The storm raged through the night, but Lyra didn't move from the temple's center.
Her mark still glowed faintly - the Eye of the Moon pulsing to a rhythm that wasn't her heartbeat. It beat with his.
She'd spent lifetimes trying to forget the sound.
Now it throbbed through her veins like a curse reborn.
The flames of the candles had long since died, yet moonlight flooded the ruin as though drawn to her. Every stone shimmered with a thin film of silver light, whispering fragments of a language she'd once known - the tongue of gods.
"Why now?" she murmured. "Why let me remember this time?"
The silence didn't answer. But the mark flared again, and with it came a vision - not her own, but his.
A battlefield of broken stars.
Eryndor standing over her fallen body.
Her blood glowing silver as he whispered, "Forgive me, Huntress."
Lyra gasped and fell to her knees. The memory faded, leaving behind the same ache that haunted her every death.
"Forgive you?" she whispered. "I remember what you did, Hunter."
But even as the words left her mouth, another part of her whispered that it wasn't that simple.
She pushed herself up and stepped toward the entrance, her boots splashing through shallow pools of rain. Beyond the temple, the mountains stretched into shadows. Somewhere in the distance, she could still feel him - the faint thread of energy that always connected them.
She hated that connection.
She needed that connection.
A sudden shift in the air made her freeze. The moonlight dimmed.
Something was coming.
The next moment, the temple door exploded inward - shards of stone scattering as a creature lunged through. Its body was smoke and bone, eyes burning with divine fire. A Moon Wraith. One of the Goddess's assassins.
Lyra barely had time to raise her hand. The mark on her palm blazed white-hot, and a wave of energy burst from her fingertips, slicing through the creature's chest. It shrieked - a sound that cracked the air - before disintegrating into mist.
Lyra stumbled back, panting. "They've already found me."
A voice answered from behind the broken pillars. "And yet you're still alive."
Eryndor stepped out of the shadows again, calm as if he'd been waiting for her to prove herself. His cloak whipped in the wind, eyes glowing faintly gold.
Lyra straightened, anger lacing her tone. "Following me already? Or did your Goddess send you to finish what her pet couldn't?"
"She doesn't know I'm here."
"Liar."
He stopped a few feet away, close enough for her to feel the heat of his power. "If I were lying," he said quietly, "you'd already be dead."
Her pulse quickened despite herself. "Then what do you want?"
Eryndor looked past her, to the smoldering ashes of the wraith. "That thing was sent to test your strength. The Goddess wants to know how much of your power you've recovered."
Lyra's lips curved into a bitter smile. "And what did she learn?"
"That you're not weak anymore," he said, meeting her eyes. "Which means she'll send worse next time."
Something flickered between them - something heavy, electric. Lyra wanted to turn away, to erase the strange awareness crawling beneath her skin, but his gaze pinned her like gravity itself.
"You shouldn't have saved me," she said. "You should have finished it when you had the chance."
"I tried."
The words were quiet - but they carried centuries of guilt.
Lyra frowned. "What do you mean, you tried?"
He stepped closer, his voice low. "Do you remember the night I killed you?"
Every muscle in her body tensed. "I remember the blade."
"Do you remember what happened before that?"
Lyra opened her mouth, then hesitated. The memory was fractured - like shattered glass in her mind. The fire. The moon breaking apart. The sound of a god's laughter.
He saw her confusion and sighed. "You weren't supposed to die that night. The Goddess tricked us both. I was meant to kill the darkness inside you, not you."
Lyra's heart twisted. "And you believed her?"
"I was her Hunter," he said simply. "Obedience was all I knew."
The pain in his voice almost made her falter. Almost.
"And now?" she asked.
"Now," he said, "I don't know what I am anymore."
For the first time, she saw something unguarded in his eyes - the same loneliness that had haunted her across lifetimes.
The silence stretched. Rain drummed softly on stone.
Lyra took a slow step back. "Whatever pity you think you deserve, you won't find it here. You killed me a hundred times over."
"I know." His voice cracked just slightly. "That's why I can't kill you again."
She froze.
He turned toward the open night. "The Moon will send her High Priest soon. He'll burn this mountain if he has to. You need to move before dawn."
Lyra clenched her fists. "And you?"
"I'll distract them."
"Why would you risk that for me?"
He didn't look back. "Because I remember too."
Before she could reply, he vanished - dissolving into shadows that scattered with the wind.
Lyra stood alone again, breath trembling, heart burning with a dozen emotions she didn't want to name.
