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Chapter no 74

The Ashes & the Star-Cursed King

For a few long, terrible seconds, nothing happened.

The battle continued. Simon kept slowly pushing himself to his knees. Raihn kept dying.

More tears welled up in my eyes. No. This had to work. It had to.

My arm shook as I held that vial to the sky, held it as high as I could, my eyes staring unblinking into the god-touched night above.

Please,ย I pleaded, silently.ย Please, Nyaxia. I know Iโ€™ve never been yours. Not really. But Iโ€™m begging you to hear me.

And then, as if she heard my silent prayer, there she was.

Time seemed to slow, the figures above moving in slow motion. The breeze through my hair grew cold, the strands suspended in midair. My skin pebbled, as if in the moments preceding a strike of lightning.

Just like last time, I felt her before I saw her. A staggering sensation of overwhelming adoration, and overwhelming smallness.

โ€œWhat,โ€ a low, melodic voice said, deadly as a drawn blade, โ€œis happening here?โ€

There was only one thing, I realized in this moment, more terrifying than the presence of a god.

And that was the rage of one. I slowly lowered my eyes.

Nyaxia floated before me.

She was just as beautiful, just as terrible, as I remembered her. Hers was the kind of beauty that made you want to prostrate yourself before her. Her hair floated in tendrils of ink-black night. Her bare feet hovered, delicately

pointed, just above the ground. Her body, dipped in silver, gleamed and shone like moonlight in the darkness. Those eyes, revealing every shade of the night sky, were dark and stormy with utter fury.

The world itself felt that fury. Ceded to it. As if the air was desperate to please her, the stars moving to soothe her, the moon ready to bow to her.

Perhaps the fighting stopped, when Nyaxia appeared, soldiers on all sides shocked by what they were in the presence of. Or perhaps it just seemed that way, because everything else ceased to exist when she arrived.

Her shoulders rose and fell with heavy breaths. Her bloody lips contorted into a snarl.

โ€œWhat,โ€ she ground out, โ€œis thisย atrocity?โ€

She spat the word, and with it, a burst of power shook the earth. I cringed, my body folding over Raihnโ€™s as rocks and sand cascaded from the ruins. Wisps of stormy shadow surrounded her, leeching out into the air with the ominous darkness of tragedy.

Simon had managed to get himself up to his knees. He turned to her, bowing, blood spilling from his mouth as he spoke. โ€œMy Goddessโ€”โ€

I didnโ€™t even see Nyaxia move. One moment, she was before me, and the next, she was at Simon, hoisting him up with a single hand and ripping the pendant from his chest with the other.

It was so sudden, so brutal, that I let out a little gasp, my own body bracing tighter over Raihnโ€™s.

Nyaxia let Simonโ€™s corpse, limp and bleeding, fall to the ground without so much as a second glance.

Instead, she cradled the twisted creation of steel and teeth in her hands, staring down at it.

Her face was blank. But the sky grew darker, the air colder. I was shakingโ€”whether with shivers or fear, or maybe both, I wasnโ€™t sure. I still leaned over Raihn, and I couldnโ€™t bring myself to stop, even though I knew it was pointless.

I couldnโ€™t protect him from the wrath of a goddess.

Her fingertips traced the pendantโ€”the broken teeth welded into it. โ€œWho did this?โ€

I wasnโ€™t expecting that. For her to sound soโ€ฆ broken.

โ€œMy love,โ€ she murmured. โ€œLook at what youโ€™ve become.โ€ The pain in her voice was so naked. So familiar.

No, grief never really left us. Not even for the gods. Two thousand years, and Nyaxiaโ€™s was still tender as ever.

Then, in an eerily sudden movement, her head snapped up. Her eyes landed on me.

My head emptied of thought. The full force of Nyaxiaโ€™s attention was devastating.

The pendant in her hands disappeared, and suddenly, she was before

me.

โ€œHow did this happen?โ€ she snarled. โ€œMy own children, using the body

parts of my husbandโ€™s corpse for their own pathetic gains? What incredible disrespect.โ€

Talk, Oraya,ย an urgent voice reminded me.ย Explain. Say something.

I had to force the words out.

