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Chapter no 1

A Light in the Flame (Flesh and Fire, #2)

โ€œYou are the heir to the lands and seas, skies and realms. A Queen instead of a King. You are the Primal of Life,โ€ Nyktosโ€”the Asher, the One who is Blessed, the Guardian of Souls and the Primal God of Common Men and Endingsโ€”rasped. Those lips of his that had whispered heated words against my skin and had also spoken cold, brutal truths were now parted. Wide, silver eyes churning with streams of luminous eatherโ€”the essence of the godsโ€”fixed on mine. A sort of awe and wonder softened the cold lines of his high, broad cheekbones, his blade-straight nose, and cut jaw.

Wavy, reddish-brown hair fell against golden-bronze cheeks as he lowered himself to one knee, placing his left hand flat on the throne room floor and his right palm over his chest.

Nyktos wasย bowingย toย me.

I recoiled from him. โ€œWhat are you doing?โ€

โ€œThe Primal of Life is the most powerful being in all the realms, usurping all other Primals and gods,โ€ Sir Holland said. Except he was no longer the man I once knew as a knight of the Royal Guard of Lasania, or a mere mortal. He was one of the Araeโ€”an actual, godsforsakenย Fate, neither god nor mortal. Able to see the past, present, and future of all, the Arae werenโ€™t beholden to any Primal Court.

Fates were as terrifying as any Primal, and I couldnโ€™t even begin to count how many times Iโ€™d kicked him.

โ€œHe is showing you the respect you are owed, Sera,โ€ Holland added as I continued staring at Nyktos.

โ€œBut Iโ€™m not the Primal of Life.โ€ I stated the obvious.

โ€œYou carry the only true embers of life inside you,โ€ Nyktos said, and that deep, softly spoken voice sent a myriad of shivers over my skin. โ€œFor all intents and purposes, youย areย the Primal of Life.โ€

โ€œHe speaks the truth.โ€ The goddess Penellaphe drew closer, coming to stand beneath the open ceiling. The star-strewn sky cast a soft glow over her

warm, light brown skin. โ€œDenying it isnโ€™t a luxury which can be afforded.โ€ โ€œBut Iโ€™m just a mortalโ€”โ€ My lungs felt as if theyโ€™d been filled with

tiny holes, and Nyktos wasย stillย bowing to me. โ€œCan you please stand or sit? Anything other than kneel? Itโ€™s really weirding me out.โ€

Nyktosโ€™s head tilted, sending several strands of hair against his cheek. โ€œYou are theย trueย Primal of Life, just as my father was. As Holland said, itโ€™s a show of respect.โ€

โ€œBut I donโ€™t desโ€”โ€ I cut myself off, my heart thumping and chest squeezing. The eather in his eyes stilled. โ€œCan you just not do that? Please.โ€ The Primal rose quickly, the wisps of essence in his eyes brightening so vividly they were almost painful to look upon. He towered over me, his stare seeming to peel away the layers of my very being, seeingโ€ฆsensing

what I felt.

I stiffened, my skin becoming hot and prickly. โ€œYouโ€™d better not be reading my emotions.โ€

Nyktos arched a dark brow. โ€œYour accusatory tone is unnecessary.โ€ โ€œAnd your response wasnโ€™t a declaration of innocence,โ€ I retorted.

Penellapheโ€™s eyes flared wide.

โ€œNo.โ€ His voice had dropped, but it still somehow thundered through me. โ€œIt was not.โ€

โ€œThen donโ€™t do it,โ€ I snapped. โ€œItโ€™s rude.โ€

Nyktosโ€™s mouth opened, likely to point out that I was the last person who should speak on rude behavior.

โ€œYou have never been just a mortal, Seraphena.โ€ Holland stepped in smoothly, just as heโ€™d done dozens of times in the past whenever Iโ€™d descended into a rant spiral. โ€œYou are the possibility of a future for all.โ€

Heโ€™d said a version of that before during training, but it took on a whole different meaning now. โ€œBut I havenโ€™t completed any Culling, and you just said that I wouldโ€ฆโ€ Closing my eyes, I didnโ€™t finish the sentence.

Everyone here knew what had been said.

Breathe in. My mortal body and mind wouldnโ€™t be able to handle the power of the embers once I began the Ascension. The only chance I had of surviving wasnโ€™t even a hope.ย Hold. Because it required the blood of the Primal that one of the embers of life belonged toโ€”that and sheer will powered byย love.

The love of the Primal Iโ€™d spent the entirety of my life planning to kill.

It didnโ€™t matter that Iโ€™d believed it was the only way to save my kingdom.

