Kael shivered beneath his tattered cloak as the wind howled through the crumbling ruins of Emberfall. The cold had worsened over the past few weeks, creeping into the bones of the city like a sickness. Fires that once blazed bright in the great pyres were now nothing more than fading embers, struggling against the eternal winter that had swallowed the land.
He pulled his hood lower, trying to ignore the sharp gazes of the market-goers as he passed. They knew what he was, even if they dared not speak it aloud. A Flamebearer. The last of his kind. The cursed bloodline that had once wielded fire like an extension of their will—but now, his gift was seen as a death sentence.
Kael hadn’t used his fire in weeks. Not since the night the King’s men came for him.
His fingers itched at the memory. That night, he had barely escaped with his life, slipping through the sewers as the guards set his home ablaze. The irony wasn’t lost on him—the last Flamebearer fleeing from fire, the very thing that once made his people powerful.
But he wasn’t safe. Not yet.
A distant horn echoed across the rooftops, and Kael stiffened. The King’s Enforcers. They were still searching for him.
He ducked into a narrow alley, pressing his back against the damp stone wall. His breath came in short, uneven gasps. He had to move—had to get out of Emberfall before they found him.
Then he felt it.
A faint warmth against his chest.
Kael hesitated before reaching into his tunic, his fingers closing around the object hidden there. A small, golden shard—no larger than a coin, yet warm as a living thing. His father’s last gift. The map that would lead him to the Heart of the World.
Before he could think further, footsteps thundered nearby.
“The boy was seen heading this way!” a gruff voice shouted.
Kael’s grip tightened around the shard. He had no choice now.
He had to run.
Or he had to fight.
And for the first time in weeks, he let the fire inside him stir.