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"
The Hunger of Eternal Ones – IV

Sindr’s eyes glowed. Not with light that died in him long ago, replaced with gnawing shadows. Not even with madness. With something primal – joy intertwined with fear of the unknown. A whole cosmic collapse of… hope.

Sindr was at the verge of implosion – if what he planned for them won’t work, he will fall to pieces.

Ona embraced her legs even tighter, seeing the men behind his back. Possibly the same one who desecrated her body. They won’t see her numb and soft like a rag doll anymore. If they touch her, she will sink her teeth in their necks. If they eventually tried to kill her… at least she takes few with herself.

“I see you are not unconscious anymore, Scholar” giggled the Praetor. His eyes embraced Isnan, like he wanted to swallow her, then slid over Ona’s frame. Slowly. Eyes set in a youthful child face, devoured her, like she was a peace of meat. “How you enjoyed the preparation for the ritual? I suspected you won’t cooperate, so I gave you relief from consciousness. Isnan dear,” his lips stretched into a wide smile. “You didn’t offer me your power, even seeing your sister in a situation not for frail minds… I assume either your bond is not as strong as I – or even you – thought… or you couldn’t draw your force out. Perhaps… yes!… perhaps you need additional stimuli… more final.”

His arms twitched when he turned to the inquisitors behind him. His left lid moved uncontrollably. Ona could swear he looks more bloated and wet, than when she met him for the first time.

“Take them to the altar, ah” his voice shook. Anticipation. And pain. “We will see which gods speak to us with more grace.”

The men dragged Ona and Isnan on their feet. Ona could swear she is about to trip and fall, when her legs refused to carry her. But one of the man lifted her up and placing her over his shoulder, he just went with her, like with a sack. Isnan was treated the same way. They heard the laughter of Sindr, chasing them, panicked and cruel at the same time.

“You will be relieved! Like a good witches, you will be purveyors of the healing! Pleasurable healing!”

Ona closed her eyes and allowed the man to carry her up, up, into the dark corridors above them, fear choking her, like a hand around her already clenched throat.

What do they plan?

Why she is not able to be strong anymore?

This powerless feeling was gnawing at her nerves and flooding her mind. She was not used to it. Not used to be exposed and without any weapon by her hand.

She caught Isnan by the corner of her eye… she will not allow them to harm her. She will do everything to save at least, use every mean and coincidence to not let them kill her or do something worse.

She didn’t have strength to claw at the back of the man who carried her – and even if she had, she had no chance to escape, surrounded by windowless walls and enemies. Her blood ran cold in her veins paralyzing her limbs. The drug which they forced into her, was still in her body – small amount, but enough to change her perception.

The chamber which they entered was illuminated with small lamps – not torches like in other parts of the building. The dim glow bathed everything in mellow shadows, soft and leaving more to darkness than to light. Ona was placed on the floor – not delicately at all – and she saw the reason why this room had to become the ultimate tool in a journey to offer the Praetor a relief from his torment.

By the wall, there stood the vast altar.

Shiny stone gleamed like glass, polished and cleaned.

“An end to a tool” grinned the man, passing her and shifting Isnan on his shoulder. “And beginning of the purpose.”

Ona was pushed forth and the knees almost buckled under her. But she managed to stay on her feet. Sindr Alusa was joining them, his face muscles moving uncontrollably. It was easy to see that he won’t bear the torture one day more – if this rite fails, he will drown in the muddy pond of madness.

The acolytes and inquisitors stood under each wall, looking at the Praetor with admiration painted on their faces. Ona could guess how his “magic” could look for them – something new, promising eternal life and end of fae shackles. They could even think his state is caused by his efforts in the battle with the folk.

And Sindr was only a poor lost soul, who was on the verge of insanity. Who could only squirm and make others squirm too.

She would pity him, if not what he did to her and her sister.

The childlike looking figure seemed misplaced among all these people. Perhaps he felt misplaced too, with his knowledge that the only real escape from the fae is… death.

That’s why he craved the Feirne people. They were not only battling faeries. They were magical themselves. Touched by the goddess, beloved children of the order against the chaos of immortality…

“Isnan, child” Praetor’s small hand touched her sister’s hair and caressed them, while her head was hanging down. “Now… you will be placed between the will of the gods… and failure. If you fill yourself with power, drain me of the shadows that reside in my head, I will release the Scholar. The gods need to listen to their beloved, don’t you think? However you call them… you are all their chosen ones. Witches. The purifying flame, burning the illnesses, attracting the creatures with their warmth, scaring the nightly monsters away with the brightness of a day.”

