Chapter 33 Ilyra
ILYRA
The world fractures into chaos around me, but I remain rooted to the wooden planks beneath my feet like I've grown from them.
Screams slice through the morning air sharp enough to draw blood.
Bodies collide in desperate flight—Elder Corwin stumbles over his own ceremonial robes, Mrs. Henley clutches her infant so tightly the child wails, and somewhere behind me Vaelra's voice rises in a keening wail that sounds suspiciously like prayers to gods who clearly aren't listening.
"Demon!" someone shrieks. "Infernal spawn!"
"Run! Everyone run!"
"The children—where are the children?"
The cobblestones thunder with fleeing feet. Silk tears, wood splinters, and the careful decorations Vaelra spent days arranging become trampled debris in seconds. A garland of white roses lands at my feet, petals already browning from the heat radiating off Azrathiel's form.
But I don't move. I don't even flinch.
Instead, I reach up with steady hands and lift the gossamer veil from my face, letting it fall in a whisper of fabric to the dais behind me. The silver pins holding it in place scatter like dropped coins, ringing against the wood with tiny musical notes that somehow cut through the pandemonium.
The morning breeze catches my unbound hair, lifting dark strands across my shoulders in a way that feels like freedom itself.
And then I look at him—really look at him—for the first time in full daylight without shadow or concealment between us.
He towers above the fleeing crowd like a monument to divine wrath, seven feet of impossible beauty carved from obsidian and starfire.
His skin gleams like polished stone, dark as midnight yet somehow radiant, stretched over muscle that speaks of strength beyond mortal comprehension.
Veins of molten gold pulse beneath the surface in hypnotic patterns, mapping power across his chest and arms like living artwork.
The celestial chains binding his shoulders and ribs burn white-hot against the darkness of his skin, each link forged from light itself. They don't diminish him—they frame him, mark him as something both fallen and consecrated. Beautiful in his bondage, magnificent in his rebellion.
His wings spread wide enough to eclipse the sun, casting everything beneath them into intimate twilight. They aren't feathered like the angels in temple paintings—they're pure shadow given substance, darkness that moves with liquid grace and whispers of power that makes my teeth ache.
But it's his face that steals my breath entirely.
Sharp cheekbones cut from volcanic glass, a mouth that promises both salvation and damnation with equal skill, and those eyes—those impossible golden eyes that burn like captured suns, ancient beyond measure yet focused entirely on me with an intensity that makes my knees weak.
He is terrifying. He is magnificent. He is mine.
Our gazes lock across the chaos, and everything else—the screaming, the panic, the world itself—simply ceases to exist.
Heat floods through my veins like liquid fire, starting where our eyes meet and racing through every nerve ending until I'm burning from the inside out. My lips part on a sharp gasp as the sensation overwhelms me, part recognition and part something deeper that I don't have words for.
His golden stare never wavers, never blinks, holding me captive with the same possessive intensity he showed when his hands mapped every curve of my body in darkness.
Mine, his expression says without words. Always mine.
"This is preposterous!" Bram's voice cracks like a whip across the square, cutting through the magical silence that has settled between Azrathiel and me.
His violet eyes blaze with indignation as he steps forward, one pale hand gripping the ceremonial staff he'd been using to officiate.
"I will not be intimidated by parlor tricks and illusions! "
The words hang in the air for exactly three heartbeats.
Then Azrathiel turns.
The movement is fluid, predatory—like a great cat shifting its attention from one prey to another.
His golden gaze slides away from mine with the weight of molten metal, and I feel the loss of that connection like a physical blow.
But the heat that replaces it when he focuses on Bram is something else entirely.
It's the temperature of a forge. Of a star going supernova. Of divine judgment rendered in flame and shadow.
Bram's bravado crumbles like parchment in a fire.
The dark elf stumbles backward so quickly he nearly trips over his own ceremonial robes, his face draining of what little color it possessed. The staff tumbles from nerveless fingers, clattering against the wooden dais with hollow, echoing strikes that sound remarkably like a death knell.
"I—" Bram's throat works convulsively, producing nothing but strangled sounds.
Azrathiel doesn't speak. He doesn't need to. The very air around him shimmers with barely leashed violence, and those infernal chains burn so bright they leave afterimages against my retinas. His wings spread wider, casting deeper shadows that seem to reach for Bram with grasping fingers.
"This is ridiculous!" Vaelra's voice shatters the moment like glass hitting stone.
She pushes through the scattered crowd, her carefully arranged hair disheveled and her silk dress torn at the hem.
"It's obviously some trick Ilyra's conjured!
The girl's always been too clever for her own good—probably learned some hedge magic from those traveling merchants! "
She gestures wildly at Azrathiel, her hands shaking but her voice growing stronger with each word. "We all know demons don't actually appear for peasant girls! This is elaborate theater, nothing more. The ceremony can continue once we've dealt with whatever conjuration this is."
The temperature drops ten degrees in an instant.
Azrathiel takes a single step toward Bram, and the dark elf's remaining composure shatters entirely.
His guards—two hulking figures who'd been flanking the dais like statues—suddenly discover urgent business elsewhere, backing away with hands hovering over weapon hilts they clearly have no intention of drawing.
"You know what?" Bram's voice climbs toward hysteria as he continues his retreat. "Nothing—absolutely nothing—is worth remaining in a demon-plagued settlement. The trade agreements are void. The marriage contracts are void. Consider your protection rescinded!"
He spins on his heel and flees, his fine leather boots slipping on the cobblestones in his haste. His guards follow, their armor clanking in discordant rhythm as they abandon all pretense of dignity.
The square empties like water from a broken dam. Bodies stream away in all directions—down side streets, into doorways, behind market stalls—until the only sounds are distant sobs and slamming doors echoing from the surrounding buildings.
Within moments, only four figures remain standing among the scattered flowers and overturned chairs: Azrathiel in all his terrible glory, myself in wedding white that suddenly feels more like armor than surrender, Vaelra with her mouth still hanging open in shock, and Mariselle cowering behind an overturned table like a child hiding from thunder.
The silence seems to suffocate the air, thick with possibility and the lingering scent of brimstone.