Follow
Chapters
Share
The Seasonal Debt Novel Cover

The Seasonal Debt

In a world of eternal frost, heat is the only currency that matters. Elara is a daughter of the Summer Court, a realm of sun and life that has long been at odds with the frozen industrial wasteland of the Winter Spire. When her people fall into a catastrophic debt they cannot pay, Elara is signed over as the ultimate collateral. She is the tithe. She is the battery. Silas, the cold and calculated King of the Spire, does not want a queen. He wants a power source. To save his dying city, he intends to extract every drop of Elara's solar fire to fuel the Great Forge. He is a man of ice and iron, a vampire who has forgotten the feeling of warmth until he tastes hers. But the extraction comes with a price neither anticipated. As Silas drinks from Elara's light, a dark and symbiotic bond begins to form, linking their heartbeats and their very souls. In a city governed by the Ancient Laws, their connection is a heresy that threatens to burn the Spire to the ground. As the political vultures of the Council circle and the rebels in the slums rise, Elara must decide if she will remain a prisoner or become the spark that ignites a revolution. Silas must choose between the survival of his kingdom and the woman who has become his only source of life. The debt is growing. The ice is melting. And in the heart of the Obsidian Spire, the sun is finally starting to rise.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 2

The entrance to the Obsidian Spire was a cavern of black glass and polished stone. It felt like walking into the throat of a great beast. There were no torches or lamps to greet us. Instead the walls themselves seemed to bleed a faint violet light that did not provide any warmth. It was a cold glow that made the shadows in the corners look deeper and more alive. I kept my hands clenched at my sides to keep them from shaking. I was a daughter of the sun and this place felt designed to swallow me whole.

"This way." Silas said.

He did not look back to see if I was following. He knew I had nowhere else to go. His footsteps made no sound on the marble floor. I on the other hand felt like every step I took was a drumbeat in the silence. The heat from my skin was already fighting the unnatural chill of the hall. I could see the faint trail of steam rising from my damp clothes.

We passed through a set of massive iron doors that opened without a sound. Beyond them lay a staircase that spiraled upward into the darkness. The air grew thinner and colder as we climbed. I felt the weight of the stone above us pressing down on my chest. It was a physical pressure that made it hard to catch my breath.

"How many people live here?" I asked.

My voice echoed off the walls. It sounded small and fragile in the vast space.

"As many as need to." Silas replied.

He reached the top of the stairs and paused at a landing. He turned to look at me with those piercing silver eyes.

"This level is yours." Silas said. "You will find everything you require for your comfort."

He gestured toward a set of double doors carved with patterns of frost and thorns. He pulled a heavy iron key from his pocket and held it out to me. Our fingers brushed as I took it. The contact was like a shock of ice water. I flinched but I did not drop the key.

"Am I to be locked in?" I asked.

I gripped the cold metal tightly. I looked at him and waited for the lie.

"The lock is for your protection Elara." Silas said. "Not all of my subjects share my patience for the Fae. Some of them would prefer to drain you dry tonight rather than wait for the warmth you promised."

He stepped closer to me. He was so tall that I had to tilt my head back to see his face. He smelled like winter air and something ancient.

"You are a precious resource now." Silas whispered. "I suggest you treat yourself as such."

"I am a person." I snapped. "Not a bag of grain or a pile of coal."

"In this city those things are more valuable than gold." Silas said. "Sleep well Little Sun. We begin your work at dawn."

He turned and vanished back down the stairs before I could argue. I stood alone on the landing for a long moment. I listened to the silence of the tower. It was not a peaceful quiet. It was the heavy silence of a place that was holding its breath.

I pushed the key into the lock and turned it. The mechanism was smooth and heavy. I stepped inside the room and gasped. It was a suite of rooms larger than my entire cottage back home. There was a massive bed draped in black furs and a fireplace made of white stone. Huge windows stretched from the floor to the ceiling. They looked out over the sprawling dark city below.

I walked to the window and pressed my hand against the glass. It was freezing to the touch. Below me the City of No Stars looked like a graveyard of light. The blue neon flickered in the distance but most of the streets were shrouded in shadow. I could see the faint outlines of the slums where the poorer vampires lived. I thought about the children I had seen in the street.

I turned away from the window and walked to the fireplace. There was no wood in the hearth. There were no coals. It was just a cold empty pit of stone. I knelt down and placed my hands on the base of the chimney.