“You know nothing about the goddess” Isnan’s voice was firm, unshaken.

But Sindr only laughed.

“The goddess? The lie which we all feed each other! Isnan, my cute, silly Isnan, if you spent so many years in purgatory, in a night world where a human goddess is a fodder for jokes and where we all are just toys for immortals… you would know which gods were imagined by humankind to ease the souls” his hand grasped her hair hard and pulled, getting her head closer to his. Isnan didn’t make a sound. “The goddess is a pretty face behind the real power.”

“Let her go” hissed Ona.

“And you, Scholar!” Sindr croaked… then his body was shook by the loud cough. “You was chosen as my very personal sacrifice. To make… ah the GODDESS… fill your stubborn sister with flames – enough of fire to purify me and end all of this.”

“The goddess will not allow it” Isnan’s voice trembled but there was force in it, something Ona always admired in her. Strength built on own heart and own will. “If she released the shadows from your head, they would flood this valley. End the lives of so many people. She might allow me to suffer, but it’s lesser evil.”

“Oh, shut up, Isnan dear” cut the Praetor and hit the ankle of the man that carried her, strong enough to make his brow twitch. “Bind her and let her watch. Maybe she will beg the gods herself.”

Isnan was trapped on the chair – it creaked when they were binding her legs and arms. It was the same chair Arolart was sitting on when she drank the first portion of the drug. Ona’s heart wanted to leave her chest. Her legs still fumbling, her body still weak. How could she let it happen? She was to save Isnan, not make them use her pain against the goddess and all human of this city and nearby villages.

“And she… on the altar!”

The man grasped her immediately again and with the strength of a bear, they hit her back against the cold stone of the altar. Ona lost her breath for a second, her lungs trying to draw air in – in futile. She saw Sindr who took Isnan’s head in his small child’s hands and turned just on the altar – and Ona on it.

“You will look… and you will brim with godly power.”

“You are delusional” groaned Isnan, but Sindr with unnatural force, managed to lock her head just on the right spot – Ona’s frightened  face.

“Maybe! Aren’t all who want to die delusional? The afterlife is better though than living in this casket. Maybe I will grow into a tree… like these wretched fae… I hope Lorian Ain’Dal fills many of them. For the fear he gave me, for the pain he stitched into my body and soul. I hope he rots in similar limbo to my own.”

Ona didn’t know what he talked about and about whom, but her eyes landed on the butcher knife, dirty, sharp, rigged. It shone before her pupils like a black star falling from the sky. She will not survive and all efforts Isnan offered to this valley will be futile. If Praetor won’t gain what he desired, the blood he spill will be an ocean.

… and she felt pain.

Her right ear exploded with it – as sharp as the knife’s blade. With shock, she moaned, not screamed – her nerves barely connecting until she saw her ear next to her, rolling over the marble fracture of the altar.

Isnan watched. Ona knew why. Not because Sindr held her. Not because she liked what she was seeing. Because it was only thing she could do for her.

Not leave her alone.

And Ona… Ona was dragged through broken glass of her own sanity. With each cut, with each slice burrowed deep into her skin, to reveal how much she – and Isnan, or maybe even the Goddess – can stand. Her vision blurred, pain was going through her like jolts of lightning – bright, cruel, sharp. Ona’s limbs were a house of open, raw, pulsing nerves, each tugged and pulled at. Bloating, and hot, screaming as they were forcing her flesh off her body.

She wanted to look at Isnan too. But all she saw was an apparition changed by tears. But she felt sister’s soft caress on her hair, even if she wasn’t able to really touch her. A caress she remembered – and it returned to her with love.

The Goddess… was not by her side.

It was a lie. Even if releasing Sindr’s torment on the valley was a cruel deed, Isnan was a Goddess’ beloved.

But Ona was not.

“Are you ready to be fucked by your Goddess?” she heard like through mist – Sindr’s youthful voice. He talked to Isnan. To her sister. Who she will lose soon.

“You will never know how it feel being loved by her” Isnan choked on words, but they left her mouth strong, even if shattered.

