
The storm broke at midnight, as though the sky itself meant to split the keep in two.
Cael Ashveil Varissen would not remember that night, but it would follow him all the same.
On the tower's high floor, the midwife muttered curses under her breath as she pressed one last time on his mother's belly. Lady Liora Ashveil Varissen's skin had gone pale as parchment hours ago.
"Push," the midwife hissed.
Liora bit down on a strip of linen and refused to scream.
Lightning lit the sky. The stones underfoot shook, and bits of white dust fell from the ceiling. At that exact moment, Cael took his first breath and cried.
The midwife caught him, muttering a prayer under her breath.
He looked so fragile.
Another maid stepped forward with a cloth, but froze when she saw Liora's eyes staring glassy and fixed on the cracked ceiling.
"Too late," one of them whispered.
Too late.
The baby's thin cries filled the room as the midwife cut the cord and swaddled him.
...
Hours later, after the body had been carried away and the boy cleaned, a nursemaid sat with him by the tower window. The storm had passed, but the scent of wet stone still lingered.
"Little lord," she murmured, not unkindly, "you've no mother to feed you now. You're small and frail, it's a miracle you've hung on this long. Luckier still you're a boy... though with your father, I don't know if that's any kindness."
She peeked down at him in her arms, and for the first time he opened his eyes. They were pale and watery gray, undecided on what they wanted to be.
"Don't look at me like that," the woman muttered, though the corner of her mouth twitched.
The door creaked open and Baron Edric Varissen strode in, his black cloak cutting through the candlelight. His face was taut with something unreadable. He barely glanced at his wife's empty bed before his eyes found the child.
"Does it even cry?" he asked.
The nurse straightened, clutching the bundle. "Weakly, my lord. But… alive."
Edric studied the small, swaddled figure in her arms for a long moment, his expression unreadable. Then he drew in a short, sharp breath and said,
"If he's to carry my name, he can't stay like that for long."
...
By morning, the servants whispered about the storm and the birth in equal measure.
Some said lightning struck the chapel roof the moment the boy cried. Others claimed crows had circled the keep for three days beforehand.
One chambermaid swore she saw black veins crawling up Lady Liora's arms as she died, though no one else admitted to it.
By dawn, the body was gone, the blood scrubbed away, and the maids hummed at their work as if nothing had happened.
But the boy was sent to the tower.
...
When Cael was old enough to remember, the tower already felt like a prison.
At five, he sat on a narrow stone bench by the window, watching his half-brother Jorlan training in the yard below.
Jorlan's hair gleamed gold in the sunlight. His sword flashed even brighter.
Steel rang out as Jorlan knocked his sparring partner into the dirt. The squires and men-at-arms around them cheered.
Cael pressed his forehead to the glass, squinting.
"Don't strain your eyes," the nursemaid, Matilde, said as she came in with a tray of bread and milk.
"I want to watch," Cael said.
"You're not made for it."
"Why not?"
Matilde paused, then shook her head. "Because the wind could knock you over and you wouldn't even see it coming, that's why."
Cael scowled at the tray. "My eyes are fine."
"They are not. You trip over your own feet half the time after dark, and you can't even tell me what color your cloak is most days."
He crossed his arms. "Then how can I see him?"
"Because the sun's out and he's hard to miss, little lord. That's all."
Outside, Jorlan finished his bout and thrust his sword in the air, drawing another cheer.
Matilde caught Cael's chin between her fingers and turned his face toward her.
"Stop staring. Eat. Maybe you'll grow enough to stand out there someday. And if you're smart, you won't bother."
...
That evening, Edric came to the tower.
Cael stood when the door opened, as Matilde had taught him.
Edric didn't look at him.
He went straight to the window, clasping his hands behind his back as he stared down at the yard. Jorlan was still sparring by the torchlight.
"You are weak," Edric said at last.
"Yes, Father," Cael answered quietly.
"Look at him," Edric nodded toward the yard. "That is what this house needs. "Not a boy who'd collapse before the first blow even landed."
Cael swallowed, forcing himself to look too.
Jorlan was smiling down at his opponent, sword resting easy in his grip.
Edric finally turned. His gaze settled on Cael as though weighing how much work it would take to make something of him.
