blood—proof that she could still hurt herself before he ever laid a claw on her
Thane continued, “Tonight, sixteen brave daughters stand before us. Blessed. Chosen.”
A murmur of reverent awe rippled through the crowd.
Adelaide felt heat crawl up her throat—not from embarrassment, but from pure fury.
Blessed?
Blessed to be chased by a demon? Blessed to be hunted like deer? Blessed to be killed to sate him off for another ten years?
Her jaw ached from how hard she was clenching it. She could almost hear her teeth grinding over his name, turning it into dust.
Thane stepped forward, gesturing broadly. “These noble girls—the pride of our village—take on the burden so that the Devil need not take many. He will hunt only one. Only one shall be claimed.”
A few villagers nodded gravely, pride shining in their eyes. Adelaide wanted to scream. She wanted to shout their names back at them, to ask if they’d still look so proud when it was their daughter’s dress hanging empty at dawn.
Thane pressed one hand to the ceremonial brazier. Flames licked around his wrist but did not burn.
“And the one he claims shall be honoured—kept in the Devil’s realm, her soul forever protected by him, blessed by him.”
Blessed. Blessed. Blessed. The word kept stabbing into her. Her vision blurred for a second—not with tears, but with the white-hot pressure of rage. Lies. All of it. Lies to sleep better at night. Lies to cover the horror of sending daughters into the woods barefoot. She imagined those lies stacking up in the chapel like stones, heavy and cold, until even the saints in the glass turned their faces away.
Her heart hammered against her ribs. She could feel eyes on her—hundreds of them, villagers staring at the wild-eyed girl on the far left of the line. The one with her chin lifted like she wanted to fight the night itself. The one who didn’t smell like compliance. The one who offered herself in her sister’s place.
Some looked at her with pity. Some with admiration. Some with fear. Let them fear her. Let them fear what she would become. If she lived through this, she would never again let them hide behind words like 'duty' and 'honour'.
As the Elders droned on about sacrifice and honour, Adelaide let her gaze drift over the crowd.
Her mother stood near the front, face pale, hands clasped tightly over her charm. Lyra was beside her, tears tracking silently down her cheeks. Adelaide forced a small nod at them. A silent “I’m still here.” Her mother lifted trembling fingers to her lips in return. Lyra pressed her free hand flat over her heart, as if she could physically hold it together.
The Elders raised their hands in unison. “The hour approaches. When the moon stands at its peak, the Offering begins. Prepare your hearts. Prepare your prayers.”
Adelaide’s thoughts hissed back: Prepare your excuses when I don’t return. Prepare your guilt. Prepare to look my mother in the eye and tell her this was necessary.
Wind curled around her bare ankles like a warning. The forest beyond the square whispered. The torches flickered violently for a moment—then steadied.
Something was awake out there. Something was already moving. She felt it like a gaze pressed between her shoulder blades, a patient, amused attention that made every hair along her neck stand on end.
The girls were led off the platform and toward the shadowed tree line where they would wait in the dark, barefoot on cold earth, hearts pounding like trapped birds.
Adelaide’s skin prickled. The night of the Offering had begun.
And somewhere beyond the trees… He was coming.
The path to the forest was narrow, carved into the earth by centuries of terrified footsteps. It wound between torchlit posts and looming pines, the air thick with the scent of sap and smoke. Adelaide walked in the centre of the line, her bare feet crunching on cold soil, every step sharper than the last. Bits of grit and tiny stones pressed into her soles, a series of small, precise pains that kept her anchored inside her body and not in the terror clawing at the edges of her mind.
The guards led them in silence.
Sixteen girls. Sixteen white dresses fluttering like pale moth wings. Sixteen drifting clouds of flower-scent rising around them. The perfume trailed behind them in the dark like a path he could follow with his eyes closed.
The forest loomed ahead—vast, dark, ancient. Its branches tangled together like bony fingers weaving a cage. No light reached inside. The night pooled there, thick as ink. It felt less like approaching trees and more like walking toward the open mouth of some colossal beast.
Every instinct in Adelaide screamed not to go closer. But the guards herded them forward, lanterns swinging, expressions blank as carved stone. No one spoke—not even the girls who had been weeping earlier. Their voices had dried into silence, as if opening their mouths now would shatter something fragile and final.
Adelaide’s heart hammered. Not with fear—she refused fear—but with a gathering, simmering rage that threatened to crack her ribcage open.
They’re marching us in like lambs. And all these people…they just watch. They would go home after this, bank their fires, tuck themselves into bed, and tell each other stories about bravery, pretending not to hear the screams that might carry on the wind.
She glanced back.
Villagers lined the path behind them, holding torches and lanterns, their faces splashed in wavering orange light. Mothers clutched charms against their throats. Fathers stood rigid, jaws clenched. Children hid behind skirts, eyes enormous. All watching. All helpless. All complicit.
