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"
Hollow Moss Well -I

Nymre’s fingers curled around the balustrade. The same one. The one beside which he had embraced her so many times. Where they had stood together, looking into the night, while his shadows drained the living essence from the woods around them. She could still feel his breath on her neck—warm, hot, familiar.

She had cried for two months. Silently. Unseen, grieving loss. And then this day came. She felt hollow, like an old mossy well long emptied of water. But her tears had dried, and she understood she had to live. Her lips still needed his. Her body was cold, stripped of its flame. But this was the life she would live now. Until something inside her broke—and maybe, just maybe, spring would grow in her again.

Winter roots still clung deep within her, claiming her body and her heart. She would need to thaw. She didn’t want to—snow and ice reminded her of her love.

Flawed, cruel, painful. But real. Strong. A love that had given her wings stronger than her own. Now she had to rely only on the feathers and wings she was born with. Black and soft—but now made of shadows. Scattered beneath her feet like on the day of their first night together.

His cruel raven.

Her shadow king.

When she learned that Leira would bear Lorian’s child, she felt nothing. Her wet eyes, her hollow spirit—everything demanded she focus on her own pain. And when the day of the mossy well arrived, she saw the truth clearly. This child would be Lorian’s only heir. The only way to continue the Ain’Dal line. Nymre would never give him a child—an empty throne would pull the Unseelie into war. The court would fight and bleed itself dry until the Sacred Woods grew bored and chose the strongest… or the one it deemed most fitting to rule a new godless world.

So she did it for Lorian. To honor his line. As much as she had disliked Leira, the almost primal hatred had faded. Leira was only a human Lorian had taken, and she had been so certain he loved her. Perhaps he had, in his own twisted way. He had fooled them both—her and himself.

When Leira entered Lorian’s chambers—now Nymre’s—the raven faerie was sipping her herbs, her posture elegant yet not free of exhaustion. These months… these cursed months… had been hard, cruel, and had nearly destroyed her. But she felt his spirit beside her—Lorian’s spirit. Perhaps it still gathered shadows around her, because she could swear that at night she still felt their caress on her skin.

Warm. Hot.

Familiar.

Leira simply sat beside her. And Nymre smiled.

She had loved him too, foolish as she was. Perhaps a spark of him lived in her as well—just as it remained in Nymre.

Nymre disliked Leira. But she was the only other person who had felt his touch as an equal. The only one who understood how to love him—and how to be loved by him.

Now, Nymre’s fingers tightened around the balustrade.

“You are aware that my court demands your death.”

“Yes, my lady.”

Nymre scoffed.

“They do not want revenge. They want the throne.”

“They are terrified that his line may survive. They are scavengers feasting on a lion’s flesh—yet while he lived, they could only croak from afar.”

Nymre’s brow lifted.

“Lion?”

“A beast from the human lands, my lady.”

Nymre looked into the horizon. The snow ceased to fall, and the land bathed on faint sunlight. The woods around them seemed distant and alien, with a veil of mist surrounding them. She could hear the forest’s pulse. Dark—but at the same time, so full of hidden life.

“We live in dangerous times. The court knew they couldn’t act during the burial rites. But once the sanctuary rises, once they build enough obelisks and monuments for their savior, they may decide that my regency is an attempt to usurp his power.”

“My child is not enough to secure the throne?”

“Oh, they would love to reduce the matter to human offspring. I can almost hear them insisting that no king was ever born of a human.”

“But from what I know, many—”

“Of course!” Nymre laughed, bitterly. “But quietly, without ceremony. No king was anointed before his birth. No king took the throne years after the previous one’s demise.”

Leira’s smile twisted.

“No king killed the gods before.”

“That and only that holds them. He is a god to them now. A savior, a hero. These times are delicate… and I must handle them delicately. I hold no power over this palace. Dal’coler was mine only as long as Lorian lived. They despise the very idea of my regency… which is precisely why it is so satisfying.”

Leira’s eyes glimmered in the darkness with understanding.

“You truly mean to crown my son the moment he is born.”

“Yes. Snow will linger only as long as winter’s consort reigns. He will be able to choose his season. He will be able to choose…”

A shiver ran through her.

Again, she felt the brush of elusive shadows. Gentle, yet insistent. A kiss behind her ear, exactly where she liked it. And a surge of courage in her heart.