"The name Ashveil," he said, slowly, "once meant something. That was before your mother's family squandered it chasing illusions. Don't follow her path."
Cael said nothing.
Edric leaned closer, his voice dropping lower. "Better to die an honest fool than live as a cursed one. Remember that."
Then he left.
...
Afterward, Matilde came and sat beside him on the bench.
"Your mother wasn't a fool," she said softly.
Cael glanced at her.
"She was clever," Matilde went on. "And she knew she might not live to tell you everything herself. So she left you something for when you're older."
"What?"
"A letter and a locket, both tucked away for now."
"Why?"
Matilde hesitated, then she rubbed his shoulder once and stood.
"Because you're not ready," she said.
...
That night, Cael lay awake on his narrow cot, staring at the dark ceiling.
He heard the faint hum of the wind through the cracks in the stone, but beneath it… something else.
A whisper.
It was faint, curling at the edge of his hearing.
He sat up.
The window gleamed faintly in the moonlight.
He padded over and pressed his forehead to the glass.
The whisper sharpened, just for an instant, into words:
"…blood… and gold…"
He stumbled back, his heart hammering.
When he turned, Matilde was standing in the doorway, holding a candle.
"You heard it, didn't you?" she asked solemnly.
Cael swallowed.
"Yes," he said.
Her expression tightened, though her voice stayed calm.
"Then it's started," she murmured.
...
The next morning, Edric summoned him downstairs.
For the first time in his memory, Cael stood in the great hall.
Jorlan waited beside their father, padded jack tight with bracers gleaming.
Edric led them out into the yard.
"Go stand over there. Watch closely," he ordered, not looking at him. "This is how a man earns his place."
The men-at-arms formed a rough circle.
Jorlan raised his blade and saluted his opponent, a much older squire who charged at him without hesitation.
Cael squinted, trying to follow the movements.
At first, the clang of steel was all he could hear, but then faintly the whisper came again.
Not from the air this time, but from the yard itself.
When Jorlan's blade swung wide, Cael saw... just for an instant... faint threads of light trailing from the sword's edge to the ground.
No one else reacted.
The threads vanished as quickly as they'd appeared.
But Cael's breath was caught in his throat.
He could still hear the whispers.
When the bout ended and the circle of men erupted in cheers, Edric turned to him.
"You see now?"
Cael forced himself to nod.
"Yes, Father."
Edric's expression hardened, yet he kept his eyes locked on him.
"Then stop clinging to walls and watching like a ghost," he said,his voice carrying just enough for everyone to hear. "If you mean to carry this name, start acting like it belongs to you."
Jorlan grinned at him.
Cael held his gaze until Jorlan finally looked away.
...
That night, back in the tower, Cael stood again at the window.
The whispers were faint but steady now, murmuring about blood and gold.
When he closed his eyes, he saw the faint threads in the yard below, glimmering where Jorlan had stood.
And for the first time, he wondered what else he might see if he dared to keep looking.