The irony of it all made me want to laugh, except I was going to die. Likely in less than five months and before I turned twenty-one, taking the last true embers of life with me. The mortal realm would be hit first and the hardest. Eventually, the Rot would spread beyond the Shadowlands to all of Iliseeum.

I exhaled long and slow, just like Holland had taught me many years ago, when everything became too heavy, too much, and the weight of it all choked the air from me. My impending death wasnโ€™t something new. Iโ€™d always known. Whether I failed or succeeded when it came to fulfilling my destiny, I knew I would die in the process.

But it felt different now.

Iโ€™d finally had a taste of being something other than a means to an end, a weapon to be used and then discarded. Iโ€™d had a taste ofย realness. Iโ€™d finally felt like a fully formed person, not a specter soaked in blood. Not a liar and a monster who could kill without all that much remorse.

But that was who I was underneath it all, and Nyktos now knew that, too. There was no more hiding that truthโ€”or any truths.

My lungs started to burn as tiny bursts of light danced across my vision. The breathing exercises werenโ€™t working. A tremor hit my hands, and panic unfurled in my chest. There was no airโ€”

Fingertips touched my cheek.ย Warmย fingertips. My eyes flew open, locking on features so finely pieced together I shouldโ€™ve known the first time I saw him that he was more than a god. His touch startled me, not only because it was warm instead of shockingly cold as it had been before he took my blood into him, but because I still wasnโ€™t used toย touching. I wasnโ€™t sure I ever would be when it had always been so rare that anyone allowed their skin to contact mine.

But he touched me. After everything, Nyktos touchedย me. โ€œAre you all right?โ€ he asked, his voice low.

My tongue was heavy and useless, having nothing to do with my too- tight chest and everything to do with his concern. I didnโ€™t want it. Not now. It was wrong on so many different levels.

Nyktos stepped in close, lowering his head until his lips were mere inches from mine. A shiver followed his hand as he curled his fingers around the nape of my neck. His thumb gently pressed against my wildly thrumming pulse. He tilted my head as if lining up our mouths for a kiss as

heโ€™d done in his office before meeting with Holland and Penellaphe. But that would never happen again. Heโ€™d told me that himself.

โ€œBreathe,โ€ Nyktos whispered.

It was as if heโ€™d compelled the very air itself to enter my body, and it tasted of his scentโ€”citrus and fresh air. The darts of lights cleared, and my lungs expanded with breath. The shaking continued in my hands as his thumb swept across my pulse, now racing for entirely different reasons. He stood so close to me that there was no stopping the flood of memoriesโ€”the feel of his mouth against my throat, and his hands on my bare skin. The pain-tinged pleasure of his bite as he fed from me. Him movingย insideย me, creating the kind of pleasure that wouldnโ€™t be forgotten and warmed my blood even now.

Iโ€™d been Nyktosโ€™sย first.

And heโ€ฆhe would be myย last, no matter what happened from this point forward.

Sorrow crept in, cooling my heated blood and settling in my chest with a different, thicker kind of pressure. At least I no longer felt as if I couldnโ€™t catch my breath.

โ€œShe has trouble slowing her heart and breathing sometimes,โ€ Holland shared quietlyโ€”andย unnecessarily.

โ€œIโ€™ve noticed.โ€ Nyktosโ€™s thumb continued those featherlight sweeps while I inwardly cringed. He probably thoughtโ€ฆonly the gods knew what he thought.

I didnโ€™t want to know.

Face heating, I backed away from Nyktosโ€™s touch, hitting the edge of the dais. His hand hovered in midair for a few seconds, and then his fingers curled inward. He dropped his arm as I turned to the raised platform. I focused on the hauntingly beautiful thrones sculpted from massive chunks of shadowstone. Their backs had been carved into large and widespread wings that touched at the tips, connecting the seats. I wiped damp palms against the patches of dried blood on my breeches.

โ€œYou are both positive that no one else knows what she is?โ€ Nyktos asked.

โ€œBesides your father? Embris knows the prophecy,โ€ Penellaphe answered, referencing the Primal God of Wisdom, Loyalty, and Duty as I pulled myself together. I faced them. This was too important for me to miss

while having a mini breakdown. โ€œAnd so does Kolis. Neither knows more than that.โ€

The eather stirred once more in Nyktosโ€™s eyes at the mention of the Primal Kolis, who every mortalโ€”including myself until recentlyโ€”believed to be the Primal of Life and the King of Gods. But Kolis was theย trueย Primal of Death. The one whoโ€™d impaled gods on the Rise surrounding the House of Haides just to remind Nyktos that all life was easily extinguished

โ€”or so I assumed. And it was a logical assumption. Nyktosโ€™s father had been the true Primal of Life, and Kolis had stolen Eythosโ€™s embers.

