Chapter 18 The Eye of the Storm #2
A flicker of something cold and appraising entered his eyes, replacing the mask of loving concern.
This was the look he got right before he corrected a servant, right before he pointed out one of her own flaws with surgical precision.
It was a look of chilling confidence, as if he had just taken in all the details of this new, unexpected situation and found them not just manageable, but tedious.
He turned his full, condescending attention back to Gessa.
It was a performance she knew well, the mask of loving concern he wore for others, but as his voice became a soft, silken murmur, she saw a new cruelty in his eyes as they flickered toward Ky.
The words were for her, but the venom felt aimed at them both.
“My darling, you’ve forgotten your lessons.
You’ve always had a stubborn streak that requires.
.. careful correction. A firm hand.” He glanced meaningfully past her at the training grounds.
“Surely an instructor understands the necessity of discipline? When a student is... spirited... one must apply the necessary pressure to ensure the lesson takes hold.”
He took one last step, his voice dropping to a conspiratorial whisper meant only for her, his eyes glittering. “...even if it requires nothing more than the memory of a stone.”
The world dissolved. She was back in the cold, windowless room at Ironwood, the air thick with the copper tang of her own blood. He was behind her, pressing her into the desk, his hips heavy against her lower back.
“Just focus,” he whispered, his free hand sliding down her stomach to press possessively over her womb. “You must be empty before you can be filled. Focus on the silence.”
He forced the smooth, cold stone into her palm. The pain began, a sharp, biting agony crawling up her arm like a thousand invisible hooks. A choked whimper escaped her lips.
“No, no,” he soothed, his lips brushing the sensitive skin of her neck, a lover’s caress delivering a jailer’s promise. “I will cure this sickness. I will make you perfect.”
The pain intensified, a white-hot shriek in her mind. As Polan’s phantom grip tightened on her waist, another touch registered in the present—a firm, grounding pressure on her shoulder.
A different voice, real and solid, cut through the memory with alarm. “Gessa! Look at me!”
It was Ky, trying to pull her back, to shield her. But it was too late. The phantom violation and the real touch collided, and she felt a sob tear from her throat, the sound of her own shattering.
The memory fractured. She was back in the valley, gasping, Ky’s hand still on her shoulder, his body a half-shield between her and Polan. But her husband was there, his own hand still reaching, inches from her face.
“Now, come here,” he was saying, his eyes dropping to her belly, then back to her eyes. “It is time to go home.”
The terror was still there, a cold sickness in her veins. But as she stared at his outstretched hand, the hand that had held the stone, something new surged up to meet it. It was rage. Pure, absolute rage.
He will NOT do this to me again, a voice screamed in her mind, a voice that was finally, fiercely her own. I am NOT that broken thing in the room anymore.
The sob born in the memory now erupted from her in the real world, but it was not a sound of surrender. It was a war cry. From the depths of her breaking point, her soul screamed a single command: AWAY!
In that instant, terror became a tool. The flood Ky had spoken of—the monstrous power she had spent weeks learning to guide—was no longer something to fear. It was her only hope.
She dove straight into the magic, mentally tearing at the rawest, most powerful current she could feel beneath the earth. She shredded the delicate threads of her training and seized the Line’s heart with the desperate strength of a drowning woman pulling the plug.
The air cracked, suddenly smelling of ozone and the freezing, acrid scent of crushed peppermint.
She became the wick for a bonfire that threatened to consume her.
It wasn’t enough. The terror of Polan’s hand was a spur in her mind, driving her past her limits.
She reached deeper, scraping the bottom of her reserves until she hit the bedrock of her own soul.
It felt like unspooling her own veins, a sickening, internal unraveling as she began to burn her very life force as fuel.
The magic turned predatory, eating her strength, her breath, her heartbeat.
She clawed at the power, frantic and weeping, tearing it from the marrow of her bones.
She saw Ky’s eyes widen, his professional calm shattering into utter terror. He lunged toward her, shouting over the rising shriek of the magic, his voice raw with panic.