I closed my eyes and reached deep inside myself. I searched for the spark that lived at my core. It was smaller than it used to be. It was a flickering amber flame that felt weary from the journey. I whispered a word in the old tongue of my people. I pushed a sliver of that heat through my palms and into the stone.

A soft golden glow began to radiate from the hearth. It was not a fire of wood and smoke. It was a fire of pure essence. The stone warmed under my touch. The chill in the room began to recede. I watched as the frost on the windowpanes melted and turned into tears of water.

I sat back on my heels and watched the light. It was the only bit of home I had left.

A soft knock sounded at the door. I stood up quickly and wiped my hands on my skirt.

"Who is it?" I called out.

"Dinner is served Lady Elara." A female voice replied.

I walked to the door and unlocked it. A young woman stood in the hall. She was pale like the others but she had a kindness in her face that I had not expected. She carried a silver tray laden with covered dishes.

"My name is Mina." She said. "I am to be your attendant while you stay with us."

She walked into the room and set the tray on a low table near the fire. She paused when she felt the warmth of the hearth. She looked at the glowing stones and then back at me. Her eyes widened in surprise.

"It has been a long time since I felt a real fire." Mina whispered.

She reached out a hand as if to touch the warmth but she stopped herself. She looked at me with a mixture of awe and fear.

"Is the King always so cold?" I asked.

I sat down at the table and lifted the lid off one of the plates. It was roasted meat and root vegetables. It smelled delicious.

"He is the oldest of us." Mina said. "He has forgotten what it is like to feel anything else. He carries the winter in his heart so the rest of us do not have to."

"That sounds like a very lonely way to live." I said.

I took a bite of the food. It was seasoned with rare spices that made my tongue tingle.

"Power is always lonely." Mina replied. "The King does what is necessary for the survival of the city. He does not ask for thanks."

"He did not have to take me." I said.

Mina looked toward the door as if checking for listeners. She leaned in closer to me.

"He did not just take you to save the city Elara." Mina whispered. "The Obsidian Spire is cracking. The very foundation of our world is freezing over. If you had not come the tower would have fallen by the next new moon."

She stood up straight and smoothed her apron.

"Eat your fill." Mina said. "You will need your strength for tomorrow. The King does not like to be kept waiting."

She bowed her head and left the room. I heard the lock click from the outside. I was alone again.

I finished my meal in silence. I watched the golden light of my fire dance against the black walls. I thought about what Mina had said. The city was not just cold. It was dying. And Silas was the one holding it together with nothing but his own frozen will.

I walked back to the window. I looked out at the dark horizon. Somewhere out there the sun was rising over the Summer Court. My people were waking up to green fields and warm breezes. They were safe because I was here in the dark.

I placed my forehead against the glass.

"I will not let you break me Silas." I whispered.

The heat from my skin left a fog on the window. I watched it fade into the night. I went to the bed and curled up under the heavy furs. I did not blow out the light in the hearth. I let it burn. I needed to remember that even in the heart of the winter a single spark could stay alive.

I fell into a restless sleep. I dreamed of a forest made of glass and a king who was made of ice. In the dream he was reaching for me. He was not trying to hurt me. He was trying to keep from shattering.

I woke up when the first grey light of morning touched the room. There was no sunrise here. There was only a shift from deep black to a dull leaden grey. The fire in the hearth had gone out. The room was freezing again.

I stood up and dressed in a gown of heavy amber wool. I brushed my hair until it shone like polished copper. I was ready.

The door opened before I could reach for the handle. Silas stood in the hallway. He looked exactly as he had the night before. He did not look tired. He did not look like a man who had slept at all.

"It is time Elara." Silas said.

"Time for what?" I asked.

"Time to see if you are as powerful as your father claimed." Silas replied.

He turned and began to walk down the hall. I followed him. We did not go back to the Great Hall. Instead we went deeper into the heart of the tower. We descended a hidden staircase that smelled of damp earth and ancient magic.

The air grew colder with every step. My breath was a constant cloud of steam. I felt the fire in my core beginning to stir. It knew where we were going. It knew that something was waiting for us in the dark.

We reached a massive circular chamber at the very bottom of the spire. In the center of the room was a giant forge made of iron and gold. It was cold and silent. Chains as thick as my waist held it in place.

"This is the Heart of the City." Silas said.

