
The sound of steel biting into their bones was the only warning I got.
It started with a wet, heavy thud, then a scream was cut short by a frantic, desperate gurgle of blood.
My heart clenched with fear and terror, but I did not look up from the desk. I was three pages into the final sequence of my father’s notes, my quill shaking as I copied the last symbols. I had spent three years making myself a ghost in these vaults, and ghosts do not look at murders.
I had spent three years being perfectly, deliberately invisible because invisible men do not end up on the Order's destroyed assets list the way my father did.
His father had also worked these same vaults. Same stone corridors, same guttering torches, same deathly silence. Then one morning when I was nine years old my father simply was not there anymore. The Order's record gave him four words: destroyed asset, cause unspecified.
They gave me his position two weeks later and told me to be grateful. I was grateful for almost a year, then I started reading things I was not supposed to read. Not because I was brave, because I was a boy who grew up into a man who could not stop asking one question: what did my father find in these vaults that was worth erasing him for?
But the silence that followed the initial violence was completely wrong and terrifying. It was heavy, like the air right before a thunderstorm breaks. Then came the heavy stomp of boots on the stone floor. They were using my corridor as a shortcut to bypass the upper surveillance!
I scrambled into the narrow gap between the stone shelf and the damp foundation wall. I made myself as small as possible, pressing my back against the rock and breathing through my mouth so the awful tang of spilled blood wouldn’t make me gag.
I counted the breaths. One. Two...Three.
I heard a body hit the floor hard and a groan of agony followed instantly. The wet slap of it echoed in the high ceiling of the vault. I knew that sound, I heard it in my nightmares. I closed my eyes and stared at the dark, praying to a god I didn't believe in that they would just walk past.
But...they didn't.
A hand with thick, grey scales shot out of no where and clamped around my throat. The grip was like a vice, cold and unyielding until my entire body turned cold with fear. The creature yanked me out of my hiding spot, my feet dangling inches off the ground.
He had the sharp, serrated teeth of a low-tier shifter and eyes that glowed with a sick, yellow light. He raised his blade with a cruel smile and tried to tear through my neck to finish the job, but, he never finished it.
A cold wave rose from deep beneath my ribs. It didn't belong to me. It felt ancient, like the permafrost that sits at the bottom of the world. It surged out of my chest in a sudden, violent motion that stripped the heat right out of the air. It passed through the hand on my throat, and the shifter dropped like he’d been struck by a lightning bolt.
The wave kept going until it hit Prince Drek, who was mid-transformation into his hybrid wolf near the altar.
The Prince was a covered in fur and muscle, halfway to his beast-form. He should have shredded the room and torn me apart, instead, he just stopped. I gasped in shock, unable to believe what I had just done.
Drek hit the stone floor in his human skin, his clothes shredded, his lungs heaving. He clawed at the air, his eyes wide, terrified, reaching for a power that was no longer there.
The last attacker took one look at the shivering Prince and the silent, standing archivist, and he immediately dropped his weapon and fled.
I landed hard on my knees as something drained out of me. The stone floor was slick with blood, but where I knelt, it was quickly turning to white frost. My hands were shaking violently. I looked at them, but they didn't feel like mine. That cold was still inside me eagerly, waiting to be used again. It was the most terrifying thing I had ever felt.
Then, the main doors burst open.
A squad of Order knights flooded the corridor, their spears leveled, but they stopped dead suddenly.
The Commander at the front of the line froze. He saw the bodies of the guards, he saw the broken Prince on the floor, and then he saw me. He looked absolutely clueless, unsure of what to do. There was no procedure for a human who could hollow out a shifter.
My heart hammered against my ribs. I looked past the Commander’s shoulder. Three feet away, sitting in plain sight on the vault desk, was my journal. The cipher was open and the pages were still exposed.
If they stepped toward that desk, they would see the proof of my father’s life. They would see the secrets I had spent eight months stealing. They would kill me for the crime of being a Null, and they would burn the only record of the man who died to protect me.
The Commander took a slow, heavy step forward, his eyes locked on the frost at my feet.
I tightened my hands into fists. I was not a brave man, I was just an archivist, but I was four pages from the truth, and I was done being a ghost.
"Don't," I said.
My voice didn't sound like mine, but more like the ice.
The Commander hesitated for a split second, then he tilted his head, his hand hovering over his sword. He didn't know what I was, but for the first time in my life, he looked at me like he was afraid to find out.
He moved his gaze from the floor up to my face. His eyes narrowed, trying to piece together the scene. A human in the vault, a dead guard, a powerful hybrid prince who looked like a shell-shocked child, and a frost that defied the laws of the heat-choked city above.
"Step away from the desk," the Commander commanded, his voice tight.
I didn't move and my fingers twitched. I could feel the cold waiting in my bones, a coiled spring ready to erupt. I didn't know if I could kill them or if I could even stop them, but I knew that if they reached that desk, my life ended anyway.
"I said move," he growled, and he drew his blade.
I looked at the Commander, and for the first time in my life, I didn't look down at my feet. I held his gaze firmly and as the cold began to bleed out of me again, I knew one thing: if they wanted a war, they had found one.
