Chapter 9 Shadows Rising

The palace was quieter than usual the morning after Lyra had surrendered the sun medallion to the council. But the silence was deceptive, stretched tight across the corridors like a bowstring waiting to snap. Guards patrolled with an edge in their step, whispering rumors of sightings and strange occurrences outside the walls.

Lyra moved through the halls with careful purpose, her cloak brushing against polished marble, ears attuned to every creak and footstep. Her hands itched to return to the relic, to feel its hum beneath her fingertips, to sense the subtle pulse of magic that had marked her as its chosen bearer. But it was gone, and in its absence, she felt unmoored.

By midday, the first disturbances began. Couriers returned with frantic tales from the outskirts of the city. Livestock found dead, fields scorched with no fire, and shadows moving independently of their source. Whispers in the streets spoke of Shadewraiths and Vilefen-creatures Lyra had only glimpsed before, now bold enough to challenge the city itself.

She found Cassian in the training yard, blade in hand, but his eyes were restless, scanning every shadow, every glimmer of movement beyond the walls. "They're testing us," he muttered, sheathing his sword. "The city senses the relic is gone. And they're coming."

Lyra's stomach tightened. "So the council was right."

Cassian's jaw hardened. "Right. And wrong. They think surrendering it means protection. But the danger doesn't vanish because the medallion is behind their gates. It waits. And now, you have to choose."

Lyra frowned. "Choose... what?"

"To train. To fight. To prepare. The relic might be gone from your hands, but the connection isn't severed. You'll have to be ready if the creatures strike again. You can't depend solely on guards or councils."

Her gaze drifted toward the horizon, where the first flickers of dark movement twisted through the treetops. Shadewraiths, moving in the wind like black smoke, silent and hungry. Her hands clenched at her sides. "Then I train. I can't... I won't leave it to chance."

Cassian's eyes softened. "Then we train together. You and me."

And yet, even as the promise of protection stirred her heart, another pull lingered: Aerion. She remembered his calm, measured presence during the council, the way he hadn't intervened, hadn't offered reassurance. That steadiness had felt like neglect. And still... the tug of his world-the noble world, the ordered world-hovered in her mind, whispering of stability she both wanted and feared.

By dusk, the first attack came. Lyra and Cassian stood on the western battlements, overlooking the fields beyond the city walls. The air shimmered with unnatural darkness, a slow, creeping shadow spreading across the grass.

"Shadewraiths," Cassian muttered, pointing to the twisting figures. They moved with inhuman grace, eyes glinting like shards of obsidian. "They test the defenses first. Then the city."

Lyra swallowed. "I thought giving the relic to the council would stop this."

Cassian shook his head. "It's not about stopping it. It's about controlling it. And right now... the city has nothing. We do."

With a sharp whistle, the guards raised their weapons, but the creatures were swift, slipping between arrows as if the wind itself carried them. Lyra felt a surge of adrenaline. "I can help," she said. "I can fight!"

Cassian's grin was sharp, thrilling. "That's the spirit. Let's see what you've got, Thorn."

She leapt into action beside him, dagger and steel in hand, every reflex honed from her years in the streets. Shadows twisted and lunged, and though she was not wielding the medallion, she could sense its echo, the residual magic that pulsed faintly through her veins. Every strike she landed, every dodge she executed, was guided by that invisible tether-the relic had not abandoned her.

The following days became a blur of drills, sparring, and whispered strategy sessions. Aerion joined them only occasionally, observing with a composed, almost clinical interest. His presence was like a weight in her chest-calm, unyielding, frustratingly unattainable.

Cassian, on the other hand, was fire incarnate. He pushed her to the limits of endurance, forced her to confront fear and exhaustion, and yet always lingered close, a whisper of encouragement, a touch of reassurance.

One evening, after a grueling session in the rain, Lyra found herself leaning against a wall, breathing hard, soaking wet. Cassian appeared beside her, towel in hand, offering it without a word.

"You're reckless," he said softly. "Every time I think you're careful, you prove me wrong."

Lyra smirked, shrugging. "Better reckless than dead."

He laughed, low and dark, eyes searching hers. "Better reckless with me than alone," he murmured, and before she could reply, his fingers brushed hers, lingering just enough to make her pulse spike.

She glanced toward the windows of the palace, imagining Aerion inside, studying maps or dispatches, the noble heir too restrained to act, too careful to intervene. The contrast burned in her mind, and she let herself lean into Cassian, letting the tension between them deepen in silence.

Aerion's absence-or rather, his measured distance-gnawed at her. She wanted to feel the warmth and protection he represented, but every time she imagined reaching for him, his calm eyes betrayed no urgency, no connection.

Cassian, in contrast, was all raw emotion. He loved her with fire, demanded her attention, challenged her at every turn. And though part of her mourned the support Aerion had withheld, she could not deny the pull of Cassian's devotion.

The city's fate, the creatures outside the walls, the echo of the relic-all of it converged in her chest like a storm. And she realized, with a mixture of fear and thrill, that her heart could be divided. Aerion offered her stability; Cassian offered her passion. And she could not-and would not-choose just yet.

Night fell, and with it came the most daring of the creatures: the Duskborn. Larger than the Shadewraiths, coated in black scales that shimmered under moonlight, they moved with terrifying intelligence. Their eyes glowed crimson, focused, calculating.

From the battlements, Lyra could see their approach. Her pulse raced, every nerve alive. Cassian appeared at her side, sword drawn, expression taut.

"Ready?" he asked, voice low.

Lyra nodded, gripping her dagger. "As I'll ever be."

The creatures lunged, claws scraping stone, wings beating shadows across the courtyard. Lyra fought alongside Cassian, their movements synchronized, every glance and gesture a silent conversation.

And in the chaos, she realized something profound: the medallion may have left her hands, but it had not left her destiny. She had a choice-to run, to hide, or to step fully into the role it had marked for her.

And Lyra Thorn had never been one to run.

                         

COPYRIGHT(©) 2022