She looked down at her mark. It pulsed once - twice - then steadied, as if echoing the rhythm of another heartbeat somewhere far away.
"Eryndor Vale," she whispered to the empty night. "You may have remembered me... but this time, I'm not yours to hunt."
The temple walls trembled, the wind howling through the cracks like laughter. Far above, the moon flickered - and for a moment, Lyra could swear she saw it blink.
By dawn, the storm had died - but the world smelled of smoke and magic.
Lyra stood at the edge of the mountains, her cloak whipping in the early wind, and looked down at the valley below.
A city shimmered in the mist - vast, ancient, and alive. Spires carved from moonstone stretched toward the sky, their tips catching the first light. Bridges made of crystal arched over silver rivers that cut through the heart of the city.
The City of Silver Blood.
A place where gods once walked - and where their children still ruled.
It was the last place Lyra wanted to go. But it was the only place she could hide.
She pulled her hood lower and started down the winding path, boots crunching against frost. With every step, she could feel eyes on her - whispers of the Moon's presence curling through the air.
"She's awake again."
"The Huntress returns."
"Will he find her first, or will we?"
Lyra gritted her teeth and ignored them. She had no intention of being found - not by gods, not by monsters, and certainly not by him.
Yet even as she thought it, she felt it - the faint hum at the back of her mind. The thread between her soul and Eryndor's. It pulsed every few minutes, like a heartbeat echoing from a great distance.
She hated that she could feel him.
She hated that part of her wanted to.
By the time she reached the city gates, the sun had climbed high enough to turn the world gold. The guards barely looked up as she passed - just another traveler with a hood and tired eyes.
Inside, the city was chaos disguised as beauty. Merchants shouted over each other in the crowded markets, hawking glittering fruits and bottled dreams. Silver-armored patrols moved through the streets like predators. Everywhere, the Moon's sigil - the same eye etched into her palm - glowed from banners and walls.
Lyra tugged her gloves higher to hide her mark. The last thing she needed was divine attention.
She found an inn on the edge of the old district - a crumbling tower that smelled faintly of dust and lavender. The innkeeper, a plump woman with kind eyes, didn't ask questions. She handed Lyra a room key and a bowl of something that might've been soup.
Lyra ate without tasting it. Her mind wouldn't stop replaying the night before - the moment Eryndor's fingers brushed hers, the flash of memory, the look in his eyes.
He said he remembered.
He said he tried not to kill her.
Could that be true?
No. She couldn't afford to believe him. Not now.
Still... something about the way he'd said her name - like it hurt him - made her heart ache in ways she didn't understand.
That night, Lyra dreamt.
She stood in a forest of silver trees beneath a bleeding moon. The air shimmered with magic.
Someone was calling her name.
"Lyra."
She turned - and saw him again. Eryndor stood at the edge of the clearing, his blade dripping moonlight.
"Stay away," she said.
But he didn't move closer. His voice was quiet, heavy with sorrow. "You shouldn't have remembered me."
"I didn't ask to."
"I know. But the moment you did, the Goddess felt it. Every reborn memory weakens her seal. That's why she's hunting you."
Lyra frowned. "Seal?"
Eryndor stepped into the moonlight. His armor was cracked and stained with silver veins. "Your death was never meant to be final. You were supposed to stay asleep - because the thing inside you isn't human."
Her pulse spiked. "What are you talking about?"
He hesitated, then whispered, "You're the last piece of her power, Lyra. The Goddess trapped part of her divine soul inside you when you defied her. If you awaken it fully... you could destroy her."
The air trembled. The trees began to burn with cold blue fire.
Lyra took a step back. "You're lying."
"Am I?" His voice broke. "Why do you think she made me your killer? To keep you from remembering what you are."
The world shattered like glass.
Lyra woke up gasping, drenched in sweat. The mark on her palm glowed through her glove, pulsing violently as if alive.
Her door creaked open.
Eryndor stood in the doorway - not a dream this time. Real. Solid. His presence filled the room like a storm.
"How-" she began.
"You called me." His eyes flickered to her hand. "The mark does that when you're afraid."
"I wasn't-"
He arched a brow. "Lying doesn't suit you, Huntress."
She glared. "Don't call me that."
He crossed the room slowly, his movements smooth, controlled. "Then what should I call you?"
"Gone," she said, shoving past him.
He caught her wrist - gently, but firmly enough that she stopped. The warmth of his hand burned through the thin leather of her glove.
