Join me in night painted with crimson and black.

Fae are enchanting. Beautiful. And deadly. Cruel like winter morn. And they love a taste of your mortality.

Tiyan Markon didn’t know how his life would turn, how much darkness would slip into it, when he became pursued by the dark fae ruler. Tiyan finds himself in the palace of the fairy, a gruesome pit filled with dark urges and twisted beauty, and isn’t even aware, that the fair folk have plans for him.

“Do you hate me, Leira? With strong, beautiful hatred?”
- Lorian Ain'Dal, chapter "The Withered Bones of Hope IV"
ATOM: In the Cold Hands of Light – V

The bottle stood in front of her in all its mundane normality. Next to it – a glass, no less ordinary. Aloralt sat against the wall, on a small, creaky chair, and his presence, his half-smile and his fingers running through a string of beads that held his keys, filled the room with an air of uncertainty.

Creak.

Creak.

Aloralt’s body did not seem to move, and Ona was aware that he was a human without magic, but somehow he made this cursed chair speak.

He led her into this room, with no windows or furniture, just bare walls, hidden in deep shadows, bathed in the soft light of three candles.

The darkness reached out to them with its tentacles, even on a clear day. Knowing what they were doing, they sealed all the windows in the temple. Bathed all the rooms in candlelight.

If you breathe night every day, you become a creature of darkness, so easily. Even if you don’t want it, it seeps into your veins with coal and soot.

Now she was given her first task, prepared for her by Sindr Alusa.

To drink from the glass. To see if her sins would allow her to follow the bright light of truth.

Ona suspected it was something they didn’t believe in themselves. Praetor was a mentally wounded child, and he certainly didn’t believe in any light, his own or borrowed from the goddess – or any god, for that matter. It was more a test to see how far she could go without fear. A test of her courage, for she doubted they expected her to show devotion.

The liquid in the glass waited for her, shimmering in the dim light. Pale, like starlight, milky and thick. It could be old milk, were it not for the greyish hue. Ona examined the glass doubtfully.

It could be anything.

Even a poison.

But if they wanted to kill her, they had many other, much more terrible ways of doing it. And it didn’t make sense – Sindr was genuinely interested in her service and knowledge, he wouldn’t gain anything by poisoning her on a whim.

“I see you are reluctant, scholar,” Aloralt’s tone was cold. His smile was still on his lips, but his eyes showed no amusement. “Does the texture of our water repel you?”

Ona’s eyebrows rose.

“Water? Is that it? My first task is to drink water from a cup?”

“Water is different in each region of Avras. Some are just thirst quenchers. But some… are more unique. Depending on where they have their source, they can give life or kill.”

“And you want to kill me?”

“More like give life,” he pointed at the bottle. “The Torch of Avras has decided for some reason that you are special. Therefore, your treatment will be special. If you dare to follow his steps, of course.”

Ona was aware that delaying this… task might have repercussions she wasn’t ready for. She knew it wouldn’t be easy, and in fact it was easier to get in front of the Praetor than she had first thought. He wasn’t guarded, and even when he told her why, it wasn’t fully explained. Sindr was a dangerous enigma – why and how he suffered was her most burning question. Why he trusted her was another, perhaps even more important.

Maybe he was more sick than she suspected, maybe he found a last chance in her.

Do not believe it.

He knows what he is doing, no matter how much he suffers.

Aloralt made the chair scream again. Ona suspected he could do the same to her, with the same emotionless smile.

“Time is working against you, scholar,” he mused. “Let me paint you a picture. A pretty one. You come here without letters or proof, claiming to know… something you claim to know. Perhaps you were deceived by the Praetor’s willingness to use your help. Perhaps you underestimate us now, assuming we are desperate enough to believe any lie you wish to tell. You saw the city…” creak, creak, creak. “But the city is just a surface. Dead, decaying, ugly, isn’t it?”

Ona gave him a bitter smile.

“The world looks different since I last checked.”

“Oh, definitely! The Fey spells, spreading sickly, destroying what makes us human. They enjoy our pain, they enjoy pressing their boot harder and harder. But the human race… is resilient. And we can endure much more, for much longer, if necessary.”