“Do you spread your legs, when she enters?” Sindr hissed. “Do you moan like a whore? I truly wanted to see it, how you become a god’s slut.”

Ona’s tears trailed through her cheeks, when another cut reached her skin. Searing pain, blood.  She was delusional when she arrived here – she truly was foolish enough to think that this world can offer them both something more than suffering. But Sindr was as well. He will kill them, but he will be left with the fae shadows, sentenced to live the eternal life.

And no cruelty will change it.

Her stomach was pierced by the knife.

Isnan screamed.

Terrifying, loud wail of someone who sees her own blood spilled. But flowing from a body of her sister.

She felt acids flooding her torn insides.

Goddess…

She won’t come. She will keep the villages safe. But she will sacrifice her children – for greater good.

“NO!” Isnan voice was full of pain. Maybe even with more suffering that Ona felt, spread on the altar like a butchered hare. “NO!! Not her! NO!”

Ona started to drift away, where her pain was just a ghastly reminiscence of itself and her mind slowly, but inevitably, was collapsing into the void. Her limbs becoming numb, her eyelids heavier by every second.

Her stomach sinking, she didn’t feel her innards anymore. Her body became soft, like wool. Let them cut her – she will just abandon herself in a dream. A dream that will be more potent than any pain – an eternal slumber.

Maybe she will find peace in it. Isnan… forgive me… Tiyan… I hope you found better end than me…

She felt touch. Warm touch. Distant yet burning her soul with… flames. It overflown her, soothing all raw sensations, allowing her to take a deep breathe. Her body was cut in so many places, she saw it from above. Her fingers severed, her limbs carrying so many wounds. The hands made of warmth traveled over her spirit form, almost like a mother’s touch. She relaxed, even if her body was dying. Her soul felt peace. Is death always like that? Pain, then warm, no – hot feathers of a dove over her skin. Like a kiss.

Like a rebirth in another – better – world.

“Use your power, you wretched wench!” Sindr. “Use it or you end like her, but for you, it will be much worse! USE IT! Kill me! Remove it from my head!”

He comes.

He wants us.

He devours us.

Crash him.

Distort his power.

You are beloved.

Beloved of the flame.

Release the night from this human’s mind.

Kill him.

Kill him.

K i l l   h i m .

Who?

Ona’s eyes opened.

Isnan tossed in the grasp of two inquisitors. Screaming, but Ona couldn’t hear it. Sindr was laying, on the floor, with eyes full of terror and… hope. The cultists under walls looked at the scene, not knowing what to do. Not knowing how to react.

Isnan’s hair looked like an ocean wave crashing against the stone harbor. Floating around her like a spider web of tangles.

And Ona…

She raised from the altar. Her guts spilled over the stone, but she felt not life animates her anymore. She felt life gave up on her, offering her into caring hands of the…

Flame.

Her mind collapsed under weight of what was happening. But her hands were ready and willing, stronger, hotter. Isnan screamed, her eyes escaped into the back of her skull.

Ona, with her entrails tangling between her feet, walked at the Praetor. Her eyes glowed with the last throes of the flaming life.

Kill him.

Kill him.

KILL HIM.

So we could live again.

Sindr started to laugh.

His laughter was like pins in the brain.

And Ona wanted so badly to remove them.

She was the witch, a goddess’ beloved. Chosen by the gods, their power on earth polluted with life. She was ready to release the shadow.



A Dry Throat of Winter – IV

Mina was cautious, very cautious. Her days here were stained with too much fear, too much blood and darkness.

But Dal’coler was beautiful.

It didn’t remind her anymore of nightmares she witnessed during her first days here. The mirrors, the flesh, the faces… it all disappeared and she partially was aware that it’s thanks to her bending to Lorian’s will. Eating the apple and allowing him to bind her with this place.

She hoped Tiyan would know how to break this spell. Usually, she would trust him in everything… but some time ago it dawned on her that her brother won’t have any power here. She still trusted him, though. She still wanted to trust his strength and determination. He will. He will take her from here, no matter how many dangers and horrors will stand on his path.

Tiyan.

She wanted to embrace him and tell him she is safe. Return to parents and live again – a hard life, but almost normal. Mundane. Their house, not a palace by any means. But it was safer, warmer and better than the huge castle she lived now in.