“Gessa, release it! You’re burning your own life! Stop!”
Beside him, Night’s guttural growl turned into a pained, rising yowl as he felt the storm gathering.
Reality tore. The air behind them ripped apart with the sound of grinding stone and tearing silk. It was a wound in the world, bleeding a roaring vortex of hungering nothingness. The backlash erupted outward as a physical shockwave of wind, dust, and stinging pebbles that scoured the valley floor.
Gessa felt the irresistible pull of the vortex.
Ky’s hand clamped around her arm. The last thing she saw was Polan’s shocked face, his mask of loving concern finally shattering into disbelief as the storm of debris and vacuum hit him, throwing him violently backward, erasing his confidence in a wash of white dust.
Then she, Ky, and the massive dark form of Night were all pulled into the swirling, roaring darkness.
Pain. Blinding, searing, total.
That was the first thing that registered in Polan’s mind. The world came back into focus with a high-pitched, incessant ringing in his ears. He was on the hard, rocky ground, yards from where he had been standing.
He pushed himself up, a guttural cry of agony tearing from his throat as he saw his arm.
His left sleeve was gone. The arm beneath was a ruin of shattered bone and scorched, blackened flesh.
The pain was a white noise that drowned out thought, leaving him dizzy, his head spinning in a sickening vortex.
“My lord! My lord!” Kestrel was suddenly there, his face pale with panic, reaching out to steady him.
Polan gripped the mercenary’s shoulder with his good hand, digging his fingers in hard enough to bruise, using the man as a crutch to force himself upright. He breathed through the agony, locking it away in a box in his mind, forcing the world to stop spinning through sheer force of will.
He stared at the spot where they had been.
There was only a crater of blackened, smoking earth. The air smelled of ozone and the acrid, freezing scent of the Void.
They were gone.
But as the shock faded, it was not replaced by self-reflection. It was replaced by a cold, crystalline certainty.
This was not his fault. He had offered her safety. He had offered her home.
This was the Spurs.
It was the same old story, played out across centuries.
The Spurs had stolen the maps from his ancestors, denying House Volanus their birthright.
And now, they had stolen the key to unlocking that legacy.
They had taken his wife, his property, and twisted her mind until she turned her power against her own master.
They were thieves, stealing his future to prop up their own crumbling monopoly.
And that instructor...
The image seared itself into Polan’s mind, brighter than the pain in his arm. The “Iron Spur.” The cripple. He remembered the way the man had stood between them. He remembered the way the man’s hand had rested on Gessa’s shoulder—familiar, protective, possessive.
A broken thing like that, touching what belonged to Polan.
A surge of revulsion twisted in his gut, hotter than the burns on his skin.
That limping dog had dared to lay claim to a Volanus asset.
For that transgression, death was too simple.
Polan would devise something special for him.
He would make that broken man watch while he reclaimed his property, and then he would finish what the Ley Tunnel had started five years ago.
“My lord,” Kestrel stammered, looking at the burns. “We need a healer. We must retreat.”
“No,” Polan whispered, his voice a dry rasp. “We do not retreat. We hunt.”
He looked at the empty air where Gessa had vanished.
She had hurt him. She had scarred him. The arm would heal, but the insult would remain. She had proven that she was too wild, too damaged by the Spurs’ influence to be trusted with freedom ever again.
She would require... drastic reshaping.
He didn’t care about her spirit anymore. He didn’t care about her “fire.” Those things were liabilities. He needed the bloodline. He needed the vessel.
He would find her. He would drag her back to Ironwood.
And if he had to carve away every piece of her personality to ensure she never defied him again, so be it.
He would leave her with nothing but her breath and her womb.
As long as the body remained whole enough to bear his heir, the rest of her was disposable.
“Get me to the horse,” he commanded Kestrel, turning away from the crater. “And send word to Malak. The timeline has accelerated.”
He would burn the Spurs for their theft. He would crush the cripple for his insolence. And he would take back what was his.