He would believe in her. Because even with all his cruel flaws—he knew she could do this.

And she would.

She would make this court bow.

“My lady… it is three months until—”

“Yes. You are safe. You are a petal of the old era falling onto new soil, a light from a dead star still echoing. I will not allow these power‑hungry fools to destroy everything.”

Leira’s smile widened.

She had feared that after the disappearance of her lover, protector, and enemy, she would be executed in the most terrible way. She had taken fae lives—not always with her own hands, but always standing where death arrived. She expected no one to defend her. Least of all Nymre, who she had once believed would peel the first patch of skin from her body.

Yet it was Nymre who came to help her. She knew it was to secure Lorian’s offspring… but she was grateful, surprised, and lost all the same.

The absence of Lorian in her mind was terrifying. For a month she couldn’t sleep or form a coherent thought. She was like a fish stranded on the shore, staring at the sea—so close, so unreachable. Her tears would not fall. Her heart was a wound.

She had hated him for so long—and loved him just as fiercely. He not only had been her lover and guardian, her tormentor. He had been her maker.

And that was reason enough to hate him even more—for going somewhere she could not follow.

A puppet abandoned by her sculptor.

An idea without purpose.

But then came the day when tears finally fell, wounds began to knit, and she felt like an empty moss‑lined well, dry but ready to open to the rain.

For him. For herself.

For the life she still wanted to live.

That was what bound them so tightly, wasn’t it?

That excruciating, ferocious will to live.

And then… amid all the ruin, amid all the despair—a single breath of wind carrying the faint scent of violets. A touch on her skin during nights when she choked on fear and loss. A whisper. A glimpse.

And she began to wonder.

Maybe Lorian had not become a god of flesh and blood. Maybe they would never love each other again. Maybe his presence would never stop her heart the way it once had.

But the forest remembered. And it carried him through Ain’asel, from the grove where he had rooted.

And…

… wasn’t that its own kind of immortality?



The Light Is Not Enough to Disperse the Darkness – III

The chamber was quite. Too quiet. Like feathers of all ravens she gave life to surrounded her and hushed all sound.

Nymre’s limbs shivered like on strings. Her hair, blown out and dry like paper, fell on her face, taking also the sight from her eyes. She slowly, very slowly – like moving in honey – lifted a hand and started to brush them out.

The temple was half crumbled. The veins of roots buried in its walls marked the ruined stone. Natsel’lorl opened for the wind – there was no roof above her, the early morning was awakening among crisp frost.

She barely could stand up. She was like a human enchanted in a doll – remembering how to be a human, still, but unable to put that knowledge to use. Her mind was calm – but in a numb, stupefied way.

Her eyes saw a hand trying to crawl over the cracked stone. With dull shock, she saw it belong to Tiyan. His eyes were half lidded, his moves mechanical. He looked like a broken puppet, blood saliva hanging from his lower lip. But he was alive. She saw Lorian took his soul. How came he was alive?

She slowly stepped over the hand.

Lorian.

When she saw him last time, he was joyfully devouring the gods. The ancestors evaporated like the temple walls, dosclosing the beating flaming veins and under them – heart pumping molten iron. They screamed, so loud, until they disappeared in nothingness.

But where was Lorian?

She almost stumbled on a stone, that had to fall from the ceiling being destroyed. She only didn’t tripped her will was now stronger than her body – and the temple that was putting those stones under her feet.

“Lorian?”

She didn’t see him.

Did he left?

Left without her?

He wouldn’t, would he?

Half of her heart knew he would not. But another, tired and mangled part feared he is not her Lorian anymore.

“Lorian!”

A small gust of wind brought in something dark. A tiny shadow, so thin, that almost invisible. Nymre’s eyes widened, she would do everything now, to not lose that trail. She followed the shadow tendril, elusive like a mist. The day was so calm – like nothing happened. Her heart again started to beat, fast and dissonant, like a music she doesn’t know melody to, but her soul remembers.

But nothing prepared her for what she has found.

Lorian. He was there. He wasn’t surrounded by all powerful night anymore. He wasn’t beaming with shadows so dark that killed even the sun.

Blood trickled down his chin, golden and thick. He was naked and lay spread on the floor, small snow petals were falling on his bare body. Nymre could swear that his skin glistened with faint light, like he swallowed the star.

