"Thorns and Bone: A Kiss of Embers" Chapter 28
Chapter 28: A Taste of Humanity
The morning air in the capital was crisp, carrying the scent of pine and the distant, biting promise of snow.
The palace, however, remained a sterile vacuum of suffocating formality. Willow had spent the hour since sunrise patrolling the inner gardens, her senses tuned to the unnatural quiet of the grounds, when a courier dressed in the muted, travel-stained leathers of the Northern border arrived at the secondary gate.
He didn't seek an audience with the Sovereign. He sought the servant with the scar on her shoulder—the one rumored to have survived the Ironspire.
Willow met him in the shadow of the rose-choked pergola. He handed her a scroll sealed with dark, dried wax—the crest of the Fallen Pack. The Northern resistance.
"From Kaelen," the courier whispered, his eyes darting toward the distant watchtowers.
"He said you would want to know before the Sovereign finds out."
Willow broke the seal, her fingers trembling with a premonition that turned her blood to ice.
She read the words, and the world shifted. It wasn't a tactical report. It wasn't a call to arms. It was a letter.
Willow,
I am writing this because the frost is finally claiming the scouts. We waited, Willow. We waited for the sign. We thought you were dead, or worse, that you had turned. But then the word came from the Blackwood. You aren't dead. You are an anchor.
They told me what the Sovereign did to you. They told me you are bonded to him, heart to cold, immortal heart.
They say you are his weapon now. But I remember the girl who taught me how to sharpen a blade in the dark. I remember the girl who promised that we would survive the forge together.
The Pack is dissolving. Bastian’s men found the sanctuary at the border. There is no resistance left to lead. I am leaving, Willow.
I am going to the Southern Isles to find a life that isn't measured in steel and ash. I do not blame you. I blame the darkness that stole you.
Do not follow me. Do not look for me. The girl I knew died at the Ironspire. I will mourn her, but I will not reach for the monster she has become.
Kaelen.
The parchment fluttered from her fingers, landing in the dirt of the rose bed. Willow didn't reach for it. She felt a phantom pain in her chest, a sudden, searing pressure that made it impossible to breathe.
The girl who had trained, laughed, and bled with Kaelen in the Northern wastes—she was a ghost. She was a lie.
She turned to leave, her vision blurring, when she saw him.
Cillian stood at the edge of the pergola, his shadow stretching long and thin over the frost-covered stone. He had been watching. He had been reading her through the bond, feeling the precise, agonizing moment her past was incinerated.
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"Kaelen," Cillian said, the name tasting like ash on his tongue.
Willow didn't answer. She turned, her face a mask of stone, but the psychic bond betrayed her. It was a torrential downpour of her grief, a jagged, violent surge of the loss of the only family she had ever known.
Cillian stepped forward, his expression a terrifying mix of fury and something that looked dangerously like jealousy. He snatched the letter from the ground before she could move. He read it in a single, scathing glance.
"He abandons you," Cillian hissed, his voice trembling with a rage that wasn't directed at the Guild, but at the man who had dared to claim a piece of her heart. "He leaves you to rot in this tomb while he finds 'a life' in the sun."
"He doesn't know," Willow said, her voice cracking.
"He doesn't know who I am."
"He knows exactly who you are," Cillian growled, his eyes glowing with that erratic, volatile light.
"He knows you are mine. He knows you are tethered to the Sovereign of the Night, and he is too cowardly to face the cost of your survival."
He looked at the letter, his thumb tracing the ink of Kaelen’s signature with a hatred so pure it made the air hum.
"Burn it," Willow whispered, her voice dead.
Cillian didn't burn it. He crushed it in his fist, the paper crumpling and tearing. He threw it into the stone hearth of the garden furnace, watching the flames lick the edges of the parchment until it was nothing but curling, black flakes.
"He is a ghost," Cillian said, moving toward her.
"He is a relic of a life you were never meant to keep."
"He was my brother," Willow shouted, the raw, ugly sound of her grief shattering the silence of the garden.
"He was the only thing that was real!"
Cillian stopped, his hands coming to rest on her shoulders. His touch was cold, his presence a suffocating, possessive weight.
"You are real," he whispered, his voice vibrating through her.
"You are the only thing in this world that is real. And he was not enough to hold you. He was not enough to fight for you."
He pulled her into his arms, his grip bruising. He held her with a desperate, clawing intensity, as if he were trying to weld their bodies together, to erase the very possibility of anyone else ever reaching her.
"I am the one who fought for you," he murmured against her ear, his lips grazing the sensitive skin.
"I am the one who burned your world to keep you in mine. He left you. I chose you."
Willow stood there, her body rigid in his hold. She felt the hollow, eternal rhythm of his chest, the cold, steady beat of a heart that didn't know how to forgive. She looked at the smoldering remains of the letter in the furnace.
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Kaelen was gone. The pack was gone. The girl from the North was dead.
She leaned into Cillian, not out of love, not out of loyalty, but out of a terrifying, absolute necessity. He was the only thing left.
"He is gone," she whispered, the words a final, bitter goodbye to the life she had once known.
"Yes," Cillian said, his eyes darkening. He tilted her head back, his thumb brushing the line of her jaw, a possessive, territorial caress.
"And you will never think of him again."
He leaned in, his kiss a frantic, hungry thing—a tasting of her, a claim, a reminder of the bond that tied their souls in a knot of shadow and steel. Willow kissed him back, the rage and the grief feeding the hunger of their connection.
She was a hunter.
She was a weapon.
And she was his.
As they stood in the grey light of the garden, Willow felt the tether pulse—a steady, rhythmic beat of their two lives intertwined, a shared, jagged truth that was far more dangerous than any secret.
The letter was ash.
The brother was a memory.
But as she held the monster, she felt the embers of her humanity finally, completely, turn to ice.
She had tasted the bitterness of a life she couldn't have, and in return, she had been given the cold, eternal embrace of the night.
"I am yours," she said, her voice a hollow shell.
"You always were," Cillian replied.
They walked back toward the palace, the gardens falling into the deep, frozen silence of winter.
Willow didn't look back.
She didn't look for the courier. She didn't look for the North.
She looked only at the dark, elegant figure walking beside her, the man who had stolen her humanity and given her the world in its place.
The mask was on.
The game was in play.
And as the palace loomed before them, a jagged tooth of stone against the sky, she realized the truth—she didn't want the sun.
She wanted the fire.
And the fire was all that was left.
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