The smell came before consciousness.
Crushed herbs, boiled water, and the faint bitterness of fresh resin. Air slid into my lungs too easily—no resistance, no familiar, sandpaper rasp. The silence was the second warning. Not the silence of the room, but the sudden, eerie quiet of my own body. For fifteen years, waking had been a violent negotiation with pain; joints grinding, ligaments screaming at the slightest twitch. Now, the internal noise was gone. The emptiness left behind brought no relief—only the strangeness of a cell whose bars had evaporated overnight.
Eyes closed, I curbed my breath. Beneath the lavender scent of the House of Breath, a furnace flared in my gut. It wasn't appetite; it was a devouring hunger, a chemical demand for fuel to sustain the impossible engineering unfolding beneath my skin.
Voices filtered through the linen curtain, sharp as glass.
"…we don't have time for rituals, Miguel." Kahn's growl was punctuated by the heavy, restless thud of his pacing. "The Trumpets of Rupture weren't a warning. They were the starting shot. The Council has already unleashed the dogs."
"They'll need the Guild, Kahn." Miguel's calm was brittle. The Elder-Healer sat at the table, his ivory robes stained with fresh soil at the knees. Deep shadows carved exhaustion into his face, clashing with the rigid posture of a man carrying the weight of Solis on his shoulders. "You're a forgotten thorn—but now you're a tool. The Council won't kill its guides."
"They don't want guides. They want disposable vanguards." Kahn's palm struck the table with a dull thud that rattled the floorboards. "They'll use the Guild as a spearhead to choke the monsters while the iron army marches over our corpses. I won't wait for the slaughter."
My skin prickled. Until yesterday, the Council crushed slowly, like rust. Now, they were a hammer.
"Take Amber," Miguel pleaded. "She's special. If the Council gets hold of her… they'll turn her into a weapon. To me, she's a daughter. Don't let her become another hollow soldier."
Leather creaked as Kahn paused.
"Prepare her. We leave in an hour. And the boy?"
The silence that followed was thick and damp—saturated with the scent of the earth beneath Miguel's fingernails.
"We buried Celeste before dawn," Miguel whispered. "The boy needs time."
"He doesn't have time. No one does. What he did last night… that light…" Kahn hesitated. "Watch him, Miguel. No one suspects a bedridden boy."
I opened my eyes.
The wooden ceiling was too sharp—every grain etched with a clarity my myopic vision had never known. I sat up. The movement was fluid. No protest from my hips. The memory of light and pain still burned at the base of my neck like a brand.
The linen curtain was pulled aside abruptly. Miguel entered, balancing a wooden bowl filled with steaming gray paste. It smelled of damp sawdust and stale grain, yet it struck me like a physical punch. My stomach clenched in a violent spasm—a demand that ignored taste entirely. Behind him, Kahn tightened the leather buckles of a campaign pack until the material groaned.
Miguel's eyes widened. The bowl wavered in his hands.
"Gin?"
I stared at my hands. The pressure sores—the scars of a life spent prone—were gone. Skin was flushed with new blood, stretched over muscle that hadn't existed hours ago.
Miguel inhaled sharply, but before words came, a smell filled the space between us: cold, freshly turned earth. The same scent clinging to the healer's sleeves and nails. The furnace in my gut coiled. I didn't need to ask. The body knew before the mind. The place Celeste had occupied in the world was now a hollow filled with that cool, loamy undertone.
"Where… is she?" The question escaped on its own. I already knew.
"In the cemetery, behind the greenhouse," Miguel said, his eyes scanning my body with clinical disbelief. "You look… well. Go to her, Gin. You need to say goodbye. And eat this first."
I devoured the porridge in three spoonfuls. The energy vanished into me instantly. My feet touched the wooden floor, and for the first time, the impact didn't send lightning through my spine. The linen robe that once hung on my frail frame like a coat rack now settled across broad shoulders and long legs. I stood—and the room seemed to shrink.
But it wasn't the new height that disoriented me. It was the absence of a sound that had shaped my life since birth. The rasping wheeze of a punctured forge bellows—my mother's dying breath—was gone.
Kahn turned. Words failed him. The Guildmaster had to lift his chin. His eyes met mine on higher ground. I had always had the height; illness had simply folded me inward. Now the body had unfolded—slender, elongated, like a willow after the thaw.
Kahn let out a dry laugh of pure shock. The flash of joy was genuine—and gone in a breath, drowned by bitterness.
"She should be here to see this," he murmured. Then his gaze hardened. "You're not a ghost under blankets anymore, boy. They'll scent you on every corner. The plan's changed. You're coming with us."
"Kahn, he just stood up!" Miguel protested.
