Mag-log in(Adelaide)
“Why is that already on you?” Adelaide demanded.
Lyra startled, nearly dropping her spoon. “Mama said we should be prepared.”
Prepared. Right. Prepared to be paraded. Prepared to be measured by a myth. Prepared to run. The words clanged around in Adelaide’s skull like pots knocked together—too loud, too hollow.
Adelaide crossed the room in three strides. “Take it off.”
Lyra’s eyes widened. “I can’t.”
“You can,” Adelaide snapped, and reached for the thread.
Their mother’s voice cut through the air like a blade. “Stop.”
Adelaide froze.
Mother stood near the stove, ladle in hand, her expression carved from stone. “It stays.”
Adelaide’s jaw clenched. “She’s not going.”
“No one chooses who goes,” her mother said. “Not us. Not the Elders.”
“That’s not true,” Adelaide said bitterly. “Everyone chooses. Every pointed glance. Every whispered word. They’ve already picked their list in their heads.”
Lyra shrank into her seat, shoulders curling inward, trying to take up less space. It twisted something deep in Adelaide’s chest.
She softened her voice. “Lyra… You don’t have to make it easy for them.”
Lyra swallowed hard. “Please don’t fight today. Not today.”
Mother set the ladle down. “She is right, Adelaide. We need peace this morning. Just for a few hours.”
Peace. How was peace possible when the air itself felt stretched thin, vibrating with dread? Her own nerves hummed like plucked wire, ready to snap with the slightest touch.
Adelaide sat, the chair scraping the floor louder than intended. Lyra flinched. Mother’s lips tightened. Adelaide forced herself still.
Lyra pushed the porridge toward her. “Eat. You’ll need your strength.”
“For what?” Adelaide muttered. “Watching the Elders read names?”
Lyra’s eyes flicked down. “For whatever comes.”
Adelaide hated the way that sounded. As if Lyra already knew the shape of the day: the bell, the names, the forest swallowing someone whole.
Silence settled, broken only by the occasional scrape of a spoon. Outside, the village was stirring—the grind of a wagon wheel, the bark of a tied-up dog, voices murmuring low, solemn. An entire community bracing for something ancient and terrible.
When the church bell tolled, deep and echoing, Mother stood abruptly. “It’s time.”
Lyra’s hand trembled as she rose. Adelaide’s heart hammered against her ribs. Not yet, she told herself. Not until they read her name. Not until she stepped forward. Not until the ink of this moment dried on whatever ledger the Devil kept.
The walk to the Chapel Square felt longer than it ever had. Villagers filled the narrow dirt paths, all moving in the same direction, dressed in muted tones. The air was colder here, sinking into skin like damp fingers. Frost clung to the eaves of roofs and the grass lining the road. Each breath Adelaide drew burned a little, misting white in front of her like pieces of her spirit escaping one exhale at a time.
Whispers followed them.
“That’s Mara’s eldest…”
“The sharp-eyed one.”
“He’ll like her spirit. They always do.”
“No—he chooses the quiet ones.”
“Not always.”
“God help whoever he takes.”
Adelaide kept her chin high, even as her palms sweated. The urge to bare her teeth at them rose sharp and hot, but she swallowed it, letting it sit like a stone in her gut instead.
Lyra clung to her mother’s hand, her own thin legs shaking. Adelaide edged closer, protective instinct coiling tight.
The Chapel Square was already full. The stone platform had been draped in black cloth. Sixteen wooden markers stood in a row—symbols of the sixteen destined to run. A brazier burned at the centre, flames bright in the pale morning. Greasy smoke twisted upward, carrying the bitter tang of old fat and charred herbs, the smell worming its way into Adelaide’s clothes, her hair, her lungs.
The Elders waited at the front, grey-robed, hollow-eyed. And behind them, carved into the chapel’s ancient stone façade, the sigil glared back at them: a sun split in half, horns curling from its broken edges. Yesterday it had been only on the well.
Today, it watched from everywhere.
