Serena’s POV (as Kael)
The academy klaxon ripped me out of sleep before dawn, a brass note that rattled my bones. I shot upright, heart hammering, and my hand flew beneath the blanket on instinct.
Flat.
A shaky breath slid out of me. The concealment still held—broad shoulders, straight lines, no softness left to betray me. Serena was buried; Kael Draven stood in her place.
I dressed fast—coarse training tunic, boots laced tight with clumsy, trembling fingers. Every muscle throbbed from a night spent sleeping too still, too careful. The cot had been nothing but a battlefield of restraint, every twitch monitored so I wouldn’t roll onto my side and give myself away.
This wasn’t a normal morning. It was the first trial. The one that would decide whether I could stand shoulder to shoulder with boys bred for war—or whether I’d be flung out into disgrace before I’d even begun.
Outside, the world was iron-gray and bristling. Recruits clustered across the yard, laughing too loud, stretching like they weren’t afraid. Their voices cracked against the weight of the storm-charged air. I hugged the chill close; fear tasted like metal on my tongue, but fear kept me sharp.
A scar-laced instructor strode into the arena, towering and silent until the gathered noise died of its own fear. His eyes swept across us like twin blades, pinning each recruit as if memorizing how we’d fall.
“Dravenhold,” he growled, “welcomes you to the Maze of Elements.”
The gates groaned open.
Before us rose a jagged labyrinth of black stone. Arrows sat c****d in hidden slits; thin seams in the floor breathed short tongues of fire. Above, thunderheads churned unnaturally, lightning webbing through their bellies. A fine glitter of frost rimed certain corners of the walls—ice sharp enough to open skin just by looking at it. The whole structure pulsed like it was alive, like it wanted us inside so it could taste our fear.
“You enter one at a time,” the instructor said. “Survive. Reach the center before the hourglass dies. Surrender if you must. Fail too often, and Dravenhold will show you the gate.”
No encouragement. No mercy. Only terms.
Names rang out; boys vanished into the dark. Some reappeared pale and bloodied, hauled aside by seniors. Others couldn’t stand, their pride scattered across the stone like dropped coins. The maze swallowed a few whole until hidden doors spit them onto stretchers. The silence that followed each collapse was worse than the screams.
“Kael Draven.”
My turn.
I walked in on legs that didn’t feel like mine. The ground seemed to tilt beneath my boots.
Rain slammed me as soon as I crossed the threshold—sheets of water driven by a wind that cut like knives. My tunic clung instantly to my skin, heavy, dragging me down. A hiss; I threw myself flat as a volley of arrows tore overhead, their tips spitting fire. Heat grazed my ear. I rolled, scrambled, ran, breath a ragged drumbeat in my ears.
The corridor narrowed and burst into a forest of ice. Shards speared from the walls, edges so fine they sang when the wind touched them. I wove through, boots slipping. The cold bit deeper than the storm outside. A sliver kissed the back of my hand—blood welled bright, and pain flared, hot and immediate.
Hold. Don’t let the spell slip.
The illusion quivered, and for one terrible second I swore I felt my own skin beneath Kael’s borrowed shape. I forced myself forward, each heartbeat a hammer threatening to break glass.
A thundercrack split the air. Lightning hit close enough to blind me and shake the stones underfoot. My ears rang, vision spotty. I staggered into a left turn, straight into a gout of flame roaring up through a grate. My sleeve smoked; I yanked my arm back, skin singing with heat.
Breathe. Move.
Another corridor; more arrow slits. I counted—hiss, pause, hiss. I sprinted during the break. I was almost clear when one flaming shaft came late, slicing across my side. Fire ripped through muscle. I folded forward, teeth bared, a cry strangled in my throat.
The disguise shuddered. For a heartbeat, my shoulders narrowed, my chest softened—Serena flashed through Kael like a ghost behind glass.
No. Not here.
I forced the magic tight again, knuckles white, breath saw-sawing between my teeth. The effort was acid in my veins. Spots swam. I lurched, caught a wall, pushed off—one step, another—
My knees buckled.
An arm hooked under my ribs before I hit the floor, iron-strong and sure. The scent of soap and cedar cut through smoke and rain.
“On your feet,” a low voice said.
I blinked up into storm-gray eyes.
Darius Blackthorn.
He pulled me upright with maddening ease, half-dragging, half-steering me as another flare of arrows hissed past. We hit the next corner; he shoved me behind him, took the brunt of a wind blast with his shoulders squared, then thrust me forward again.
“Move,” he ordered, not looking back.
Somewhere behind us, a boy screamed as the maze claimed him. My legs wanted to fold, but pride shoved me onward. Not because of the trial. Because of him.
We burst into the maze’s inner court a heartbeat before the hourglass emptied. The final bell tolled, deep and merciless. I collapsed to my knees, clutching my side, vision narrowing to a tunnel of gray.
“Stretcher!” someone barked.
The world tilted. Darkness slid in.
⸻
I woke to white lamps and the steady hum of healing. A medic stood over me, hands glowing cool along the torn arc of my side.
“You were lucky,” she said without preamble. “Another inch and you’d be decorating the maze floor.”
I tried to sit; pain jaunted up my ribs. “Did I—?”
“You made center,” she said, pressing me gently back. “Barely.”
Barely. The word stung worse than the wound.
A shadow separated from the window. Darius. Arms folded. Expression unreadable, carved from stone.
“You run like you have something to prove,” he said, voice as even as ever.
“I don’t need commentary,” I muttered, heat crawling up my neck.
One brow lifted. “You needed rescuing.”
The retort jammed in my throat. I bit the inside of my cheek hard enough to taste metal. The spell fluttered under the pain, a thin tremor along my skin. I clenched my jaw, willed it still. Don’t you dare.
The medic finished, binding my side with brisk efficiency. “Rest. No training for the remainder of the day,” she ordered, eyes narrowing when she caught my restless fidgeting.
Darius pushed off the wall. For a heartbeat his gaze lingered—sharp, assessing, like he could peel back layers if he cared to. “Try not to make yourself my problem tomorrow,” he said, and was gone.
The door clicked shut. Only then did I let myself exhale shakily, ribs burning. I eased to the edge of the cot and caught my reflection in the wall mirror—just a flicker, but enough to make my stomach drop. My face had softened for the span of a blink. The illusion snapped back, but sweat needled my spine.
Injury weakened the weave.
If it failed at the wrong moment… if anyone saw…
I lay back and stared at the ceiling until the lamps blurred. The Maze of Elements had tested more than strength or speed.
I had survived it.
But keeping my secret through the next trial might be harder.