I fought the shudder, thinking over the prophecy Penellaphe had shared. The part about the desperation of golden crowns could be related to my ancestor King Roderick and the deal heโ€™d made thatโ€™d started all of this. But prophecies were only possibilities, and they wereโ€ฆ โ€œProphecies are fucking pointless,โ€ I muttered aloud.

Penellaphe turned her head to me, raising a brow.

I grimaced. โ€œIโ€™m sorry. That came out worse than I intended.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m curious exactly how you intended that statement,โ€ Nyktos wondered. I shot him an arch stare. โ€œBut I do not disagree.โ€

I stopped glaring at him like I wanted to stab him.

โ€œI understand the sentiment,โ€ Penellaphe said with a bemused expression. โ€œProphecies can often be confusing, even to those who receive them. And, sometimes, only bits and pieces of a prophecy are known by oneโ€”the beginning or the endโ€”while the middle is known to another and vice versa. But some visions have come to pass, both in Iliseeum and in the mortal realm. Itโ€™s hard to see this since the destruction of the Gods of Divination and the passing of the last of the oracles.โ€

โ€œGods of Divination?โ€ Iโ€™d heard of the oracles, rare mortals who had lived long before my birth and were able to communicate directly with the gods without having to summon them.

โ€œThey were gods able to see what was hidden to othersโ€”their truthsโ€” both past and future,โ€ Penellaphe explained. โ€œThey called Mount Lotho home and served in Embrisโ€™s Court. The oracles would speak to them, and they were the only gods truly welcomed by the Arae.โ€

โ€œNot the only gods welcomed,โ€ Holland corrected softly.

Penellapheโ€™s rosy blush momentarily distracted me because there was definitely something going on there.

โ€œPenellapheโ€™s mother was a God of Divination,โ€ Holland continued. โ€œThat is why she was able to share a vision. Only those gods and the oracles could receive the visions the Ancientsโ€”the first Primalsโ€”dreamt.โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t have her other skillsโ€”the ability to see what is hidden or known,โ€ Penellaphe added. โ€œNor have I received any other visions.โ€

โ€œThe consequences of what Kolis did when he stole the embers of life were far-reaching. Hundreds of gods were lost in the shockwave of energy,โ€ Nyktos explained. โ€œThe Gods of Divination took the hardest hit. They were all but destroyed, and no other mortal was born an oracle.โ€

Sorrow crept into Penellapheโ€™s expression. โ€œAnd with that, what other visions the Ancients dreamt, and may only be known to them, have now been lost.โ€

โ€œDreamt?โ€ I lifted my brows.

โ€œProphecies are the dreams of the Ancients,โ€ she explained.

I pressed my lips together. Most of the Ancients, being the oldest of the Primals, had passed on to Arcadia. โ€œUh. I did not know prophecies were dreams.โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t think that piece of knowledge will help change Seraโ€™s opinion of them,โ€ Holland said wryly.

Nyktos huffed out a dry laugh.

โ€œNo, I imagine not.โ€ Penellaphe smiled, but it faded quickly. โ€œMany gods and mortals have been born without hearing or seeing even one prophecy or vision, but they were far more common at one time.โ€

โ€œThe vision you had?โ€ I asked. โ€œDo you know which Ancient dreamt

it?โ€

She shook her head. โ€œThat is not known to those who receive them.โ€ Well, of course not. But it didnโ€™t matter since the Ancients had entered

Arcadia ages ago. โ€œProphecies aside, I Ascended Bele when I brought her back to life.โ€ Bele wasnโ€™t a Primalโ€”at least not technically. Her brown eyes had turned the silver of a Primal, and the gods here in the Shadowlands believed that she would now be more powerful, but none knew exactly what it all meant. โ€œThat was felt, right?โ€

โ€œIt was,โ€ Penellaphe confirmed. โ€œIt wasnโ€™t as strong as when a Primal enters Arcadia, and the Fates raise another to take their place, but every god and Primal wouldโ€™ve felt the shift of energy that occurred. Especially Hanan.โ€ Worry pinched her brow. As the Primal of the Hunt and Divine

Justice, Hanan oversaw the Court that Bele had been born into. โ€œHe will know that another has risen to a power that could challenge his.โ€

โ€œBut there is nothing that can be done about that.โ€ Nyktos crossed his arms over his chest.

