ARWEN
MY EYES BLINKED OPEN TOย a warm swath of blue sky and a cluster of swaying autumn leaves. The air was as crisp as an apple and just as
sweet. I inhaled it through my nostrils greedilyโpumpkin seeds, damp leaves, chimney smoke.
And the groundโa grassy meadow, clean with morning dew beneath my head. Blades of grass tickling my cheeks and forearms. My eyelids fell closed amid gentle awareness.
I knew this place.
I knew the view of the small yet bustling town square that would greet me once I pushed myself up to sit. Knew the vibrant sunset colors that would paint the sky in subtle gradations. Yolky yellow, rosy pink, crystal blue.
โIs it just as you remembered it?โ
The voice, though Iโd never heard it before, didnโt frighten me. I moved from my back to sit comfortably atop the knoll, that view Iโd been expecting to stretch below me even smaller, but somehow more comforting than Iโd remembered. Sleepy Abbington shone under the colorful clouds. Like ripped tufts of cotton backlit by liquid gold.
The manโs dark brown hair receded a bit up the crown of his head. His heart-shaped face and angular nose were handsome, kind. Inexplicably familiar.
โDo I know you?โ
โA complicated question,โ the man said ruefully. โNoย is probably the simplest answer.โ
White floppy butterflies floated by on a breeze.
โI owe you many thanks,โ he continued, his eyes, too, on the fluttering wings, the watercolor sky, the rolling autumn hills, and the shepherds that tended to flocks grazing atop them. And then down to the town. The handful of shopkeepers and merchants closing up for the evening. Headed home to their families to sleep and eat and start anew tomorrow.
I turned to him once more. โYou do?โ
โI was not able to return home for a long time. I had done something foolish in the hopes of helping others. Had not used my power in the way it was meant to be used. Your bravery proved it had not been an error at all.โ Something brimmed in his eyes. โYou conquered a mighty force. Saved many lives. Spared realms.โ
But I didnโt feel pride. I didnโt feel like a savior or a queenโI was born in this quiet, autumn town. I was just a girl. โMy name is Arwen.โ
โI have been looking forward to this day for some time, Arwen.โ
Somewhere in my mind I remembered I had slain a mighty dragon. Had combusted in a hail of flame beside him. I looked down at my hands, clean, bare of dirt or blood. Pale in the violet light. โBecause I killed him?โ
โTo meet again.โ
โYou said I didnโt know you.โ
The manโs eyes crinkled. โYou donโt.โ
I nodded, though I didnโt understand. A swallow warbled out a soft tune and a fly whizzed past my nose. The gentle wind breathed through the soft cotton of my skirts and the manโs white tunic beside me.
โYour husbandโฆโ he said after some time, โis very devoted to you.โ I smiled. โI know.โ
โIโm glad for it. Heโs been a good king to your lands.โ My brows knit. โMy lands?โ
โWell, mine.โ The manโs low laugh reminded me of wind chimes. โBut King Oberonโโ
โIf you go back to the very beginningโฆthe rightful heir is the child of true Onyx. You.โ
Realization dawned on me. Misted in a deep contentment but realization nonetheless. Words a bright-eyed young seer had uttered to me in another life. โMy fatherโฆthe Fae God.โ
The manโmy fatherโsaid nothing. Just appraised me curiously. โWhat do they call you? Those original nine?โ
He shrugged and I thought it funny. A great and powerful Fae God, shrugging. โSome have deemed us Elder Gods.โ
โAnd your powerโฆit birthed Onyx?โ โCorrect.โ
My father. A Fae Elder God. The creators of the sacred Stones, and his, Onyx. The stone of power and strength and darkness. Bequeathed to me, a healer from a farming town. I nodded to myself in deep understanding. โI think it will be wonderful.โ
โYou take after your mother in that way.โ
My mother.
I smiled. โSomeone once called it relentless positivity.โ โAnd who was that?โ
The town below me was blurring a bit. Trees and bricks and cobblestones becoming spotty blotches of gray and brown and green. โIโฆI canโt remember.โ
โAh,โ my father said. โTime to get you back.โ
He stood with a soft groan and I thought the sound very human. I stood, too, and stretched like a cat under the fading sunlight.