"Listen to me," he said, voice low. "You can't stay here. The Goddess's soldiers are already in the city. They're hunting for anyone with your signature."
Lyra yanked free. "Then let them come."
"You can't fight them all."
"Maybe not. But I can kill enough to make them remember me."
Eryndor's jaw tightened. "That's not bravery, Lyra. That's suicide."
"And what would you call what you're doing?" she shot back. "Running from a goddess who owns you?"
For a heartbeat, they stood there, fire and shadow colliding.
Then Eryndor said quietly, "You think I haven't tried to kill her?"
Lyra froze. "What?"
He looked away, eyes dark. "She bound me to the Moon when I was mortal. Every time you died, she made me remember - every scream, every wound. She wanted me to suffer until I broke."
Something inside Lyra cracked.
For centuries, she'd thought he was the monster. The blade. The curse.
But maybe he'd been a prisoner too.
The silence between them grew heavier, thick with things neither of them dared say.
Finally, Lyra whispered, "What do we do now?"
Eryndor's gaze met hers - gold burning into silver. "We run. Together."
Lyra's breath caught. "Together?"
He nodded once. "The only way to break this is to find the Moon's heart before she does. And I can't get there without you."
Her chest ached. She wanted to say no - to tell him she didn't trust him, that she'd rather die than follow him again.
But she didn't.
Because deep down, she knew the truth: she needed him just as much as he needed her.
Lyra exhaled slowly. "Fine. But if you betray me again, I'll make sure you remember it next time you die."
Eryndor's lips curved into the faintest, most tragic smile. "Fair enough."
He turned toward the window. "We leave at moonrise."
As he stepped into the shadows, Lyra whispered, almost to herself, "This time, it won't end the same way."
He paused, his voice soft but certain.
"It never does."
The moon rose like a blade over the horizon - sharp, red, and heavy with prophecy.
Lyra stood on the rooftop of the inn, her cloak snapping in the cold wind, and tried to quiet the storm inside her chest.
Every instinct screamed run. But another voice whispered stay.
She looked down at the city below - streets glowing with moonlight, patrols sweeping through the alleys, the hum of divine energy thick in the air. The Goddess's reach was spreading faster than she'd imagined.
They'd found her scent.
"Leaving without me already?"
The voice slid through the darkness like velvet.
Eryndor stepped out from the shadows beside her, his presence a mix of calm and quiet danger. The moonlight caught in his silver hair, turning him into something half divine, half broken.
"I thought you were good at following," she said without looking at him.
"I am. You're just bad at hiding."
Lyra rolled her eyes. "Is this how you plan to protect me? With sarcasm?"
He smiled faintly. "It worked for centuries."
For a heartbeat, their eyes met - and the world seemed to tilt. The bond between them thrummed again, a pulse of energy that neither could ignore.
Lyra looked away first. "What's the plan?"
Eryndor's tone turned serious. "The Goddess's soldiers will sweep the lower districts by midnight. We need to leave the city before they seal the gates."
"Where do we go?"
He hesitated. "North. To the Vale of Echoes. There's an ancient shrine there - older than the Moon herself. It might hold a way to sever the bond between us."
Lyra's lips tightened. "You want to break the bond?"
"Yes."
She hadn't expected that. For a reason she didn't want to name, the thought hurt more than it should have.
"So, once it's broken... what happens to me?" she asked quietly.
Eryndor's jaw flexed. "If the legends are right... you'll be free."
"And you?"
He didn't answer. His silence was enough.
They left the city under the cover of midnight.
The streets were eerily silent, silver mist curling along the cobblestones. Lyra moved quickly, keeping to the alleys, while Eryndor's presence flickered like shadow - there one moment, gone the next.
They slipped past the gates just as the Moon Guard arrived - their armor gleaming with holy light.
Lyra's heart pounded. "Too close."
Eryndor smirked. "You forget who you're running with."
"I'd rather not be reminded."
Despite her words, she couldn't deny it - the way he moved, the way he watched over her, it all felt maddeningly familiar.
And every time their hands brushed, even by accident, the mark on her palm burned brighter.
By dawn, they'd reached the outskirts of the forest. The Vale of Echoes lay ahead - a vast stretch of trees that glowed faintly in the dark, their leaves whispering with trapped voices.
Lyra shivered. "This place feels wrong."
"It is," Eryndor said. "The dead speak here. Memories don't fade - they linger."
She glanced at him. "Like us."