Your house will never be the same and you know it. It stopped being safe.

Dal’coler was enormous. And dark, with darkness that whispered to her old tales and showed her more and more with every gaze. Each painting on the wall, each arche, was hiding secrets, and her young soul started slowly to be curious.  Walking by Lorian’s side, she sometimes stopped, seeing something that she didn’t expect, only to realize that it wasn’t there… When her eyes were drifting in different directions, the miracle was back, even more tempting and secretive.

This was infuriating, and intriguing. So much, that Mina almost forgot how afraid she was a few weeks ago.

Magic.

From her mother, she knew that it’s a vile thing. That it promises pleasures, joy and beauty, but hides teeth and thorns. She knew as well, that it was magic that wounded Alina in the past. The same fairies who  now hosted her, captured Alina and tormented her for long days. She didn’t want to trust anyone here. But even she couldn’t be aware that the enchantment which held Dal’coler in its claws, already worked on her.

Filling her with trust, even if developed slowly, even if only rubbing her slightly with its soft paws, like a cat, encouraging its owner to allow him to jump on his lap.

Mina didn’t understand magic. It was an alien thing, possessed by enemies of humankind. But all things she was seeing through the last days, was showing it in resplendent light and soothing darkness, which were breaking her tightly woven cocoon she had woven around herself.

She stopped by the window, deep in the niche. Stained glass figures forming a scene, which she had to see closer.

It showed a bright star, with its rays touching the people standing under it, some of them on their knees, some; in a fetal position, naked, holding their legs with their arms. Behind them, a crimson sunset, so red, that it looked like it was painted with fresh blood.

Mina had to touch it somehow. The star. The glass was cold under her fingers. Smooth like a raven feather.

“Creation” she heard the voice next to her and she withdrew her hand, fast. Lorian was standing by her side, his black eyes seemed to reflect the red light the setting sun was offering  to the gathering on the art. “For some, the moment of life. For some, the hour of death.”

“How so?” Mina again looked at the window. She focused closer, to suddenly see the roots coming from the ground, with black flowers blooming from them. Some of them dragged the people underground, some were just trapping them halfway.

She could swear the glass art looked differently when she was looking at it for the first time.

“Creation…  a painful process” Lorian still looked at the artful depiction of suffering. “Dangerous, cruel. Delightful and vile. Beautiful and splendid. Most of your kind don’t even know how you came to be.  Most of you believe in an honored mother, who guards you, even if invisible and distant.”

“No” Mina shook her head. ” It’s all true. The goddess created us. That’s how Alina told us.”

Lorian laughed. It was a light, amused laugh.

“If anyone could not believe in the goddess, it would be Alina Sacrana. She, above all humans, knew what kind of gods animated life. But she would never admit it before her children. It would be way too cruel of her.”

Minas’ scrutinizing gaze landed on Lorian. Alina. Sacrana. He knew her family name. How so? Was he really knowing everything?

If so, what Tiyan was still not here, if he wanted him so much?

“You knew my mother” her eyes looked at him from half-closed eyelids.

Fae tortured her mother. They made her bald and scarred up.

“We could of course say that I knew her. But better admit that we talked a lot during… quite an intense moment in her life. She shared a lot of her past with me… and quite eagerly offered the blood of her blood.”

His black eyes are like the night sky, his face alit with inner darkness.

“You say…”

“Of course not,” chuckled Lorian. “Your mother was  the most fine example of a human species I had pleasure to meet. She would never betray anyone, if she had other options. But… Some things are inevitable. From some things… you can’t escape even after death.”

Mina tried to understand his words, even if she had to dig deeper. But something told her, some inner voice, that she won’t get any more answers.

Lorian resumed the walk. Mina went after him. No matter what her mother had to suffer, she would never betray anyone. Just like he said. She would never.

“Where we go?”

“Somewhere where the winter chill melts by the sun” was an amused, enigmatic answer.

They slowly passed the corridors, filled with stained glass scenes, which Mina learned not to look at, but now, when Lorian was by her side – as dubious protection as it was – she observed the scenes, which were changing the focus, whenever she stopped looking even for a moment. Not moving, but gaining new details.