โ€œNo,โ€ Penellaphe agreed softly. โ€œThere is not.โ€

โ€œOnly those present when you brought her back know you Ascended Bele.โ€ Nyktos looked at me. โ€œNeither Hanan nor any other Primal knows the full extent of what my father did when he placed the embers of life in the Mierel bloodline.โ€

A whoosh went through my stomach at the reminder of the even bigger shock and blow that had been dealt. I didnโ€™t know how to come to terms with learning that Iโ€™d lived countless lives that I couldnโ€™t remember. That I had been Sotoria, the object of Kolisโ€™s loveโ€”his obsessionโ€”and the very thing that had started all of this.

Iโ€™d thought the stories of the mortal girl whoโ€™d been so frightened upon seeing a being from Iliseeum that she had fallen from the Cliffs of Sorrow were just some bizarre legend. But sheโ€™d been real. And Kolis had been the one whoโ€™d scared her so badly.

How could I beย her? I ran from no one and nothingโ€”well, except serpents. But I was a fighter. Aโ€”

โ€œYou are a warrior, Seraphena,โ€ Holland had said. โ€œYou always have been. Just like she learned to become.โ€

Gods.

I pressed my fingers into my temple. I knew Eythos and Keella, the Primal of Rebirth, had done what they believed best. Theyโ€™d captured Sotoriaโ€™s soul before it passed to the Vale, preventing Kolis from bringing her back to life. Their actions had thus started a cycle of rebirth that had ended withย myย birth. But it felt like another violation. Another choice stripped away from her. Not me. We might have the same soul, but I wasnโ€™t her. I wasโ€ฆ

You are just a vessel that would be empty if not for the ember of life you carry within you.

Nyktosโ€™s words had been harsh when heโ€™d spoken them, but they were the truth. From birth, I had been nothing more than a blank canvas primed to become whatever the Primal of Death desired, or to be used in whatever manner my mother saw fit.

I sat on the edge of the dais, fighting the pressure as it threatened to return to my chest. โ€œI saw Kolis not that long ago.โ€

Nyktosโ€™s head jerked toward me.

I cleared my throat, unable to remember if I had told him this or not. โ€œI was in the audience when Kolis arrived at the Sun Temple for the Rite. I was in the back and had my face covered, but I swear he looked directly at me.โ€ I forced a swallow. โ€œDo I look like her? Like Sotoria?โ€

Penellapheโ€™s hand went to the collar of her taupe gown. โ€œIf Kolis had seen you and youโ€™d looked like Sotoria, he wouldโ€™ve taken you right then.โ€

The ragged breath I exhaled left a misty cloud behind as a sudden bone- deep chill entered the chamber. My gaze shot to Nyktos.

His skin had thinned, and deep, dark shadows blossomed beneath his flesh, reminding me of how heโ€™d appeared in his true form. His skin had been a kaleidoscope of midnight and moonlight, his wings much like a drakenโ€™s but made of a solid mass of eatherโ€”power.

He looked like he was about to go full Primal again. โ€œSotoria didnโ€™t belong to him then, and Seraphena doesnโ€™t belong to him now.โ€

Seraphena.

I could count on one hand how many people called me by my full name, and none of them spoke it like he did. As if it were a prayer and a reckoning.

โ€œI donโ€™t know what Sotoria originally looked like,โ€ Holland said after a few moments. โ€œI didnโ€™t follow her threads of fate until after Eythos had come to ask whatโ€”if anythingโ€”could be done about his brotherโ€™s betrayal. All that I do know is that she didnโ€™t appear the same with each rebirth. But itโ€™s possible that Kolis sensed traces of eather in you and believed you were a child of a mortal and a godโ€”a godling or a god entering their Culling.โ€

I nodded slowly, forcing my thoughts past the whole Sotoria thing. I had to. All of that was just too much. โ€œBut what I did has already drawn their attention. Itโ€™s not like we can pretend it hasnโ€™t happened.โ€

โ€œI know,โ€ Nyktos remarked coolly. โ€œI expect I will have numerous unwanted visitors.โ€

โ€œBeing his Consort will offer you some level of protection,โ€ Penellaphe said, looking at Nyktos. โ€œUntil then, any Primal could make a move against her. Even a god. And it would be unlikely youโ€™d have the other Primalsโ€™ support if you retaliated. The politics of our Courts?โ€ Penellaphe sent me a sympathetic grimace. โ€œThey are rather archaic.โ€

That was one way to describe them. Cutthroat was another.

