Chapter 7 Mireya
MIREYA
For two days, the heavy ironwood doors of the main hall remain bolted against the Undercity. For two days, the monster of Venn Manor avoids my shadow entirely.
The silence is a suffocating miasma, a heavy, airless pressure that binds me the moment his footsteps fade.
I sit in the dusty confines of my assigned wing, tracing the crude maps I have drawn of the estate, but my focus is a frayed thread.
My mind constantly circles back to the salt-rimed courtyard.
To the blinding, apocalyptic heat of his unleashed curse.
Release her, or I will liquefy the armor to your flesh.
The raw, feral possessiveness in his gravel-strewn voice echoes against the inside of my skull.
He did not merely shield a court-mandated research subject.
He risked immediate execution. He dared Theryn Duskryn to wage a siege, all to stop a soldier from bruising my arm.
The question of why burns my throat, a heavy, unasked demand.
But every time I venture toward the central stairwell to seek him out, the ambient rot thickens in the corridors, a silent, volatile warning to keep my distance.
He is a man caged by his own terrifying lack of restraint, terrified of the instinct that drew him out of the dark.
That night, the oppressive atmosphere of the manor bleeds into my sleep.
I do not dream of the chanting witches or the black fire. I dream of the quiet.
I am standing in the shattered dining hall, the air freezing and metallic. The shadows part, and Khaelor steps into the meager light. He does not wear the heavy velvet cloak. His chest is bare, the ashen-violet expanse of his skin mapped entirely by the jagged, pulsing veins of his affliction.
He does not stop at thirty paces. He does not stop at five.
He closes the distance between us, the sheer, inexorable gravity of his frame blotting out the rest of the room.
I am instantly drowning in the scent of him—a narcotic blend of crushed embers, the sharp tang of spent magic, and the dark, feral musk of his sweat.
The heat coming from his skin doesn't burn; rather, it settles over me like a dark fever, thickening the air until my lungs ache.
Tilting my head, my gaze traces the cruel angles of his cheekbones, only to find the amber of his eyes anchored to the ragged rise and fall of my chest.
Slowly, deliberately, he raises a corrupted hand.
The black-gold ichor weeps from his fingertips.
He does not touch me, but he brings his hand a fraction of an inch from the curve of my throat.
The phantom heat wraps around my skin like a weighted, velvet blanket.
A deep, resonant hum vibrates between us, an inescapable, magnetic pull binding two opposing biologies.
I lean upward, craving the impossible contact, my breath catching as the dark gold light reflects in his eyes—
I wake with a harsh gasp.
The room is pitch black. My skin is flushed, slick with a fine layer of sweat despite the ambient chill of the manor. A heavy, phantom ache lingers along my collarbone, a visceral yearning that makes my muscles tighten. I press my palms to my face, dragging in deep pulls of the stale air.
The awareness of him is no longer just a necessity for survival. It is an infection in my blood.
By mid-morning, the restless energy is intolerable.
I strap the heavy leather satchel containing the obsidian relic to my hip and resume my mapping protocols, driving myself deep into the unused, lower corridors of the east wing.
I need the distraction of the crumbling architecture.
I need to understand the anatomy of this dying house.
The corridors here are different. The stone is not pitted with the violent, explosive slag of recent curse surges. The rot is older, settled beneath a thick, suffocating layer of gray dust.
At the end of a blind hallway, I find a door heavily reinforced with tarnished silver bands. It is not locked with iron bolts, but with a thick, calcified crust of hardened ash.
I press my palm against the wood. The faint, dormant gold undertones of my skin prickle. There is magic here, but it does not carry the chaotic, sharp tang venom of Khaelor’s aura. It is steady. Preserved. A rhythmic, deliberate pulse echoing from a dead century.
I pull the raw null-quartz from my pocket and press it against the ash seal. The disruption charm hisses, a brief flare of violet light fracturing the hardened crust. The ash crumbles. I shove my shoulder against the heavy wood, the rusted hinges screaming as the door gives way.
The air inside the chamber is dense, smelling of dried lavender, metallic preservation spells, and stagnant time.
It is a vault.
Suspended from the vaulted ceiling and mounted on tarnished silver pedestals are dozens of faceted, crystalline prisms. They do not catch the light; they seem to hold it captive within their depths. Echo crystals. The memory vaults of the high-born Dark Elves.
I step into the middle of the room. The obsidian relic strapped to my hip begins to vibrate, a low, warning hum that resonates through my pelvis.
I approach the largest crystal, mounted on a pedestal carved with the intertwined serpents of House Venn. The dust on its surface is absolute. I wipe it away with the sleeve of my tunic.
The friction is a catalyst. The crystal violently flares, bathing the small chamber in a cold, unforgiving silver light.
