Chapter 5

Nowhere else felt quite like this dark room where Christabel stayed seated, legs folded, on the black stone ground. A quiet light flickered within her, low but steady. Even now, echoes of what happened in that shadowed jail ran through her body, her arms and legs humming, worn out. Her pulse hadn't slowed yet, not after feeling William so close, too close, just moments before.

‎Alive she was just enough to count it. His words kept coming back: sometimes a shadow stands beside you instead of against you.

It made no sense to her at first. For so long shadows brought only endings, grip, dread. Still... William shaped them around her like a shield instead of a weapon. The thought angered her more than she expected.

Out of nowhere, heat rose in her throat, sharp and sudden, pushing her forward like before yet not quite. This time, a pull settled deep behind her ribs, quiet but insistent, refusing to be dismissed even though she had no name for it.

‎The heavy door groaned wide. Into the room came William, his cloak making no sound, eyes dark like midnight. Silence hung while he looked at her measuring, thinking. Words stayed locked away.

Fine, you're breathing, he said at last.

Her jaw rose, sharp with challenge. "Right. Because of the flames I made."

A look of surprise crossed his face. "Me too," he said

Warmth rose into her face. Silence held her answer.

‎William motioned toward the center of the chamber. "The council waits. It is time you understand why you are here... beyond survival."

She went anyway, flames curling at her fingers like restless snakes. Not wide but deep, the room stretched round, walled by tall pillars of dark stone glassy, cold, swallowing whatever glow came near. Along the edges, shadows stuck close, shifting just enough to feel seen when she passed.

Near the back wall waited the royal sorcerer, dressed in dark cloth, his gaze sharp with secrets and quiet laughter. Not behind but slightly off to the side, old woven hangings told Eryndor's past: rulers crowned, battles blazing, shadows clashing, then tucked within, scenes unfamiliar to Christabel a young woman wreathed in fire next to a prince veiled in night.

‎"You are the last of the Flameborn," the mage began, voice echoing off the walls. "And your survival is no accident. Nor is it mercy. You are part of a prophecy, one that predates the founding of this kingdom."

Her heart jumped. As a kid, she'd caught bits of talk rumors about Flameborn hiding, wielding strength equal to thrones but none of it ever felt real until now.

‎"A prophecy?" she asked, voice trembling. "I am... I am just a girl. I survived."

‎"Survival is not enough," the mage said sharply. "Your power is linked to both fire and the shadow that hunts you. Together, your flames and his darkness will awaken a force older than the crown itself - a force that can save the kingdom... or destroy it."

Something shifted in Christabel's eyes when they landed on William. Shadows moved like breath near his skin, twisting slow, drawn by her flame as if it were song. Each pulse made the space between them thinner ,brighter, charged with something sharper than air.

‎The mage continued, ignoring her disbelief. "The prophecy names two: one of flame, one of shadow. One will lead, one will follow. One will sacrifice, one will endure. Your destinies are intertwined, whether you wish it or not. Together, you hold the balance of life and death for all of Eryndor."

Her gut clenched tight. Not curiosity now recognition. That hum under her skin, the warmth like sunlight through glass, the sharp edge in the air when he stepped near it wasn't chance. A thread pulled taut since long before they met. Written. Settled. Done.

‎"I..." she started, struggling for words. "You expect me to trust him? The prince who hunts my people?"

‎The mage's eyes softened, just slightly. "Trust is irrelevant. Only the bond matters. Fire and shadow must learn to coexist... or the consequences will be catastrophic."

‎Close now, William broke the silence. The space hummed, dark shapes twisting near her flame. His voice came soft, nearly kind. "He spoke truth," he murmured. Bound we are - not through want, yet need forces it.

Heat rose in her chest, though she fought to keep it under. "Tied to you? You?"

He nodded, words quiet but steady, though colored by a feeling she didn't have a name for hunger, authority, caution all tangled together.

Fires rose inside her, sudden, wild, climbing fast along the bones of her back. Stuttering words broke free "Not this way... it won't..."

