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Chapter 3 - CHAPTER 3: THE AWAKENING OF ASH AND LIGHT

POV EMMA BELLE

The sky was no longer the deep, familiar black of a mountain night. It was a bruised, sickly violet, swirling with clouds that looked like clotted blood. The giant crow circling above let out a shriek that felt like a serrated blade scraping against my skull.

"The Council," Vincent hissed, his shadow-like form flickering at the edge of my vision. "They've brought the Soul-Eaters."

Damon didn't hesitate. He swung me into his arms, his muscles bunching with an effortless, terrifying power. "Into the fortress! Now!"

He sprinted across the stone bridge, Félix and Nathaniel flanking us like twin pillars of lethal intent. The wind began to howl, but it wasn't natural; it carried the whispers of a thousand dead wolves. I clung to Damon's neck, my heart hammering a frantic rhythm. The mark on my nape was burning, a white-hot brand that felt like it was trying to melt my spine.

"Damon, wait!" I gasped, clutching his shoulders. "The sky... it's falling."

A bolt of purple lightning struck the bridge just inches behind us, shattering the ancient stone. Damon didn't flinch. He cleared the heavy iron doors of the Black Crag just as they began to groan shut.

Inside, the air was thick with the scent of incense and old magic. The great hall was a cathedral of obsidian, lit by floating embers. Damon set me down, but he didn't let go. His golden eyes were scanning my face, filled with a possessive ferocity that made my blood sing.

"Nathaniel, the wards!" Damon roared.

Nathaniel was already at a stone pedestal in the center of the hall. He bit his palm, letting a drop of silver blood fall onto the ancient runes. "The wards are weakened, Damon. She's the anchor. Her power is leaking, and it's acting like a beacon. If we don't seal her core, they'll tear this mountain apart to get to her."

"Seal her?" Félix—my Lixie—stepped forward, his green eyes flashing with anger. He looked at me, then at Nathaniel. "She's not a jar of honey you can just put a lid on! She's hurting!"

"If we don't, she dies, Félix," Nathaniel countered, his voice like ice. "Her core is expanding too fast. The mountain ash kept her suppressed for twenty years. Now that it's gone, the pressure is going to explode her heart."

I looked at my hands. They were translucent, glowing with a soft, pulsing light that seemed to emanate from my very bones. I felt… infinite. And terrified.

"I can do it," I whispered, though my voice trembled. "I can fight them."

"No," Damon growled, stepping in front of me, his massive back a wall of solid muscle. "You are not a warrior yet, Emma. You are a Queen in the making. Your job is to survive."

Suddenly, the heavy iron doors groaned. Something was hitting them from the outside—something massive. The sound of scratching claws, hundreds of them, filled the hall.

"They're through the outer perimeter," Vincent said, appearing from the shadows of the rafters. He held two obsidian daggers that seemed to drink the light. "The Council Alphas have unleashed the Feral Thralls."

"Félix, take her to the altar," Damon commanded, drawing a double-headed axe that looked heavy enough to crush a boulder. "Nathaniel, stay with them. Vincent and I will hold the door."

Félix didn't argue this time. He grabbed my hand, his palm scorching against mine. "Come on, Little Bird. It's time to see what you're really made of."

He led me toward the back of the hall, where a circular platform made of white marble stood in stark contrast to the black stone. Nathaniel followed, his expression grim. As we climbed the steps, the sounds of battle erupted behind us.

I looked back and saw the doors burst open.

A flood of grey, gaunt creatures—wolves that had been twisted by dark magic into mindless monsters—poured into the hall. Damon met them with a roar that shook the mountainside. He was a whirlwind of destruction, his axe severing limbs and heads in a blur of gold and red. Vincent moved like a ghost among them, his daggers finding throats with surgical precision.

"Focus, Emma!" Nathaniel's voice snapped me back.

He forced me to sit in the center of the altar. The marble was freezing, sending chills through my thin cloak.

"The White Queen is the heart of the four kings," Nathaniel explained, his silver eyes locking onto mine. "We are your guardians, but you are our source. To stabilize your power, you must bond with us. Not just in blood, but in spirit."

"I don't know how!" I cried as another explosion rocked the fortress. A piece of the ceiling crashed down near the altar.

Félix knelt in front of me, taking both of my hands. "Don't think, Emma. Feel. Look at me. Forget the monsters. Forget the Council. Just look at Lixie."

I looked into his forest-green eyes. I saw the dimples in his cheeks, the wild rebellion in his soul, and the unconditional protection he was offering.

"Good," he whispered. "Now, give me your fire."

He leaned in and pressed his forehead against mine.

A jolt of electricity surged through me. It wasn't the cold, calculated power of Nathaniel or the heavy, brutal strength of Damon. It was life. It was the wind in the trees and the heartbeat of the forest. My vision turned green.

Bonding, my wolf whispered.

The pain in my neck began to recede, replaced by a warm, golden glow. I felt Félix's strength pouring into me, and in return, my white light flowed into him.

"It's working," Nathaniel breathed. He knelt on my other side, placing his hand on my shoulder. "Now, let me in. Balance the fire with the steel."

As Nathaniel connected, my mind expanded. I could feel the entire fortress. I could feel Damon's rage at the door, Vincent's cold focus in the shadows, and the overwhelming hunger of the creatures outside.

But then, a new presence entered the hall.

The air turned freezing. The fighting stopped as a figure in crimson robes stepped through the shattered doors. He was tall, skeletal, with eyes that were nothing but empty white sockets.

The High Inquisitor.

"Emma Belle," his voice hissed, echoing through the hall like a thousand snakes. "The Moon's mistake. Your existence is an insult to the hierarchy. Die like the defect you are."

He raised a gnarled staff of bone and pointed it at the altar. A beam of pure, necrotic energy shot toward us.

Damon tried to reach us, but he was pinned by a dozen Thralls. "NO!" he roared.

Félix and Nathaniel braced themselves, trying to shield me with their bodies, but I knew their strength wouldn't be enough against a High Council spell.

In that moment, the fear died.

I stood up on the altar, my hair whipping around my face in an invisible gale. The mountain ash was gone. Caleb was gone. The girl who served soup and took lashes was dead.

"I am no mistake," I screamed.

I didn't just push the energy. I absorbed it.

The necrotic beam hit my chest, but instead of killing me, it turned white. My skin glowed so brightly it blinded everyone in the hall. I felt the tether to my four kings snap into place—Damon, Nathaniel, Félix, and Vincent. Their powers merged within me, creating a harmony of destruction.

I threw my hands forward.

A tidal wave of pure, lunar light erupted from the altar. It swept through the hall, incinerating the Thralls instantly. It hit the Inquisitor, throwing him back through the doors and out into the abyss of the mountain.

The violet sky shattered, returning to its natural starlight.

Silence returned to the Black Crag.

I fell back into Félix's arms, my body smoking, my breath coming in ragged gasps. The white light faded, but the mark on my neck was now a permanent, glowing sigil of a crown.

Damon walked up the steps of the altar, his body covered in black blood, his axe trailing on the floor. He looked at me, his golden eyes filled with something that looked suspiciously like worship.

He knelt at the foot of the altar. Nathaniel and Félix followed. Vincent emerged from the shadows and bowed his head.

"The Queen has awakened," Damon whispered, his voice cracking.

I looked at them—my four kings. I had saved them, but I knew the cost. The Council would send an army now. Caleb would be the least of my worries.

"Get up," I said, my voice sounding older, deeper. "We have a war to win."

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