“Lorian…”

He seemed to not hear her. She fell on her knees and crawled to him. His limbs were bent in unnatural positions, his whole body was cold.

Yet… he opened his eyes. Black as night. A familiar void.

“Nym—re.”

Nymre’s throat clenched.

“Lorian… what… what happened…”

He tried to laugh. A not less familiar sensual laughter filled his throat, until it was caught out with a bloody spit.

“I. I took them all.”

“No.”

“I took them all, Nymre.”

“NO.”

This was not true. He soon stands up. And show in his usual grace, in his darkest of shadows. They will return to Dal’coler. They must.

Lorian coughed. Again with gold. He never coughed! He never—

“Nymre…”

“No!”

“Nymre… listen… ”

“Lorian…” her eyes filled with tears. Not unwanted even. She wanted them to pour.

Perhaps…

“I couldn’t—”

His black eyes were shining, still with this beautiful unnatural light. Nymre felt as her whole being falls apart. It was not real. IT. WAS. NOT. REAL.

“Nymre, I—-”

“Stay with me. Please.”

She would give her immortality to make him just stand up. To allow him for even a day of life. She would slit her wrists, only to feed him her blood, if that was to help him.

She would do everything…

“Please. Stay with me. I–”

His eyes stopped to shine.

An alone, single shadow was carried away by the wind.

And Nymre knew that they both won’t return.

Not anymore.

*

They say when a fairy dies, a tree loses its life too so the new one could be born, holding their soul. Maybe now, a whole burned forest crumbles into dust, somewhere at the end of the world. Maybe now, the wind carries the cinders over the mountains, to fertilize the barren land.

Tiyan crawls over the broken stone. His body just goes, unbothered by anyone. He doesn’t matter. He is no one. Another human, who can die or live. Without half of the soul, he will die either way.

Nymre, half bent, embraces the dead body of her lover. She will be sitting by his side for two days and two nights, even if her court tries to talk to her common sense.

Somewhere in  Dal’coler, Leira doesn’t feel a presence in her head, which she started to perceive as her own. Her eyes are dry. Her soul shatters.

And Ain’asel bathes in snow.

The Sacred Forest breathes life in.

And nothing is the same again…



Light Is Not Enough To Disperse the Darkness – II

His blood boiled in his veins—but the joy that grew within him was monstrous. He became something without a name, something no language knew description for. Night peeled itself from the sky and stepped into him; stars alight in his eyes, white and mercilessly hot. They had a scent, ancient scent of eternity, and it obscured the fae knowledge. His body twisted into a prayer to the void, a poem of blood and shadow, he had become a child of the timeless black. Delight and agony being carved in him until they were indistinguishable.

The gods tried to merge with him, to stop the metamorphosis, to keep him from swallowing their light, their flame, their souls. But he was stronger now—stronger than all of them together. He had drunk from them for too long, gnawed at their magic until it fused with him. Now he took in the spirit of their shared flame, the one they closed in Tiyan. At last, he was what they feared most: a perfect epitome of power.

He heard Nymre screaming—her hair writhing in the winds created during the birth of a new god. The world stopped itself, unmaking its past, bowing before the flesh of the newborn night.

Lorian felt nothing. No joy. No pain. No fear. At last, he was free from the burden of feeling—feelings that had always been shackled to suffering. The emptiness soothed him like a cold cloth pressed to a rotting wound. The gods devoured him slowly, tendrils of burning light piercing his darkness; but he devoured them faster. The flames around them dimmed, swallowed by a hunger that had no end.

“Poor, poor fae.”

“Your time will never come.”

“Spread beneath our feet for eternity.”

“Evaporating and merging forevermore…”

But beneath their words, he felt their terror. Panic. Hunger. Fear. A twisted joy at feeding—any feeding—but fear because the feast was turning against them. Lorian’s night buried deeper, shadows rearranging their divine organs, teasing the fire inside them, growing larger with every second, ready to burst through their divine flesh.

“Nymre.” He turned his smile toward her. Panic painted on her face. His voice rang through the collapsing chamber, cold and resonant, like a bell beating underwater. Tears trailed her cheeks…

He tried to recall what he had promised her.

Eternity.

Love.

Pleasure. Safety.

But what was love to a creature without a heart? What was safety beside a being who devoured gods? And eternity—was it not simply a longer road to abandonment?

