Chapter 3 #3
Myanin noticed, and said nothing about it. “What,” she said carefully, her eyes tracking the edge where the firelight gave out and the dark gathered mass, “would make a sentient prison nervous?”
The question landed in silence and stayed there.
The darkness beyond the burning chamber was no longer passive.
It had weight now, a density that hadn’t existed before, as though something that had been dispersed through the walls and floor and ceiling had begun, slowly and deliberately, to collect itself into a single point.
The shadow thickened. Deepened. Became intentional. Then it breathed.
Not the breath of wind shifting, not fire consuming oxygen.
A living inhale, drawn from somewhere old and patient and thoroughly unhurried, the sound of something that had been waiting long enough that waiting had become its natural condition.
Every flame in the chamber dropped to a trembling half-height.
The scorched air went dense with a pressure that had nothing to do with heat.
Even the echo stepped back.
That was what broke through Myanin’s careful composure, not the darkness, not the breathing, not the thing assembling itself from shadow with the quiet certainty of something that had never doubted its own arrival.
The wrong-faced copy of herself, the thing that had advanced on her without hesitation through fire and guilt and manufactured grief, retreated from whatever stood in that dark like it knew precisely what it was dealing with and had made a very fast decision about it.
Myanin filed that information away with extreme prejudice.
Shade’s voice arrived low, the word beginning and then cutting off entirely, as though what came next refused to be named aloud in its presence.
The darkness opened two eyes.
They didn’t glow. They didn’t burn. There was no dramatic light, no theatrical color, nothing that could be described as a spectacle.
They simply opened, and the worst part, the part that dragged cold fingers along the inside of Myanin’s ribs, was that they looked aware.
Not predatory. Not enraged. Aware in the way of something that had been watching long before the eyes appeared, something that had been present through the entire encounter and chosen, until now, to remain unannounced.
Myanin swallowed once and kept her voice level through sheer force of will. “Well,” she said, because apparently her mouth operated independently during genuine terror, “that feels considerably above my current rate of compensation.”
The thing spoke. Its voice was the sound of parchment tearing, not violently, not all at once, but in one long, deliberate draw, the sound of something being separated from what it had been bound to.
“First oath resisted.”
The words didn’t echo. They settled. They had the quality of a record being amended, fact being entered into a ledger that had existed before the chamber, before the book, before any of the events that had led them here. Not a judgment delivered from anger. Accounting rendered in absolute calm.
The eyes shifted. Away from Myanin. Toward Shade.
“Second oath waits.”
The silence that followed pressed against both of them with equal patience.
Myanin turned her head just enough to catch Shade’s face, and what she found there was not fear, exactly, but recognition: the specific, grounded expression of someone encountering something they had known, on some level, was coming, and had chosen not to think too carefully about until it arrived.
The understanding landed in her chest like a key turning.
This had never been punishment. Not for her, and not for him. The fire, the echo, Lyra’s voice rising from the scorched floor, every piece of it had been measured and deliberate in a way she hadn’t recognized until now, because she’d been too busy surviving it to read what it actually was.
An examination of sorts. No, she mentally shook her head, that’s not the correct word. It was like an inquisition. No, she shook her head again. That still wasn’t right.
“What’s it searching for?” Shade asked, his voice soft as they continued to stare at the form that still wore Myanin’s face.
“Don’t know,” Myanin admitted. “But apparently, it’s done with me and you’re the next target. So, have fun with that.”
Suddenly the form shifted and it was no longer Myanin. Now it was a male djinn warrior that she didn’t recognize.
“Shit,” Shade said, sounding as if the air had been punched out of him.
Apparently, he did recognize said warrior. The eyes did not close. They waited, with the patience of something that had centuries to spare, for what came next.
“Let’s get this over with,” Shade told the entity.
“I feel like you’re going to need some cotton candy after this whole mind trip,” Myanin told him as she folded her arms in front of her and took a deep breath. “And if I liked you, I’d be a pal and get you some. But, I don’t. Like you, that is. So. No cotton candy for you.”
“Damn. And here I thought I could trust you.” His words were dry and flat.
“Oh, you can trust me,” she smirked. “Trust me to throw your selfish ass under the bus. I’m going to be quiet now so that it will focus on you and maybe forget I exist.”