Her mother stood near the front, gripping Lyra so tightly the girl might bruise. Lyra’s eyes were red, cheeks streaked with tears, but she didn’t cry out anymore. She just stared at Adelaide, like watching a dream slowly turn into a nightmare.
Adelaide forced herself to look away. If she met those eyes too long, she might break. And she had promised herself that when she broke, it would be in front of no one but him.
The guards stopped when the trees towered directly overhead. The forest swallowed the moonlight, swallowed the warmth, swallowed the world.
Here, the ground was colder. Pebbles bit her soles. The air smelled of damp earth, moss, and something more profound—something that prickled across her neck like breath. The darkness between the trunks wasn’t empty; it felt thick, crowded, full of things that weren’t quite shapes yet.
“Stand here,” a guard commanded, gesturing toward a broad stretch of flattened earth before the tree line.
The girls obeyed. Adelaide stepped into place among them, chin lifted, jaw hard. Wind brushed her bare legs. Leaves whispered. Something unseen shifted deeper in the woods. She had never felt more alive. Or more furious. Her blood sang with a strange, sharp clarity, as if this was the moment she had been walking toward her whole life without knowing it.
Elder Thane approached again, his long grey robes dragging through the dirt. Torches cast leaping shadows across his gaunt face. He looked like a ghost already.
He raised a hand for silence.
“As the moon climbs toward its peak,” he said, “the Offering nears.”
A few villagers bowed their heads. Some pressed their hands to their hearts. Some clung to each other as if seeking strength to share.
(Adelaide & Cael) They resumed walking. The forest grew darker as they moved deeper, though Adelaide’s wings kept the worst of the shadows away. Cael watched the path with renewed focus, but his attention kept returning to her, to the impossible ease with which she carried fire, to the way her emotions brushed his own, to the new markings hidden beneath his sleeves, to the old palace waiting ahead like a sealed memory preparing to open its eyes. Adelaide felt his thoughts circling something and glanced over. “You’re thinking loudly.” “I am not thinking at you.” “You are brooding with force.” “That is not a measurable phenomenon.” “It is now.” He exhaled softly, and for a few steps, the sound of ash beneath their boots filled the quiet. Then he said, “Can you feel Apollo?” The question moved between them carefully. Adelaide’s steps slowed. Not stopped. But slowed. She looked ahead, her expression tightening. “Not clearly.” Cael waited. “That’s the worst part,” sh
(Adelaide & Cael) “I don’t want to be someone else,” Adelaide said, and the words came so quietly the forest almost took them. The words left her before she could stop them. And once spoken, they seemed to linger in the air between them, exposing something she had not fully understood until that moment. Because it wasn't power she feared. It wasn't the wings. Or the fire. Or the way ancient magic kept recognising her before she recognised herself. It was the possibility that one day she would wake up and find there was less of Adelaide Harrow left than there had been the day before. Her throat tightened. The dream returned without invitation. White hair. Not pale. Not silver. White in the way starlight was white. White in the way sacred flame was white. She remembered standing atop a mountain that seemed to pierce the heavens themselves, the sky torn open above her in ribbons of gold and fire while thousands knelt below. An impossible crown rested upon her head. Not metal.
(Adelaide & Cael) The forest peeled back in slow, reluctant increments, the path widening into scorched earth where the canopy had been burned to nothing. Above, the sky bled through a veil of smoke, bruised and red, as if heaven itself had been wounded and left to seep into the world below. Adelaide’s wings flared their own sovereign light upward, white and gold against the ruin, and for a moment Cael saw her not as a traveller through the ashes, but as a queen leading the dead forest toward resurrection. The thought unsettled him enough that Emberflame answered. Gold light slid around his fingers before he consciously called it, a small, controlled curl that twined once around his hand and vanished. Adelaide looked down. “You did that.” Cael looked at his hand. He had. Not by command, not even by conscious intent. The flame had risen with the barest thought, answering the shape of his concern before decision had even formed. Once, even as Emberflame grew stronger in Adelai
(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
(Apollo)The watching demons stiffened.They felt it before he moved again, that subtle shift in the air when their king went from entertainment to execution. The court’s hunger faltered into caution. Stone seemed to tighten around them. The lava’s restless glow steadied, as if the realm itself lea
(Apollo)The soul screamed like metal being torn in half.The sound wasn’t just noise; it was vibration. It punched through the cavern walls, rattled ancient runes carved into stone, and made loose pebbles skitter across the iron walkways like fleeing insects. Even the lava seemed to flinch, its su
(Apollo)“Make it bleed, Majesty.” The title rolled through the cavern like a prayer answered by Devilfire.He could. He did. He dragged out the process, spreading the agony thin and wide, savouring every strained gasp and choked cry. He stretched seconds into eternities, pulled nerve and memory a
(Adelaide)By the time they reached her chamber door, Adelaide felt like she could finally breathe again. Her lungs still trembled from the place they’d just passed—the black-mouthed tunnel slanting down into the human-soul dungeon. Even now, several halls away, she could feel the echo of it clin