โ€œBut a coronation wonโ€™t be without its risks,โ€ Penellaphe added. โ€œMost of the gods and Primals from all nine Courts, including yours, will show for the ceremony. Theyย shouldย follow the customs, which prohibitโ€ฆconflict at such events. But as you know, many like to push that line.โ€

โ€œDo I everโ€ฆโ€ Nyktos muttered.

The goddess winced. โ€œKolis doesnโ€™t make a habit of joining such festivities, butโ€ฆโ€

โ€œHe knows something is here. He already sent his dakkais and draken, as Iโ€™m sure you know.โ€ Nyktos pinned Holland with a hard stare, and the Arae arched a dark brow. โ€œKolis hasnโ€™t shown in the Shadowlands since he betrayed my father, but that doesnโ€™t mean he canโ€™t. I assume that if you know whether he can or cannot enter the Shadowlands,โ€ he said to Holland, โ€œitโ€™s something you wonโ€™t be able to answer.โ€

โ€œUnfortunately, you would be correct,โ€ Holland confirmed, and I wondered if knowing and not being able to say anything was more frustrating than having no knowledge at all.

Probably not, considering how annoyed I was.

Despite the temperature of the room returning to normal, a chill broke out across my skin as I thought of what could come. โ€œWhat will happen if Kolis enters the Shadowlands?โ€

โ€œKolis can be unpredictable, but heโ€™s no fool,โ€ Nyktos said. โ€œIf he can enter the Shadowlands and comes to the coronation, he wonโ€™t try something in front of the other Primals and gods. He believes heโ€™s the fair and rightful King of Gods, and he likes to keep up the faรงade, even though the Primals know better.โ€

โ€œBut if heโ€”โ€ I started.

โ€œI wonโ€™t let him lay a finger on you,โ€ Nyktos swore, his eyes flashing.

My heart tripped. While that was a nice vow for him to make, I knew it stemmed from the knowledge that I carried the embers of life in me. And because Nyktos was decent. Protective.ย Good. โ€œThanks, but Iโ€™m not worried about what will happen to me.โ€

Nyktosโ€™s jaw hardened. โ€œOf course, not.โ€

I ignored that. โ€œWhat will Kolis do if he realizes youโ€™re shielding someone who carries the embers of life?โ€ I demanded. โ€œOr discovers that I carry Sotoriaโ€™s soul? What will he do to the Shadowlands? To those living here? I want to know what my presence will cost you.โ€

โ€œYour presence will cost meย nothing.โ€ Shadows deepened once more beneath Nyktosโ€™s flesh.

โ€œBullshit,โ€ I said, and the silver of his irises shifted to iron. โ€œI donโ€™t need to be protected from the truth. Itโ€™s not like Iโ€™ll be so frightened by it that Iโ€™ll run off a nearby cliff.โ€

Holland sighed.

โ€œThatโ€™s good to know,โ€ Nyktos replied dryly. โ€œBut I am more concerned about you running in a very opposite direction.โ€

I lifted my chin. โ€œI donโ€™t know what you mean.โ€

โ€œBullshit,โ€ he parroted, and my eyes narrowed. He was right. I absolutely knew what he meant.

Whatever.

โ€œKolis already knows that there is something here with the power to create life,โ€ Penellaphe interjected, ignoring the furious glare Nyktos sent her. โ€œBut as Nyktos said, Kolis is no fool. He sent the dakkais as a warning. A way of showing Nyktos that he is very much aware.โ€

โ€œBut that was after I brought Gemma back,โ€ I said. Gemma was one of the third sons and daughters given over during the Rite to serve the Primal of Life and his Court. A tradition honored and respected throughout all the kingdoms in the mortal realm.

An honor that had become nothing but a nightmare under Kolisโ€™s rule. Gemma had been one of the few that Nyktos had secreted away from

Kolisโ€™s Court with the aid of gods like Bele and others and then sheltered in the Shadowlands. He gave them sanctuary. A sliver of peace.

The things my mere existence threatened.

Gemma hadnโ€™t gone into detail about what her time spent in Kolisโ€™s Court had been like, but she hadnโ€™t needed to for me to know that being Kolisโ€™s favorite for a while wasnโ€™t anything pleasant. Whatever had been done to her was bad enough that when sheโ€™d spotted one of the gods from Kolisโ€™s Court in Lethe, she had panicked. So afraid of being sent back to him, she had run into the Dying Woodsโ€”where certain death awaited her.