โ€œI agree,โ€ I said. โ€œIโ€™m returning what is rightfully yours. Your husbandโ€™s blood, my Mother.โ€

I opened my fingers, offering her the vial in my shaking palm. Her face softened. A glimmer of grief. A glimmer of sadness.

She reached for it, but I moved it awayโ€”a stupid move, I recognized right after Iโ€™d done it, when her sadness was replaced by anger.

โ€œI ask for a deal,โ€ I said quickly. โ€œOne favor, and itโ€™s yours.โ€ Her face darkened. โ€œIt is already mine.โ€

That was a fair point. I was gambling with something that was not mine to trade, with leverage that was laughable against a goddess. I was so afraid. I was grateful I was kneeling, because otherwise, I was sure my knees would have buckled.

I tethered myself to the sensation of Raihnโ€™s fading heartbeat beneath my palm, and my own heightening desperation.

โ€œI appeal to your heart, my Mother,โ€ I choked out. โ€œAs a lover who knows grief. Please. Youโ€™re right, your husbandโ€™s blood is yours. I know I cannot, and would not, keep it from you. But Iโ€”I ask you for a favor in return.โ€

I swallowed thickly, my next words heavy on my tongue. If I wasnโ€™t so distracted, maybe this would have been funny. My entire life, Iโ€™d dreamed of asking Nyaxia for this very giftโ€”but never did I think it would be under these circumstances.

I said, โ€œMy Mother, I ask you for a Coriatis bond. Please.โ€ My voice cracked over my plea.

A Coriatis bond. The god-given gift Iโ€™d once thought would give me the power I needed to be Vincentโ€™s true daughter. Now, I was giving up my fatherโ€™s greatest weapon to bind myself to the man Iโ€™d once thought was my greatest enemy. To save his life.

Love, over power.

Nyaxiaโ€™s gaze flicked down. She seemed to notice Raihn for the first time since sheโ€™d arrived, with only passing interest.

โ€œAh,โ€ she said. โ€œI see. Much has changed, I suppose, since the last time you begged me for his life.โ€

Before, Nyaxia had laughed when Iโ€™d asked her to save Raihnโ€™s life, amused by the antics of her mortal followers. But there was no amusement in her eyes, now. I wished I could read her face.

I wished I had better words for her.

โ€œPlease,โ€ I choked out, again. Another tear slid down my cheek.

She leaned down. Her fingertips caressed my face, tipping my chin toward her. She was so close that she couldโ€™ve kissed me, close enough that I could count the stars and galaxies in her eyes.

โ€œI told you once, little human,โ€ she murmured. โ€œA dead lover can never break your heart. You did not listen to me then.โ€

And Raihn had broken my heart that night. I couldnโ€™t deny that.

โ€œYou should have let the flower of your love remain forever frozen as it was,โ€ she said. โ€œSo beautiful at its peak. So much less painful.โ€

But there was no such thing as love without fear. Love without vulnerability. Love without risk.

โ€œNot as beautiful as one that lives,โ€ I whispered.

A flicker of something I couldnโ€™t decipher passed over Nyaxiaโ€™s face. She reached for the vial in my palm, and this time, I let her. Her fingers touched it tenderly, like the caress of a lover.

She let out a soft, bitter laugh.

โ€œSpoken by someone too young to see the ugliness of its decay.โ€

Was this what she told herself? Was this how she stifled her grief over her husbandโ€™s death? Did she convince herself it was better this way?

The last time Iโ€™d met Nyaxia, she had seemed a force greater than any mortal could comprehend.

Now, she seemed… so tragically imperfect. Fallible in all the same ways as us.

โ€œIt would have bloomed,โ€ I said softly. โ€œIf he had lived. You and Alarus.

Your love wouldnโ€™t have withered.โ€

Nyaxiaโ€™s eyes snapped to me, like Iโ€™d startled her by speakingโ€”like sheโ€™d gone somewhere far away, forgetting I was here at all.

For a moment, grief collapsed in her beautiful face.

Then she shuttered it behind an ice wall, pristine features going still. She snatched the vial from my hand and drew herself back up to her full height.

โ€œI feel your pain, my child,โ€ she said. โ€œBut I cannot grant you a Coriatis bond.โ€

The words obliterated me.

My skin went numb. My ears rang. I could not hear anything over the sound of my heart shattering at my goddessโ€™s feet.

