"Thorns and Bone: A Kiss of Embers" Chapter 37
Chapter 37: The Cost of Forever
The valley below the Northern ridge was painted in the soft, bruised colors of twilight—deep indigos, violet shadows, and the fading, golden ember of a sun that refused to linger.
Willow stood on the precipice, her hands shoved deep into the pockets of her travel-worn cloak, watching the world stretch out before them. It was a vast, terrifying, and beautiful expanse.
For the first time in her life, the horizon didn't represent a mission or a boundary. It represented time.
Footsteps crunched on the frost-dusted pine needles behind her. She didn't need to turn to know it was Cillian.
The weight of his presence was no longer the heavy, suffocating pressure of a shadow, but the steady, rhythmic warmth of a man.
He stopped beside her, his hand finding the small of her back—a touch that was possessive, yes, but gentle. Gone were the iron-clad gloves and the lethal, supernatural chill. He wore a simple wool tunic, his skin bearing the faint, pinkish flush of the mountain air.
"The village is three leagues east," he said, his voice a low, steady hum that no longer vibrated with the unnatural power of the throne.
"They have a smithy, a mill, and a hearth that never goes cold."
Willow leaned into him, resting her head against his shoulder. She could hear his heart—it was a sound that had once been a rhythmic, hollow beat, but now it was frantic, fragile, and utterly, profoundly human.
"We are going to be ordinary," she whispered.
"We are going to be mortal," Cillian corrected, his gaze fixed on the darkening woods.
It was a strange, haunting thought. They had spent a millennium—or at least, he had—defying the inevitable.
He had fought against the decay of time, the cruelty of the cycle, and the crushing weight of the crown, only to trade it all for a handful of decades.
"Do you regret it?" Willow asked, looking up at him.
He was watching her, his eyes soft, the grey irises flecked with the reflected light of the dying sun. The lines around his eyes were new, tiny creases that spoke of the long, arduous journey they had taken from the ruins.
"I regret that we have so little time," he said, his voice raw.
"I regret that I will spend the next forty years—if we are lucky—trying to make up for the thousand years I spent in the dark."
He reached up, his fingers gently brushing the side of her face. His skin was warm, his touch devoid of the predatory, possessive edge that had once defined their dynamic.
"But I do not regret the cost," he added, his voice a whisper against her skin. "I would trade a thousand eternities for a single afternoon of watching you breathe in the sunlight."
Willow turned, wrapping her arms around his waist, pulling him flush against her. He felt thinner than he had in the palace, less solid, but he felt here. He was not a ghost. He was not a shadow. He was a man who grew cold in the winter and tired in the evening.
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"Forty years," Willow murmured, a ghost of a smile touching her lips.
"That is an eternity, in its own way."
"It is a blink of an eye," he countered.
He leaned down, his forehead pressing firmly against hers. The contact was a grounding, necessary anchor. It was a promise that they were tethered not by blood or by curse, but by the simple, terrifying, and beautiful choice to share the remainder of their lives.
"We have to leave the palace behind," Willow said, her gaze drifting back to the silhouette of the ruins on the horizon.
"We have to leave the history, the names, and the ghosts."
"They are already gone," Cillian replied. "There is only us."
He reached into his pocket and pulled out a small, iron-bound compass—a simple, mechanical thing he had salvaged from the palace’s stores. He placed it in her hand, his fingers lingering over hers.
"I have spent my life navigating by the stars and the shadow," he said. "I have no idea how to navigate by a map. I have no idea how to build a life that doesn't involve a throne."
"We will learn," Willow said. "We will make mistakes. We will be hungry, we will be cold, and one day, we will be old."
Cillian let out a long, quiet laugh—a sound that was entirely foreign, a sudden, bright note in the stillness of the woods.
"I have never been old," he mused. "I suspect I shall be terrible at it."
"I will make sure you are," Willow promised.
The sun finally dipped below the horizon, the stars emerging in the darkening sky—a vast, uncaring, and beautiful tapestry.
The cold of the night began to settle in, but Willow didn't pull away. She stood there, holding the man who had been her tyrant, her enemy, her anchor, and her soul.
He was mortal now. He was fragile. He was terrified.
And as she felt the steady, frantic thrum of his heart against her chest, she realized the truth—that was the price. The vulnerability, the fear, and the inevitable, crushing weight of the end.
They were going to leave the palace behind. They were going to walk into the village, and they were going to pretend to be a carpenter and a seamstress, or a traveler and a scout, or whatever they needed to be to survive the quiet.
They were going to grow old, and they were going to see their hair turn grey, and one day, one of them would have to bury the other.
It was the most terrifying thing she had ever considered.
And yet, it was the only thing she wanted.
"Let's go," Willow said, her voice steady.
She turned away from the ridge, her hand still locked in his, her steps falling into sync with his own.
They walked down the mountain path, the shadows of the trees dancing around them, the world waiting for them to arrive.
They had no titles, no legacy, and no power.
They had nothing but the time they had stolen from the void.
And as they descended into the valley, the first lights of the village twinkling in the distance like fallen stars, Willow didn't look back.
The story had ended. The life had finally begun.
And for the first time, she was not afraid of the dark.
She was only excited for the light.
They walked on, the cold of the evening failing to bite, their shadows melding into one as they disappeared into the trees, two people walking into a future that was finally, beautifully, theirs to define.
The forever they had fought for was not the one they had imagined.
It was better.
It was human.
And as the last of the starlight touched the path before them, they didn't stop. They didn't pause.
They kept walking, hand in hand, until the world had swallowed them whole, and the legend of the Sovereign and the Hunter was nothing more than a whisper in the wind.
The cost of forever was death.
But the price of a life was worth every single second.
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