A voice projects from the stone. It is not a whisper. It is a command—sharp as cut glass, ringing with an arrogant, aristocratic cruelty that commands immediate submission.
"The Khuzuth covens grow too bold in the lower caverns.
They mistake our tolerance for weakness.
" I freeze. The voice belongs to a woman. It carries the same weighted, formal cadence as Khaelor’s, but completely devoid of his simmering grief.
This is the voice of a predator sitting comfortably upon a throne. Lady Sorelle Venn. The Silver Matron.
"The Undercity Court debates sanctions and treaties.
Fools," the projection sneers, the audio perfectly crisp in the stagnant air.
"The Blackflame Coven practices a magic that refuses to kneel.
They worship the ash and the blood, hoarding power that belongs by divine right to the High Houses.
We do not negotiate with feral witches."
A violent nausea coils tight in my gut. The relic at my hip hums louder, the vibration turning frantic. Beneath my skin, a phantom heat flares, an instinctual, defensive rising of magic I do not understand.
"I have authorized the Vanguard," Lady Sorelle’s voice continues, devoid of a single tremor of mercy.
"They march tonight under the cover of the eclipse.
Seal the cavern exits. Burn the root. Leave no child to carry their profane spark.
Let the ash of the Blackflame choke their remaining kin, so the Undercity remembers the price of defying House Venn. "
The crystal falls silent, the silver light slowly dimming, leaving the horrific weight of the confession hanging in the air.
Leave no child. The massacre was not a battle. It was an extermination.
Before the horror can fully settle in my lungs, the silver light of the crystal is abruptly, violently swallowed by a suffocating dark.
The temperature in the vault plummets. The scent of ozone and aggressive, toxic decay floods the confined space.
Khaelor stands in the doorway.
The sheer breadth of his shoulders blocks the exit.
The black and gold veins on his neck are pulsing with a frantic, lethal rhythm.
For a second, the image from my dream superimposes over reality—the memory of his phantom heat, the sensual, devastating gravity of his body.
The awareness spikes in my blood, a sharp, physical pull that clashes violently with the freezing terror of his actual presence.
His molten amber eyes sweep over the glowing crystal, then snap to me. The anger in his gaze is an abyss.
"Get out," he commands. The words are heavy stones dropping into a bottomless well. "This chamber is restricted to bloodline members. You trespass in a grave, Mireya."
I do not step back. The echoes of slaughtered witches are still screaming in the silence of the room. The stubborn defiance that kept me alive in the Undercity rises, hot and unyielding in my chest.
"A grave for your family, or a monument to the people they butchered?" I challenge, my voice echoing off the crystalline walls.
Khaelor’s jaw locks. The air pressure crushes inward, the magic weeping from his skin threatening to crack the suspended prisms.
"Do not speak of politics your human sensibilities cannot comprehend," he warns, taking a single, predatory step into the room.
The distance between us closes. The tension simmering in the room is a live wire, thick with the unsaid truths of the courtyard, the lingering heat of my dream, and the blood-soaked history of his name.
"It is not politics, Khaelor. It is an atrocity." I refuse to look away from the catastrophic ruin of his face. "She ordered the slaughter of children. Did you condone it? Did you march with them?"
The silence that follows is agonizing. I wait for the deflection, for the aristocratic justification of the Dark Elves. I wait for him to defend his name.
Instead, the volatile light beneath his skin flickers, dimming into a hollow, bruised glow. The towering, lethal monster seems to fracture, leaving only a man crushed beneath a century of isolation.
"I was an envoy," he says, the words tearing from his throat like rusted blades. He does not yell. The quiet devastation in his tone is infinitely worse. "I spent six months in the deep eastern caverns, brokering trade routes for the High Court. I secured a peace treaty."
He takes another step. The heat of his body washes over me, close enough that I can see the microscopic tremors in his clenched fists.
"I returned to the Undercity to celebrate a peace that was already dead," he whispers, his amber eyes searing into mine, stripping away the monster to reveal the raw, bleeding wound beneath. "I walked through the iron gates of this estate. I called for my mother. For my sisters."
The air in the vault turns razor-thin.
"I found them in the grand foyer," Khaelor continues, his voice devoid of all light.
"I watched my mother—a woman so ruthless she would cull her own children if she deemed them useless—and my innocent sisters melt into wet ash upon the floorboards.
I grieved the slaughter of my sisters and the absolute eradication of my bloodline. "
A cold horror sinks into my bones. He was not the architect. He was the witness.
Khaelor looks down at his own hands, at the lethal, corrupted magic weeping from his pores. "I did not wield the blade against the Blackflame, Mireya. I did not know the order was given. But the witch, the Purna, who cast this curse upon my bloodline..."
He looks back at me, the gravity of his suffering an inescapable snare.
"...made absolutely certain that I would wear the ashes of the massacre for eternity."