She almost heard her father’s words. “Until we breathe, we are alive. And if we are alive, we are not yet defeated.” But her father died as the Shadows took over Feirne. His last hours were the opposite of life.

But Ona still said those words to herself. Because she was alive. And she wasn’t ready to die.

“Do you see the picture, scholar?” Aloralt continued with a wry smile. “We are not fools. We fight for something better. For the victory of humanity. And we use every means at our disposal. But if a means is useless and doesn’t cooperate… why use it in the end?”

The chair stopped creaking and Aloralt bit into her with his gaze, burying it deep into her soul.

“If you don’t drink it now, you will be useless. And we will dispose of you, no matter what promises you hold in your head.”

Ona knew it was true.

She couldn’t back out now. Fear was not an option. Be that as it may… she stopped really being afraid when they took Isnan. Life was incomplete without her. Without her… her journey had no meaning.

She took the glass. Looked once more at the milky liquid inside.

And poured it down her throat.

She half expected to choke on it. A poison that would eat away at her insides. Something that would bring her to her knees.

But nothing of the sort happened.

The liquid had a silky texture and a sweet taste. Like the cough syrup her mother gave her when she was a child. It tasted like childhood and Ona couldn’t really understand what was wrong with it.

Aloralt smiled.

The chair creaked.

“Your devotion will be rewarded. And your help will be accepted.”

The rest of the liquid settled to the bottom of the glass, with gleaming dust.

*

When she awoke in the night, her insides were torn in so many places that she couldn’t pinpoint what really hurt. The pain was everywhere, digging into her with sharp claws and teeth. Her bed was wet… and she could swear it was blood. Blood.

Blood.

Not hers. Or hers?

Her body, sweaty, sore, as if it had been beaten with hundreds of wooden bludgeons, sprawled across the bed while someone moved about. A person. No, two. Or more.

She felt a touch on her forehead, and she felt someone’s hand between her legs, squeezing hard. But she was in so much pain that she couldn’t resist as fingers entered her, searching her like an empty drawer.

No…

No.

“A virgin?”

“Yes.”

“The Praetor was certain she was not.”

“She is young. She had to use the dust. He knew that too.”

“How much younger?”

“She may be sixteen.”

“A scholar. Of course. Lies.”

“The Praetor thought she might be touched?”

“Torch of Arelt knows everything. Surely he had his reasons for saying so.”

“Virgin or not, she lied.”

Ona groaned as the fingers left her. The pain in her innards was slowly, gradually, becoming harder to bear, and her consciousness was on the verge of collapse.

“Look, Sygyn, I think she knows what is happening.”

“I doubt it.”

“I feel she does.”

“Does it matter?” a cackle, a woman’s. Sharp and mocking. “She won’t remember us. She won’t even remember the pain. But she reacted like a witch. Light never lies.”

“But she did lie.”

“The Praetor will know how to use her.”

“He knows everything.”

“He knows everything.”

“He knows the thoughts of a drop of water.

Ona’s mind was slowly shutting down. Her insides were like coals and her limbs like sea foam. She heard them talking quietly, a murmur of whispers. And she felt hands on her tights, and a woman spoke again, as if through a hazy mist.

“The barrier between her legs won’t do. Virgins are useless when the magic of a goddess speaks.”

“Should I…?”

“She must lose her purity, otherwise it will stop the flow of power. Call Rhyn and Sabar. They are good, devoted men. Surely working in the name of Light will bring them much joy.”

Ona gagged and threw up, she could swear the vomit was crimson. The colour of her guts. Her mouth as if filled with broken glass.

And the sweet taste of the water she drank the other day. Her mother’s cough syrup. Served in a shattered cup.

Reality turned black.



ATOM: Lovers Like Gods – III

As Koshis’het took in his shadows, his eyes filled with tears, of joy and pain – both. Joy – because his torment will be easier in the days to come… pain – because the retreating gods were tearing at his mind, wanting to stay a second, a minute longer.

Lorian now possessed their own power. Which they detested – in their own overwhelming way – and drank from the cup of that hatred, feeding their eternal flame.

“My king… thank you…” the Ritualist murmured as the pain began to ease, his blind eyes glistening with tears. “If you could also help the Shatar’sai… they guard the chamber where they sleep…”

Lorian’s eyes bored into Koshis’het with deadly daggers. He was sure that the Fae king would say no. But…

“Take me to them.”

