From aa146da9bf50df0b4af3e40f4b01ba1374078339 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: PAE Date: Mon, 6 Apr 2026 04:14:13 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] staging: polished/chapter-ch-08.md task=cedaec07-7baf-4cee-a3b7-ebe7e9488b1a --- .../staging/polished/chapter-ch-08.md | 160 ++++++------------ 1 file changed, 55 insertions(+), 105 deletions(-) diff --git a/projects/crimson-vows/staging/polished/chapter-ch-08.md b/projects/crimson-vows/staging/polished/chapter-ch-08.md index 154d3dd..94f344f 100644 --- a/projects/crimson-vows/staging/polished/chapter-ch-08.md +++ b/projects/crimson-vows/staging/polished/chapter-ch-08.md @@ -1,159 +1,109 @@ -Chapter 8: The Siege of the Lowen-Court +Chapter 8: Malcorra’s Gambit -The air in the solar, once thick with the copper sweetness of Aldric’s sacrifice, soured instantly into the stench of wet earth and rot. It was a physical blow, a sudden structural failure in the atmosphere that made the very stones of Castle Sangue feel porous and unreliable. +I did not look at the cooling corpse of the man who had served my line for twenty years; I looked at the tremor in the King’s hand and the way the silver-dust still shimmered like a dying star against his pale skin. -Seraphine did not move. She remained on the edge of the velvet chaise, her spine a column of unflinching marble, though the blood of a king was currently screaming through her veins. It was a frantic, rhythmic gold—a vitality so different from her own cold, methodical pulse that it felt like an intrusion. She could feel his heart hammering against his ribs, not because she was looking at him, but because the debt had tethered their nervous systems. Every time his pulse spiked in alarm, a corresponding needle of heat pricked the back of her eyes. +The Great Hall of Castle Sangue was a tomb of held breaths. The scent of ozone from my own hemomantic surge fought with the heavy, metallic tang of High Provost Vane’s blood. It pooled on the flagstones, a dark map of a shattered loyalty. I could feel the nobility—the "bracing pillars" of my court—receding into the shadows of the colonnades, their terror a cold, damp draft against my skin. -"The doors," Seraphine said, her voice a sharp, clinical blade that cut through the mounting hysteria. "Kaelen, bar them. Not because wood will stop the Blight, but because I require the silence to think." +But it was the King who pulled at my senses. Through the Sanguine Vow, our pulses had become a discordant duet. His heart was a frantic, wounded bird fluttering against the cage of his ribs, and the silver-toxin he had ingested was a thousand needles of ice scraping the inside of my own throat. I swallowed, the phantom pain sharp enough to draw a wince I refused to grant. -Captain Kaelen did not hesitate. He slammed the heavy oak bicones shut, the iron bolt sliding home with a sound of finishing. He was breathless, his tabard stained with a grey, viscous fluid that Seraphine recognized with a twitch of her nostrils as necrotic essence. The inner glass-line—the alchemical barrier that had protected the heart of the monarchy for three centuries—had not just been breached. It had been dissolved. +"Captain Kaelen," I said, my voice cutting through the silence with the precision of a jeweler’s saw. I did not turn my head. I kept my gaze fixed on Aldric’s throat, where the jugular thrummed with a dangerously erratic rhythm. -"Your Majesty," Kaelen rasped, his eyes darting to the pale, slumped figure of King Aldric. "The Lowen-Court is... it is a slaughterhouse. Provost Vane’s successor was the first to turn. His blood didn't even hit the floor before it began to crawl." +"My Queen," Kaelen’s voice was a low rasp. I heard the rasp of his blade returning to its scabbard, a sound of grim finality. -Seraphine finally turned her head, not toward the door, but toward the man beside her. Aldric Thorne was a ruin of royal parchment. His skin was the color of a winter moon, and the puncture wounds on his forearm—her own handiwork—were still weeping thin, watery red. Yet, as she watched, he forced his body into a semblance of sovereignty. He did not lean on the armrest. He did not slump. He adjusted the heavy signet ring on his right hand, the gold clinking against the bone of his finger, and stood. +"Clear the hall," I commanded. "The High Provost suffered a massive internal rupture of the heart. It is a private matter of the Crown. If a single word of 'poison' or 'silver' crosses the threshold of this room, I will treat it as a confession of conspiracy. Ensure the lords and ladies understand the... gravity of their silence." -He swayed. +"Immediately," Kaelen replied. -Seraphine was on her feet before she had consciously decided to rise. She caught his elbow, her fingers digging into the fine wool of his sleeve. The contact was a mistake. The moment her skin met his, the sensory intrusion of the bond surged into a roar. She saw a flash of his