I took a single step toward the desk and the Commander lunged forward.
In that moment, I gave into the cold and just allowed it to reach out of my body.
Latest Chapter
CHAPTER 10
Running was no longer an option, it was merely a delay of the inevitable. Hiding was a death sentence. Waiting for the lower ward to tear itself apart would only hand Callum the outcome he had been manufacturing for decades. The only move left was forward, and it had to be so decisive that it forced the reality of the situation to rewrite itself.I spent the final night in the sanctuary, alone with the archive. The texts I hadn't yet deciphered were not history; they were blueprints. They were technical, brutal, and precise. I spent four hours cross-referencing three disparate, crumbling sections of parchment to parse the deeper registers of the Null ability. The pulse I had been using—the one that stripped away the beast-forms—was nothing more than the first, most basic expression of my bloodline. It was a surface-level flicker, a parlor trick meant for the easily impressed.The deeper register was something else entirely. It didn't strip the beast-form; it reached into the biologic
CHAPTER 9
The image traveled faster than horses. By the following dawn, it had reached the three nearest towns, carried by travelers who described the scrying glass's truth to people who, in turn, told everyone they met. By the third day, hand-drawn copies of the feast hall scene were circulating in markets two weeks' ride from the capital. The story grew in the telling—not in exaggeration, but in clarity. It burned down to a single, essential fact: The Order’s elite had been rendered ordinary by one man, and they had been powerless to stop him.The lower ward woke up changed. It wasn't freedom yet, and it certainly wasn't safe, but the fundamental architecture of our lives had shifted. For three generations, the belief that hybrid dominance was natural and permanent had been the load-bearing wall of every human existence in this realm. I had cracked it in public. That psychological fracture moved through the population faster than any army.By midday, three Order enforcement posts were surrou
CHAPTER 8
The smile told me everything I needed to know in the time it took to draw one breath. Callum Vane was not surprised because he knew we were coming before we even stepped into the maintenance passage. The feast floor had been seeded with elite guards—men chosen for this specific moment, not for event security.Someone inside Sera’s network had sold us out. I filed that betrayal away for later. Later was only possible if I survived the next four minutes.The guards in the Great Hall shifted. It wasn't the clumsy, partial transformation of the lower ward. This was the Order's finest—monsters built for stone, speed, and lethal precision. They filled the hall with a wall of muscle, bone, and killing intent.Drek didn't wait for permission. He ripped a heavy iron torch bracket off the wall, the stone tearing with a crunch, and waded into the fray. He fought with the furious economy of a man who had stopped caring about his dignity and started caring about his survival. He swung the iron wit
CHAPTER 7
The Grand Hall of the Syndicate Stronghold was a suffocating layer cake of gluttony. Thousands of candles burned the air thin, and the smell of roasted meat mixed with the musk of a thousand hidden predators. I moved through the crowd in a servant’s grey tunic, keeping my chin down and my pace even. I was a background detail, a shadow in a room built on ego. Invisible men do not get noticed at a feast…invisible men survive.Drek walked a few paces ahead. He played the part of the entitled royal perfectly, his chin held high, his movements fluid with the practiced arrogance of a predator who has never known a leash. But his eyes were a different story. They were scanning for the target. We weren't here for the wine or the politics but for the Blood Seal. Without it, even with his shift restored, Drek was still a political ghost. He needed the seal to claim his seat, to claim his house, and to hold the leverage required to tear the Syndicate down from the inside.The first hour was fo
CHAPTER 6
I met Sera Maddox in a holding cell beneath the district docks two years ago. I was just an archivist then, hiding in plain sight, and she was the woman who had burned down a warehouse to keep her people from being shipped to the labs. She hadn't broken me out because she liked me; she did it because she realized I was the only person in the ward who could read the nonsense runes she’d salvaged from the site. Since then, we had been a grim partnership, her iron and intelligence, my knowledge of the Order’s inner workings.She didn’t waste time on explanations now. She descended on us like a storm, hauling Drek and me through the layers of the lower ward with a speed that left no room for questions. We rushed through three safe houses in two hours and I trusted her silence more than a thousand vows. She was a woman who understood that in this city, words were often just a different kind of trap."In," she commanded, shoving the heavy iron door of the final sanctuary open. "Drek, watch
CHAPTER 5
Three days in the lower ward stripped Drek of every assumption he carried down from the upper city, and it did so without mercy. Without the predatory scent of his beast-form, the ward didn’t move around him. Shopkeepers didn’t drop their price and gate wardens didn't simply step aside for him to pass. He was just a tall, pale man in silks that were too fine for the grit and grime of the lower levels. The ward read that as either a mark or a fool and treated him accordingly.But I taught him not out of kindness, but because it was a practical necessity. A companion who stood out was a neon sign pointing directly to our location. I taught Drek how to walk in the lower ward. Shoulders in, eyes aware but not searching. Pace that says you belong here and have somewhere to be, not pace that says you’re passing through.Drek learned faster than I had expected. He complained less than I expected also. On the second night, beneath the flicker of a broken streetlamp, Drek leaned against a cru
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