She reached toward him with trembling fingers, as if unsure whether she wanted to touch him or flee.

His smile widened—an enchanted mask stretched too far, beautiful in a way that hurt to look at.

“RUN.”

That was all he said.

Run.

He would not let her be consumed by his hunger. This place would collapse soon—releasing his power into the night sky.

Pain slammed into him. The gods pressed closer, their flaming bodies forming a cocoon around him. They touched him, stroked him. A lover’s touch, a tormentor’s caress.

Lorian’s shadows struck back. Like a rowan blade in a puka’s flesh. Like an iron nail in a sprite’s heart. The gods felt pain too—but they grinned, and so did he, all of them baring their teeth in a silent, shared madness.

“You have no chance, little godling.”

“We are hungrier than you.”

“We are much older.”

“We own this land.”

“We own your kind.”

Lorian’s pain arose, worse than anything he had known in life. A molten crown pressed into his skull, iron splinters twisted in his gut… He heard Nymre scream—closer now. She had not run.

Foolish woman. She had not run.

*

The first trumpet rang. The first horse—white and wild—shook the rain from its pale mane.

Sarsha, moved by the power of the word Kosel had spoken moments before, pierced the shadowed talons into Rapis’ heart.

Golden mist rose above him. For one terrible second, time froze—feeding on life, draining the world—and then the mist vanished.

*

The gods howled as their connection to Rapis cut. The flaming ropes gnawing at Lorian’s tendons withdrew—for a moment. It was enough.

Lorian grasped the nearest god’s head.

His fingers—shadow blades sharp as diamonds, sharper than them—closed around it and squeezed. More tendrils sprang from his flesh, reaching for the others, holding them back while he fed.

They crashed onto the crumbling stone. The god writhed, but Lorian was stronger. The others still fed on him, tearing at the night around him, but as long as he devoured this one—one by one, he would consume them all.

For the first time in his life, Lorian lost composure.

He didn’t waste time on a kiss. He sank his shadowed teeth into the god’s throat.

*

The blinding light swallowed the unmaking temple. Nymre, still held where she stood, covered her eyes with her arm.

Run.

She wanted to. Her mind screamed for it. But her body refused.

If he died here, her purpose would disappear with him. So she waited—fear bubbling in her throat, thick and iron-like, ready to burst out as another ragged scream.

She didn’t dare to call his name, though her heart begged her to reach for him. Her limbs were numb, her skin cold, her pulse slowed. Her heart should have been racing—but it barely moved, as if she were watching her own undoing unfold before her.

She couldn’t help him.

She was nothing but a distraction.

Run.

She would. She truly would.

But her legs sagged beneath her, and her soul screamed in a voice her body could not obey.

*

The second trumpet rang. The black horse with a star on its forehead shook the dew from its moonlit mane.

Ona—vessel of something far different—buried her hand in Sindr’s tangled hair. His misty eyes brimmed with tears—pain, terror, and a twisted, delirious joy.

“Yes…”

The word shivered on his lips as her hand plunged into his face. Bone cracked. Flesh parted. Something vital snapped. She pulled, and the world seemed to stop and take a breath as she tore a trembling mass of his brain.

The place of shadows.

The gate to twilight.

Ona—animated by the god’s will—bit her teeth into the grey, quivering tissue…

*

Lorian tossed the god with a shattered throat onto the stone. His limbs froze for a heartbeat as he felt his hold over Sindr snap. A millisecond—yet enough. The others surged toward him, sinking their teeth into his night.

They latched onto him like starved parasites, burying deeper. Every bite burned through him as if he were still mortal. Their divine saliva seeped into his wounds, spreading, rooting, claiming.

Nymre.

She was there.

While they devoured him—deeply, greedily—his gaze locked with hers. Her eyes were wide, impossibly blue, half-hidden behind the raven mask. Terror shone in them, but something else too: a plea.

A plea for him not to let them. Not to let them take him. Not to let them take everything.

He stood in his chamber, with his eyes closed. Moon caressing his skin—he sensed its dim light spreading over him. Delicate, sensual touch of element that every winter lord loved. Its power, its beauty and its calling. But Lorian, somehow, stepped forth, before all kings of Ain’asel. He heard the moon song. Not only imagined it, while it gifted him with his magic. But he heard it, deep inside—resonating in his ribcage, pressing tangled notes onto his heart.

