Chapter 21
The walk back to my chambers is quieter than it should be. The corridor should be busy at this early evening hour, guards changing shifts, aides and advisors moving between wings. Instead, it’s nearly empty.
Where’s Ren?
She’s supposed to meet me at the junction point, the way she has every time I finish my lesson with Isolde, and return to my chambers to prepare for my lesson with Zevran. Her absence makes me feel uneasy.
Maybe she’s checking the perimeter. Maybe there was a security briefing I wasn’t informed about.
I reach my personal chambers and palm the entry panel, a new security feature Ren had set up on my door. The lock disengages with a soft chime.
I step inside and seal the door behind me.
The room should settle into the same hum it always holds in the early evening hours, the faint vibration of ventilation systems and distant machinery that’s become familiar enough to sleep through. Instead, the air feels wrong. Too still. Too cold.
A curtain at the far end of the room near the lighting console shifts. Just a ripple, fabric moving against nothing.
The ventilation hasn’t turned on.
My pulse kicks up from panic, the same instinct that’s kept me alive before in the slums. I move one step into the room. Another. My eyes adjust to the dim light filtering through the balcony glass, analyzing shadows that should be furniture, corners that should be empty.
“Ren?” My voice stays low, controlled. “Are you in here?”
Silence answers.
I try again, sharper this time. “Ren?”
The lights above the bed flicker once. A warning I register a second too late.
Cold pressure clamps over my mouth. Not a hand – the texture is wrong, formless but solid, like trying to push against smoke.
My arms are yanked back and pinned by something impossible to fight against. There’s no surface to strike, no flesh to heat with power.
I twist, trying to wrench free, but the bonds only tighten.
They adapt to my resistance, flowing around my movements.
I reach for the Sun sigil deep in my chest, trying to call forth the pain powers I felt in the first trial.
I don’t know how to summon it deliberately, only that it’s there, dormant and waiting.
Nothing happens. The magic sits unresponsive beneath my skin, and even if I could wake it, what would I hurt? You can’t ignite what has no body.
The air at my neck drops ten degrees. I feel someone behind me, close enough that I should hear breathing. I don’t.
A hard strike rattles the outer door. The sound of metal on metal, precise and furious.
Ren’s voice cuts through the quiet. “Lady Cyra—”
The panel lights flash red. Another strike, harder. I hear the frame groan under the impact. Then the door gives with a crack that echoes through my bones, the lock mechanism shattering as the panel jolts inward.
Ren steps through with her weapon raised, eyes sweeping the room in a single trained movement.
The shadow tether binding my arms is visible now, threads of darkness moving, alive and deliberate.
The attacker stands near the corner, dressed in gear so matte black it looks like a void cut into the shape of a person.
Only the angle of their stance gives them dimension.
Ren shifts to attack, weapon locked on target.
The shadows behind the attacker bend inward. The air distorts, pressure dropping like it does in space. A different figure steps out of that wrongness, moving with the kind of quiet that belongs to predators.
Lord Lucien.
He’s dressed in black, the white mask stark against his face. He doesn’t rush. Doesn’t hesitate. He reaches through the shadow tether with one gloved hand and severs it with a motion too fast to follow.
The restraints binding me snap apart. The magic loses cohesion, dissolving into formless smoke. I drop to my knees, gasping as my arms swing free. My wrists ache where the bonds held tightest, skin cold where darkness touched.
The assassin staggers, balance disrupted. Lord Lucien catches them by the collar of their tactical gear before they can recover. Their body jerks, half-shadow under his control, as if the darkness in them recognizes his authority.
“Traitor.” Lord Lucien snarls.
He glances once in my direction. Those dark eyes beneath the mask meet mine for a heartbeat. Then he pulls the assassin with him into the shifting dark at his back. The distortion folds over them, and both are gone.
Ren stands in the doorway, weapon still raised. She’s seen enough. I watch the knowledge settle into her posture, the way her jaw tightens, her fingers adjusting their grip.
She knows exactly who intervened.
