Chapter 20 Prayer in Ruin

Chapter twenty

Prayer in Ruin

-Alarik-

The scent of burning myrrh curled through the high vaulted chamber like a memory left to rot. Alarik stood at the heart of the old sanctum, where no prayers had been answered in a hundred years, and still whispered one anyway.

Not to be heard. But to remember.

Cracked statues of the five gods loomed overhead, their faces worn by time, or perhaps willfully erased by the people who had grown tired of divine torture. The floor beneath him was etched in sacred geometry, the lines long since faded to ash.

He’d been a child when he first learned of the curse, it was taught to him and the other nightbound children. A cautionary tale of how the Gods viewed them as monsters before they even became men.

Calanthe had once been a kingdom of song and light: rich with spring-fed vineyards, golden fields, glitter beaches, sweet warm waters, and fae-spun beauty that dazzled the senses. But no longer. Not in his lifetime.

Now the sea and rivers ran too cold. The crops withered before harvest. Children were born too sickly, or not at all.

And the veil, once a protective layer of old magic separating the waking world from the nightmare realm, thinned more with every moonrise. Monsters, the veilspawn, slipped through its seams. Whisper-things. Bone-walkers. Dream devourers.

He knelt at the crumbling altar of Eiren, the forgotten goddess of dreams and mercy, the fifth and silent. A cluster of night-blooming lilies lay at her feet, the last of their kind in his realm.

“Give me something,” he whispered. “A sign. A shadow. Even silence, if it has meaning.”

Nothing. Not even the wind.

Alarik stood slowly, brushing his fingers across the ancient runes that circled her broken feet. One of them glowed faintly at his touch.

Hope, it read. A lie.

He returned to the war room with that word burning in his chest. His generals bowed.

The advisors followed, he ignored them all —But Zarion.

His friend stood just behind the high back chair meant for Alarik at the table, a quiet pillar of strength draped in shadow and gold.

His ebony skin caught the light like polished obsidian, golden eyes sharp with quiet wisdom, always watching more than he spoke.

His onyx braids hung down his back, threaded with gold cuffs — marks of battles survived and peace brokered.

Where Alarik was fire held in check, Zarion was the steady hand guiding the flame.

They had grown up together on the palace grounds, he was grateful for his presence.

He nodded to him and took his place at the map table, eyes scanning the worn edge of the continent.

Nythra. The Calyrix throne. And the girl.

The mortal who had sparked so many questions —Maris —stolen like a treasure by Kael in the dark. Rumors had reached his shores in troves — whispers of her magic, her beauty, the dance, the noble dragged to the dungeons, her rage.

He’d spent a century chasing seers, scholars, lorekeepers, broken prophets and crumbling tomes. After the death of Elenwe — the only one he had ever loved —he had vowed to spend eternity paying back the curse with blood or brilliance.

And yet…

What if the answer wasn’t in ancient spells?

What if it bled — walked wrapped in mortal skin, with starlight in her eyes?

Alarik’s magic stirred with that thought — restless —sensing each shift in the veil.

His power was fae-light bound to vampiric hunger.

Where Kael’s magic moved like cold shadow, his danced like wildfire.

Bright, golden threads woven through with deep blue flame.

Illusion. Influence. Empathy. He could taste emotion.

Manipulate desire. Weave thoughts into dreams and nightmares alike.

And he had never been more tempted to use it.

To see why the cold King of Nythra would risk a war for one girl.

“Send word,” Alarik said at last, voice cool as river glass. “I want eyes in the eastern forests. If Kael leaves his court again, I want to know why. And I want the girl’s name and likeness sung in every corner of his kingdom until even the shadows start listening.”

Zarion hesitated. “And if the Nythran King retaliates?”

A smile curved his lips — lovely, lethal, determined.

“Then he’s more desperate than I thought.”

The last time Alarik saw Kael was beneath a sky choked with stars — a night too beautiful for what it would birth.

The ball had been held on sacred ground, a neutral territory — perched on the broken edge of the northern borderlands.

Within a palace of forgotten rule. It's spires pierced the sky like broken teeth, veiled in ivy and centuries of ash.

Time had gnawed the gold from its gates and peeled the paint from its walls.

Its windows gaped like hollow eyes, shattered glass glinting like old wounds.

Wind whispered through the halls where its king once dined.