Only Nymre knew it. Now, she stood by his side, leaning over his shoulder, her hair on his arm. She smelled of light ocean breeze and it was a scent unforgettable. Something born in pure water dressing the spiderweb with its droplets. A morning song of a awakening day.

“What do you think about?” he heard her voice.

He wasn’t thinking of anything. He just took in the magic of the night. His pitch-black eyes opened. The moon was there, enormous, like in the day of New Lunar Year. Nymre wore the same black silky dress she was wearing when they loved violently after they left the court enjoying debauched feast. It was even torn in placed his passion reached it. Few feathers beneath her feet.

Remember? His trophies. She wanted him to tear them from her back.

But now, she looked like a serenity. Calm, soothing, beautiful. A healing medicine for his restless soul.

“I think of… how far we have led the lie.”

Her gaze held undecipherable mystery.

“Lie?”

He laughed, in a way that only he was able to. Deep, but silent. Sensual yet threatening.

“Why do I lie to you, Nymre? Why do I lie to myself? Why I still think our life is to save? This world is already destroyed. Not because of the gods. Because of my hunger. I am a dark hole that swallow light. Nephena had right and I adore she had—”

Nymre shook her head.

“Nephena was a fool. You were only fifty years old. This was not your fault.”

“But of course it was” his smile lightened his features, cold, cruel. “I was angry. And my anger always lead to catastrophe. Just as my passion. Just as my mere being. I am a ruin, and I always knew it. Since I have dragged my youngest brother to the crystal casket. Since my flame swallowed Inge. Her branches probably still call my name. I go, love and hate, admire and crave… and I leave debris behind.”

“You love pain. Own one, just as much as I do. But you are life just as you are death.”

“Why?”

His eyes bored into her like two obsidian blades.  He truly wanted the answer, as beautiful, as cruel as it was. If he is not the end of the world, the blood between the human’s fingers, the flesh open by his hunger… then who he is?

“You are Lorian Ain’Dal, the hundredth king of Ain’asel. And you are more than that. More than your needs, more than your lust. You are a true child of the sacred forest, deadly, rapid, but  beautiful and full of budding creation. You were the source of suffering – but also my salvation. And…”

Her face got closer, her lips brushed his, leaving a trace of salty water.

Salt.

Tears.

“… you must live. Now.”

NOW.

The gods almost brought him to his knees. Nymre looked at him, from afar. He still felt her salty kiss.

You are more than that.

More than your hunger.

And if I can’t live. I will take them with me.

His shadows amassed like a black cloud. His power burst around him, spreading its night-black wings. His back adorned with them, bigger than Nymre’s, bigger than half of the chamber – which would not hold them, if it was not falling apart. Black mist enveloped the temple, a proof of his godly ascend. It pulsed around them, a beat of millions hearts, trapped in the palace of Dal’coler and in this place—his own army of lost spirits, which he held on a leash. A millions of dark tendons led from Lorian to the walls of the temple… and further, leading a trail back to Dal’coler, spreading with the speed of light.

They all led to his victims, whose blood he trapped in the apples, whose souls he enchanted in the concrete of his fortress.

And they all were on his command. Unwilling soldiers of their tormentor, who held them just for this very moment.

He pulled.

Millions of soul, hundreds of ghastly, tormented and angry apparitions, clashed against the all-powerful strength of the ancestors. The gods tried to feed, as always—but they were too many, too furious, too wounded and too suffering. They not only clung to gods—they entered them, evaporating in their flames, but managing to fill them with fear and despair. With belief of inevitable end. With visions of demise. They were eating the gods with overpowering feel of failure.

Lorian only waited for that.

He felt pressure in his mind, like the moon was stolen from the sky and placed inside his head. His being was weakened from within, by the opposition of life the gods represented. It was not a feeling, alive void which he held inside his black eyes. It was void all life was fearing. Void of the nothingness—dry, hollow. A barren stone on the silent desert, what was left to look upon the empty world.

But moon was not a tool of harm. It was a hunter who blessed him with its light. Stolen from the sun, living only in the night.

His power entered gods. Slowly, he found them, among the flaming veins, magma bodies and fire muscles. He found them, even if burrowed deep, so deep his fae shadows wouldn’t be able to dig that far.

Yet… he wasn’t a fae anymore.

And he sucked their souls in.