Kahn didn't look away. His eyes measured the width of my shoulders, the steadiness of my wrists. The hand he set on my shoulder wasn't comfort or initiation—it was weight. An anchor of reality demanding an immediate answer from my body.
"Go to the cemetery. Say goodbye. We need to go."
I stopped before the healer. I was half a head taller than the man who had watched me wither. I reached out and clasped Miguel's forearm—a man's grip, stripped of a patient's fragility.
"Thank you," I said. My voice was steady. Deep.
"Go," Miguel whispered. "Before I try to find a sickness where there's nothing left."
Kahn was already at the door, a silhouette of armed impatience. I didn't look back. I crossed the corridor of the House of Breath, where lavender and sickness now felt like a shroud I had just shed.
When I stepped through the threshold, the world struck me.
The sun of Solis wasn't merely light—it was a physical assault. White brilliance crashed over me like a molten anvil. My pupils, accustomed to candlelit dusk and heavy curtains, constricted violently, turning the horizon into silver fire. I raised an arm to shield my face, but the heat had already claimed me. It was tactile, almost solid—a scalding kiss that seeped into my pores and drove my blood into an urgent, frantic rhythm.
For the first time, the sun wasn't a concept observed through dusty glass. It was brute force, demanding every nerve in my reborn body recalibrate.
As the glare stabilized into shape, the scale of the chaos finally took form. The steps offered a vantage point over a fevered organism. Solis was no longer a city; it was a roar. Where once there had been the monotonous rhythm of industrial shifts, now boiled a profitable disorder. The air was thick with fresh pitch, human sweat, and the frantic clatter of coins changing hands across makeshift counters.
Iron cranes, driven far beyond their load limits, shrieked like dying beasts as they hauled nets overflowing with supplies and weapons. I saw both faces of the human coin: peasants clutching bundles of old clothes, eyes glassy with terror at the new sky; and beside them, mercenaries and scions of ruined houses, their gazes sharp with predatory light. These weren't fleeing Solis. They were hunting the future. Their hands, steady on newly sharpened sword hilts, trembled not with fear but with hungry anticipation for the lands the broken Seal promised to unveil.
An era was being born—baptized in panic and gold.
Beneath the uproar, something cut through the noise. A march. Heavy. Rhythmic. Metallic.
At the top of the steps, the crowd parted like water before a ship's prow. The Iron Council had arrived. Not guards—the Hounds.
At the center, two figures commanded a vacuum of silence.
The man was a mountain of flesh and discipline, his black hair cut in strict military fashion. His expression carried restrained malice, as if violence were a private joke. His armor—a breastplate of iron so thick it resembled a shield molded to his torso—gleamed beneath the pale sun. Resting on his shoulder was a warhammer like a fused anchor.
Beside him stood the girl, a small shadow swallowed by a weightless black cloak. From the depths of the hood, a shock of hair spilled from her hood, framing a face of skin so translucent it seemed carved from moonlight. I looked at the blindfold—a violent strip of blood-red silk that silenced her eyes and ears.
The crimson cloth didn't just cover her; it screamed against the ghostly pallor of her throat. And there, cinching that fragile neck like a permanent shadow, was a thick, jagged ring of raw-pink scar tissue. The contrast was sickening: the vibrant red of the blindfold, the paper-white skin, and that collar of ruined flesh—the unmistakable signature of a heavy shackle worn for a lifetime.
Luna stopped. The procession halted. Kael lowered the hammer with a dull impact that rattled windows. The girl tilted her head, tasting the air. The crimson blindfold pulsed as she read the currents.
Slowly, Luna turned her face. The blindfold pointed straight at me.
"Rats…"
The words vibrated in the air before they were spoken.
"…leaving the nest."
Kael smiled.
I retreated into the shadows, heart pounding into a dangerous cadence. Time for mourning was revoked. I spun on my heel and ran.
"Kahn! They're here!"
Steel rang instantly.
Outside, Luna broke formation and surged forward—flowing through the crowd like mercury, vaulting crates with inhuman speed.
"Back way! Now!" Kahn roared, hurling a supply bag at me.
We burst into the garden. Amber knelt in the fresh earth of Celeste's grave. At the crash, she sprang up, dirt-streaked hands raised defensively. Bronze skin and wild golden hair made her the living opposite of the death surrounding her.
"Father?" she cried, eyes wide with terror.
"Go! No questions!" Miguel shouted, shoving her toward Kahn.
Wood exploded at the front of the house. The Hounds were inside. Kahn seized both of us and veered toward an iron-grated hatch.
"Down!"
I bolted. My new legs devoured the ground. I left my mother's grave without a final word, carrying only the life she had purchased with her death—and the shadow of executioners closing in.