Adelaide felt it like a hand closing around her throat. For a heartbeat, she could have sworn the carved lines darkened, as if ink—no, blood—had seeped into the grooves overnight. She blinked hard, but the impression clung.
Lyra whimpered softly beside her. “I don’t want to go up there…”
“You won’t,” Adelaide said immediately. “Do you hear me? You won’t.”
Her mother shot her a warning look, but said nothing.
A hush fell as Elder Thane stepped forward, unrolling the long, brittle parchment. His voice, thin and sharp as a reed flute, cut through the cold air.
“By decree of the Pact, by the Seal of Fire, by the bargain struck a thousand years ago—sixteen names shall be offered.”
Lyra’s breath hitched. Mother’s fingers tightened around hers.
Adelaide stood very still, muscles taut as wire. The words of the Pact were old and worn smooth from repetition, but today they crawled over her skin like living things. She’d heard them once before, a decade ago, when she was a child, and yet this was the first time they felt aimed like an arrow.
“First,” the Elder said, “Mira Ellwood.”
A girl near the front burst into sobs as her parents gripped her arms.
“Second. Talie Harrow.”
“Third. Rowan Vess.”
Each name was a hammer. Each reaction—a flinch, or a cry, or resigned stillness—drove the point deeper. The square seemed to pulse with each syllable, the air thickening, as if the world itself were taking tally.
“Fourth,” Thane read, “Lyra—”
“No.”
The word tore from Adelaide before she realised she’d spoken. Every head snapped toward her. Lyra went rigid, her eyes filling instantly. Their mother’s face crumpled.
Elder Thane blinked. “Lyra Harrow—”
“I said no,” Adelaide repeated, stepping forward. “I invoke the Exchange Rite.”
Gasps rippled through the crowd. A few people crossed themselves. Others stared, wide-eyed, as if she’d sprouted horns herself. Somewhere near the back, a woman muttered a prayer under her breath, the words tripping over one another in her haste.
Thane’s face tightened. “That is an ancient rite seldom honoured. Blood must match blood. Will matched by will.”
“Then it fits perfectly,” Adelaide said. She yanked her sleeve up and sliced her palm with the small knife strapped beneath her belt. A thin line of red welled instantly. The sting was sharp, clean; the cold air bit at the open skin, and the blood looked too bright against the washed-out day, a small defiant bloom of colour.
Behind her, Lyra cried out. “Addie, no—no, please—”
Adelaide ignored her and held her bleeding palm forward. “I take her place.”
Elder Thane regarded her with a strange blend of dread and fascination. “You do not understand what you are offering.”
“I do,” Adelaide said. “Better me than her.”
Mother’s hand flew to her mouth. Lyra sobbed harder. A few villagers murmured.
Elder Thane’s gaze swept the crowd, then the other Elders. Finally, he sighed, ancient bones shifting as he raised his hand.
“So be it. The Devil cares not which girl runs—only that sixteen run. Adelaide Harrow, you stand in Lyra’s stead.”
A heavy silence fell. Even the fire in the brazier seemed to hush, flames drawing in on themselves. The square had the feel of a held breath, waiting to see if the world would crack.
Lyra collapsed into their mother’s arms, trembling violently. Mother stared at Adelaide with a mix of terror, pride, and heartbreak, as if she couldn’t decide whether to scold her or pull her into a crushing embrace.
Adelaide swallowed hard, the cold wind burning her lungs.
The Elder dipped a strip of red thread in the brazier flame until it smoked. Then he tied it around Adelaide’s wrist—tight, almost cruel. The mark of a runner. The mark of prey.
The moment the knot cinched, Adelaide felt it like a shiver racing up her spine. The world seemed to tilt, shadows lengthening for just a breath, as if something unseen had turned its head toward her. Watching. Recognizing. Choosing. A low, soundless roar filled her ears, like distant waves crashing against cliffs she had never seen, drowning out the square for a heartbeat before fading.
When the Elder stepped back, the crowd whispered among themselves.