memory—the weight of a crown he never wanted, the cold snap of the axe that had taken his brother—and her own vision blurred with his residual grief. +I heard the heavy thud of boots, the ushered whispers of the terrified elite, and the slamming of the great oak doors. Then, there was only the three of us left in the cavernous space—and the dead man between us. -"I do not require a crutch, Seraphine," Aldric said. His voice was perfectly measured, each syllable a polished stone, but his hand was trembling with a violence he could not mask. +Aldric stood as if his spine were a rod of tempered steel, but I saw the minute shift in his weight. His right hand twitched, his fingers brushing against the heavy signet ring on his finger—a gesture of concealment I was beginning to recognize. -"You are a hollowed-out vessel, Aldric," she countered, her consonants clicking like shears. "If I let go, you will collapse, and I have just invested too much of my own equilibrium into your survival to see you shatter on the floorboards. Do not mistake my grip for a gesture of affection. You are a biological asset." +"You should not have done that," he said. His voice was measured, perfectly grammatical, yet it carried the thinness of worn parchment. He did not use the royal plural. "The execution of a High Provost without a trial... it creates a vacuum that the Cathedral will seek to fill with fire." -Aldric looked at her then, his grey eyes searching her throat where the pulse of his own blood beat visibly in her neck. "A remarkably candid assessment. It is a pity the asset is currently experiencing a total systemic failure." +"A trial is a decorative luxury for times of peace, Aldric," I replied, finally shifting my gaze to his eyes. They were dark, swimming with a feverish light. "In war, one simply removes the rot before it reaches the foundation. He tried to kill you. In doing so, he tried to unmake the Vow. My hand was merely the tool of the Law." -"Peace, both of you," Kaelen urged, moving toward the weapon rack near the hearth. He pulled a heavy broadsword from its mounting. "The Cathedral guards are not with us. Malcorra has issued a decree of 'Sanctification through Purity.' She is letting the Blight cull the Court to see who the blood protects." +"I... I can stand," he murmured, though I had not yet moved to help him. He was assessing the room, his eyes darting to the exits, calculating the distance to the stairs as if he were planning a siege rather than a retreat to a sickbed. -Seraphine felt a cold, familiar rage coil in her gut. "It is written in the vein," she whispered, mimicking the High Priestess’s liturgical lilt. "Malcorra is not testing our blood; she is clearing the board of anyone who might dissent against her theology. She views this coup as a divine renovation." +He took one step. -She released Aldric’s arm, but only when she was certain his legs would hold. She reached out with her mind, activating the *Gilded Pulse*. Usually, the castle was a symphony of predictable rhythms—the steady, boring thrum of the kitchen staff, the sharp, disciplined staccato of the guards. Now, it was a cacophony. Below them, in the grand halls of the Lowen-Court, the heartbeats were changing. They were slowing, deepening into a wet, thudding sound that mimicked the heartbeat of a dying forest. +His knee buckled. The "weight of presence" he usually projected vanished, replaced by the raw, physical reality of a man dying from the inside out. -The Blight was not just killing the nobility. It was rewriting them. +I was there before he hit the stone. I caught him, my armored forearm bracing beneath his chest, my other hand gripping his shoulder. The contact was a lightning strike. The moment our skin met—the heat of his neck against the cool metal of my gorget—the blood-bond roared to life. -"We cannot stay here," Seraphine said. She looked at the shadows dancing under the solar door. "The chimney flues, the servant passages—everything is a vein for the rot to travel through. We must reach the balcony. If the people see the Sovereigns together, it may arrest the panic before the Cathedral can solidify its hold." +The Great Hall vanished. -"Then they will see that we are still breathing," Seraphine snapped. "In this architecture of ruin, that is the only pillar that matters." +*I was standing in a courtyard of grey stone. The air smelled of wet earth and old grief. I was younger, smaller, but the weight of a sword in my hand was real. A man knelt before me—a man with Aldric’s eyes but a softer mouth. A brother. A boy. I heard a voice, Aldric’s voice, but hollowed out by a decade of ice. 'By the law of the Thorne, for the preservation of the borders, I find you guilty of sedition. Form is temporary. The Kingdom is eternal.' I felt the sickening lurch of the blade falling, the spray of red that wasn't just blood, but a piece of my own soul breaking away.