‎"You can," he interrupted, shadows tightening slightly around her without harm. "You must. And you will. But not because I say so. Because you are meant for it. Because you are stronger than you know."

Something tightened in her throat when he spoke. Not weaker than she thought. It bothered her how easily he spotted what burned inside how she held back, yet refused to bend.

‎"You are mine to guide," he said, stepping even closer, "but not to command. Not fully. That is the trial ahead. Learning to trust fire and shadow. And... perhaps each other."

Her heart jumped, hotness wrapping around the edge of fright. Run. Fight back. Shove him off. That is what every piece inside shouted. But beneath that something else hummed low, something long tucked down deep through too many hard days. A quiet pull, sharp and risky, began to rise.

‎The mage raised a hand. "Your first trial as part of the prophecy begins at dusk. Fire and shadow will be tested against the ancient force. Only together can you survive. And fail... and all of Eryndor will burn."

Her lungs froze mid-air. What was risky now tipped into ruin.

A brush of fingers. William didn't mean to touch her, would have sworn he hadn't, yet the nearness pulled a response from her flame. Light trembled in the dark room, curling like smoke where his outline met the wall.

The air inside the room grew still. A pause settled where voices had been.

A whisper broke the silence sharp, sudden. The wizard spoke before anyone could blink

‎"Prepare yourselves. Tonight, fate will judge not only your magic... but your hearts."

Spinning thoughts filled Christabel's head. Not just the old words whispered through time, but that deep unseen power too, William was tangled in it all. Their connection tugged like a current beneath still water. Chaos rose, sharp and sweet at once, impossible to outrun or ignore.

Fresh in her mind, a quiet truth settled getting through Ashmoor, walking out of the Shadow Prison, that wasn't the finish line. Instead, it felt more like stepping onto a path she hadn't seen before.

‎Fog rolled in as the first step hit the ground.

Chapter 6

Out past midnight's edge, the sky tried to glow behind those tall dark towers. Cold underfoot, the stones stung as Christabel moved across the open ledge, her shoes too slight against the chill. Rest did not come easy her mind stayed busy, not with dreams gone wrong, but with flames that twisted like smoke beside silent shapes. Even now, her body remembered how close William stood when evening fell.

Out on the stone ledge, he stood motionless just another shadow among shadows. The wind tugged at his coat, sending soft ripples down its edge. Gray light hung low, dull and quiet above the rooftops. Waiting had become part of him by now. Night bled into his form, clinging close without sound.

She questioned if he rested, her words strained, giving away no emotion yet flames danced faintly at her hands, stirred by the weight hanging in the air.

He stood still at first. Only after a pause did William shift to face her. His gaze met hers dark like volcanic glass, hard to read - but a flicker moved behind it. "Things aren't good," he said. She unsettled him, that much slipped out.

Fever spiked under Christabel's skin, sudden. Unwelcome. His voice carried risk sharp enough to cut. Maddening, really. Hatred should come easy; she owned solid grounds but then, her bones hummed a different tune entirely.

Survival drives me, not spectacle, she snapped, grasping back control of her power and presence.

‎"Of course," he said smoothly, stepping closer, shadows rippling around him as if alive. "But surviving and learning are not mutually exclusive. You will need to trust me. Whether you like it or not."

‎Christabel bristled. "Trust you?" she repeated. "After everything after the villages, the hunts, the Shadow Prison? You think I can simply... trust the prince who has hunted my people?"

‎William's gaze softened, fleetingly, a crack in the wall he had built around himself. "You do not need to like me," he said quietly. "You only need to survive. And for that, you need me."

A hot wave rose without warning. His voice carried facts she didn't want to accept. Run, push back, strike hear that inner cry yet fury wasn't her only power. Beneath it hummed something sharp and wild, an invisible force with no label, no leash.

A sudden call pulled them forward. At the courtyard's rim stood a figure cloaked, face hidden, sent by the council, silent as stone.

‎"You leave today," he said, voice sharp, echoing against the obsidian walls. "The ancient force has awakened in the northern mountains. Fire and shadow together must confront it. Alone, you will perish."

