
The desert wind howled like a wounded god. Sand bit into his skin, caked in blood and sweat, and the taste of iron sat heavy on his tongue. Karan Dor’rak knelt in the slavers’ pit, bound in chains that clinked with each labored breath.
He could still feel the sting of the knife that had shorn his braid,the braid that marked him as a warrior of the Dortracy, son of the Storm Clan. To lose it was worse than death. It was erasure.
Above him, the sky burned copper and red. The sun sank behind the endless plains, the same plains he had once ridden free upon with the white stallion he’d tamed as a boy. Now he knelt in filth, the smell of fear and men around him thick as smoke.
“Look at the savage,” one of the guards sneered, a pale man from the coast, his armor too polished for this land. “Still glaring like he’ll eat us alive.”
Karan raised his head slowly. His amber eyes caught the fading light—cold, feral, unbroken.
“Untie me,” he said in the tongue of the lowlands, voice like gravel and thunder. “And I will.”
The guard laughed and stepped closer, pressing the flat of his curved blade under Karan’s chin. “You’re a pretty one for a beast. Maybe I’ll keep your eyes as trophies.”
Karan’s lips barely moved. “Try.”
The guard didn’t see the chain slacken. Didn’t notice the subtle twist of Karan’s wrists—trained, brutal, patient.
A heartbeat later, steel flashed. The guard’s laughter turned to a strangled gasp as the chain wrapped around his neck. Karan pulled once—hard—and the man crumpled.
Blood sprayed across Karan’s chest. Warm. Real. The pit erupted in shouts, but he was already on his feet, moving like the storm itself.
He caught the dead man’s sword midair, turned, and slit another slaver’s throat in one clean motion. The curved blade—a shakar, forged in the style of his people—fit perfectly in his hand.
It had been months since he’d felt its weight, yet his body remembered the dance of killing.
The pit became chaos. Slaves cried out, chains rattled, guards cursed. Karan leapt onto the wooden ramp leading up from the pit, blood splattering beneath his bare feet.
A crossbow bolt hissed past his shoulder, grazing skin. Pain sang through him like an old song. He grinneda flash of teeth.
“Kor’ath vekh,” he growled in Dortrac, the old battle cry.
(Blood for the wind.)
He ducked, rolled, and plunged his blade into the gut of the crossbowman. Then he was through the gate, through the smoke and heat, into the open night.
The plains stretched endless and dark before him. The wind carried the smell of grass and ash, and somewhere far off, thunder grumbled.
He paused on a rise, chest heaving, blood dripping from the blade. The world was vast again—and he was small only in body, not in will.
He looked east, toward the horizon where the moon rose pale and thin. Somewhere beyond those ridges lay the camp of his brother, Raikor—the man who had betrayed him before the eyes of their father, who had cut his braid and sold him to slavers in exchange for the Storm Crown.
Karan pressed the blade to his palm and whispered a vow.
“By the wind that rides, by the blood that binds, by the stallion that never kneels—Raikor, I will come for you.”
The night answered with silence. Then the wind shifted—and he heard hooves.
He turned sharply. Shadows moved along the ridgeline. Not soldiers. Riders. Their banners flickered in torchlight, horses restless beneath them. Dortracy. His people.
He ducked low, heart hammering. Had they come for the slaves, or for him?
The riders descended, circling the pit below. Karan counted at least twenty. He recognized the tattoo patterns on their arms—Storm Clan markings.
But not the man who led them.
This one rode a black stallion, his hair braided in gold, his jaw tattooed with the mark of command. He wore the talon cloak of a chieftain. When he spoke, his voice rolled deep across the plain.
“Bring the escaped one alive,” he said. “Raikor wants his brother’s head clean, not torn.”
So his brother knew he’d survived. Good.
Karan waited until they were within reach, crouched behind the rocks. The moon lit their blades. The first rider came close—too close—and in that instant, Karan moved.
The shakar curved through the air, slicing the man’s throat in silence. The horse reared, screaming, and Karan vaulted onto its back, kicking hard.
The beast obeyed instinct before thought—it ran.
Through grass and smoke and wind, Karan rode bareback into the dark, arrows whistling past him. He did not look back.
He could feel the horse’s muscles burn beneath him, could smell its fear and sweat. It wasn’t his stallion, but it was freedom.
The horizon opened like a wound before him, and the stars above burned like the eyes of old gods.
He thought of his father’s face, of his mother’s tears as the braid fell, of Raikor’s smirk.
A thousand memories roared behind his ribs.
He lifted his blade to the wind, whispering again in the old tongue
“Kor’ath vekh. Vash dor’rak.”
(Blood for the wind. Storm shall rise.)
Behind him, torches scattered in pursuit.
Ahead, only the whisper of destiny.
He didn’t stop riding until dawn.
When the first light spilled over the horizon, painting the plains gold, he dismounted and stood atop a dune, breathing in the silence.
The horse trembled, sides slick with foam. Karan placed a hand on its neck, murmuring the binding words he had not spoken since his exile.
“Kor’veth shalor, mekah dor’rak.”
(Ride with me, and be bound.)
The horse’s eyes met his. A shiver passed between them. The wind stirred, carrying the faint echo of hooves the song of the plains.
He had no clan now. No name. No gods left who would claim him.
But he had his blade. His oath. And the endless blood plains before him.
A storm was coming. And Karan Dor’rak would be its heart.
