Chapter 23 Carmilla

CARMILLA

Somewhere beyond the mouth of the cave dawn is trying to happen, but no ordinary sunrise reaches this throat of the world.

Instead, a tremor hums the morning into being—low, insistent, rattling loose stones from the ceiling so they tap the shelves like chimes.

The magma river has settled into a begrudging flow after the long night, yet every fresh pulse in the ley core feels hungrier, as though the realm itself skipped sleep and woke ravenous.

I sit in a shadowed alcove carved naturally into the rear wall, knees drawn up, cloak draped over my shoulders like a half-forgotten promise of warmth.

Kylan still dozes beside the finished ritual circle, resting only because I drugged the camp’s water with whisperroot; he needs one hour of oblivion before the grind begins again.

Wolves never admit exhaustion until their bodies steal it, so I lent a hand.

His breathing echoes faintly down the corridor—steady, comforting, a memory of safety in a place that promises none.

The vision started the moment the tremor shivered up the wall and into my spine. One heartbeat I was hunched over folio notes, the next I was standing outside my own skin. As always, the sight stamps every sense with merciless clarity:

The circle complete but empty, its sigils glowing a dull kiln red.

My body kneels at its center—no breath, no pulse, the lattice fully bloomed until flesh has turned to translucent quartz.

The cracked palm is splayed on obsidian tile, frozen mid-gesture, as if I was trying to finish a word that died on my tongue.

Outside the perimeter Kylan kneels, head tilted back, a howl ripping out that shakes dust from the stalactites.

It’s the kind of sound that can break bones without ever touching them. I swear the magma itself cringes.

The vision ends there, but I can still taste the aftermath: salt, soot, heartbreak so dense it carries its own gravity. When I blink back to the alcove every muscle aches from clenching, and sweat runs cold between shoulder blades despite the heat.

No more time for doubt. I unfold the folio, tug a fresh shard of slate from my kit, and grind the last of the ash-blood mixture into a fine powder.

With the stylus I draft an alternate sigil pattern—one Kylan must never see until the instant it must be used.

It rearranges sacrifice ratios, forcing the circle to draw ninety percent of the closing energy from me and only a sliver from the wolf bond.

Theoretically the realm will accept the imbalance as payment in full; practically, it means the vision becomes truth.

The pattern pours from memory as if my hand has practiced for years.

Perhaps it has, in dreams I refuse to remember.

Halfway through the final glyph the stylus slips; pain lances up my cracked fingers.

A new fracture opens across the heel of the palm, and for a breath everything strays out of focus.

I clutch the hand, counting heartbeats until vision steadies.

Blood wells in pearl-sized drops, dark against the pale crystal creeping under the skin.

Five minutes of pressure seals it enough to keep writing.

Finished, I breathe over the slate, whispering a binding hush so the glyphs sink just beneath the surface grain—hidden from a casual glance.

The slate slides into the inner pocket of my sleeve alongside the thin dagger of moon-silver.

If Convergence outpaces us I will embed the slate directly in the anchor’s heartstone, trusting Laurel’s prodigious curiosity to find it when she reaches this place. Trusting that she will reach it at all.

The farewell crystal waits in my satchel: a thumb-sized shard of star-glass with a trapped wisp of aurora swirling at its core.

I harvested it years ago on the Sanctuary ridge, telling Laurel it was a navigation tool.

Really it was always meant for this altar.

A final message in case the world keeps spinning without me.

I rise, footing careful on the glass-slick floor, and make my way toward the altar shelf beyond the circle.

Each step sends mild protests from joints, like gears grinding without oil.

I lay the crystal beside a petrified lotus that grew here centuries ago when the cave breathed cooler air.

The star-glass flares once, recognizing dragonstone in the altar’s make.

In that bloom of light the alcove seems larger, less oppressive, almost gentle.

My whisper barely disturbs the heated air.

“Guide whoever bears the maps after me. Carry them true.”

The crystal dims, a promise accepted.

Behind me a change in Kylan’s breath warns he will wake soon.

I wipe ash and blood residue on cloth, preparing a facsimile smile.

Resolve has to be armor this morning; he cannot feel the weight of a choice I’ve already made.

If he does, he will try to shift it onto his own shoulders, and the pattern will fail.

A soft scuff of boot on basalt announces him before voice does. “The bed’s empty, and the air smells like secrets.” His words rumble, still husky with sleep but edged by amusement.

I turn, letting the cloak fall so lattice on my arm can’t hide in folds. He takes in the new crack, the tired gleam in my eyes, and the amusement fades into concern lined with something achingly tender. “Nightmares or visions?”

“Both.” I fold arms, forcing a shrug. “This cave does not believe in boundaries.”

He crosses the distance, thumb brushing fresh bandage. “You injected whisperroot into my water, little liar.” The accusation lacks anger; more a wry acknowledgment.

“You needed the rest.”

“So did you.” He steps nearer. Heat from his chest radiates through the scant gap between us. He tilts my chin, searches my gaze. “Tell me what you saw.”

Stone corpse. His howl. The universe bleeding quiet around us. I push the memory behind a mask of wryness. “I saw the next surge arriving sooner than we calculated. We should be ready within the hour.”

Eyes narrow, but he senses I’ve shared all I intend. “Then we will be.” He brushes a kiss at the corner of my mouth, gentle, but it vibrates with restrained fear. My heart snags against ribs. One more reason he can’t know about the slate.

We leave the alcove together. Wolves have reset camp after the fissure collapse—Rowan stands guard, crossbow balanced though his face is gray; Holt sharpens blade, eyes flicking to the lava river every few breaths. When I call them for briefing they gather without hesitation.