Her breath caught cold peaks ahead. Old power sleeping there. Just her now, beside William. The flames inside flickered, restless, waiting.

He touched her back, one gloved hand steady but soft. Not pushing just there, present like a held breath. Heat slipped through fabric, his shape close without pressing. Dark near light, almost humming between them. Her heart jumped. She watched the path ahead, eyes fixed, refusing to look away.

‎"I am not afraid of the ancient force," she said, though the tremor in her voice betrayed her. "I am afraid of... being at your mercy."

‎His eyes darkened. "You are never at my mercy," he said, though his hand lingered, steady, protective. "Not truly. Only... in the ways you refuse to see."

Fighting back rose in Christabel's throat, yet her body stayed still. She almost twisted free, almost shouted no almost believed it too. Stillness won, though words did not.

Fog still hung low when we set out. Dawn had barely touched the trees.

Through thick woods they traveled, darkness wrapping around William as if stitched to his skin. Whenever twigs snagged Christabel's arms, whenever creatures rustled nearby, whenever cold gusts sliced the air her flames sparked without thought. Yet something in his stillness, in the way the dark obeyed him, softened their glow. Never before had her power seemed to move in step with another.

Fear gripped me then.

‎"Do not mistake this," she said, voice tight. "This... connection, this synergy... it does not mean I trust you. Or like you."

A small, sharp grin touched William's mouth. Not even for a second did he pretend otherwise

Frozen minutes stretched into something longer, broken only by brief clashes against odd little beings forest echoes warped by the old power climbing through the ground. Every clash sparked a new surprise as their magic met. Not fire against shadow, instead they curled around one another, shielding, lifting, answering. Light flickered dark, dark lit up light, winding through trees like slow breath. The woods wore that strange shine now, quiet and watching.

It hit Christabel sharp, wild, close. Each brush of their power made her heart jump. His dark form shifting near her flame lit something under her skin. How deeply it stirred her? That bothered her. Him? She resented him... yet not quite.

When evening came, they arrived at the mountain's lower slopes. Cold gusts roared through, murmuring about old strength sleeping beneath the earth.

Something stirred beneath the ruins, restless. It did not forgive trespassers. The old man's voice shook when he spoke of it. Not a machine, but something that felt. Patience wasn't its trait hunger was.

Off the horse William stepped, reaching out his hand without a sound. Hesitant, she grasped it, the air thick with something unspoken. "Beside me you'll stand when the time comes," he told her. Not only flames, your gut, your pulse, they must answer too

‎Christabel narrowed her eyes. "My heart? That is the part you cannot control."

‎He looked at her, unwavering, shadows pooling around his boots. "Perhaps. But it may be the only thing that saves you."

A shape began to rise as they climbed dark smoke curling like a question. It shifted when they faltered, feeding on unease, mirroring silence. Flame leapt from Christabel's hands, sharp and sudden. Meanwhile, William's darkness thickened, holding tight, forming barriers without sound.

It hit me after a pause.

Out of nowhere, a raw force - old and merciless crashed down on the two. Fire burst from Christabel, wild and loud, yet William's dark shapes coiled tight like chains, shaping what they could not stop. Heat met shadow in sharp bursts, exploding outward, hurling them across jagged stone where they landed hard, breath gone.

Out of breath, her eyes met his - just for a second - and enemy lines blurred. Not friends either. More like currents pulled together, hooked by fate, tangled in spellwork, drawn close by a wild pull they both felt but wouldn't name. A moment passed. Then silence.

Her fingers closed around his once more, heat and darkness flickering at the edges. Surviving was never a solo act, not after this. His words came out steady, close to a whisper. Side by side, that's how it stayed

Fire prickled at Christabel's throat, heat tangled tight with something sharper. Not now, she told herself, though the space between them hummed like a live wire. Pulse drumming up her neck, power thrumming low under skin, trust flickered there, thin as breath, edged in risk.

Down farther inside the peaks, an old power kept its gaze fixed. Not because of strength, but because it sensed what they could do. What they lacked came clear to it too. Silence stretched as it waited - not rushing - just ready when their steps slipped.

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