Latest Chapter
Chapter Forty-Three: The Salt Magistrate
“Do not let the horses taste that wind,” Vael said.A door hung in the air ahead of them, a perfect bar of pale light set upright on the salt. It did not gleam. It absorbed. Heat slid toward it and went quiet. Sound pressed close to the ground. Every grain of the desert seemed to wait for permission.Lyra shifted Aren higher against her side and felt the faint hum of the Ember Crown through cloak and leather. The ring’s small coal breathed like a steady child. Kael rode behind her knee, one hand on the mare’s mane, the other resting on the edge of her saddle, counting the beats of hooves as if they were notes he could name.Karan eased forward until Kor’Vareth’s shoulder was even with the door’s shadow. The stallion’s coins clicked once, then stilled. Salt air lifted and dried the sweat at Karan’s temples, leaving a thin crust that stung. The light-bar widened until it matched a city gate. The desert in its frame did not move.Rael’s column took the right. Serah drifted left with two
Chapter Forty-Two: The Closing Gate
“Hold him,” Lyra said.The softened pane stiffened, cold biting the gums. The winter lion reeled from the crack’s blow, claws carving frost. The gate began to knit. Beyond it the litter juddered on light-ropes, half in the mirror’s world, half in the ash camp where brass and geometry posed like weather. The child blinked into borrowed brightness.Karan set his hands beneath Lyra’s elbows without taking the lamp, steadying her bones. The Ember Crown stayed itself—a refusal given shape. In the ring a coal glowed like a saved breath. Vael held a low horn-note. The wedge kept hunger behind bit and knee. Serah watched the seam where snow fell straight.Kor’Vareth stamped; coins stilled. The lion held, frost unraveling from the round wound.“Make the invitation louder,” the smith said.Lyra lifted the lamp so the gap faced child and sky. She formed the word her mouth knew without lips: come. The plate turned a breath toward lion, then boy, a compass testing two norths. The ember clarified.
Chapter Forty-One: The Measuring Hand
“Touch him and I burn,” Lyra said.The crack above the basin bent like a finger and reached down through the cold, a straight line of angled light that was not weather. It wanted to write Kael’s name without asking. At the lion gate, the mirror brightened. White silk stirred. Ash banners rose. The litter slid forward, ropes taut, geometry humming.Karan stepped ahead without lifting his hands. He kept them open and low, the way Vael had taught him to handle a stallion that remembered wounds. Lightning gathered in his breath but did not show.“Stay small,” he said. “Breathe with your mother.”Kael leaned into Lyra. She felt his heartbeat through her cloak. His head tilted, listening under the noise. The ropes on the far side were singing to him, promising weight to carry so others could rest.Vael raised her horn and did not blow. She watched riders, not sky, found the places fear might borrow their hands, nodded once. The herd moved as one. Hooves placed softly. Spears lowered to thig
Chapter Forty: The Ember Crown
“Walk when it opens,” Vael said.The glass did not shatter. It softened and parted, a winter curtain drawn by an invisible hand. Cold air rolled through the gap and laid a clean taste on every tongue. A frost-white lion stepped forward, quiet, the horn on its brow shining as if it had stored a season under skin. Coins in Kor’Vareth’s braids chimed once, then fell still. The riders lowered their spears to knee height and waited for the stallion to move.Kor’Vareth went first. He tested the edge with a forehoof and placed weight without hurry. The world held. Karan followed on the smoke stallion, then Lyra with Kael in her arms, then Serah and Vael and the Dortracy line behind them. They crossed their own reflections into air that smelled of pine and stone.Beyond the gate lay a narrow basin roofed by iron sky. The glass ribs ended at a shelf of dark ground scattered with white grass. A thin stream ran with the sound of wire brushed by careful fingers. The winter lion stood on a low ris
Chapter Thirty-Nine – The Lion Reforged
“What’s on the lake?” Serah asked.“Not ash,” Vael said. “Not riders.”The black glass field shivered as if a fingertip tested its skin. Far out, something pale slid beneath the crust, a shadow traveling under a mirror. The forge breathed slow.Karan did not reach for lightning. He stood in the doorway with his hands open, letting the desert pass through him. Lyra lifted her mantle so the open circlet rested where any archer could see it. Kael leaned at her hip, listening to a song only he could hear.“It swims,” he whispered. “Not in water. In words.”The smith wiped her palm on leather and watched the lake. “If it favors glass, it favors reflection. It will try to turn you back into yourselves.”“Then we don’t look,” Serah said.“You look,” the smith replied. “And you don’t blink.”Three billets lay on oiled cloth, dark as river stones. Oathsteel was still a promise.Outside, Kor’Vareth stepped onto the nearest ribs and put weight down carefully. Coins in his braid clicked as hair b
Chapter Thirty-Nine – The Lion Reforged
“What’s on the lake?” Serah asked.“Not ash,” Vael said. “Not riders.”The black glass field shivered as if a fingertip tested its skin. Far out, something pale slid beneath the crust, a shadow traveling under a mirror. The forge breathed slow.Karan did not reach for lightning. He stood in the doorway with his hands open, letting the desert pass through him. Lyra lifted her mantle so the open circlet rested where any archer could see it. Kael leaned at her hip, listening to a song only he could hear.“It swims,” he whispered. “Not in water. In words.”The smith wiped her palm on leather and watched the lake. “If it favors glass, it favors reflection. It will try to turn you back into yourselves.”“Then we don’t look,” Serah said.“You look,” the smith replied. “And you don’t blink.”Three billets lay on oiled cloth, dark as river stones. Oathsteel was still a promise.Outside, Kor’Vareth stepped onto the nearest ribs and put weight down carefully. Coins in his braid clicked as hair b