Current location: Novel nest Thorns and Bone: A Kiss of Embers Chapter 8

"Thorns and Bone: A Kiss of Embers" Chapter 8

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Chapter 8: The Weaponized Gaze

The armory lay deep beneath the palace, a cavern of dormant violence. Rows of iron racks stretched into the gloom, bearing the weight of centuries.

Here, the air tasted of cold oil and old, dried blood. Willow walked behind Cillian, her footsteps muffled by the thick layer of dust coating the stone floor. She kept her hands clasped, a picture of perfect, hollow obedience.

Cillian stopped before a rack forged from black basalt. He ran a long, pale finger across the edge of a curved saber.

"The Guild crafted these during the Great Purge," he said, his voice echoing against the vaulted ceiling.

"They were meant to carve the darkness out of the world. They were meant to carve it out of me."

He plucked a dagger from the rack and tossed it toward her. Willow caught it by the hilt without thinking.

The blade was perfectly balanced, the steel etched with ancient runes designed to burn vampire skin on contact. Her fingers closed around the familiar texture of the leather wrap. Her muscles remembered the weight.

"Practice," Cillian commanded, his back to her.

He didn't draw a weapon. He stood there, a static target, his shoulders broad and exposed. He was baiting her.

Willow stared at the dagger. Every instinct honed by the Guild screamed at her to act. Strike the neck. Sever the spine. End the threat. She felt the familiar, cold precision of the hunter rising within her, the way the world seemed to slow, marking every weak point on Cillian’s stationary frame.

"You hesitate," Cillian said. He still didn't turn.

"A hunter who hesitates is simply a corpse in waiting."

"I am a servant, my Lord," Willow replied. Her voice sounded thin, even to her own ears. "I do not know how to wield such things."

"Liar."

He spun, faster than a thought. Before Willow could process the movement, he had crossed the distance. His hand shot out, capturing her wrist. He didn't tighten his grip, but he held her firm, forcing the blade’s point toward his own throat.

"You look at me and you see a target," he whispered, his eyes locking onto hers. The gray depths were swirling with a dark, hungry light.

"You map the vulnerabilities. You count the heartbeats. You wait for the exact moment the light hits my eyes just right."

He pressed the dagger closer. The cold metal grazed his skin, leaving a thin, silver line where his flesh should have bled—but didn't.

"Do it," he urged. "Prove that the girl I killed at Ironspire is truly gone. Strike."

Willow looked at his throat. She looked at the pulse of magic beneath his skin. If she drove the blade home, the runes would activate. It would be a slaughter.

She stared into his face. There was no arrogance there, only an agonizing, desperate curiosity. He wanted to feel the bite of the steel. He wanted to know if she was capable of the betrayal.

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"I cannot," she said, letting the dagger slide from her fingers.

Cillian caught it before it hit the floor. He stood there, the blade held loosely in his own grip, staring at her with a look of profound disappointment.

"You are more disciplined than I gave you credit for."

"I serve you," she said, dropping to her knees. She kept her head low, hiding the fire that burned behind her eyes.

"You serve the secret, not the master," he countered.

He walked around her, his heavy boots making no sound on the floor. He stopped behind her, leaning down until his lips brushed her ear. The scent of ozone was overwhelming.

"Do you know what these blades taste like to me?" he asked.

He took her hand again, pressing her fingers against the edge of another blade on the rack. The metal was biting, sharp.

"They taste like the fear of my own kind," he murmured.

"They taste like the end of all things. And when you hold them, you taste like the same."

He stood her up, his hands firmly on her shoulders, guiding her toward the rack. He made her touch each weapon, forcing her to confront the memories tethered to the steel.

The serrated edges, the heavy pommels, the balance of a killer's tools—they were the vocabulary of her past, and he was forcing her to read them aloud.

"Each one has a trigger point," Cillian explained, his voice a low, instructional drone.

"A flick of the wrist. A shift in the center of gravity. You know them, don't you? You know exactly how to use them to cause the most pain."

He wasn't just checking her skills. He was cataloging her reactions. He was recording the way her breath hitched when she touched a heavy broadsword, the way her eyes traced the trajectory of a throwing knife.

He was measuring the distance between the girl she was and the weapon she had become.

"Why are you doing this?" she finally asked.

"To see if you are worth the trouble," he said, turning her to face him.

He pinned her against the stone rack. The metal bit into her back, cold and unyielding.

"You are the only thing in this palace that does not fear me," he said. He reached up, tucking a loose strand of hair behind her ear. His touch was clinical, yet possessive.

"And that makes you the most dangerous thing here."

He leaned in, his face mere inches from her own.

"I am not testing your loyalty, Willow. I am testing your capacity for hate."

"And if I hate you?" she asked.

He smiled, a dark, fleeting expression that did not touch his eyes.

"Then I shall have something to look forward to every morning."

He pulled back, the air suddenly rushing back into the room. He sheathed the dagger at his belt.

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"Go back to your quarters," he said, his tone shifting back to the distant, regal indifference of a Sovereign.

"We are finished here."

Willow didn't wait. She turned and walked toward the exit, her hands trembling uncontrollably. As she reached the door, she looked back.

Cillian was still standing in the gloom, surrounded by the rows of killing iron. He looked like the king of a graveyard, a man who had survived a thousand deaths and was waiting for the final one to come from the hand of the person he had brought into his house.

She reached the hallway and leaned against the wall, sliding down to the cold floor. She gripped her arms, trying to stop the shaking. She had survived the armory. She had played the part.

But as she sat there in the dark, she realized something that sent a chill deeper than the castle’s stone.

He wasn't just training her. He was sharpening her.

He was grooming his own executioner.

And the terrifying part was, she realized with a start, he knew it. He knew exactly what he was doing, and he was inviting her to do it.

She stood up, forcing her legs to carry her toward the upper levels. She needed to be quiet. She needed to be careful.

He was watching her, and every time she looked back, she saw the same thing.

The predator wasn't the one with the teeth. The predator was the one who survived the hunt.

She walked into the shadows, the silence of the palace pressing in on her. She had endured the tour, the memory, and the gaze. She had kept her secrets.

For now.

She reached her room, the iron collar clicking against the doorframe. She collapsed onto the bed, staring at the ceiling.

The images of the armory haunted the darkness—the steel, the cold, the way his eyes looked when he realized she was more than she seemed.

She was here. She was inside the lion’s den.

And as the cold of the castle seeped into her bones, she realized she wouldn't have to wait long for the end.

He was already drawing her in. He was already forcing her to feel the weight of his legacy.

She would be ready.

She would be the last thing he ever touched.

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