Kylan outlines timings: next core lift predicted at forty minutes—he speaks this while glancing at me, testing confidence. I nod, reinforcing where needed. Holt and scouts will apply river-ice wards at new stress lines; Rowan handled despite cough because his aim remains true.

I spare an instant to admire them: mortals with mortal faults, choosing to stand here where the world’s vertebrae creak. It strengthens the final shard of doubt—no mortal should spend twice for the same fate. My lattice will pay for their safety.

We disperse. I return briefly to the alcove, sliding slate into deeper crevice under loose rock. The farewell crystal pulses once behind me. If Kylan enters again he will need a seer’s eyes to find either item.

On leaving, another tremor passes—smaller, but it jolts the half-healed cracks in my bones.

The lattice brightens to a soft cerulean, and for one terrifying instant I feel the rhythm of the dragon beneath the magma, stirring in its ancient coffin.

Each tick of its breath rasps through the crystal in my blood. It wants out.

I catch the wall, breathing shallow until the resonance ebbs.

Already the world blurs at edges, as if I peer through water.

When my vision clears, Holt has paused by the cave mouth, looking back.

His brow furrows at my grip on basalt but he says nothing.

Loyalty or respect—maybe doubt of what words would help. I wave him on.

Fishing in cloak pocket, I withdraw a shard of quartz no larger than a grain of rice—the lattice’s first fragment to flake from wrist weeks ago.

I kept it in case it turned useful. Now I press it to my lips, whisper Kylan’s name, and place it atop the farewell crystal.

Two pieces of me, one physical, one spectral—if souls can bind to bone, maybe bone can carry a soul.

Time compresses. Wolves hurry, seed roots glow brighter in glyph hollows, and the cave’s ambient thrum increases pitch by half-tones every few breaths.

Each tone is a string drawing tight; soon it will snap.

I busy myself checking sigil edges, adding flecks of chalk where sweat erased corners.

Kylan enters with bowls of aqua drawn from a glacier melt flask—rare cold here—and hands me one. We sip, neither speaking.

He catches me studying lava swirls. “If world ends today, what regret claws deepest?” His voice is deceptively calm.

Regret. Mine crystallizes instantly. “Leaving you to mourn.”

Brown-gold eyes soften. “I would rather mourn than have never known.” He sets the bowl aside, fingers brushing my lower back. “My turn. I regret I can’t play you the bone flute on a hilltop meadow far from danger.”

I smile at image. “When this is finished your flute and my star charts will share a meadow.”

“Promise.”

“Promise,” I echo, hoping the slate’s treachery will never be needed.

The bowl trembles in my hands—first real surge. Kylan’s head turns toward the magma river; he listens to frequency change. “We start.”

Positions taken: I at south rune point, he at north. Holt guards east, Rowan west. Scouts ready pulleys. Kylan lifts vibra-stone and begins chant that pulls pulse-seeds into proper phase. I weave counter-notes, lattice crackling electric.

Heat intensifies; sweat steams off skin. My palm feels aflame where cracks widen. Pain whitewashes vision yet I don’t stumble. The circle swallows our chants and spits back harmonic that locks cave vibrations into pattern echoing heartbeats. Good.

First surge peaks: magma leaps, lava ceiling vents breathe hard. The circle’s emerald glow holds firm. I see Kylan grin, teeth bared like victory. Wolves howl short exultations.

But under triumph hums a deeper note, one only lattice can hear: dragon’s exhale slithering upward, snake sliding under door. It plays the same key as my hidden slate. Destiny tests loyalty: will I rip tiles to implant alternate pattern now or wait?

Resolve answers. I wait until the circle shows first strain—no earlier. My terms; not dragon’s.

The surge tapers. We stand, shaking. Rowans tears up coughing but nods he’s fine. Holt pours melt water across cracked floor edge. The circle dims to steady jade.

Second surge predicted in eighty heartbeats. I feel pulse accelerating. Kylan strides over, brushes thumb under my eye where an exhausted tear escaped. He kisses brow. “We win,” he murmurs.

I steal that warmth, lock it behind ribs. If I win, we live. If prophecy wins, he lives, realm lives. Either way he must keep breathing. Slate pulses against sleeve like a second heartbeat.

I whisper back, “For every chart in my study, for every cub in your den, we win.”

Surge two begins with shriek of rock rending somewhere deep. The circle bristles. Ash dust lifts into air along sigil lines—pattern unraveling faster than we feared. The dragon presses.

Kylan’s face tightens; he slams palms onto runes, channeling raw life force. The glow steadies but doesn’t climb. He is burning himself in tiny increments, and I feel each scorch echo through bond. Choice stands in front of me now, clear as mirrored glass:

Use slate and kill this body, spare his flame; or let him pour himself hollow until we both turn stone.

Vision’s echo—his howl over my corpse—tugging.

I grip sleeve seam above hidden slate, nails biting fabric. Matte black crack splits crystal up forearm with audible ping. He hears, glances—fear there. I force a grin. “Still breathing.”

His answer: “Together.”

Yes. Even in death, together. I plant feet, lift free hand, feed lattice’s agony into chant.

Energy crashes through me—rapids over shattered dam.

The circle brightens, matches surge for second, overwhelms pain.

Yet deep down the decision settles like bedrock: when surge three arrives, the slate will drop, and I will let destiny carve the rest.

Until then, I pour everything I am into the song of survival, and the cave shakes not from collapse but from sheer, stubborn defiance.

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