Current location: Novel nest Thorns and Bone: A Kiss of Embers Chapter 7

"Thorns and Bone: A Kiss of Embers" Chapter 7

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Chapter 7: Shadows in the Vault

The palace breathed at night. It was a slow, rhythmic expansion of stone and shadow that Willow felt through the palms of her hands.

She crawled through the ventilation shaft, the metal groaning softly under her weight. The air smelled of dust, rust, and the faint, lingering ozone of Cillian’s magic.

She reached the grate overlooking the central vault. Below, the room was a labyrinth of locked chests and shimmering artifacts.

She adjusted her position, peering through the slats. Her target lay on a central pedestal—the Ledger of Souls.

It was the key to the Guild’s downfall. If she could copy the names within, she could destroy Valerius.

She unscrewed the grate. She dropped soundlessly to the floor, her landing cushioned by the training she had refined for a decade. She kept her breathing shallow. She moved toward the pedestal.

The floor was enchanted. A slight shimmer of violet light warned of pressure-sensitive tiles. Willow navigated the path. She moved with the grace of a predator.

She reached the ledger. She opened the heavy, iron-bound cover. The pages held columns of names, dates, and locations. She pulled a small, charcoal stick from her tunic. She began to transcribe the critical entries.

A sound echoed from the corridor.

It was the heavy, rhythmic thud of armored boots. Guards.

Willow didn't panic. She memorized the final names, snapped the ledger shut, and replaced it. She scrambled for the nearest pillar, her muscles straining as she pulled herself into the rafters.

The door swung open. Two guards entered. Their armor clanked in the silence.

"The Sovereign said to patrol the vault every hour," one guard grunted.

"Why? No one gets in here," the other replied.

They swept the room. Their torches cast long, flicking beams of light that missed her by inches. She flattened herself against the cold stone, holding her breath until her lungs burned.

She needed to reach the vent. She was twenty feet away.

She shifted her weight. A loose pebble dislodged from the ceiling. It clattered to the floor, loud as a thunderclap in the quiet chamber.

The guards froze. They turned their heads toward her position.

"What was that?"

They raised their torches. The light crawled up the wall. It hit her boots.

She had nowhere to hide. She prepared to drop. She would take them out before they could sound the alarm.

Suddenly, a figure appeared in the doorway.

Cillian.

His presence filled the room, a freezing wave of power that extinguished the guards' torches instantly. The chamber plunged into pitch-black darkness.

"Leave," Cillian commanded. His voice was a whip of sound.

The guards stumbled back. They did not question the order. They fled into the hallway, their armor retreating at a frantic pace.

Silence returned. Cillian stepped into the room. He did not need a torch; his eyes cut through the dark with the clarity of a star.

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"Come down," he murmured.

Willow didn't move. She stayed pressed against the rafters.

"I know you are there," he added. He walked beneath her, his head tilted back.

She dropped. She landed in a crouch, her hand on the hilt of the small blade she had fashioned from a piece of scrap metal. She stood, her chest heaving.

Cillian stood ten feet away. He leaned against the pedestal, his arms crossed.

"Stealing secrets, little bird?"

He looked amused. He didn't look angry.

"I was lost," she lied. Her voice remained steady.

He laughed. He crossed the distance between them. He stopped so close she could feel the cold radiating from him.

"Lost," he repeated.

"In my vault, behind a heavy iron grate?"

He reached out. He caught her wrist. He pushed the sleeve of her tunic up, revealing the charcoal-stained tips of her fingers.

"The ledger is secure," he said, his voice dropping to a low, intimate frequency. "But you came for the names."

He didn't pull her toward the guards. He didn't call for Julian. He studied her face, his gaze searching for the lie.

"You were about to kill them," he realized. His eyes darkened. "I saw you move in the rafters. You were ready to jump."

He stepped closer, invading her space until she had to look up to meet his eyes.

"You didn't need my help," he whispered.

The realization sat between them. She was a weapon, and he was finally seeing the edge.

He didn't draw a blade. He didn't sound the alarm. He reached out and brushed a lock of hair away from her damp forehead.

"You are so much more than a servant," he murmured.

He turned his back to her. He walked toward the door, leaving it open.

"If I find you here again," he said over his shoulder, "I will not be so forgiving."

He exited into the hallway. He didn't lock the door behind him.

Willow stood alone in the vault. She looked at the pedestal. She had the names. She had the truth.

She ran for the vent. She pulled herself into the narrow shaft, the metal biting into her palms. She crawled until the vault was a memory.

She reached her room, her clothes torn and covered in dust. She collapsed onto her cot.

She touched her wrist. She felt the ghost of his grip.

He had let her go. Why?

He wants to see how far I go, she thought. He wants to see what I do with the information.

She pulled the charcoal from her pocket. She began to write the names on the underside of her mattress.

One by one, the targets appeared.

She was a ghost in his house. She was a thief in his vault.

But as the night wore on, she realized the truth.

He wasn't keeping her as a slave. He was keeping her as a test.

She lay back, the cold of the room seeping into her skin. She had the intel. She had the plan.

The game was no longer a secret. It was a race.

And she intended to win.

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