โ€œHe hasnโ€™t responded to what I did to Bele,โ€ I continued. And then added, โ€œAs far as I know.โ€

โ€œOnly because I imagine that act caught him off guard,โ€ Penellaphe mused. โ€œNeither he nor anyone else wouldโ€™ve expected that.โ€ She glanced at Nyktos. โ€œHe hasnโ€™t summoned you?โ€

โ€œNo.โ€

โ€œIs that the truth?โ€ I demanded.

Nyktos nodded. โ€œI can only delay in answering his summonses. I canโ€™t deny them.โ€

โ€œHeโ€™s likely cautious right now,โ€ Penellaphe said. โ€œAnd I imagine heโ€™s also very curious, considering exactly what could be hidden away in the Shadowlands, how it could be possible for embers of life to exist, and how he could make use of whatever this source of power is.โ€

โ€œAid him in whatever twisted ideal of life he believes heโ€™s creating,โ€ Holland tacked on.

โ€œYou know what heโ€™s been doing to the Chosen who have gone missing?โ€ Nyktosโ€™s gaze sharpened on him. โ€œThese things called Revenants?โ€

โ€œI know that what he calls Revenants are not theย onlyย mockery of life heโ€™s managed to create.โ€ Hollandโ€™s dark gaze locked on Nyktos. โ€œAnd youโ€™ve already seen what heโ€™s had a hand in creating. What some of the gods of his Court have been doing in the mortal realm.โ€

Nyktosโ€™s brows pinched together, and then he glanced at me. โ€œYour seamstress.โ€

It took me a moment to realize he meant my motherโ€™s seamstress. โ€œAndreia Joanis?โ€ Before I found her dead, Iโ€™d seen the god Madis near her home in Stonehill, a district that faced the Stroud Sea. Her veins had darkened, staining her skin as if ink filled them, and her eyesโ€ฆthey had been burned. Nyktos had been following Madis that night, and heโ€™d ended up there. He too had believed she was dead. โ€œShe came back to life or something. Sat up and opened her mouth. She had four fangs I do not recall her ever having before.โ€

Holland barked out a short, guttural word in a language I didnโ€™t recognize as he turned his head, spitting on the ground.

My brows flew up. โ€œCome again?โ€

โ€œCraven?โ€ Nyktosโ€™s eyes narrowed as he recognized whatever Holland had said.

The Fate nodded. โ€œIt is what becomes of a mortal when their life force

โ€”their bloodโ€”is stolen from them, and the loss isnโ€™t replenished. It does not matter who the mortal was before. The act rots them, in body and in mind, turning them into amoral creatures driven by an insatiable need for blood. Craven.โ€

Nyktos had gone still. โ€œThe act of killing a mortal while feeding has been forbidden since the dawn of time.โ€

โ€œAnd that outcome is why,โ€ Holland said. โ€œIt is a balance.โ€

I threw up my hands. โ€œHow in the hell is turning a mortal into something like that a balance?โ€

โ€œThe balance here demands that the life taken is then restored to serve as a reminder to the gods that their inability to control themselves has consequences. Maintaining balance isnโ€™t always as simple to understand as it is when, say, the Primal of Life restores a mortalโ€™s life.โ€ His eyes fixed on mine. Hard. All-seeing. โ€œAnotherโ€™s life must be forsaken in their place.โ€

I sucked in a sharp breath, my stomach hollowing. โ€œThe night I brought Lady Marisol back to life, my stepfather, the King of Lasania, died in his sleep.โ€ I hadnโ€™t even considered that it had anything to do with my actions. โ€œGood gods. I killed my stepfather?โ€

โ€œNo,โ€ Nyktos cut in, his eyes narrowing on the Fate. โ€œYou didnโ€™t.โ€

I stared at Nyktos. How could he be so sure of that? Because it sure sounded like I had.

โ€œIt was not intentional,โ€ Holland said. โ€œBut it was her time. You intervened, upset the balance, and it had to be righted.โ€

โ€œBy whom?โ€ I demanded. โ€œWho decides how balance is restored?โ€ Holland looked back at me.

I stiffened. โ€œYou?โ€

โ€œNot him,โ€ Nyktos answered. โ€œThe Arae in general. They are likeโ€ฆ cosmic cleaners.โ€

I had no idea what to say to that. Or how to feelโ€”well, other than guilty. And I should feel that because while King Ernald hadnโ€™t exactly been the greatest leader, he hadnโ€™t been bad. Except I really didnโ€™t feel anything but passing shock and a touch of shame. Like when I killed and knew I would barely think of it later.

And that disturbed me. I disturbed myself.