Latest Chapter
Chapter 19: First Steps and Tournament Stakes
The pouch in his sleeve weighed more than the coin inside. It felt more like acknowledgement, a sort of test, and a warning all in one.Don't disgrace yourself in the tournament.His father's voice was still clear in his head.In the Southern Duchy, tournaments were no idle sport. Every two years, the Duke of Leth hosted the Tournament of Rethmar — part spectacle, part proving ground. To the crowd it was entertainment, but to the noble houses it was reputation, money, and power decided in the open.Victors earned prestige, favors, and sometimes direct offers from wealthier houses. Defeat brought mockery, and repeated defeat carved deep wounds in a house's reputation.For House Varissen, once spoken of for its fighting strength, the tournament was more than a spectacle, it was a chance to prove they were still dangerous.The last time they had competed, they'd been eliminated on the first day. A second embarrassment would brand them as weak beyond recovery, while a strong showing could
Chapter 18: Lessons at the Hearth
Cael hesitated outside the door. The faint smell of smoke drifted under the wood, mingling with something else — wine, most probably. From within came faint scratching of a quill and the soft rustle of parchment. He straightened his sleeve and then knocked."Enter," Edric called, his voice low and unhurried.The desk was covered in neatly stacked ledgers, ink pots, and seals. Behind it, his father glanced up briefly before returning to the page in front of him."So," he murmured, almost to himself, "the old man finally got you worked up enough to come knocking." Edric's tone was mild, almost bemused.Cael blinked at that. He stepped inside and let the door latch click shut behind him. He hadn't expected his father to sound… almost amused. He swallowed the first reply that came to mind."I thought it was time I spoke with you," Cael said.Edric's eyes flicked up again, eyes narrowing slightly. Not angry but more like sizing him up. His mouth curved faintly, and he leaned back in his ch
Chapter 17: The Weight of the Yard
The morning was clear but cold, the kind of cold that seeped through even a padded jacket and lingered in the joints.Cael stood just inside the archway of the training yard for a long moment before stepping out, breathing in the damp air and the faint smell of dust and sweat.The yard was already alive. Squires striking at posts. Guards crossing blades. Servants carrying buckets to and fro between the barracks and the well.He folded his hands behind his back and took his usual place near the fence. Nobody noticed him which worked better according to his ideas.Her words still lingered.Your bloodline is cursed. It clings to things best left buried... Magic, isn't it?He exhaled slowly, watching two guards sparring in the sand. The word magic burned in his mind.Coming to think of it, what did she see? What did he see?The Veil shimmered faintly at the edge of his sight, threads stretching like spiderwebs across the yard, impossible to shut out completely.He blinked and they dimmed.
Chapter 16: The Heir and the Thorn
The Varissen banners hung limp in the courtyard, their colors dulled by dust and too many summers.Cael stood to one side of the gathered household, hands clasped behind his back, watching the gate.They'd spent the morning polishing the flagstones and brushing down the horses outside. Inside, the maids had cleaned the sconces and scattered fresh straw on the floor. But nothing could hide how worn the place looked, especially today.A hush settled as the gates opened and the Drevane banners moved into view, vivid against the weathered walls.Three carriages, lacquered deep and edged in brass, rolled forward in perfect sequence. Behind them rode six guards in matching cloaks, their horses well-groomed with tack glinting in the late sun.The first carriage stopped. A rider swung down, barked an order and as if rehearsed, the servants rushed forward to open doors and lower steps.The woman who emerged first didn't rush.Her gown was a muted gold that caught light in subtle flashes as she
Chapter 15: The Business of Wheat
The scent of parchment and ink always clung to the scribe's tower.Cael was beginning to like it.He climbed the narrow stair two at a time, the quiet murmur of voices drifting down toward him. Just short of the landing, he stopped, pressing his palm on the wall to listen.Two men. Not the scribes, their voices were rougher and sounded like merchants."…told you the crop would fail," one said, sharp with irritation. "Frost came too early and the rain too late. They say it's worse in Dorvale, whole fields blackened before harvest.""And?" the second replied, calmer. "That's why we raise the price. Supply dwindles, price rises. Common sense."Cael narrowed his eyes."Common sense?" the first scoffed. "You say that now, but the merchants' guild is already sniffing around. Two of their men were in Alne last week, promising cheap foreign grain. If they manage to undercut us once, we're finished."The second man exhaled through his nose before speaking. "If they do bring in foreign grain, w
Chapter 14: The Starlet’s Spark
Frost still clung to the stones when Cael woke before dawn.His body ached, not the raw ache of overuse but something more dull and satisfying. He dressed quietly, pulling his heavier tunic over his head and lacing his boots.The Veil still hovered at the edge of his mind, as it had every night since showing him the shimmer in the yard. No longer just a curiosity, it was part of him now. But this morning, he didn't go to the yard.Instead, he cut through the narrow servants' walk, past the kitchens where the scent of baking bread hung thick in the air. His boots scraped faintly against the flagstones as he passed under the arch toward the stables.Jorlan would still be asleep. Good.Better to keep his brother from noticing where he spent these odd morning hours.The stable smelled of hay, dung, and damp leather. Horses shuffled in their stalls, snorting clouds into the cold.And there he was.The boy.Thin, all narrow shoulders and awkward limbs, hair the color of dirty straw. He was
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