Chapter 27
SHADOW LORD
Ada
The corridors held none of the horrors I'd imagined.
High ceilings painted with twilight skies.
Art depicting landscapes rather than conquests.
We passed a library filled with people actually reading.
A courtyard where someone practiced blade work.
A room where children sat at desks, laughing at something their instructor said.
The Shadow Realm had schools.
Everything the Light Realm had taught me about this place—the torture, the cruelty, the darkness that devoured anyone foolish enough to cross its borders—none of it matched the reality of these corridors.
The architecture was different, yes. Darker stone, obsidian pillars catching what light filtered through, silver inlay where we would have used gold.
But the people who passed us walked with purpose, not fear.
A woman carried a stack of books. Two men argued cheerfully about something I couldn't quite hear.
A child chased a shadow-finch down a hallway while her mother called after her to slow down.
"Through here," our escort said. "Lord Kaan awaits in the eastern garden."
I felt Hakan tense beside me. Behind us, Sarp adjusted the collar of his tunic with studied casualness, though I caught the way his eyes tracked every exit, every guard, every potential threat.
Old habits. Sarp joked his way through most situations, but underneath the humor lurked a defensive reflex, almost military instincts that never quite switched off.
The doors opened onto a space that stole my breath.
Bioluminescent flowers in shades of violet and deep blue lined winding paths between silver-leafed trees.
Pools where water caught the strange ambient light and threw it back in shifting patterns.
Both moons visible above—gold and silver hanging in impossible harmony, as though this garden had been designed to hold them both.
And at the center, four figures.
The first was unmistakably Kaan. Dark-haired, powerfully built, shadows pooling at his feet like ink bleeding into water.
His features echoed Hakan's—the same jaw, the same intensity—though his eyes were fully dark, shifting in color as they caught the light.
He stood with the confidence of a thousand years of unchallenged rule, dressed in black and midnight blue, silver scars visible where his sleeves were pushed back.
The second was a woman with golden eyes.
Light-bearer's eyes. Impossible in this place, and yet she stood beside Kaan with her hand resting on his arm, her body angled toward him with an intimacy that spoke of centuries rather than years.
She was striking—dark hair twisted up, her posture straight and alert in a way that reminded me of the blade instructors at the Light Court academy.
"The Shadow Lady," our escort said. "Lady Nesilhan."
The third was a tall man standing slightly behind Kaan's left shoulder.
A soldier's bearing—rigid spine, watchful eyes, hands clasped behind his back in the precise way of someone accustomed to having a weapon within reach.
He assessed our party with the cool, professional calculation of a general reviewing incoming forces, and I had a feeling very little escaped his notice.
I was studying the soldier when a flash of silver light announced a fourth presence.
A small woman materialised near Nesilhan—barely five feet tall, with wild silver-blonde hair that seemed to shift color at the edges, oversized lavender eyes gleaming with open mischief, and translucent wings casting prismatic patterns across the garden stone.
My breath caught. I'd read about creatures like her in the oldest texts of my father's library—beings who walked between light and shadow before the realms split.
The wings, the shifting hair, the faintly luminous skin.
She couldn't be... could she? The Twilight Fae were supposed to be extinct.
But everything about her suggested otherwise.
"Oh good," the small woman said, examining us with unabashed interest. "Fresh entertainment. The palace has been dreadfully boring since Kaan banned me from enchanting the dining chairs."
"The chairs were biting people, Banu," Nesilhan said, a note of fond warning in her voice.
"Only the boring people. I was doing everyone a favor."
Banu fluttered closer to our group, circling Hakan with the graceful, unhurried steps of someone who had absolutely no concept of personal space. She tilted her head one way, then the other, studying him like a particularly interesting botanical specimen.
"So this is the mysterious baby brother.
" She completed her circle and planted herself directly in front of him, hands on her hips, head tilted back to look up at his face.
The height difference was comical. "Adequate bone structure.
Could use a haircut. The brooding expression needs work—your brother does it much better.
He's had a thousand years of practice." She glanced back at Kaan. "I'd rate him a seven. Generous seven."
"I wasn't aware I was being scored," Hakan said flatly.