โ€œPleaseโ€”โ€ I begged.

โ€œI am a romantic,โ€ she said. โ€œIt brings me no pleasure to deny you. But you and himโ€”you were created, thousands of years ago, as enemies. Those roles are marked onto your skin. Hiaj. Rishan.โ€

My chest burned, my Heir Mark pulsing, as if awoken by her mention of it.

โ€œRoles given byย you,โ€ I said, even though I knew it was stupid to argue with herโ€”

โ€œRoles given by your forefathers,โ€ she corrected. โ€œDo you know why I created the Hiaj and Rishan lines? Because even before Obitraes was the land of vampires, your peoples fought. A perpetual power struggle that would never end. It is what you are meant to be. If I grant you a Coriatis bond, your hearts would become one, your lines intertwined. It would erase the Hiaj and Rishan legacy forever.โ€

โ€œIt would eliminate two thousand years of unrest.โ€

And it wasnโ€™t until Nyaxia nodded slowly, giving me a long, hard stare, that I realized:

We were saying the same thing.

Nyaxia had no interest in ending two thousand years of unrest.

Nyaxia liked her children squabbling, constantly vying over each other for her affections and favor.

Nyaxia would not grant me a Coriatis bond with Raihn, would not allow me to save his life, out of nothing but petty stubbornness.

I opened my mouth, but nothing came out. My anger swallowed all words.

Nyaxia sensed it anyway, though, a flash of disapproval over her features. She leaned close again. โ€œIโ€™m handing you victory for the second time, my child. Perhaps you should simply take it. Donโ€™t all little girls dream of being queens?โ€

Did you?ย I wanted to ask her.ย Did you dream of becoming this?

Instead, I rasped, โ€œThen tell me how to save him.โ€

Her perfect lips thinned, another drop of blood rolling down her chin with the shift of her muscles. Her lashes lowered as she took in Raihnโ€™s mangled body.

โ€œHe is practically already dead,โ€ she said. โ€œThere has to be something.โ€

Another indecipherable emotion over her face. Perhaps genuine pity. She flicked a tear from my cheek.

โ€œA Coriatis bond would save him,โ€ she said. โ€œBut I cannot be the one to give it to you.โ€

She rose and turned away. I didnโ€™t look up from Raihnโ€™s battered features, which blurred with my unshed tears.

โ€œOraya of the Nightborn.โ€ I lifted my head.

Nyaxia stood at Simonโ€™s broken body, nudging it with her toe.

โ€œTreasure that flower,โ€ she said. โ€œNo one will ever be able to hurt you again.โ€

And then she was gone.

No one will ever be able to hurt you again.

Her words echoed in my head as I let out the sob Iโ€™d been choking back.

I leaned over Raihn, pressing my forehead to his.

His breath, ever-fading, was so weak against my lips. I did not care that Simon was dead.

I did not care that the Rishan were retreating. I did not care if I had won my war.

Raihn was dying in my arms. Slow rage built in my chest.ย Treasure that flower.

Perhaps you should just take it.

Spoken by someone too young to see the ugliness of its decay.

With every memory of Nyaxiaโ€™s voice, it grew hotter. No.

No, I refused to accept it. I had come this fucking far. I had sacrificed so much. I refused to sacrifice this, too.

I refused to sacrificeย him.

A Coriatis bond,ย Nyaxia had said.ย But I cannot be the one to give it to you.

The answer was right there.

A Coriatis bond could only be forged by a god. And yes, Nyaxia had denied me. But Nyaxia wasnโ€™t the only goddess my blood called to. She was my fatherโ€™s goddess.

My motherโ€™s was just as powerful.

Crazed hope seized me. I looked up to the skyโ€”the sky still bright and swirling with the thinning barrier between this world and the next. And maybe I imagined itโ€”maybe I was a naive fool for itโ€”but I could have sworn I felt the eyes of the gods on me.

โ€œMy Goddess Acaeja,โ€ I cried out, my voice cracking. โ€œI summon you in the name of my mother, your acolyte, Alana of Obitraes, in my greatest time of need. Hear me, Acaeja, I beg you.โ€

And perhaps I wasnโ€™t insane after all.

Because when I called, a goddess answered.

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