* -They began the descent. +I gasped, my lungs seizing as I was wrenched back into the Great Hall. -The corridors of Castle Sangue were no longer the pristine arteries of power Seraphine had spent her life maintaining. The walls were sweating. A thin, grey frost of Blight-mould climbed the tapestries, devouring the depicted histories of the Valerius line. The scent of ozone grew so thick it tasted like a penny on the tongue. +Aldric was leaning heavily against me now, his breath hot and ragged against my ear. He had seen it too—or rather, I had felt the echo of his agony. The execution of his brother. The wound he carried was not just a memory; it was a hairline fracture in his own spirit. -Kaelen moved ahead of them, his blade slick with the grey-black ichor of the three infected servants he had already cut down in the stairwell. He signaled for them to hold at every junction, acting as a physical shield between the Sovereigns and the encroaching rot. +"Do not," he hissed, his fingers digging into my arm. "Do not look... into the cellar, Seraphine." -Aldric walked with a terrifying, iron-willed precision. Every step looked like it cost him a year of his life. Seraphine watched the back of his neck, seeing the way his muscles corded as he fought to maintain the *Weight of Presence*. Unlike her hemomancy, which extracted and redirected energy, Aldric’s power was a psychic command—a crushing gravity that forced the atmosphere itself to acknowledge his right to rule. He was projecting a field that made the very shadows recede as they passed, but the cost was evident in the way his breath hitched. +"I am not looking," I whispered, my voice losing its sharp edges for a fleeting second. "I am holding the weight." -"Do not overextend," she warned, her voice a low vibration. "I can feel your heart laboring. It is... inefficient." +I signaled Kaelen, who moved to Aldric’s other side. Together, we began to move him toward the private lift that led to the Sovereign’s wing. Every step was a calculation of balance and pain. I could feel the silver-dust in his blood reacting to my proximity, the magic in my veins trying to purge the impurity and failing because the toxin was designed to kill the very thing I was. -"I am the King of the Lowen-Court," Aldric replied without looking back. "If I am to be extinguished, I will be a sun, not a candle." +We were ten paces from the hidden door behind the dais when the air in the hall changed. -She moved closer to him, allowing her own hemomancy to bleed into the air between them. She began to extract. Not from him—there was nothing left to take—but from the environment. She drew the heat from the burning torches, the kinetic energy of the shifting air, and the residual life-force of the rodents dying in the walls. She funneled it toward him, not through a touch, but through the invisible bridge of their shared blood. +The scent of copper and old death vanished, replaced instantly by the suffocating aroma of metallic incense and the biting, liturgical sting of sanctified smoke. It was the smell of a storm held in a bottle. -Aldric’s shoulders eased by a fraction of an inch. He didn't thank her. He simply adjusted his ring and kept walking. +The far doors to the Great Hall did not open; they were simply *unmade* as the shadows within the vestibule coalesced into a figure in crimson silk. -They reached the grand gallery overlooking the Lowen-Court just as the screaming reached a crescendo. +High Priestess Malcorra. -Seraphine looked over the gilded railing and felt a rare moment of vertigo. The court was a sea of shifting, violent geometry. Below, the High Provost’s successor—a man named Callow who had once been a decorative column of a courtier—was currently unmaking a countess. He wasn't using a blade. His skin had split into thousands of hair-like tendrils of Blight, which were weaving themselves into her pores. +She did not walk so much as she glided, the heavy iron thurible in her hand swinging with a rhythmic, hypnotic precision. *Clink. Sway. Clink. Sway.* Her face was a mask of pale parchment, her eyes unblinking as she fixed them on the center of my throat. I saw her thumb rhythmically circle the etched runes of her thurible—a Cathedral-sanctioned rite that allowed her to bridge the silence of the Vow and eavesdrop on the pulses of the living. -And in the center of the chaos, standing as still as a tombstone, was High Priestess Malcorra. +I felt a sudden, sharp needle of psychic pain lance through the blood-link. It wasn't my pain, and it wasn't Aldric's—it was an external intrusion, a "Silent Admonition" designed to remind us who truly held the leash of our souls. -She was draped in the heavy, blood-red silks of her office, her iron thurible swinging with a rhythmic, hypnotic precision. The smoke rising from it was not incense; it was a heavy, metallic fog that seemed to guide the Blight-infected toward specific targets. +Aldric groaned, his head dropping to my shoulder. My own knees nearly gave way as the Priestess "tuned" into our connection. Kaelen’s hand moved instinctively to his hilt, his eyes flicking to mine with a flash of genuine alarm; he knew as well as I did that to defy Malcorra was to invite a spiritual siege we were not prepared to weather. -Malcorra looked up. Her eyes, milky and unblinking, locked onto Seraphine’s. +"The blood is restless," Malcorra said. Her voice was operatic, a liturgical drone that seemed to vibrate the very stones of the hall. "It screams of a premature harvest. It screams of sacrilege." -"The Sovereigns have descended from their ivory height," Malcorra’s voice carried through the roar of the riot, operatic and terrifyingly calm. "The blood is restless, Seraphine. It recognizes the impurity you have invited into your vessel." +I straightened my spine, refusing to let go of Aldric. I stood on the edge of my strength, my gaze meeting hers with predatory intensity. "The High Provost committed treason, Malcorra. I have dealt with the instability of the court. Your presence was not requested until the morning oratory." -"The only impurity I see is the rot you have allowed to breach my halls, Malcorra," Seraphine shouted back, her voice echoing with the authority of three centuries. "You mistake providence for preference. You have brought a plague to a political dispute." +Malcorra stopped ten paces away. She began to rub the pads of her fingers together—a dry, rasping sound that set my teeth on edge. "You mistake providence for preference, Queen Seraphine. I do not come because I am requested. I come because the Vow has been polluted. I felt the ripple of the silver in the clay. I felt the King... waver." -Malcorra’s thin, mocking smile did not waver. "The clay must be fired to be hardened. The Lowen-Court was a stagnant pool; I am merely providing the agitation required for evolution. It is written in the vein: the weak shall be the mulch for the strong." +She turned her gaze to Aldric, her eyes narrowing. "The vessel is cracked. You have allowed a Thorne King to be poisoned under the shadow of the Crimson Cathedral. This is more than a failure of security. It is a failure of the Spirit." -"You speak of vessels and clay while the kingdom burns," Aldric stepped forward, his voice a low thunder that seemed to vibrate the floorboards. "I am Aldric Thorne, and this house is under my protection. By the Sanguine Vow, I command these shadow-horrors to cease." +"He lives," I snapped, my consonants clicking like shears. "I filtered the toxin through the link myself. The equilibrium is being restored." -He exerted the full force of his sovereignty. The air in the court thickened, a crushing weight that forced several of the infected guards to their knees. For a second, the violence stuttered. The power of a King, even a dying one, was a primal thing, a biological command that the very blood in the room tried to obey. +"At what cost?" Malcorra’s voice dropped to a dry, raspy wheeze. She stepped closer, the smoke from her thurible coiling around us like spectral snakes. "You have woven your essence into a dying man. You have tethered the Valerius line to a buckling support. It is written in the vein: that which is joined in blood must be purified in fire." -But Malcorra began to whisper. It was a dry, raspy wheeze that forced the air out of the room. +She raised her hand, her fingers twitching as if she were plucking invisible strings. I felt another surge of pain—this one deeper, aimed at the core of the bond. It felt like someone was trying to peel my skin away from my muscles. -"Your pulse is a borrowed music, King Aldric," she hissed. "You are a ghost eating the life of a dying Queen. You have no authority over the sanctified." +Aldric’s hand tightened on mine. Even in his weakened state, he found his voice. "High Priestess," he rasped, his eyes fluttering open to fix on her with a cold, Thorne stare. "We... I... do not recognize your authority to 'purify' that which the Crown has already sealed. You overstep." -The infected guards rose. Their eyes were no longer human; they were glowing with the sickly, bioluminescent grey of the deep Blight. They began to scale the pillars of the gallery, their fingers elongating into claws that bit deep into the ancient stone. +Malcorra’s thin lips curled into a mocking smile. "You speak of authority, little King? You, who cannot even stand without the Queen’s grace? You are an impurity in this hall. A necessary one, perhaps, but an impurity nonetheless." -Kaelen stepped in front of the Sovereigns, his sword leveled. "Get back. There are too many." +She looked back at me. "Seraphine, let him go. He must be taken to the Cathedral. The Sisters of the Sanguine Heart will perform the necessary extractions. If he survives the Rite of Thorns, then he is worthy of the Vow. If not... then the blood has judged him." -"No," Seraphine said. She felt the blood of Aldric inside her reaching out, seeking its source. The debt was not just a burden; it