"Everything is being scored, darling. Welcome to the Shadow Realm."
The soldier behind Kaan exhaled through his nose—not quite a sigh, but close. The look he gave Banu had the weary patience of someone who had endured several centuries of this exact behavior. So he was Kaan's general, then. The one person in the room who seemed thoroughly unsurprised by any of it.
But then Kaan's attention fixed on Hakan, and everything else—Banu's chatter, the garden's strange beauty, my own hammering pulse—faded to background noise. For a long moment, neither brother moved. The shadows around Kaan's feet went very still, as if even they were holding their breath.
"You came." Kaan's voice carried easily across the garden—deep, commanding, with an edge of something dry and sharp. "I was half-convinced you'd burn my letter and pretend it never arrived. That's what I would have done, and I'm told we share certain personality defects."
Hakan stiffened but didn't look away. "Your letter surprised me. I was curious to meet you."
"Curious." Kaan repeated the word as though tasting it.
"Smart instinct. Our father's children learn suspicion the way other people learn to walk—early and badly.
" He moved toward us, shadows rippling around his feet like dark water disturbed by a stone.
"But you came anyway. Brave, or stupid, or desperate enough that the risk seemed worth taking. "
"Maybe all three," Hakan said.
Something flickered across Kaan's face—approval, perhaps, or recognition.
Then his mouth curved into a sharp, amused grin.
"Honest. Good. Most visitors spend their first hour trying not to soil themselves.
You're already talking back." He stopped a few feet away, studying Hakan with unsettling intensity.
Then, without warning, he reached out and clapped Hakan on the shoulder—hard enough that Hakan's shadows flared instinctively.
"Relax, little brother. If I wanted you dead, I wouldn't have sent a letter. I'd have sent Emir." He gestured toward the soldier, who inclined his head with an expression that said he'd heard this joke approximately four hundred times.
"My lord flatters my efficiency," the soldier—Emir—said. His voice was low, measured, perfectly controlled. "Though I'd like to note for the record that I advised a less theatrical approach to this reunion."
"You always advise less theatrical approaches. That's why I never listen."
"And yet I persist. Hope is a character flaw."
Hakan studied Kaan for a moment. Then he turned and extended his hand toward me. I stepped forward, lacing my fingers through his, and felt his shadows brush against my light in quiet reassurance.
"This is Ada," Hakan said. "Daughter of Gün Ata. God of Light and Love. Ruler of the seven factions of the Aydinlik Realm." He said it with deliberate weight, and I understood—he was not simply introducing me. He was establishing my rank before anything else could be said.
Kaan's expression shifted. The sardonic amusement didn't vanish, but something more formal settled alongside it. He inclined his head—not a shallow nod, but a genuine acknowledgment of status.
"Ada." He said my name with care. "The Light God's own blood. That places you above nearly every noble in either realm." His dark eyes held mine steadily. "You honor my home with your presence, and I want you to know that you are received here with the respect your lineage commands."
The formality caught me off guard. This was not the dry, teasing man of a moment ago. This was the Lord of the Shadow Realm, ruler of seven factions and a thousand years of history, acknowledging me as an equal. Beside me, I felt Hakan's surprise through the bond—he hadn't expected it either.
"Thank you," I said, and meant it.
Kaan held my gaze a moment longer, then the corner of his mouth ticked up. "Also, anyone who can inspire my brother to accidentally unleash his full divine power has my complete admiration. That takes remarkable talent."
"And this is Sarp," Hakan said, before Kaan could take that any further. "My closest friend."
Kaan looked past us with genuine interest. "I've been watching you catalog every exit since you arrived."
Sarp didn't miss a beat. "Habit. Your garden's lovely, by the way. Very calming. Definitely not planning escape routes."
"He's also incapable of reading the room," Hakan added.
"I read the room perfectly," Sarp said. "The room is tense and slightly embarrassing and I'm offering everyone an exit. You're welcome."
Kaan's laugh was genuine—surprised out of him, almost. He looked at Emir. "I like him. He's like you, but less depressing."
"I am not depressing, my lord," Emir said, without changing expression. "I am realistic. There is a meaningful distinction."