But I couldnโ€™t dig deeper into that at the moment because that hadnโ€™t been the only life Iโ€™d restored. โ€œAnd if a god is brought back? Does balance demand the death of another god?โ€

โ€œLuckily, no,โ€ Nyktos said. โ€œIt has only ever applied to mortals.โ€

โ€œThat doesnโ€™t sound entirely fair,โ€ I muttered. It was a relief to know that I hadnโ€™t killed another god, but I had sentenced a nameless, faceless

mortal to death when I brought Gemma back. โ€œWould have been good to know that.โ€

Holland eyed me. โ€œWould that have changed your actions?โ€ I snapped my mouth shut. I couldnโ€™t answer that.

โ€œBut now you know what you already knew. Some lessons will always be painful to learn.โ€ His smile was sad and gentle. And, thankfully, brief. โ€œEither way, if this Andreia had not been killed, she wouldโ€™ve left her home and attacked the first person she came into contact withโ€”man, woman, or child.โ€

โ€œDid Madis do that to her?โ€ Nyktos asked.

โ€œI believe Madis was attempting toโ€ฆrectify what one of Kolisโ€™s creations left behind.โ€ Holland tipped his chin slightly. โ€œAnd that is all I can say about those matters. I do not know much more. But revealing anything else could be considered interference.โ€

โ€œAnd heโ€™s already walking a very fine line,โ€ Penellaphe reminded us, but mostly Nyktos, whose glare had narrowed on the Fate. โ€œBut at this moment, what Kolis is doing isnโ€™t our greatest concern, nor should it be yours.โ€

I wasnโ€™t sure I agreed with that.

โ€œYou asked what Kolis would do to get to the embers of life. He would find a way to obtain them. Perhaps he wouldnโ€™t use his cruelest methods to do soโ€โ€”her brilliant blue eyes dimmed, becoming hauntedโ€”โ€œbut if he were to realizeย whoย you once were, he would stop at nothing to have you.โ€

โ€œPenellaphe,โ€ Nyktos warned.

โ€œItโ€™s the truth,โ€ she said, turning to him. โ€œYou cannot hide that from her.

You may not be able to even try to do so.โ€

โ€œYou have no idea what I am capable of doing when necessary,โ€ Nyktos told her.

โ€œTrue,โ€ she said, her voice gentling. โ€œBut you knowย exactlyย what Kolis is capable of. As do I. He would burn through the Shadowlands to obtain hisย graeca.โ€

In old Primal language,ย graecaย meant life. But as Aios had said, it was also interchangeable with the wordย love.

Gemma had been the first Iโ€™d heard use the wordย graeca. Sheโ€™d said that Kolis had often spoken of hisย graecaย and that she believed it was related to whatever he was doing with the missing Chosen who returned as something different and not quite right. Something cold. Lifeless.ย Hungry.

I barely suppressed a shudder. โ€œAnd what would he do to Nyktos if he attempted to shield me from Kolis?โ€

โ€œYou do not need to worry about that.โ€ Nyktos twisted toward me.

โ€œAre you serious?โ€ I exclaimed. โ€œWeโ€™re talking about the same person who killed your mother and father. Who impaled gods on the wall of your Rise to remind you that all life was fragile.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s not like Iโ€™ve forgotten that.โ€ Bright wisps of eather flared in his eyes again. โ€œWhatever he will or wonโ€™t do doesnโ€™t change anything. I will handle Kolis.โ€

I shook my head, my frustration growing. โ€œHe could kill youโ€”โ€

โ€œNo, he cannot,โ€ Holland interrupted. My head swung to him. โ€œAs Iโ€™ve said, there must always be balance. In everythingโ€”even among the Primals. Life cannot exist without Death, and they should not be one and the same.โ€

โ€œWait.โ€ I dropped my hands to my knees. โ€œYou mean like aโ€ฆa Primal of both Life and Death? Is that possible? Because you saidย should not. You didnโ€™t sayย could not.โ€

โ€œAnything is possible,โ€ Holland replied. โ€œEven the impossible.โ€

Struggling for patience, I stared at him. โ€œThat was such a remarkably helpful statement. Thank you.โ€

Holland laughed.

โ€œWhat he means to say is that such a thing, a Primal of both Life and Death, is not meant to exist,โ€ Nyktos said. โ€œIt would be unthinkable for the embers of both to thrive in one being. But if they could?โ€ He gave a short laugh with a raise of his dark brows. โ€œThe kind of power theyโ€™d wield? It would be truly absolute. They could unravel realms in the same breath they created new ones.โ€

โ€œThere would be no stopping such a being,โ€ Holland added. โ€œThere could be no balance. Therefore, the Fates ensured long ago that such power must be split and that an absence of either ember would cause a collapse of all the realms. It wouldnโ€™t be like the Rotโ€”a slow death. It would be sudden and absolute for all. Kolis cannot Ascend another Primal to take the place of a fallen. By killing Nyktos, heโ€™d doom himself. He understands that much, at least.โ€

Yeah, except I had technically done that with Bele, paving the way for her to replace Hanan if he fell.