was a circuit. "Kaelen, stand aside." +The Rite of Thorns. It was a death sentence for a man already weakened by silver. They would drain him nearly to the point of heart-stop to "wash" the blood. -"Your Majesty—" +"No," I said. The word was a heavy stone dropped into a still pool. -"I will not say it again, Captain. Stand. Aside." +Malcorra’s hand stopped moving. "No? You would deny the Cathedral its oversight?" -Seraphine turned to Aldric. His face was a mask of agony, the strain of holding the *Weight of Presence* threatening to burst the vessels in his eyes. She reached out and took his hand. Not a gentle squeeze, but a grounding, violent grip that fused their skin together. +"I am the Sovereign," I said, my voice rising, vibrating with the authority of the throne. "The King is under Sovereign Seclusion. By the ancient laws of Castle Sangue, the interior chambers are a sanctuary beyond the reach of the liturgical courts. I will stabilize him. I will be his physician and his priest until the toxin is cleared." -"Give it to me," she commanded. +"You would isolate yourself with a foreign King?" Malcorra whispered, her voice scraping the inside of my skull. "You would risk the Blight of sentiment? It is written in the vein, Seraphine: the heart is a hollow vessel. If you fill it with a man instead of the Law, the roof will surely fall." -"I have nothing... left to give," he gasped, his fingers spasms against hers. +"The roof is mine to support," I replied. "Kaelen, take him to the Solarium. Now." -"Not your life. Your authority. You provide the command; I will provide the extraction. We are a single architecture now, Aldric. Brace yourself." +Kaelen didn't hesitate. He practically lifted Aldric from my side. The break in physical contact was an agony of its own—a sudden, freezing void where his warmth had been. I felt the phantom nausea of the silver return, doubled by the loss of his counter-balance. -She shut her eyes and dove into the link. It was a sun-bright roar of sensation. She felt his pain, a jagged glass landscape in his chest, but beneath it, she felt the deep, ancient resonance of the Thorne line—the power to bind and to hold. She took that resonance and wrapped it in her own hemomancy, the power to pull and to drain. +I stood alone before Malcorra, my hands of stone at my sides. -She opened her eyes, and they were no longer gold. They were a terrifying, midnight crimson. +The High Priestess stared at me for a long time. She did not blink. She looked at my throat, watching the steady, defiant pulse there. The air between us was thick with the scent of a conflict that had been brewing since the day I took the crown. -She didn't aim for the guards' hearts. She aimed for the Blight itself. +"You think you are saving him," she said, her voice a raspy whisper as she began to turn away. "But the blood-link is not a bridge, Seraphine. It is a debt. Every drop of health you give him is a drop of weakness you invite into yourself. And the Lowen-Court is hungry. They have seen you kill for him. They will wonder when you will begin to die for him." -As the first infected soldier reached the top of the railing, Seraphine didn't strike him. She simply pulled. She reached into the necrotic essence of the Blight and treated it like a vein. She extracted the heat, the moisture, and the dark energy that animated the rot, and she funneled it directly into the King’s weakening body. +She paused at the entrance to the vestibule, the shadows reaching out to claim her crimson robes. -The effect was instantaneous. Aldric’s skin regained its color with a violent flush. He gasped, his back arching as the stolen vitality of the Blight surged into him, filtered through Seraphine’s constitution. +"It is written in the vein," Malcorra whispered, her voice a dry, raspy wheeze that seemed to scrape the inside of my skull. "You have not saved him, Seraphine. You have merely invited the Blight to dine at your own table." -"Now!" she screamed. +I watched her go, the clink of her thurible fading into the distance. I stood in the center of the Great Hall, surrounded by the blood of my Provost and the ghosts of a thousand ancestors, and for the first time in my life, I felt the inherent stability of my own world begin to groan under the weight. -Aldric didn't hesitate. He thrust his free hand toward the center of the court, releasing a wave of pure, sovereign gravity. It wasn't just a weight; it was a decree. The air itself seemed to solidify into a hammer. The infected guards scaling the pillars were not just pushed back; they were crushed into the stone, their bodies imploding under a pressure that shouldn't have been physically possible. +I turned and walked toward the Solarium, my boots clicking rhythmically on the stone. *One step. Two steps.