โWe wonโt meet again, Arwen.โ
โI know,โ I said, though I wasnโt sure how. โYou can go home now, though?โ
He smiled, and the light from that beaming grin warmed the hilltop we stood on and all the grass surrounding us. โYes. And you must do the same.โ
My heart thumped once in my chest.
Home.
THE EMBERS SIZZLED ACROSS MYย feathers.
Molten and liquidโscalding and blistering and scorching each fiber and plume.
And yet it felt like cleansing rain. Soothing every ache, healing every wound, building me back together, piece by piece.
My talons tingled beneath a rising sun, my palms stretched as if awakening from a good, succulent sleep, my wings burning with white flames as they spread wide across the clearing.
I screamedโwind and light and fire burning up as it rose inside my throat. Clearing my chest, bracing myself. And then I shuddered ferociously, shifting and shaking, angling my head, flexing every tendonโ
Until all was quiet.
And just a little too cold. Gooseflesh rippled along my stomach and legs as a winter wind swept across me. My face lifted gently from fresh, clean snow. It tasted rich like the morning.
โArwenโฆ?โ Kaneโs hoarse voice sliced through my senses and my eyes sprang open.
Watery silver filled my vision.
Tears slipped down his dirtied cheeks. My hands found them and held his face close to my own. โYouโre alive,โ I murmured.
โMe?โย He laughed, raw and rough.
Someone chuckled behind us through tears. It sounded like Griffin.
Kane sat us both up a bit and brushed the ash and snow from my cheeks. But I couldnโt let go. Couldnโt stop grasping at him. When I convulsed involuntarily against the cold, Kaneโs eyes left mine and fell elsewhere. Whoever heโd looked at rushed over and placed a warm cloak across my bare body.
The soft reddish fur smelled of clove and cinnamon andโฆ โMari,โ I croaked, sitting up a little.
Mariโs brown eyes were wide. Wider than Iโd ever seen them. โWelcome back.โ
I scrambled from Kaneโs lap, wrapping the cloak tighter, and threw myself at my friend.
โHow is this possible?โ Griffin murmured somewhere behind us. โWe watched herโฆโ
Mari released me long enough to turn to him and Kane. โHer shifted formโa phoenixโwill always rise from its ashes.โ
โSo Iโฆcanโt die?โ I was in too much shock to wrap my mind around the gravity of those words.
But Mari shook her head and held me to her once more. โOnly in your shifted form you canโt.โ
And this time I didnโt ask her how she knew so much. I only held her tighter.
When weโd held each other so long my tears had frozen on my face, Kane insisted on taking me somewhere warmer.
Through a tumult of cries for the dead and victory songs, past barrels of ale being rolled across snow and moaning bodies hefted on stretchers, we marched home. Women cried as children embraced their fathers at the knees, and boisterous teens, hanging from the remains of the sentry towers, rained liquor down onto soldiers below.
Shadowhold had survived.
Not without loss. Not without mourners and wheelbarrows filled with fallen men. But when I couldnโt tear my eyes from the blood-spattered brick walls or our beautiful wrought iron warped by salamander flame, Kane took my hand and said, โWeโll rebuild.โ
โRavenwood.โ
I turned at that familiar voice, as did Kane.
Aleksander appraised us, ice-blond hair stained red, rusty eyes glowing brighter than usual. โYou look like death itself.โ
Kane only shrugged his shoulders smoothly.
I said nothing. Too tired to snip with the Hemolich. I knew how much power coursed through his veins with all the carnage surrounding us. I had no energy left for a fight. I wanted to see my siblings.
But Kane spoke first. โThe deal we made, you must knowโโ
Aleksander interrupted with a raised brow. โWhat deal?โ His ruby eyes finally left Kaneโs to land on my own with cold curiosity.
โThe raven we sent you,โ I said. โI never received a raven.โ
My mind emptied. Then emptied again. โThen why did youโฆโ But my words trailed off with deep understanding.
Aleksander was silent, his warrior pride lurking behind that solid-ice exterior. I watched him survey the torchlit scene. The hefting bodies, the prisoners of war chained in lilium. And right alongside all the gore and pain, cries of triumph that rent the air. Cheers of merriment.
