Page 125 of Wings of Shadow

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“It’s too much,” I breathe, watching light dance through the stone like captured fire. “Kai, I can’t?—“

“Nothing is too much for you.” His voice cuts through my protest, silk over steel. He leans against the glass display case, all sharp angles and contained power, lamplight turning his hair to burnished gold. When he reaches for my hand, his thumb traces the ring’s edge with reverent precision. “It’s not about the stone, Liebes. It’s about the promise.”

The words settle into my bones, warm and certain. I step closer, fingertips finding the steady rhythm of his heartbeat through fine cotton. “When you put it like that...”

He lifts my hand to his mouth, lips brushing my knuckles in a kiss that tastes like forever. The world narrows to this—rose-scented air, polished wood gleaming amber, time suspended like honey in sunlight.

I glance up at him, about to tease, when something catches my eye in the mirror behind him.

A shadow. Watching.

My breath catches, spine straightening as recognition slams into me. Across the street, framed by dying light, stands a figure I’d know anywhere. Motionless as carved marble, hazel eyes fixed on us with the patience of eternity itself.

Kaisner feels the shift in my body before I speak. His head turns slowly, following my gaze to the reflection. The moment he sees, something predatory ripples beneath his skin—not fear, but recognition of a different kind.

“I didn’t know he was back,” I murmur, already moving toward the door.

The bells chime our exit into twilight’s embrace. Paris flows around us in streams of gold and shadow, but this being stands apart from it all, untouched by the mortal world’s hurried rhythm.

“Dristan,” I call out gently.

His smile blooms, slow and genuine. “Clarissa,” he replies, his voice like smoke and dusk. “Radiant as always.”

I stop just within arm’s reach, close enough to see the ancient kindness in his eyes. “You’re back.”

“Called back, more like.” His gaze drops to my hand, taking in the diamond’s fire. “Congratulations are in order, I see.”

Heat spreads through my chest. “This is Kaisner. My?—”

“Schattenkönig.”

Shadow King. The word falls from Dristan’s lips like a stone cast into still water, sending ripples through the very air between us.

Kaisner says nothing. His silence is an answer.

“What does that mean?” The question slips out before I can stop it.

Dristan’s attention shifts to me, weighted with memory and sorrow. “Heir of the Hollow Flame. Last blood of the Forgotten Court.” His voice lowers, barely above a whisper. “I watched his lineage burn once, torn from the Unnatural Brethren. Never thought I’d see it rise from the ashes.”

The twilight seems to deepen around us, shadows gathering at Kaisner’s feet like loyal hounds. In this light, he looks less man than myth—something carved from darkness and dreams.

“I stood vigil the night they fell,” Dristan continues, addressing Kaisner now. “Swore to keep the secret buried.” A pause, heavy with implication. “But old blood calls to old blood. Your mate’s fire was always going to wake what slept.”

My skin prickles with goosebumps that have nothing to do with the evening chill.

Dristan’s expression shifts, ancient recognition flickering in his amber eyes.

“The old blood remembers,” he says, voice heavy with witnessed history. A pause, thick with unspoken implications. “Will you take on the role fate has entrusted to your hands, I wonder?”

“What are you doing here?” Kaisner’s voice carries ancient authority, though his tone remains conversational.

“Watching. Waiting. Following the threads as they weave themselves back together.” Dristan’s smile turns sharp. “The world knows more than it pretends to forget.”

He steps back, inclining his head with old-fashioned courtesy. “May fortune smile upon your union,” he says, the formal blessing rolling off his tongue like ritual. Then his expression turns cryptic. “Shadows have a way of finding their way home, don’t they? Especially royal ones.”

The words hang between us like a challenge, a prophecy… a warning.

Then he’s gone, melting into the crowd as if he’d never been there at all.