Lorian was aware that good guards were part of his plan. The ones who would alert others and not fall prey when the gods fully awakened. And for that they would need all the strength they could get.

Nymre walked beside him, her expression disgusted. He knew what she saw in the Ritualists – rotting creatures from abandoned temple who foretold her death. But they were more than that. Perhaps they were petty, and their divination power could be terrifying when well directed. But they were also the last outpost.

So was he.

He was like them, the last outpost before the slaughter. He didn’t like to think of himself as such. He wasn’t doing it for them, or for the Fey. He did it because he didn’t like the idea of the end of all things.

Nymre had told him once that it was too final. After the end… nothing remains. Dark debris, filled with flames, brimming with divine light.

A debris built over his and Nymre’s corpses, sinking in the pool of nothingness, deep, deeper.

Nymre may have felt disgust for the Ritualists. But she knew now, she knew everything. And she came with him willingly, to see with her own eyes how far things had gone. Her large, pale eyes embraced the corridors that led to the heart of their land, observing mould and decay with a doubtful air.

“I was here so long ago, Lorian,” she admitted, turning to him, her whitish hair falling across her face. “Has it always looked so…”

He chuckled, darkly.

“Dead?”

“You could say that,” her eyebrows furrowed. “I was almost sure that the temple dedicated to the Dark Forest would be much more alive. I suppose the gods have already seen to that.”

“Gods eat everything, my lady,” Koshis’het, now completely sober and no longer intoxicated by the divine aura, broke into their conversation. Lorian could teach him not to, of course… but the Ritualist was past the point where punishing him would bring him pleasure or even joy. “Their power is not just coal and flame. They bring destruction, they feed on every aspect of life. Long ago, on the eve of time, they fed on loose magic… but in their greed and hunger, they decided to create a stellar race, powerful enough to grow like a fruit until it was ripe and strong enough to feed them with an infinite amount of magic,” he laughed, a rasping cackle filling the passage. “We are indeed created from the night sky and starlight… but we pay the price. As does everything in this beautifully cursed world.”

Nymre looked at Koshis’het as if he were begging her to step on him. Lorian found it amusing.

“Please continue to bother my lover,” he mused. “Rarely can anything annoy her as much as my person.”

Nymre didn’t answer, but he noticed that his words amused her as well.

When they were alone, she would like to continue it. A banter that would remind her of her younger years. But not when this Fae was looking at her. Not when he was not the only one looking into her soul.

The air was slowly getting thicker, hotter. It wasn’t this hot the last time he was here. They were truly awakening, filling the chamber with their seething presence. He felt more than he saw the guards standing outside the door to the Gods’ Chamber. Their tortured minds groaned in his head, caught between duty and fear. But they knew their task and would never abandon their post. Formed from young Ritualists, they had to have a will as hard as stone.

And Lorian valued that in others. And they deserved relief.

His shadows drifted slowly towards the guards, enveloping them in a thick mist that soothed and silenced the hundreds of voices they heard in their heads. Gradually, he shut out the gods’ presence with their own weapon – the power he had gained by drinking from them. The guards visibly relaxed.

Lorian felt a surge of gratitude. Something he hadn’t expected and didn’t really want. It was foreign to him. A weak feeling from a weak soul. Something that took more than it gave. Something he had long since locked away within himself.

“Do you wish to enter the chamber with the raven lady, my king?” asked Koshis’het, his hand searching for Nymre like a worm crawling over a branch. She returned a blank, indifferent stare. “Will you allow…”

“I do what is best for Lorian and the realm,” she cut off any speculation. “And I need no permission, my good priest.”

A smile formed on Lorian’s lips. Nymre would subjugate even the gods, if Koshis suggested they had any power over her. And perhaps that would be the end of it all, the woman’s pride delightfully resolved all their problems, he toyed with the idea, entering the room.

The first thing he saw inside were open eyes.

Everywhere, growing into the walls like a grotesque tapestry. Eyes, bulging, tearing, crimson with effort. Built into the flesh, literally. Thousands of them, lined up at the entrance, as if waiting for him and him alone. And they were, feeling him, seeing him, touching him with the power of the gods, eager to tear his mind from him.