โShe got to you,โ Kane said slowly, such pride brimming in his eyes. โDonโt paint me as some changed man. I didnโt do it for either of you. I
couldnโt have that bigoted bastard taking over Rose.โ
Kane continued, unbothered, my hand still held in his. โYou know what she said to me once?โ
Aleksander said nothing, his mouth a flat line.
โEveryone is capable of redemption.โ
My heart swelled at the memory, and I peered up at my husband. He was burned and beaten half to death, his eye nearly swollen shut. His Onyx armor shredded at the sleeve, his long fingers blue with frostbite. But Kane had never looked so beautiful.
Iโd said those words to him in the dim midnight light of my bedroom, after Haldenโs explosion had forced Kane to tell me more than heโd ever planned to. And heโd remembered, all this time.
โGood luck to you, Aleksander,โ I said on a sigh. โI hope we never meet again.โ
Inside the great hall, banners were being hammered, hung, and unfurled, and bells jangled in the hands of children. Triumph and bereavement and mourning and celebration poured out in the castle like a chalice overfilled.
My brother found me first. I inhaled the tobacco and snow on his clothes as he held me before Iโd even seen him coming. He pulled back just long enough to examine my face. โI was so scaredโโ
โI know,โ I breathed. โMe, too.โ
Leigh found us like that and wedged her way between us easily. I couldnโt stop the tears then, nor did I want to.
We stayed in that embrace for a long time. Holding one another in peaceful silence.
Peace.
Thatโs what this feeling was. Somewhere in between the clash of blades and the loss of those I loved and the fiery death of my enemyโฆpeace had found me.
Surely the joy would hit me soon. Theย reliefย that we had won. But right now, my still-stiff limbs and reeling, foggy mind just needed this. Tangible, unmoving, pleasantly exhausted peace.
I knew Kane had not torn his soft, quicksilver gaze from me one time since Iโd awoken.
Eventually I released my family and turned to face him once more. โHello,โ he said, a crooked grin at his cheeks, tears still in his eyes.
Behind him, the sun crested steadily through the stained-glass windows of the hall and over the snow-draped forest and the peaked mountains beyond. Voices throughout the warmly lit hall rang out, no longer afraid.
โItโs finally over, isnโt it?โ I asked, relief flooding me as I grasped his broad, calloused hand. The warmth of his palm simmered through my entire body. Despite being born of ash and snow bare as a newborn, my hand still somehow carried Kaneโs signet ring.ย A gift from my father, I thought.
โFor usโโKane shrugged, thumb dragging softly over my skinโโI think itโs just the beginning.โ
Dear Arwen,
I donโt expect, nor see reason, for you to give much credence to the marital counsel of an old, solitary, occasionally cankerous man, but it appears I am compelled to share with you regardless.
It is not news to me that the battle you and Kane plan to wage is unlikely to leave both of you alive. It is a truth that has plagued my thoughts, and I mourn even tonight as I write to you. No man should outlive one child, let alone two.
I was lucky enough to have been married once myself, and we, too, were not given quite as much time as I thought we deserved
together. Now, I am no romantic. You know as well as anyone I wonโt fuss over the needs of the heart. So this is the only advice I will share with you ahead of your wedding. Cherish one another. Appreciate the moments you are given, ephemeral as they may be. Do not dwell in
the past or scurry toward the looming future. And be grateful, each day, for the love that you share. I am grateful to have witnessed it.
And one last thingโperhaps not sage wisdom, but as my quill has become loose upon the page and the spirit in my glass empties, I find the words easier tonight than I think they may ever be again.
For years youโve believed your fears made you cowardly, yet chose time and time again to face those fears, regardless of what mightโve been waiting for you on the other side.
Youโve saved yourself and those who matter most to you. Helped and healed so many in need. Youโve discovered a deep well of power within yourself. Met someone you wish to spend your life with.
Youโve found joy in times of darkness, and helped share that joy with others.
In this war, and in the days I hope will follow, I urge you to
remember this: do not equate bravery with fearlessness. If someone like you has nothing left to fear, it will be your heart I worry for.
Fear is human, and only grows as we come to care deeply for others.
Stones know Iโve become more fearful in knowing you. Thatโs what love does to us.
You are courageous, Arwen. And Iโm very proud of you.
Dagan