The throne room remained intact — faded banners hung limp from cracked marble columns, and a throne of dark stone sat waiting, cold and empty beneath a domed ceiling spidered with cracks.

It was brought back to life if only for the night.

The night was meant to forge peace between the kingdoms. But the gods had other plans.

Alarik had arrived draped in white— regal and radiant.

His tunic was stitched with threads of moon-silver and ivory silk, the cut sharp tailored perfectly to his build.

A high collar framed his throat like armor, and at his waist, a ceremonial blade rested sheathed in pearl- lacquered leather.

His magic danced on his skin, threads of fae-light laced with the faint hum of blood-call.

His beloved, Elenwe, had chosen it. The white— a symbol of truce, of good faith.

His lover. His intended. His tranquility.

A nightbound princess from the Island Kingdom of Virella, her brother the King Thauren out to sea, West, beyond Calanthe.

She was born more fae than vampire, like him.

She was delicate, sun-kissed, with laughter like bells and eyes like spring. She had believed in peace.

She stood at his side, a vision of serenity woven into silk and light.

Her gown floated around her like mist — layers of pale gold and opalescent ivory, delicate as moonlight on water.

Fine embroidery traced vines and river lilies down her sleeves, stitched with threads of soft green, blue, and silver, the colors of each kingdom to unite them.

Her skin glowed like sunlight, and her long golden hair was crowned with a circlet of starstone and braided vine, humble and regal.

Her presence alone reduced a need for armor, the sight of her disarmed every male within the hall.

Her sea glass eyes sparked with joy. She was peace made flesh, the embodiment of mercy.

She believed she could broker a scared truce between the kingdoms on this night, unite the nightbound to defend themselves against the Veil terrors and so she created the idea for a shared ball. But that night… That night the gods wanted chaos. And chaos they were given.

It began in a waltz. Elenwe, went to greet Kael, a symbol of goodwill between courts.

He stood at the opposite end of the hall, cloaked in black, every inch of him carved in shadow and command — his tunic tailored, inlaid with obsidian threads that caught the light like whispered threats.

A mantle of raven-feathered velvet swept from his shoulders, a dark ban rested on his brow.

A blade rested at his side, it gleamed in the light.

Alarik watched, tense but trusting across the floor — until Kael’s eyes changed. Once molten silver, darkened in an instant — swallowed by shadow until no light remained. The shift was unnatural, he no longer looked like a king but divine wrath in the skin of one.

She smiled reaching out a hand to him.

In a blur of shadow and steel, Kael drove his blade through Elenwe’s chest. No words. No warning. As if fate had whispered death into his hand. The music stopped. The room screamed. Swords were drawn.

Alarik tore through the chaos, his breath a ragged thing, half scream, half prayer. Elenwe crumpled like a flower cut too soon, and when he fell to his knees beside her, the world narrowed to the blood blooming from her chest.

"No," he rasped, voice breaking as he gathered her into his arms, his hands already stained with her blood. Her eyes fluttered, unfocused, lips parting to speak — but the wound was too great, blood greeted him instead of her soft voice.

He shifted his stare onto Kael’s deadened eyes and let a curse fall from his lips like a blade forged in vengeance.

“I swear on the bones of the gods themselves,” he spat, voice a tremor of thunder, “I will take what you love most and break it until even your shadows weep.”

Zairon had pulled him back that night, ebony skin splashed with Elenwe’s blood, golden eyes full of fury, and sorrow carving hollows into his face.

“Don’t do this,” Zairon had begged. “This wasn’t Kael's choice Alarik — you know it wasn’t.”

He did, but the gods had already turned the wheel and Alarik would not forgive. He couldn’t.

Not when the Veil bled nightmares into their sky.

Not when his people fell sick beneath crimson moons.

Not when Elenwe’s voice came to him in dreams, whispering, breathless in agony —

Now Kael had something. A mortal girl.

A girl whose name already rode whispers across the borderlands like smoke: Maris. Alarik exhaled, the wind rattling the stained glass beside him as he turned from the window of his war room.

Zairon stood arms crossed.

“You’re going to attempt to bring her here aren’t you,” his old friend said flatly.

“I’m going to give Kael a taste of what he took from me.”

“It won’t avenge Elenwe.”

“No,” Alarik said quietly. “But she will be his ruin.”

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