Chapter 28 #3

Bootsteps crashed down the far corridor—fast, uneven, the rhythm of someone who’d been running long before he realized he was late.

A Stormguard scout appeared in the archway, rain streaking his armor, mud spattered to his knees, breath coming in sharp pulls.

The chamber parted for him instinctively, as though the storm itself had sent him.

He dropped to one knee before Atlas, fist to the stone.

“Your Highness… Dawnbreak riders breached the wards at dawn. They’ve halted on the lower road—just past the first checkpoint—and are holding formation in the rain. They refuse to advance or withdraw.”

A ripple of silence swept through the War Gallery.

The stormglass map flickered, amber veins pulsing faster, adjusting to the news. Officers stiffened. Even the air seemed to grow aware of itself, coiling tighter inside the vaulted chamber.

Atlas’s jaw tightened. “How many?”

“Seven riders,” the scout said. “Armed. And… there is a priest among them.”

Kastor didn’t move, but the shift in the room was unmistakable. His attention sharpened. His posture grew even more rigid, if that were possible.

“State his purpose,” Kastor said.

The scout’s throat worked before the words emerged. “He claims he was sent to verify a disturbance in the storm.”

The phrase dropped like a stone into dark water.

But the next words were worse.

“He says the disturbance carries a signature not belonging to Storm Court lineage. He demands audience with… with the girl inside the keep who bears it.”

The chamber froze.

Officers went still mid-breath.

Stormguard straightened, boots rooted.

No one spoke, but every gaze in the room turned to me slowly, like metal dragged by a magnet.

Kastor didn’t look at me immediately. His gaze moved firs to the wardline projection. The amber flare reflected in his eyes, calculating. Then, slowly, he turned toward me.

My stomach dropped, shadows rising in a tight coil around my ankles before I forced them still.

Maren stepped closer, so subtly most people wouldn’t have seen it, but I felt it like a hand placed at the small of my back.

Atlas moved half a step forward, placing himself between me and the stunned silence of the room.

Not blocking me but standing with me. Anchoring me.

Kastor exhaled quietly, the sound thin, calculating. “Then we proceed as expected.”

He didn’t even look at me when he continued.

“We move her immediately to the inner wing.”

Atlas’s head snapped toward him.

“What?”

“It is a matter of containment,” Kastor said, tone maddeningly level. “Dawnbreak priests specialize in manipulation. If she remains visible, their demand gains legitimacy. If we remove her from sight—”

“You assume she agrees to that,” Atlas said sharply.

Kastor didn’t blink.

“She does not need to agree. The Court decides matters of security.”

Heat didn’t just rise in me, it surged, a tidal swell of fury that felt older than my own heartbeat. It was as if every slight, every warning, every whispered fear that had ever been pressed against my skin suddenly lit a fuse beneath my ribs.

I had spent years being spoken for, tiptoed around, feared, handled. Verdant’s advisors had tutted over me like I was a volatile mixture waiting to spill. Root-witches had looked at me with pity and dread braided together.

Even strangers on the Thornway would cross themselves, as if my presence alone invited disaster.

Here, where the air hummed with magic that answered my own, I had begun to believe I might finally stand without being diminished.

And still another man dared speak of me as though I were nothing more than a problem to be moved out of sight—an inconvenience, a complication, a danger to be locked away until others decided my fate.

Something in me cracked wide open.

“You’re discussing what to do with me as though I’m not standing here.”

My voice didn’t echo; it hit. The room stilled around it, officers freezing mid-movement, even the stormglass flickering as though it recognized the shift in the air.

But the real breaking point wasn’t Kastor’s condescension.

It was the subtle, instinctive motion at my side, the way Atlas’s posture shifted, readying himself to intercept, to calm, to step forward in that careful, protective way he never seemed to question.

No.

Not anymore.

I turned on him before he could move, the storm inside me snapping into alignment like two halves of a fractured bone finally meeting. “Don’t,” I said, voice raw and quiet and deadly. “Do not step in right now.”

His eyes flashed in confusion. “Caelira—”

“I can speak for myself,” I cut in, anger shaking loose years of restraint.

“I don’t need you swooping in to smooth things over, or shield me, or decide what truths I can survive hearing.

Not after this morning. Not after the half-answers.

Not after that prophecy you’ve been carrying like a blade you’re convinced will cut me. ”

The room had grown too small—too sharp—too charged to pretend I wasn’t shattering something important. The officers felt it. Maren felt it. Kastor watched it unfold like confirmation of every suspicion he harbored.

I drew a breath that tasted like metal and stormwind. “All my life I have been managed,” I said. “Contained. Spoken about like I’m a hazard or a curse. Told that I’m fragile or dangerous or too unpredictable to trust with my own choices. And I’m done. I am done being handled.”

Shadows snapped at my ankles in a sudden rush, and then something answered them. Silver lightning flared through the darkness, impossibly bright, threading the shadows with veins of living fire.

It crackled over the stone floor, running in jagged branches between my feet, lacing through the shadows as if they were meant to belong to each other. The temperature in the room shifted. The air thickened. Wind brushed the back of my neck like a warning or a vow.

Gasps rippled through the officers.

A lantern overhead shattered, raining thin shards of stormglass onto the floor.

The stormcurrent deep beneath the keep gave a low, answering thrum.

I didn’t try to stop any of it.

“I am not leverage,” I said, my voice steady even as lightning climbed my spine in thin silver ribbons.

“And I am not a secret you get to keep or a problem to be solved behind closed doors. Whatever disturbance Dawnbreak thinks they sensed, they sensed me. So, I get to decide how I face that. Not you. Not him. Not anyone but me.”

The shadows rose higher, swirling around my waist like a dark tide pulled by the moon, while silver lightning threaded through them in obedient arcs. It wasn’t wild. It wasn’t chaotic. It felt like recognition, like something ancient simply waking up because I finally stopped fighting it.

Atlas stared at me with something that wasn’t fear but something just as sharp, something reverent and aching and breaking all at once.

Kastor’s careful composure fractured for a single, telling instant.

Maren looked at me not like I had become something monstrous, but like she’d been waiting for this version of me to step into the light.

And for the first time in my life, I felt wholly myself. Not contained, not diminished, not warned against.

A storm brought to heel by no one.

The room had gone utterly still.

Silver lightning still clung to my skin in thin, trembling veins, threading through the shadows coiled at my feet. Every officer watched with wide, uncertain eyes. Kastor’s posture had turned to granite. And Atlas stared at me like he didn’t know whether to reach for me or kneel.

Good.

Because for the first time, the storm in me wasn’t raging, it was listening.

Kastor cleared his throat, attempting to recover control. “Lady Caelira, you are only proving why you must be removed from sight. A Dawnbreak priest will twist whatever he sees, and your lack of discipline—”

“My lack of discipline?” I repeated quietly.

The shadows stirred.

Atlas stepped closer, slowly, but he didn’t speak.

I lifted my chin, the last of my fury crystallizing into something cold and immovable.

“If Dawnbreak came for me,” I said, “then they can face me.”

That sent a shock through the officers, a ripple like thunder rolling under stone. Kastor’s expression cracked. Maren’s breath hitched behind me.

Lightning flashed once, silver and sharp.

“Let him in.”

Kastor stiffened in disbelief. “This is not your decision—”

Atlas cut across him, voice low and final. “It is now.”

And just like that, the storm shifted.

Not outside or beneath the castle.

Inside me.

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