TIDE
I wake to pain.
Not the dull ache of betrayal. Not the sharp sting of a blade. But something deeper. Older. Like my bones are singing in a language I’ve forgotten, like my blood is boiling with ancient magic, like the tide itself has turned against me.
The air is thick. Cold. Smells of iron and decay, of old blood and something darker—something *wrong*. My wrists are bound above my head, chained to a slab of black stone that hums with cursed energy. The cuffs bite into my skin, etched with runes that pulse in time with my heartbeat. My legs are free, but weak. My fangs descend on instinct, my rune flaring above my spine, reacting to the magic, to the fear, to the *truth*.
I’m not in the Midnight Court.
I’m not in the vault.
I’m in the Fae High Court.
The chamber is vast—walls of living wood and silver thorns, the ceiling lost in shadow, the floor covered in moss that glows faintly with trapped moonlight. The air shimmers with glamour, with illusion, with something *false*. And at the center of it all?
The Judge.
Not a person. Not a creature. But a *presence*—a shifting form of light and shadow, voice echoing from everywhere and nowhere.
“Tide of the Sea,” it says, voice like wind through dead leaves. “Daughter of the bound. Heir of the broken. You stand before the Fae High Court, accused of violating the ancient pact, of severing the Blood Contract, of threatening the balance of power.”
My breath hitches.
“I didn’t violate anything,” I say, voice raw. “I *ended* it. I freed my bloodline.”
“And in doing so,” the Judge replies, “you weakened the Sovereign. You fractured the alliance. You opened the door to chaos.”
“And what if I did?” I snap, pulling against the chains. “That contract was built on blood. On lies. On *slavery*.”
“It was a pact,” the Judge says. “Sacred. Binding. Enforced by riddle and ordeal. And now, you must face the consequences.”
“Then let me.” I lift my chin. “Let me answer your riddle. Let me face your ordeal. But don’t pretend this is about justice. This is about control. About fear. About keeping us all chained.”
The air stills.
Not a whisper. Not a breath. Not a single sound.
And then—
“Very well,” the Judge says. “Answer the riddle, and you may go free. Fail, and the contract renews. In *his* name.”
My blood runs cold.
“Malrik?”
“No.” The Judge shifts, light bending around it. “In *yours*.”
“What?”
“The contract demands a new anchor. A new heir. And you, Tide of the Sea, are the last of your line. If you fail, the magic will bind you—not as a weapon, not as a pawn—but as the Sovereign. As the *ruler*. And you will spend eternity enforcing the very chains you sought to break.”
My breath stops.
That’s worse than death.
Worse than slavery.
To become the monster I came to destroy.
“The riddle,” the Judge says, voice echoing. “Answer wisely.”
And then—
It speaks.
“I am born of water, yet I drown in fire. I am bound by blood, yet I break the chain. I am the end of one world, and the beginning of another. What am I?”
I freeze.
Not because it’s hard.
But because I *know*.
Because it’s *me*.
“I am the tide,” I say, voice steady. “I rise. I fall. I destroy. I create. I am the force that cannot be tamed. I am the change that cannot be stopped.”
The air hums.
The moss glows brighter.
The Judge shifts, light bending around it.
“Correct,” it says. “But knowing the answer is not enough. You must *prove* it. Face the ordeal. Survive. And you will be free.”
“And if I don’t?”
“Then you will rule. In chains.”
The chains release.
I fall to my knees, gasping, my body trembling. The moss beneath me pulses, reacting to my magic, to my rage, to the *truth*.
And then—
The floor opens.
Not with sound. Not with light. But with *hunger*.
A pit yawns beneath me—dark, endless, filled with shadows that writhe like living things. And from the depths?
Voices.
Whispers.
Laughs.
“Tide,” a voice says—soft, familiar, *broken*. “You left me.”
My breath hitches.
It’s my mother.
Not her body. Not her ghost. But her *memory*—pulled from the deepest part of me, twisted by the magic, used against me.
“I didn’t,” I whisper. “I came to save you.”
“And now you’ve doomed us all,” she says. “You broke the contract. You killed the Sovereign. You let the world burn.”
“No,” I say, standing. “I *freed* you.”
“You abandoned me,” she says. “Just like he did. Just like they all do.”
“I was seven,” I say, voice breaking. “I was a child. I couldn’t save you.”
“And now,” she says, “you’re doing the same to him.”
“Him?”
“Kael.”
And then—
Another voice.
Deeper. Rougher. *Hers*.
“You’re weak,” Lira says, stepping from the shadows. “You think love makes you strong? It makes you vulnerable. It makes you *foolish*.”
“You’re not real,” I say, backing away. “You’re just a shadow. A lie.”
“Am I?” She smiles. “Then why does your rune burn? Why does your heart ache? Why do you *doubt*?”
And then—
Elric.
Standing beside her, eyes sharp, voice like gravel. “You betrayed your mission. You fell for him. You let him *in*.”
“I didn’t betray anything,” I say, water rising from the moss, coiling around my arms. “I chose. I *chose* him.”
“And now,” Elric says, “you’ll pay for it.”