His expression didn't change, but something flickered in his eyes - recognition, maybe regret.
They walked in silence until they reached a clearing surrounded by black stones carved with ancient runes. In the center stood a pool of still water, reflecting the blood-red moon above.
Lyra stepped closer. "What is this?"
"The Shrine of Binding," Eryndor said. "This is where the Moon first chained the souls of mortals. If we perform the pact here, the bond between us can be rewritten."
"Rewritten?" she repeated. "You mean broken."
He looked at her then - really looked - and for the first time, she saw hesitation in his eyes.
"Yes," he said softly. "But it requires a sacrifice."
Lyra's stomach tightened. "Whose?"
He didn't answer. Instead, he reached into his cloak and drew a dagger - its blade silver, its hilt inscribed with her mark.
Lyra tensed. "Eryndor-"
He shook his head. "Not like before. I won't harm you."
"Then what-"
He sliced his palm and let a drop of his blood fall into the pool. The water hissed, glowing with light.
"The pact requires both our blood," he said. "Bound under the Blood Moon."
Lyra hesitated. Every instinct told her this was a trap - and yet, something deeper told her to trust him.
Slowly, she drew her own blade and nicked her hand. Her blood shimmered silver as it touched the water.
The pool erupted in light.
Voices rose from the stones - whispers, cries, laughter, pain. The forest seemed to breathe around them.
Eryndor's voice was steady. "Repeat after me: I offer my blood to break the chains of eternity."
Lyra swallowed. "I offer my blood to break the chains of eternity."
"And bind my fate to truth, not memory."
She hesitated - but said it anyway. "And bind my fate to truth, not memory."
The water turned red, reflecting both their faces - intertwined in the same light.
A shock ran through Lyra's body, and suddenly she saw - flashes of past lives, hundreds of them.
A queen.
A warrior.
A witch.
And always, always him.
Sometimes her killer.
Sometimes her savior.
Always the same eyes.
Lyra gasped, staggering backward. "What... what did you do?"
Eryndor's voice was tight. "The bond reacted. It's showing you what we were - all the versions of us that existed."
She pressed a trembling hand to her chest. "There were so many..."
"And every time, I failed you," he said, his tone raw. "Every lifetime, I tried to save you - and every time, I killed you instead."
Lyra met his gaze, tears stinging her eyes. "Then why keep coming back?"
"Because," he whispered, "the bond never broke. Even death couldn't erase you."
For a long moment, neither spoke. The wind carried the sound of distant thunder. The moon hung low, watching.
Then the light around the pool began to fade - but not completely. Instead, it wrapped around their joined hands like molten silk, sealing something unseen.
Lyra looked down, panic flickering. "What's happening?"
Eryndor's breath hitched. "The shrine didn't break the bond. It... reforged it."
"What do you mean?"
He stepped closer, voice low. "It means, Huntress, that from this moment on - our lives are one. If one of us dies... so does the other."
Lyra's eyes widened. "You've tied us together?"
"I didn't plan it."
Her heart pounded. "You're lying!"
"I'm not."
The mark on her palm flared - and this time, his glowed too. Two halves of the same light.
The realization hit her like a blade. "You've doomed us both."
Eryndor's voice dropped to a whisper. "Maybe that's the only way the Moon can't use us anymore."
For a moment, there was nothing but silence - then the trees shuddered, and a roar split the night.
From the darkness, shapes emerged - armored figures with eyes of light. Moon soldiers.
Lyra drew her sword. "You brought them here?"
"No." Eryndor's expression darkened. "They followed the blood."
"Then let's finish this."
They stood side by side as the first wave descended - divine steel flashing under the red moon. Lyra moved like fire, her blade singing through the air, while Eryndor fought beside her with brutal precision.
Every time she faltered, he was there.
Every time he fell, she caught him.
And with each blow, their bond grew stronger - pulsing like a heartbeat shared between two souls.
When the last soldier fell, the clearing was silent again. The pool's water had turned completely crimson.
Lyra dropped to one knee, exhausted, her hand pressed to her glowing mark. "What happens now?"
Eryndor looked at the blood-soaked shrine, then at her. "Now, we run again. But this time, we don't run from the Moon..." He paused, eyes burning gold. "...we run toward her."
Lyra met his gaze - defiant, fierce, alive. "Then let's make her bleed."
The wind howled through the forest as the Blood Moon burned brighter above them - sealing a new fate written not in prophecy, but in rebellion.