* I was going to him. Not because of the Vow. Not because of the Law. -Below, the metallic fog of Malcorra’s thurible was swept away by a sudden, violent wind. - -Malcorra’s mocking smile finally vanished. She took a step back, her fingers rubbing together frantically as she tried to tune back into the blood-link she had lost. "Sacrilege," she whispered, her voice failing her. "You are mixing the currents. You are polluting the ritual." - -"I am the Architect," Seraphine said, her voice sounding like a thousand voices speaking in unison. "And I have decided that this cathedral is surplus to requirements." - -She pushed more energy into Aldric, her body acting as a high-tension wire for a power that was starting to char her own nerves. She felt her skin begin to smoke, the tips of her fingers turning a bruised purple as she over-articulated the extraction. - -The Lowen-Court began to shake. The great glass windows at the far end, depicting the ascension of the first Valerius, groaned under the psychic pressure. - -"Seraphine, stop," Aldric’s voice was no longer measured. It was urgent. "The internal structure... it is failing. You are pulling too much." - -But Seraphine couldn't stop. She was looking at Malcorra’s throat, wanting to see the moment the High Priestess’s own pulse surrendered to the gravity they were creating. She saw the fear in the older woman’s eyes, the realization that the "vessels" she had tried to manipulate had become a storm she could not weather. - -Then, a sound like a thousand mirrors breaking at once. - -The glass-line didn't just break; it detonated. The shockwave threw Kaelen across the gallery and sent Malcorra staggering back into the shadows of the lower cloisters. - -Seraphine felt the connection snap. The rebound was a physical blow that sent her reeling. Her knees hit the stone, her breath escaping her in a ragged sob. The pain was absolute—a searing white heat that traveled back from her fingertips to her collarbone, charring the magical pathways she had opened. Her skin cracked, weeping thin lines of gold-tinted blood that hissed against the cold floor. She tried to push herself up, but her arms buckled. She was a ruin of a sovereign, her vision fraying into a dull, static grey as her system went into shock from the raw transit of power. - -Hands caught her. Strong, trembling, and undeniably warm. - -"I have you," Aldric said. He wasn't using the first-person plural. He was just a man, his voice cracked with an emotion he had spent thirty years burying. - -Seraphine leaned into him, her forehead resting against the cool metal of his gorget. She could feel his heart—really feel it now, not as a predatory calculation, but as a living, breathing miracle. It was steady. It was strong. And it was terrified for her. - -"The Court," she coughed, the taste of ash in her mouth. "Is it...?" - -"Cleared," Aldric said, looking down at the wreckage below. The Blight-infected were gone, reduced to heaps of grey dust by the sheer weight of the sovereignty they had unleashed. But Malcorra was gone too, vanished into the dark veins of the castle. "For now." - -Seraphine tried to stand, but her legs were hollowed out. She looked at her hands; the raw, weeping skin was the price of acting as a conduit for a king’s rage. - -"We have to follow her," Seraphine whispered. "She will... she will go to the Cathedral. She will try to seal the gates." - -"We go nowhere until you can breathe without shaking," Aldric countered. He reached out, his thumb brushing a smudge of grey soot from her cheek. For a second, the sovereign was gone, replaced by something much more dangerous: a partner. - -"I do not shake," Seraphine lied, even as her fingers clutched his forearm for support. - -"You are shaking like a leaf in an autumn gale, Seraphine. Do not lie to the man who currently shares your circulatory system." - -She looked up at him, intending to issue a sharp command about her own autonomy, but the words died in her throat. The solar had been a negotiation. The feeding had been a desperation. But this—this moment on the balcony, surrounded by the ruins of their power—was something else entirely. It was a recognition. - -The silence that followed was not the clinical silence Seraphine preferred. It was heavy, loaded with the weight of the things they hadn't said—about his brother, about her hunger, about the fact that they were now biologically incapable of living without the other. - -A sudden, sharp crackle of sound broke the moment. - -They turned as one. From the darkness of the lower court, a single, high-pitched scream echoed, followed by the sound of more glass shattering. Not the inner line this time. The outer windows. The ones that faced the city. - -The Blight wasn't just in the palace. It was in the streets. - -"As the first of the glass windows shattered inward, Seraphine didn't reach for her crown; she reached for Aldric’s hand, and for the first time in three centuries, the Queen of Valerius felt the cold strike of genuine fear." \ No newline at end of file +And that was the most terrifying realization of all. \ No newline at end of file