Nymre looked sceptically at this display of gore.

“It seems the elders are aware of my aesthetic choices,” Lorian gazed up at the ceiling, where eyes hung from fleshy tendrils, bloodshot and focused on him as well. “Eyes have always been my favourite.”

Nymre wanted to answer, but then the door closed – Koshis’het did not enter. Nymre greeted it with a raised eyebrow.

“He is afraid, my raven. Don’t blame the decaying priest who doesn’t want to decay any further.”

“Wasn’t it like this before?” she asked, pointing at the eyes. Her hair began to move, touched by the power of this place. Nymre looked with slight concern at her own tangles, moving as if under water.

“They never watched so… carefully.”

“Your jokes are not amusing.”

He graced her with a small smile that lit up his beautiful features.

“We are standing in the very heart of darkness. Every leaf, every tree, every living thing begins here. Here are the roots of the Eternal Forest, and here I decided to trap the gods. It was perhaps the best and worst choice. The magic of this place kept them asleep long enough for me to feed on their power… but at the same time they caused the forest to decay.”

“So… the priests can thank you for their condition?”

“Of course,” his smile widened even more. “I owe them some grace, after all.”

Slowly, cautiously, he approached the place where the gods slept. He had no intention of absorbing them today, and he knew that they were just waiting to take over Nymre’s mind, just as they had done with the Ritualists. Nymre… stubborn, strong Nymre… if he told her that this journey was too dangerous, it would be another reason to go with him.

But it really was dangerous. The thing was, it could really end badly.

He pulled the eye stalks from the wall. They struggled, first trying to grab his elbows and hands, but his shadows penetrated them, separating them so they couldn’t bury him under their mass. But they latched on to him, one by one, like beloved children, clinging to their father with fierce love. He could feel their flesh crawling over his skin.

The gods wanted him. Wanted him spread out on the tree, suffering for eternity. Burned by hundreds of suns. Lorian was sure those eyes already saw his agony.

And there they were.

Caught between branches and stones, no taller than he or Nymre, no more imposing… their skin looking like copper mixed with gold, dimly reflecting the light of the torches. Their limbs sunk into the walls, fossilized in time and space. Fingers joined in triangles in front of them, drowned in roots, seemingly trapped forever.

And their eyes…

Lorian had never seen such eyes.

Perhaps no one in all of Ain’asel has ever seen anything like them.

They had every colour in the palette, and it was as if they had no colour at all. Black and white rainbow, prismatic dullness. They were both alive and dead, like the world that would happen if they woke up.

“They’re really here…” Nymre whispered.

She approached and stood by his side, her hand on his arm.

The gods’ lips were turned up, grotesquely stretched, like a theatre mask from older human days. And Lorian knew what it meant. They were displeased, hungry and twisted, and that was their pleasure. To see him and to show him that they were not completely asleep. That they were one step away from revenge and fulfilment.

And that they were patient.

As much as he was not.

“I don’t like it here, Lorian,” Nymre decided to speak. “Not because of the gods. I feel the forest. It… screams in my head. It feels pain… is that normal? Do you…?”

“Yes. Any of us would feel the funeral dirge of the sacred woods.”

A stalk of eyes drifted in Nymre’s direction, she swatted it with her hand in disgust.

“But if the forest dies…”

“Even if they don’t wake now and I can still drink from them, the woods won’t survive. They will collapse and so will we. There are no safe choices, no real ones. The mortal fool who travels here must want to give his life. Otherwise, the laws imposed on us by the same gods you see here won’t allow the spell to work.”

Nymre looked at him, considered him for a moment.

And then she laughed. A little fear in that laugh. A little panic. Bitter and sad, though laced with mocking and feigned joy.

“He would rather assist them than help us, in any way. Even if it would not be the end of his life.

“That’s why… I have to do it,” his smile grew darker, more seductive… more predatory. His face lit up from within with black light. “I have to make him want it.”

“But how…”

“I have to break him,” and Nymre could swear she saw shadowed teeth and thick jaws of night in his face. Buried deep within himself. A beast of shadows and blood, well kept on a leash – most of the time. “And it will bring me immeasurable joy.”