They move—fast, silent, deadly. My mother’s ghost reaches for me, fingers like ice. Lira lunges, claws out. Elric raises a dagger etched with blood sigils.
I don’t hesitate.
I raise my hands.
And the tide answers.
Water erupts from the moss—thick, heavy, alive. It wraps around my mother’s ghost, pulls her back into the shadows. It slams into Lira, throws her against the wall. It disarms Elric, sends the dagger flying.
But they don’t stay down.
They rise. Again. And again.
And each time, they’re stronger.
Each time, they whisper.
Each time, they *break* me.
“You’ll never be enough,” Lira says.
“You’re just a weapon,” Elric says.
“You failed me,” my mother says.
My breath hitches.
My fangs descend.
My rune flares.
And then—
Another voice.
Not from the shadows.
Not from the past.
From *him*.
“Tide.”
I freeze.
“You’re not alone.”
Kael.
He’s not here. Not in the chamber. Not in the pit.
But I can feel him—his presence, his power, his *hunger*—like a second heartbeat.
The bond.
It’s not broken.
It’s not distant.
It’s *singing*.
And then—
I understand.
The riddle wasn’t about me.
It was about *us*.
“I am born of water,” I say, voice rising. “Yet I drown in fire.”
The water thickens. The shadows tremble.
“I am bound by blood,” I say, stepping forward. “Yet I break the chain.”
The moss glows brighter. The pit trembles.
“I am the end of one world,” I say, lifting my hands. “And the beginning of another.”
And then—
I *pull*.
Not with my magic.
Not with my rage.
With the bond.
With the truth.
With *love*.
The water erupts—thick, heavy, alive. It wraps around the shadows, around the voices, around the lies. It doesn’t destroy. It *cleanses*. It washes them away, one by one, until the pit is silent. Until the chamber is still.
And then—
The Judge speaks.
“You have answered the riddle. You have faced the ordeal. You are free.”
“And the contract?”
“It remains. Half ash. Half alive. Waiting.”
“For what?”
“For balance. For sacrifice. For *love*.”
And then—
It vanishes.
The chamber is silent.
Not the quiet of peace.
Not the hush of rest.
But the silence of *victory*.
I sink to my knees, gasping, my body trembling. The moss glows softly beneath me, the air clean, the magic still.
I did it.
I survived.
And then—
A whisper.
Not from the shadows.
Not from the past.
From the bond.
“I’m coming,” Kael says. “Hold on.”
And I do.
—
The portal opens like a wound in the air.
Not with light. Not with sound. But with *hunger*.
Kael steps through—shirtless, coat gone, fangs bared, eyes like frozen fire. Blood streaks his shoulder. His lip is split. His breath is ragged. But he’s alive. And he’s *here*.
“Tide,” he says, voice rough.
And then he’s on me.
Not to claim. Not to dominate.
But to *hold*.
One arm around my waist, the other cradling my head, pulling me against his chest. I don’t fight. Don’t run. Just collapse into him, my body trembling, my breath ragged, my hands clutching his shirt.
“I’m sorry,” he murmurs, pressing his lips to my hair. “For everything. For the pain. For the bond. For *this*.”
“It’s not your fault,” I say, voice muffled against his chest. “Not all of it. You didn’t take her. You didn’t bind her. You didn’t write the contract.”
“But I’m the one who holds it now,” he says. “And I’m the one who bound you.”
“You didn’t have a choice,” I whisper.
“Maybe not.” He pulls back, just enough to look at me. “But I could have let you go. I could have refused the bond. I could have walked away. But I didn’t.”
“Because?”
“Because I *wanted* you.” His fingers brush my cheek. “From the moment you touched the parchment. From the moment your rune flared. From the moment your scent—salt and storm—filled the chamber. I *wanted* you. Not as a weapon. Not as a pawn. Not as a contract heir. But as *you*.”
My breath hitches.
“And I knew,” he says, voice raw, “that if I let you go, I’d spend the rest of my immortal life wondering what could have been.”
“And now?”
“Now,” he says, “I know.”
I don’t answer.
Just look at him—shirtless, wounded, lethal, *mine*.
And for the first time—
I believe it.
—
We return to the Midnight Court in silence.
Not the tense quiet of enemies. Not the charged silence of lovers. But something deeper. Something *real*.
The corridors are empty. The torches dim. The runes pulse faintly, reacting to the bond, to the magic, to the *truth*.
We don’t speak.
Don’t need to.
Because we already know.
As we reach the vault, I stop.
“We have to finish this,” I say.
He nods. “Together.”
I press my palm to the door.
It groans open.
And there it is.
The Contract.
Half ash. Half alive.
Still pulsing.
Still bound.
Still waiting.
I step forward.
He follows.
And together, we place our hands on the parchment.
“With consent,” I say.
“With sacrifice,” he says.
“With love,” we say together.
And the bond *sings*.
Not a scream.
Not a burn.
But a *song*.
Of fire.
Of water.
Of blood.
Of *us*.
And as the magic flares, as the contract begins to rewrite, I know—
This isn’t the end.
It’s the beginning.
And I’m not alone.