They entered one of the few lighter chambers, which beamed with wintery sun rays. Almost the whole wall was made of…nothingness. No windows, nothing that could stop the winter cold from entering the room and freeze her to the bone. But of course fae were using magical barriers. This room was a wonder, opened in the wild forest, which grew bitten in the walls, making the chamber look bathed in white. She could almost hear the whisper of the trees and cracking of the frosted branches.

And there… in this room… was sitting the most beautiful woman Mina has ever seen.

Clad in black gown, with golden collar and ringlets, she was sprouting black, raven wings from her back. She was looking through the non existent window, her eyes set in the distance. Mina could feel something in her. She was always very observant. From Lorian, she could feel dark. Real dark, which she couldn’t decipher. But at the same time… a night that blinds the light, but also, offers night creatures a place and means to live.

Feed them and give them a place where they can survive.

From the winged woman…

She was feeling anger, mixed with desperation and affection. She never knew why she could feel all of it. In this place… Dal’coler, it intensified. Like the magic that resided her, gave her wings as well.

When they entered, the woman turned back, her wings cut the air, spreading behind her like a veil made of feathers.

Beautiful, Mina though. She is beautiful.

“Lorian” she was visibly relieved, her lips curling up in a stunning smile.

“I brought the gift, small, young… but very curious” Lorian grinned, a perfect contradiction for her smile. Her smile was like a clouded sun, heavy with promise of fresh spring rain. His… like the beautiful colors of a deadly predator, warning all that it has a poison.

The woman came closer, allowing Lorian to place a kiss on her cheek. Mina could feel how strongly they pulled each other. Something she never saw between anyone she knew. Tiyan loved Noyd, she cheered for them, always. Her father, Gravir, loved Alina. But these two…

How do you know that?

How have you learnt that?

You never had such a strong feel…

But here she was, feeling them, they were dawning on her like their elements, fire, water and cruel stars.

“Have you shown our guests the most breathtaking parts of the palace?” the woman looked just at her. Her eyes were pale, very big, almost transparent. Blue like a drop of rain water.

Mina knew now that light warmth radiating from the woman was her aura. Again, opposed to the shadows that Lorian was bathed in.

“Not even in the slightest part. Now, when the apple was consumed” – the woman scoffed. Lorian laughed, lightheartedly. “When it was consumed, Dal’coler lays before her like a ripe fruit, ready to be picked. And I would detest myself, if I had to deprive her of that.”

“I hope you don’t plan any more depravations” joked the winged woman and leaned towards Lorian. He didn’t seem to care that Mina stood between them, and dragged her closer.

“How clever of you to mention it…”

Fire.

Love.

Mina knew, somehow, that they do feel it. The fae were able to feel it. How was it possible? They were dark holes in the soul of the world.

But at the same time… they could be so normal.

Where was the deception and where were their real faces? When they kidnapped her and forced the apple in? When they were sending horrors at her?

Or when they laughed, teasing each other? Feeling love?

Mina didn’t know, and that was the scariest thing of all.

The woman placed a hungry kiss on Lorian’s lips and parted with him, to return attention to her. Her thick, whitish hair gleamed in the faint morning light. Her face was like a newborn star. All fae had this unearthly shine to them, but this winged woman…

“I know that you don’t have any reasons to trust Lorian… but we really don’t mean to harm you.”

Lorian chuckled again, this time real amusement ringing in his voice, Nymre offered him a deadly expression.

“This is not how you talk to a captive child, Nymre. She is not blind on her situation. She knows we would harm her, if she was not useful. But she is – so we are in an impass.”

Nymre’s bitter air was almost palpable.

“I am not a child” Mina decided to speak. “You sent me into awful places with mirrors and dripping meat. You killed many people. And put a spell on Avras. We couldn’t eat fresh food for years.”

Lorian’s black eyes sparkled.

“Well said, little one. You are far more conscious than my lover thinks. Sometimes we are underestimating humans. But as we came to the conclusion, you are safe, so why not enjoy it? I open before you all the gates in Dal’coler.”

Mina’s hands suddenly became strangely cold. Slight fear creeping into her, something she knew all too well. She will be allowed everywhere, spend time in company of those fey and later…? What later? When Tiyan is already here and she will be used to bend him to their will?

What then, when she won’t be needed anymore?

“I need to be sure. That you won’t kill me.”

The words left her mouth faster than she thought them. She didn’t want to die. She wanted to see Alina and Gravir – no matter what Lorian said about her mother. He was a liar and cruel.