He walked to the edge of the forge and placed his hand on the metal. A layer of frost immediately spread from his touch.

"It used to burn with the light of the first sun." Silas said. "It powered our lights. It warmed our homes. It kept the shadows at bay. But the fire died a hundred years ago."

He looked at me. His silver eyes were bright with a desperate intensity.

"I want you to wake it up." Silas commanded.

I looked at the massive forge. It was huge. It was a mountain of iron. I felt like an ant standing before a god.

"I cannot do that alone." I said. "My magic is not enough to light something this big."

"Then find a way." Silas said.

He stepped toward me. He grabbed my wrists with his freezing hands. He pulled me toward the forge.

"My people are dying Elara." Silas hissed. "The ice is coming for us all. Light the forge or we will all die in the cold."

I looked at him. I saw the fear behind the iron mask of his face. He was not a king. He was a man who was terrified of the dark.

I looked at the forge. I looked at the cold iron. I felt the fire in my heart begin to roar.

"Fine." I said. "But stay back Silas. You might not like the heat."

You may also like

Divorced And Reborn: The Masked Doctor's Return Novel Cover
7.1
I was eight months pregnant, waiting on the sofa for my billionaire husband to come home. But when the heavy oak doors opened, Cayden threw a fake DNA test on the glass table, showing a zero percent probability of paternity. He accused me of carrying another man's bastard. I cried and begged, swearing I was framed by his childhood friend, Carmella. He didn't listen. Instead, he ordered his massive bodyguards to pin me down while a private doctor forced an abortion pill down my throat. "The Merritt family does not raise bastards. Get rid of it." He forced me to sign divorce papers and ordered his men to throw me out into the freezing storm. Before I was dragged away, I desperately told him the truth: I was the anonymous donor who gave him a kidney to save his life three years ago. He just sneered, saying Carmella had the surgical scar to prove she was the donor, and kicked me out to die. Lying in the freezing rain, vomiting up the half-dissolved poison to save my baby, I didn't understand how the man I loved could be so completely blind. How could he let that woman steal my kidney, my marriage, and murder his own flesh and blood? Five years later, I returned to New York not as his pathetic discarded wife, but as a top-tier medical fixer for the global elite. And my genius five-year-old son has already infiltrated his mansion, ready to tear his empire apart from the inside.
ICE- The Alpha's Unwanted OMEGA Novel Cover
7.1
The captain is dead to the world. And I'm the only one holding the kill switch. Ethan Carter, the "Glacier of Silvercrest," was the most feared Alpha to ever step onto the ice. Now, he's nothing but a shell-a broken, comatose legend trapped in his own body. My life? It was supposed to be simple. Graduate, survive the pack's bottom-tier status, and pay off my father's ruinous blood-debts. Instead, the pack elders handed me a contract soaked in cold, hard malice: I am the designated "Stabilizer." My only job is to touch him, scent him, and keep his wolf from flatlining. I thought I was just a glorified nurse. I didn't realize the Alpha was listening. When Ethan finally wakes, he isn't the hero the Kingdom of Valeria remembers. He's a starving predator with amber eyes that burn holes through my defenses and a temperament that makes the frost in the mansion seem warm. He hates the bargain, he hates the pack, and-most dangerously-he hates the way his scent turns wild whenever I'm near. He wants me out of his sight. I want to be out of his reach. But in a pack built on secrets, someone is still trying to finish the job they started on his life. Now, the man who wants me gone is the only one who can protect me. And as the rink turns into a battlefield, I'm realizing the most dangerous thing about the Alpha isn't his temper... it's the fact that once he claims a mate, he doesn't know how to let go. Frozen hearts are meant to shatter. But in the fire of this pack, we're both going to burn.
Reborn As The Alphas' Hated Mate Novel Cover
7.2
I woke up in a lavish bedroom, only to find a man built like a god of war chained to my wall, glaring at me with pure, unadulterated hatred. A glowing apparition appeared and told me I had died in a car crash and transmigrated into the body of Elara, a tyrant Luna. Worse, the chained man was Ryker, one of my six fated mates whom the original Elara had brutally tortured. Because of her sadistic crimes-starving them, exiling them, and sending two of them on a suicide mission-my affinity with them was at negative five hundred. The apparition delivered my terrifying death sentence. "In three days, at the Marking Ceremony, you will be killed by your six mates." No matter what I did-freeing Ryker, sharing my food, or lifting their brother's exile-they viewed every act of kindness as a sick, twisted trap. They were just waiting for the punchline to my cruel joke, ready to expose me and end my life. I was just a librarian who organized book clubs and paid my taxes. Why did the Goddess throw me into this doomed vessel to pay for a psychopath's blood debts? How was I supposed to survive when the men destined to love me were actively plotting to rip my throat out? Cornered by their righteous fury, I realized playing defense wouldn't work. I grabbed a dagger, sliced my own palm over the ceremonial stone, and swore a blood oath to bring their missing brothers home-or initiate a soul-shattering Rejection Ceremony myself.
