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Chapter 1 - PROLOGUE: Ashes of Oakhaven

The sky over Oakhaven didn't break. It bled.

Mara pressed her back into the corner of the stone cottage, her spine grinding against the cold wall. Her arms ached from holding Elena, but she could not loosen her grip. The baby was barely a week old, her face the size of a plum, her eyes squeezed shut against a world that had already decided she did not get to live in it.

Outside, the village screamed. Voices of the villages who are scared for what has befallen them.

"They're here."

Thomas stood by the door, his hands shaking as he drove the wooden beam into the brackets. He was not looking at what he was doing. His eyes were fixed on the light bleeding through the cracks in the walls.

"The Heaven Sent and the Earth Bound." His voice cracked on the words. "They've come for her."

Mara looked down at Elena. The baby's chest rose and fell in quick, fragile beats. To the village, she was a miracle. To the ones who had just arrived, she was something else entirely.

Crack...

The oak door did not splinter. It turned to ash. One moment it was there, solid. the next, a cloud of fine white dust filled the room, coating Mara's tongue, her lungs, the baby's closed eyelids.

Two figures stepped through the remains.

They wore crimson robes that swallowed the torchlight. Gold masks shaped like a serpent consuming its own tail. The Ouroboros.

"The Prophecy is ripe." The taller one's voice came from somewhere deep, somewhere old. Stones grinding in a well. "Give us the Infinite Vein, woman. Do not make us waste more blood."

Thomas moved before Mara could speak. He grabbed the rusted scythe from the hook by the hearth the only weapon they owned and lunged.

He never reached them.

The Priest did not move. He flicked one finger, a casual gesture, the way a man might wave away a fly.

Thomas slammed against the wall. The sound of his ribs giving way echoed off the stone. He hung there, pinned by nothing, his feet dangling, his mouth open in a shape that was not quite a scream.

"Please." Mara's voice came out raw. She pressed Elena tighter against her chest. "She is just a child."

"She is eternity." The Priest took a step forward.

The temperature dropped.

It did not get cold. It got dead. The air turned to ice in Mara's lungs. The thatch roof ripped away like a scab torn from a wound, and when she looked up, she saw them.

The Wingless.

They filled the roof of the village houses. They did not want the baby for her power. They wanted her gone. Erased. A future threat strangled before it could draw breath.

The Priest drew a curved blade from his robe. The metal caught the moonlight and turned it sickly gold.

"The Fallen." He did not sound afraid. He sounded annoyed. "You are late for the feast."

The cottage became a blur.

Silver light and crimson robes. Dark shapes falling from the sky. The crash of furniture breaking, the hiss of spells colliding with flesh. Mara tried to crawl, tried to shield Elena with her body, but a hand closed around her wrist and wrenched her arm back.

The baby slipped from her grasp.

"NO!"

She watched Elena fall. Watched the Priest catch her before she hit the ground, his gloved hands cradling the infant like something precious. Something harvested.

Mara lunged. A boot caught her in the ribs. She hit the dirt floor hard, her vision white, her ears ringing. She clawed at the ground, dragging herself forward, fingernails splitting against packed earth.

The Priest looked down at her. The gold mask showed nothing. No pity. No triumph. Just the cold curve of the serpent eating itself.

"She will be the sun that never sets." His voice was calm now, almost gentle. "And you? You are just the dirt she was planted in."

Light exploded.

It swallowed the Priest, the baby, the cult. It swallowed the screams of the village and the shriek of the Wingless. When it faded, the cottage was empty.

They were gone.

Mara lay in the dirt, her ribs screaming, her arms empty. Outside, the Fallen turned their fury on the village. She heard the first scream. Then the second. Then she heard nothing at all.

A blade found her side. Hot. Sharp. Red.

The dark took her.

---

Twenty-Four Years Later

The scar on Mara's side burned like a fresh coal.

She sat beneath the Great Willow, her eyes closed, her hands flat on her knees. The morning sun filtered through the branches, dappling her face with light and shadow. Before her stood a weathered statue of a nameless monk, his stone face worn smooth by two decades of rain and wind.

Every morning for twenty-four years, she woke with the weight of a child in her arms.

Every morning, she opened her hands and found them empty.

Mara opened her eyes. She stood slowly, her joints popping, her knees stiff. Her hair was grey now, shot through with white. Her hands were calloused. Her face was lined with things that had nothing to do with age.

She walked to the statue. Placed her palm flat against the stone.

"I'm coming," she whispered.

Behind her, leaned against the trunk of the willow, a broadsword caught the morning light. The blade was worn thin from sharpening, the edge lethal, the hilt wrapped in leather that had molded to her grip over years of holding nothing else.

She picked it up. The weight was familiar. The cold metal against her palm was the only thing that felt real.

She looked toward the horizon tightening her fingers around the hilt.

She did not have wings. She did not have magic.She had a sword. She had twenty-four years of rage. And she was done waiting.

"I am coming Elena". She whispered. It was not a sob anymore, this time, it was a promise.

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