Lorian suddenly stood way too close to her, the cold spread further, creeping, unpleasant. The scent of violets, tempting, like taken from a dark dream.

“Very good, Mina” he used her name for the first time since she appeared here. “You are precautious. I like that. Beings your age usually are more naive.”

Mina swallowed thick saliva. But she continued.

“I need a promise.. Which you can’t break.”

Lorian’s lips weren’t smiling anymore. His features like cut in marble, his pale skin looked even lighter in the faint winter light.

“Why should I do it? I own your future. Any agreements would be delightfully pointless.”

Mina shook her head.

“I know that you couldn’t force the apple into my mouth. I had to agree.”

“The fragile structure of core spells demands delicate touch and a willing need, they are stronger then… but you have nothing to offer, beautiful child.”

“I have. I will do everything you order me. Tell Tiyan that you are not evil. That you will free us. That he needs only to do the thing you want him for.”

Lorian chuckled. His black eyes gleaming with amused sparks.

“And he will believe, you assume?”

“You said that spells will be stronger if Tiyan is willing.”

Something dark came through Lorian face, dark and cruel. Mina felt exposed, and a sudden wave of wrongness washed through her like a tide.

Nymre leaned over Lorian’s arm and looked at Mina with gaze made of liquid intrigue. Mina didn’t back off, though. She needed herself – and Tiyan – safe. Lorian touched Mina’s chin and pulled her head higher – Mina returned him a bold gaze.

“If you insist so… if you need me to delve into your heart and burn a mark on it… We can make an agreement. Something that will give your soul peace of safety.”

“No.”

“I thought that you wanted a promise. I am willing to give you one.”

Never make a deal with the fairy kind.

Mina knew the first law of winter. Fae were tricking humans, giving false promises, twisting words of agreements. And she knew Lorian would use every means to twist this one too.

“I want you not to be able to kill me. And Tiyan.”

She couldn’t believe she said these words. Lorian’s black eyes drilled her through, like a miner’s pickaxe. She could see – and feel – how his shadows amasse around her, a hot presence. So hot, yet her hands – whole body – were cold.

“I am not in a bloodthirsty mood. I don’t need your death and I don’t need your pain. You, though…”

“I won’t do anything endangering Tiyan.”

Lorian’s smile became predatory. Still stunning like sunrise… but a sunrise, with sun falling on the earth, to burn the land.

“I promise that I won’t end your life. Your brother will live too, as long as he was destined by gods, before he ever met me. Even small hair won’t fall from his head. And you… you will be a grateful human being. Very grateful and very open on my grace.”

The sounded badly.

Like a lie.

But she had no choice…

“Is that good enough, stubborn child?”

“Say that you won’t kill Tiyan too. With these words”

This time it was Nymre who laughed.

She was looking at her with a dubious expression, and suddenly, Mina saw a beak, real beak under her mask. Not a fae face. The face of a bird, beak longer and thicker than in a real raven, and above it… two blue orbs, made of azure fire.

Lorian though  didn’t look confunded or displeased. More amused and enjoying it.

“Very well. I won’t kill your brother, no matter what will happen, even if gods planned his death since the very beginning.”

She couldn’t not agree on that, even if she will have to help them achieve whatever he need Tiyan for. The shadows lifted her chin, so she couldn’t not look at Lorian’s face, which suddenly became dark, darker, made of black smoke, his eyes gaining depths of abysmal caves and lakes under the face of the earth.

This was only an illusion…

But why she felt she shouldn’t see this, that even they didn’t want her to see? A creeping feeling of wrongness, of misplaced time.

She nodded, almost invisibly.

She knew from the tales that fae can’t break a willing agreement. And she latched to it, desperately. He possibly hid truths and will try to use them… but she had no other protection. He could kill her – and Tiyan – on a whim.

Something hot touched her and she saw a tendril of a shadow, slowly worming its way on her skin… she backed off, but the misty tentacle followed her quickly and slowly pressed the place where her heart was. It didn’t even hurt. The shadow entered her, through clothes, and placed a kiss on her chest.

It didn’t hurt.

But she knew there would be something new, when she took off the dress.

Lorian was smiling, so beautifully,and her heart jumped at that.

Why didn’t she feel safer?