Reborn As The Vengeful Billionaire Heiress Novel Cover
7.9
For five years, April Gamble loved Julian Travis with everything she had, trusting him completely. But on a stormy night, he casually tossed a liquidation agreement at her feet, single-handedly destroying her grandfather's company. He coldly admitted he only dated her to steal Vance Group's internal financial data. "You were convenient," Julian said, swirling his whiskey without a shred of guilt. Before April could even process the brutal betrayal, a breaking news alert lit up her phone. She watched in absolute horror as her grandfather jumped from the ledge of the Vance Tower on live television. Julian looked at her writhing, screaming form with utter boredom and simply ordered his bodyguard to throw her out. Blinded by grief and tears, April sped into the torrential rain, only to be completely crushed by a hydroplaning transport truck at an intersection. As the shattered glass tore into her skin and the metal crushed her ribs, she died with a hatred so pure it made her teeth ache. Why did five years of devotion mean absolutely nothing to him? Why did her family have to die just to feed his ruthless greed? When she opened her eyes again, the harsh hospital lights blinded her, but the familiar burn scar on her arm was gone. She wasn't the betrayed financial analyst April Gamble anymore. She had woken up in the body of Altagracia Blanchard, the most notorious, obscenely wealthy heiress in New York. Julian had taken everything from her, but now, armed with a billionaire's empire, she was going to bury him.
Reborn From Ashes: The Billionaire's Obsession Novel Cover
7.7
I trusted the wrong people in my past life. My supposed lover and my sweet sister conspired against me, locking me inside a burning warehouse to die. But the man I had spent my life hating, my ruthless captor Damien Sterling, rushed straight into that inferno and burned alive just to try and save me. In my past life, I was utterly blind. I believed Julian's forged documents and Scarlett's fake affection. I even tried to assassinate Damien with a silver dagger they provided, breaking the heart of the only man who truly loved me. I died choking on thick ash, realizing too late who the real monsters were. Why was I so incredibly foolish? Why did I let their vicious manipulation turn me into a weapon against the one person who would sacrifice absolutely everything for me? Opening my eyes again, the phantom smell of smoke vanished. I was sitting in the bloody water of Damien's bathtub, right after my staged suicide attempt. When my sister sneaked into my penthouse suite and handed me the dagger to kill him again, I didn't hesitate. I grabbed her hand tightly and plunged the sharp blade directly into my own shoulder. "Please don't kill me, Scarlett!" This time, I will ruthlessly ruin them both, and I will never let Damien go.
Reborn Luna: Rejecting My Cruel Alpha Novel Cover
7.0
I was the fated mate of Ryker Blackwood, the future Alpha, but my lack of an awakened wolf made me a pathetic joke to his pack. Instead of protecting me, he publicly rejected me, chose the manipulative Lilith Vane as his Luna, and locked me in a freezing dungeon. While the entire pack cheered for their final mating ceremony above, I rotted in heavy chains below. When a rogue attack killed our unborn pups, I reached out to him in agony, but his voice through our fading bond was like splintered ice. "Our pups are dead. Don't bother me again." He didn't care at all. The casual dismissal shattered my inner wolf, and I died in that filthy cell, suffocating on my own despair and a hatred so potent it burned through my last breath. Until my last moment, I couldn't understand why my absolute devotion was met with such cruel betrayal, and why my fated mate let our children die without a second thought. Opening my eyes again, I wasn't in the dungeon. I was back in my seventeenth year, choking on the icy water of the lake Lilith had just pushed me into. Seeing Ryker's arrogant sneer and Lilith's fake concern on the shore, I didn't cry or beg for his attention like I did in my past life. This time, I would publicly sever our sacred bond, awaken my true Alpha bloodline, and make them pay for every drop of my blood.