Current location: Novel nest Thorns and Bone: A Kiss of Embers Chapter 12

"Thorns and Bone: A Kiss of Embers" Chapter 12

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Chapter 12: An Unholy Alliance

The aftermath of the vault collapse left the palace in a state of high alert. Guards patrolled the corridors in double shifts, their armor clanking like funeral bells.

Willow sat in Cillian’s private study, the air thick with the scent of ozone and the dying embers in the hearth.

The registry lay on the heavy mahogany desk between them, its pages open to the list of names—the informants, the sycophants, and the architects of the Guild’s shadow influence.

Cillian leaned back in his high-backed chair, a goblet of dark wine swirling in his hand. He looked less like a king and more like a predator examining a fresh kill. He had spent the last hour dissecting the registry, his eyes flickering with a cold, analytical fire.

"Valerius," he murmured, the name sounding like a curse in the quiet room. "The Commander of the Guild is not merely a soldier. He is a broker of souls."

Willow stood on the opposite side of the desk, her posture rigid. The bond between them was a steady, low-frequency hum at the back of her mind, a constant reminder of his presence. She could feel his focus—sharp, narrowing, hungry.

"He doesn't just want order," Willow said, her voice devoid of its servant-like tremor.

"He wants the throne. He wants to consolidate the Guild’s power and replace the current aristocracy with men he can buy."

Cillian looked up, his steel-grey gaze locking onto hers.

"And you, little hunter? You were his favorite student, his most lethal tool. Why betray him now?"

Willow didn't blink. She reached out and placed her palm on the open page of the registry, pointing to a specific, ink-stained entry.

"Because he threw me away. He sent me to the Ironspire knowing I would be captured. He didn't want a soldier. He wanted a distraction."

The psychic bond spiked with Cillian’s sudden, savage recognition. He felt the echo of her betrayal—the sharp, piercing realization that the man she had worshiped had been architecting her extinction.

He rose from his chair, crossing the distance in a blur. He stopped so close that the chill radiating from him dampened the heat of the fire.

"You seek revenge," he whispered, his voice a low, vibrating thrum.

"And you have realized that your vengeance is the only weapon that can cut through his defenses."

"His influence relies on these names," Willow said, her gaze unwavering. "If these informants are neutralized, his leverage disappears. If his leverage disappears, he is just a man with a sword, standing in a room full of people who hate him."

Cillian leaned in, his fingers reaching out to trail slowly through the loose hair at her temple, a gesture that walked the razor's edge between violence and intimacy.

He tucked a stray lock behind her ear, his touch lingering against the sensitive skin of her neck, right over the bite mark.

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"A coup," he mused, his breath brushing her skin.

"You wish to help me dismantle my own political obstacle, all while you carve out your pound of flesh from the Commander."

"It is an alliance of necessity," Willow replied.

Cillian’s hand slid down, his thumb tracing the line of her collarbone. The bond pulsed, his possessiveness washing over her like a freezing wave.

He was evaluating her, measuring her resolve, searching for the crack in the alliance that would lead back to her own hidden agenda.

"Necessity," he repeated, his eyes darkening.

"You are bold, Willow. You walk into the lion’s den and propose we hunt the keeper together."

"I am the only one who knows how he thinks," she countered.

"I am the only one who knows where he hides his failures."

Cillian reached for a second goblet on the sideboard. He poured a deep, crimson draft and handed it to her. His fingers lingered on hers as she took the glass, his grip firm, a silent seal on the bargain.

"To the destruction of Commander Valerius," Cillian said, raising his own glass.

"To the end of his command," Willow responded, her voice steady.

They clinked their glasses. The sound was sharp, final.

Cillian drank, his eyes never leaving hers. He stepped closer, invading her space until she was forced to lean back against the heavy desk. He reached out and caught her chin, forcing her to look up into the vortex of his gaze.

"You realize," he whispered, "that once we begin this, there is no returning to the life you had before. Once you destroy the Guild, you are mine entirely. You will have no home, no allegiance, no shadow to hide in."

Willow felt the truth of his words echoing in the bond. She was making a deal with the darkness to defeat the rot.

She was trading one master for another, one type of confinement for a more intimate, dangerous cage.

"I have no home," she whispered.

Cillian’s expression shifted, a flicker of something raw and unrecognizable crossing his features. He leaned down, his lips brushing the shell of her ear.

"Then you shall have a throne," he murmured.

He didn't wait for a reply. He reached out and hooked his arm behind her waist, pulling her flush against his marble-cold frame. The bond roared to life, a cacophony of his dark ambition and her burning need for retribution.

They stood there for a long time, the registry forgotten on the desk, the fire dying in the grate. They were two broken things finding a jagged, violent purpose in the other’s reach.

"Julian," Cillian called out, his voice not raising above a whisper.

The door opened instantly. Julian stood in the threshold, his face a mask of iron efficiency.

"Prepare the orders," Cillian commanded, his gaze fixed on Willow.

"We begin the culling tonight."

"As you wish, my Lord," Julian said, his eyes flicking to the registry before he bowed and disappeared.

Cillian looked back at Willow. He brushed his knuckles across her cheek, a touch that felt like the stroke of a blade.

"We are allies now," he said. He leaned in, his voice vibrating through the bond. And in this house, allies are the most dangerous things of all.

Willow didn't pull away. She leaned into the touch, her heart matching the cold, empty rhythm of his. She had her alliance. She had her path to Valerius’s throat.

The palace was quiet, but the hunt had entered a new phase.

She turned and walked toward the window, looking out over the sprawling, light-dusted grounds. She saw the guards, the distant flickers of the city, and the dark, tangled woods beyond.

She was ready.

She looked back at Cillian, who watched her with a look of terrifying, triumphant expectation.

She had made her choice.

And as the night deepened, she felt the bond settle into place, a permanent, freezing anchor that tied her to the monster, the king, and the ruin of everything she had once been.

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

And they were the ones who would draw the first blood.

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