But knowing that Kolis wouldnโ€™t kill Nyktos was a relief. Still, how could he be sure what Kolis would or wouldnโ€™t do? He couldnโ€™t. Kolis didnโ€™t sound like the most rational Primal.

Frustration surged through me. โ€œWhat does Kolis even want? What is his goal with these creations of his?โ€

Holland snorted. โ€œThat is a good question.โ€

โ€œOne you know the answer to and canโ€™t share?โ€ I countered.

โ€œI actually donโ€™t know,โ€ he said. โ€œFates donโ€™t know the inner workings of oneโ€™s mind.โ€

Fates also werenโ€™t at all helpful.

โ€œHe wants to rule over allโ€”Iliseeum and the mortal realm,โ€ Nyktos answered. โ€œThe Courts in Iliseeum would replace the kingdoms in the mortal realm. There would only be him and his sycophants, and mortals would be put in their placeโ€”or so he believes. Beneath those greater than them. And I imagine the mockery of life he has been creating is being done in an attempt to aid his cause.โ€

So Kolis was creating an army of mortals controlled by hunger? Unnerved, I squeezed my knees until I felt the bones beneath my fingers. โ€œThat canโ€™t be possible.โ€

Holland opened his mouth.

โ€œIf you say that anything is possible, even the impossible, I might scream,โ€ I warned. The Fate closed his mouth. โ€œMortals would fight back, even those most loyal to the gods. Heโ€™d have to battle an entire realm, and then what would be left for him to rule over?โ€

โ€œIt wouldnโ€™t be easy, and it would end in the kind of death even I would have a hard time imagining,โ€ Nyktos said. โ€œHe would be left to rule over a kingdom of bones.โ€

โ€œBut will that knowledge stop him?โ€ Penellaphe asked quietly. โ€œHas

it?โ€

Didnโ€™t appear to have.

But Kolis wouldnโ€™t get what he wanted either. Not after I died. Heโ€™d

rule over a kingdom of bones.

Unable to sit any longer, I stood and reached for the shadowstone dagger Nyktos had returned to me, only to realize that Iโ€™d left it in his office. I faced Holland. โ€œHow long does the mortal realm have?โ€ I swallowed thickly. โ€œOnce I die.โ€

โ€œYou wonโ€™t die,โ€ Nyktos stated as if he had the authority to make such a claim.

He didnโ€™t.

โ€œShe will,โ€ Holland said softly. โ€œShe will die without the love of the one who Ascends herโ€”a love that cannot be dismissed. A love that must be recognized.โ€ He turned to Nyktos. โ€œAnd you haveโ€”โ€

โ€œWe heard you the first time,โ€ I interrupted as the Primal ran a hand through his hair.

โ€œBut you havenโ€™t,โ€ Holland countered. โ€œYou havenโ€™t heard why he cannot save you as he is now.โ€ He tilted his head towards Nyktos. โ€œHas she, Your Highness?โ€

Tension filled the air as the Primal held the Araeโ€™s gaze. โ€œNo. She has not.โ€

There was nothing to read in Nyktosโ€™s expression, but a sense of unease settled over me. โ€œWhat are you two even talking about?โ€

A muscle in Nyktosโ€™s jaw tightened. โ€œI cannot love,โ€ he ground out through clenched teeth, directing his words to Holland. โ€œI ensured it could never be a vulnerability to exploit.โ€

Something told me this was more than a simple statement. โ€œAnd how did you ensure that?โ€

โ€œMaia,โ€ he replied, referring to the Primal of Love, Beauty, and Fertility. โ€œI had her remove my kardia.โ€

Penellaphe gasped, her eyes wide with shock. โ€œGood Fates,โ€ she whispered. โ€œI have known no one who has done that.โ€

I was clearly missing something, and my patience was wearing thin. โ€œWhat is a kardia?โ€

โ€œItโ€™s the part of the soulโ€”the sparkโ€”that every living creature is born with and dies with. It allows them to love someone outside their own bloodline, unconditionally and selflessly,โ€ Penellaphe explained, her voice trembling. โ€œIt must have been excruciating to have that torn away. To truly be unable to love.โ€

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