She lowers the weapon only when she reaches my side. Her hands check my shoulders, wrists, ribs for potential injuries. “Are you okay, Lady Cyra? Are you hurt?”
My voice comes out thin, adrenaline still flooding my system. “No. The shadow held me … but it didn’t cause any injuries…”
Ren nods, stands and sweeps the room. She checks behind the curtains, under the bed, inside the wardrobe. She kneels briefly at the balcony door, testing the lock mechanism with careful fingers.
She moves to the entrance panel and pries open the damaged edge, revealing the lock mechanism beneath. A thin disk sits wedged behind the frame, catching the light with a faint iridescent sheen.
Ren slides it into a sealed pouch from her belt. “Looks like Uranus alloy … an experimental security override tech. I suspect this was placed intentionally.”
Ren positions herself between me and the broken door until reinforcements arrive. She keeps her weapon angled toward the corridor, her stance a shield. I sit on the edge of the bed, trying to slow my breathing, trying to process what just happened.
I press a hand to the place on my chest where the Sun sigil sleeps under my skin. The room’s the same shape it was an hour ago. The same furniture, the same walls, the same view of the arena through the balcony glass. Yet everything feels altered.
I can still feel the cold outline of the shadow against my mouth. The pressure without warmth, restraint without substance. I can still see Lord Lucien stepping out of the dark, as if the room had opened a door in the darkness.
Reinforcements sweep into the suite within minutes.
I hear them before I see them, boots on metal grating, the sharp cadence of military movement.
Cardinals Benedict and Marcus arrive together, their ceremonial robes dishevelled.
Two security aides follow, carrying scanning equipment that buzzes with active power as they begin sweeping the walls for breach points. The room floods with bodies and voices.
Ren gives a report to Cardinal Marcus. She recounts the override disk, the magic restraints, the timing of the breach. She doesn’t mention Lord Lucien by name, but instead glances in my direction, her eyes meeting mine as if to keep that information between us.
I stand near the inner doorway with my arms wrapped around my ribs, not injured, only trying to keep the tremor in my hands contained.
The room feels too bright under the emergency lighting the security team’s activated.
Every surface seems to hold the echo of the shadow that wrapped around me.
I can still feel the ghost pressure on my wrists.
Cardinal Benedict turns to me. His face is pale under the harsh lift of the lights, fine lines around his eyes more pronounced. “Lady Cyra – we’ll relocate you to a temporary suite while we isolate this wing. You won’t be left alone.”
Ren steps forward before I can answer. Her ice-blue eyes are hard, uncompromising.
“A temporary suite isn’t sufficient, Cardinal.
Whoever breached this room did it with advanced tech and magic we can’t counter.
We don’t know if they had an accomplice.
Her protection requires a fully secured location with redundant systems.”
Cardinal Benedict bristles, drawing himself up to his full height. His hand moves to the ornamental chain at his collar, an unconscious gesture of authority. “All Conclave accommodations meet security standards, Agent. We have protocols.”
Ren opens her mouth, but another voice cuts through the argument before she can respond.
“Your standards have already failed.”
Every person in the room turns.
Zevran stands in the doorway, wearing his Mars tactical gear. The jacket hangs open over a training shirt not yet dark with sweat, clearly on his way here to escort me to our lesson. The guards behind him keep their distance, shifting their weight, uncertain whether to challenge a House Lord.
His eyes find me across the crowded room, and the relief that flashes through them is so raw it makes my heart skip. Then it’s gone, locked behind the controlled mask he wears in public.
He doesn’t raise his voice. “She’ll come with me.”
Cardinal Benedict stiffens. “Lord Zevran … the Cardinals are handling the situation. We have procedures for contender protection…”
Zevran steps farther into the suite, his commanding presence felt by everyone. “You failed to protect a contender, Cardinal. If she dies under your watch, the Conclave collapses, and Mars will hold you accountable. We will not tolerate another breach.”
The threat’s quiet. Absolute.
The Cardinals exchange a look. I watch calculation move behind their eyes, weighing political cost against pride. One of the security aides shifts uncomfortably, hand drifting toward his weapon before thinking better of it.