“She offered—willingly?”
“The Devil will enjoy that.”
“Brave girl… foolish girl.”
“May the gods shield her.”
Adelaide turned to Lyra.
Her sister reached out, fingers shaking so hard she could barely hold her wrist. “Adelaide,” she whispered, voice cracking, “why—why did you—?”
Adelaide stepped forward and snatched up her sister's wrist. Using the same knife, now stained with her blood, she cut the red tie from her sister's wrist.
“Because he’s not getting you,” Adelaide said fiercely. “No matter what happens.” The piece of red wool hit the ground between them, like a line in the sand drawn and ready for battle. The thread landed on a thin crust of frost and steamed faintly where her blood had touched it, as if the ground itself acknowledged the bargain she’d made.
Lyra sobbed and threw her arms around her. Adelaide held her tightly, letting the warmth of her sister’s trembling body anchor her, even as dread churned her stomach.
She had done it. There was no turning back now.
The thread around her wrist seemed to pulse with heat. As if somewhere far beyond the veil, something ancient and hungry had just smiled. In the back of her mind, unbidden, rose an image she’d never seen but somehow knew: a figure in the dark woods lifting its head, the echo of a grin cutting through shadow like a blade of moonlight. And for the first time, Adelaide understood that this was not just a tale told to frighten children. This was a summons.
(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)“Continue.” Apollo demanded.“They reached the Wilds faster than predicted. By the time our surviving forces reorganised after the battle, they had already established forward positions and begun moving toward the Ashen Dominion.” A flicker of irritation crossed Apollo's face. “Why weren't they intercepted?” The room fell briefly silent. Not from fear. From calculation. Malachar eventually answered. “Because the army spent the first day believing you might die.” The words landed harder than anything else spoken thus far. No one moved. No one spoke. Apollo simply stared at him. Malachar held the gaze. “You were unconscious. The command structure was fractured. Casualties exceeded expectations. The western divisions required immediate reinforcement. The wounded required evacuation. We did not have the numbers to pursue aggressively without risking a complete collapse of the line.” Apollo hated the explanation, mostly because it was reasonable. “The army?” “Rec
(Apollo)By the time he reached the throne room, the air itself felt thinner, stretched tight with anticipation as though the space understood what was coming before the doors even opened. They parted before him. Inside, the war council stilled. Several generals rose instinctively before realising they had already been standing. One advisor took an unconscious step backward. Another gripped the edge of the war table hard enough for his knuckles to pale beneath dark skin. None of them were looking at their king with relief. They were looking at him the way soldiers looked at an unstable siege engine that had suddenly begun moving again. The chamber stretched wide, obsidian floors reflecting fractured light from towering braziers that burned higher than they should have, reacting to the instability he carried with him. Above the central dais, projections of the battlefield hovered in layered constructs of gold and red, shifting lines of strategy suspended in magic that flickered
(Apollo)The door shuddered behind him.So did he.Apollo stood in the corridor, chest heaving, fists clenched so tightly his claws had already broken skin. Blood slid down his palms in slow, hot lines, dripping off his fingertips onto the obsidian floor. Each drop hissed faintly as it hit the ston
(Apollo)“Female,” he said, voice rough from need and hatred of that need. “And not human.”The demon bowed deeper. “At once.”His breath shook. He couldn’t be in his chamber. He couldn’t see the bed where he’d laid her. He couldn’t breathe the same air she had gasped in.Here — in the throne room
(Adelaide & The Devil)“Apollo.”The name felt strange on her tongue—too soft, too human, too real for the creature who had ripped her from the world she knew. She didn’t mean to speak it aloud. The sound simply escaped, barely a whisper. It slid out like an accident, like breath forced from her lu
(Adelaide )The silence after he slammed the door wasn’t silence at all.It throbbed.It rolled through the chamber in suffocating waves, vibrating across the stone walls and humming beneath the floor like something alive. The iron in the door still rang with the echo of his exit, a faint metallic







