Aria
The forest stills the moment I reach the clearing. I followed the map that appeared on the back of the invitation carefully, but there is nothing here. No archway, no castle, nothing. Just an empty clearing with decayed trees.
I stomp my foot on the ground, mumbling a curse under my breath. Suddenly, the air begins to hum around me. Music, too low for human ears, fills the space, echoing in my head. Mist curls between the trees, glowing like silver, and when it parts, I see it. The heart of the veil. An arc of light that ripples like water. It is both beautiful and wrong, and most definitely calling my name.
I pause a few feet away, my pulse pounding in my chest. The invitation's words repeat in my mind: Survive the Game. Win what your heart desires most.
I don't know what that means exactly. I only know the bond still burns faintly beneath my skin, and I can't live with it anymore. I can't be reminded of what Riven promised and then stole away. If what is through that veil promises a way to end it, then I'll walk straight into the unknown.
A breeze slides past me, carrying the faint scent of ash and wildflowers. The edge of the veil shimmers, showing flashes of something beyond. Images of stone corridors, torchlights flickering, and distant voices. Violet presses forward inside me, curious to see what lies beyond this shimmering light.
"Here goes nothing," I whisper, and step through.
The world folds. Light rushes over me, making it impossible to see. It feels like falling and floating at once. The hum becomes a heartbeat. For an instant, I'm nowhere, weightless, a breath suspended between two worlds. Then my feet hit solid ground.
The air changes instantly. It is warm and sticky. Thick with old magic. I open my eyes.
A courtyard spreads before me, vast and dangerous under a strange sky where stars drift too close to the ground and clouds move backward. Black-stone pillars rise in circles around a fountain that spills silver water. Beyond them looms a castle, ancient, elegant, and alive. Its walls pulse faintly, veins of light running through the stone as though it breathes.
Twelve of us stand scattered across the flagstones. Twelve strangers, bound by whatever madness brought us here. I keep to the outer edge, taking them in.
A woman with silver hair kneels by the fountain, tracing symbols in the water. A witch, by the smell of sage and iron. Two human mercenaries size each other up, hands twitching toward hidden blades. One male and one female, neither looks intimidated to be among supernatural creatures. A vampire stands near the shadows, beautiful and bored, eyes glinting crimson. Four werewolves, two young males already posturing, one older male with scars along his jaw, and a younger female who watches everything but says nothing. A fae woman lounges against a column, smirk sharp enough to cut glass. A siren shifter hums under her breath, the sound sliding into my bones. A healer clutches a satchel of herbs to his chest like it's armor.
And then there's him.
Leaning lazily against a pillar, arms crossed, smile careless. He doesn't look nervous, or awed, or afraid, just amused. Golden eyes, messy hair, the kind of face that belongs in sunlight instead of whatever this place is. I feel his gaze sweep over the group and stick to me for a fraction of a second too long.
My instincts prickle. I meet his stare for half a heartbeat before looking away. I'm not here to trade looks with charming idiots. I'm here to win.
Still, the awareness lingers. He keeps watching; I can feel it. I tell myself it doesn't matter, but if that is true, why do my eyes keep drifting back to him?
A figure materializes near the fountain, cloaked in shadow. The voice that follows is smooth and cold.
"Welcome, contestants. You stand in the Heart Court, the beginning and end of all things you will face. Twelve entered. Only one may claim the prize."
A ripple of unease passes through the group. No one speaks.
"The rules are simple," the herald continues. "Survive each challenge. At dawn, you will be given your first." The hooded head tilts. "If you die here, your soul belongs to the Game. If you win, your heart's desire is yours."
The vampire laughs softly. "Comforting."
No one else joins him.
The herald's attention sweeps across us, lingering for a beat on me. Violet stirs again. This time, she is uneasy. Then the figure dissolves, leaving only the echo of their words and the soft hiss of the fountain.
Silence.
Someone finally clears their throat. "So... we're just supposed to wait?" One of the humans, the taller mercenary. He glances around like he expects a door to open.
"Looks that way," the fae drawls. "Try not to die of boredom before dawn."
A few nervous chuckles ripple through the group, quickly fading. Everyone's on edge, pretending not to be.
I keep scanning the courtyard. The air hums faintly, responding to movement, like the castle itself is listening. Every surface gleams as though wet with moonlight. It's beautiful, yes, but the beauty here feels like a trap. I can almost sense the hunger beneath it.
The man with the golden eyes shifts, catching my gaze again. He smiles, a slow, lazy curve that says he's harmless, but there's something calculating beneath it. My heart gives an annoying little stutter.
No. Not again. Not here.
I turn away, pretending interest in the fountain's silver water. It smells faintly of roses. My reflection stares back, pale and tired but steady. I look older than I did yesterday, as if stepping through the veil scraped years off my life.
The younger she-wolf drifts closer, her voice quiet. "You all right?"
I nod once. "Fine."
She offers a small smile. "None of us are fine. If we were, we wouldn't be here."
Before I can answer, a bell chimes somewhere inside the castle. It is so deep that it shakes the stones under our feet. A line of torchlight flickers to life along the archway ahead, forming a path into the great hall.
The others start to move, some cautiously, some with bravado. I fall in behind them, keeping my distance. The golden-eyed man lingers near the back, close enough that I can sense his presence but not see his expression. He's silent now, watching everything. It makes the hair on my neck rise.
When I step beneath the archway, the air shifts again, humming with promise. The walls of the castle seem to whisper my name. I pause, hand brushing the stone. It pulses once under my fingertips, like a heartbeat answering mine.
"Don't touch that," someone warns. "It bites."
It's him. The smile in his voice makes it impossible to tell if he's joking. I don't give him the satisfaction of turning around.
"Then maybe it should learn better manners," I say, and walk on.
A low chuckle follows me, warm enough to make the back of my neck flush. I hate that I like the sound.
We emerge into a vast hall lined with mirrors that don't reflect properly. Shadows move in them, not our reflections but something else entirely. The others whisper, uneasy. I keep my eyes forward.
The herald's disembodied voice echoes from nowhere and everywhere. "Rest until dawn. Then the first test begins."
A few contestants scatter to explore, and others huddle together. I find a corner away from them all, drop my pack, and sit with my back against the cold wall. My body aches from travel, but my mind won't still. The castle hums around us, patient, sentient, waiting.
I glance once toward the golden-eyed stranger. He's still by the doorway, looking out at the courtyard we came from. The veil glows faintly beyond him, pulsing like a heartbeat. He turns slightly, as if sensing my gaze.
For an instant, our eyes meet across the hall. There's something in his expression, not flirtation, not mockery. Recognition, maybe pity. Or maybe it's a warning.
I look away first.
Let him stare. Let them all underestimate me. I'm not here to make friends. I'm not here to be anyone's story but my own.
I'm here to win.