Chapter 10 The Vale’s Curse
Trine was quiet again, but not peaceful.
The storm had passed, leaving the streets slick with rain and silence. The air still hummed faintly with the echo of power. Somewhere beneath the city, The Sect was nothing but ruin — a hollow place where magic had burned through walls and shadow alike.
Seraphina walked home through the mist, her coat clinging to her shoulders, the golden glow still faint on her skin. Her body felt heavy, as if her veins carried more than blood now.
The city lights blurred through the fog. She moved without thought, without destination, until she reached her shop — Vail Antiquities, the one constant in her centuries of running.
Inside, it was quiet, almost too quiet. The clock ticked faintly in the corner. The smell of dust and wax greeted her like an old friend.
She shut the door behind her and leaned against it for a moment, breathing in the stillness. The adrenaline that had carried her through the night faded, leaving a hollow ache in its place.
Her cat, a small gray creature with mismatched eyes, leapt onto the counter and meowed softly.
Seraphina smiled tiredly. “You should’ve stayed asleep.”
The cat blinked as if to scold her for being gone too long. She stroked its fur absentmindedly, the simple act grounding her.
For a moment, she let herself believe that the world had quieted, that the danger had passed.
She lit a candle and sank into the chair by the window. The rain outside had slowed to a drizzle. The city below seemed distant, dreamlike.
But as she sat there, a strange stillness crept into the room — too deep, too absolute. Even the cat went still, its fur rising in silent alarm.
The flame of the candle bent sideways, then flickered out.
A whisper filled the air. “Still so restless.”
Seraphina’s breath caught. Her hand tightened on the armrest. She knew that voice.
“Mother?”
The shadows stirred, and a figure stepped from them — cloaked in silver and white, her hair long and pale as moonlight. Her presence filled the small room, soft and overwhelming at once.
“Seraphina,” the woman said, her tone both tender and scolding. “You’ve torn the balance apart.”
Seraphina rose to her feet, disbelief in her eyes. “You can’t be here. I saw you die. The Court burned the Vale to ashes.”
Her mother — the High Priestess of the Vale — smiled faintly, though sorrow lingered in her gaze. “The Vale cannot die while its purpose still breathes. I was bound to the old magic, cursed to linger beyond death until the world called me back. Tonight, it did.”
Seraphina’s throat tightened. “Because of me.”
“Yes,” her mother said simply. “When you unleashed your power, it reached across every boundary that separates this world from the next. Life trembled. Death listened. The witches felt it. The Vale woke.”
Seraphina shook her head. “I didn’t mean to. I was defending myself. Elysande—”
Her mother’s voice cut softly through hers. “Elysande feels everything you do. She was bound to the same current once. But what you carry is older. The balance itself bends toward you. That is why she fears you.”
Seraphina’s voice wavered. “You’re saying the witches know? All of them?”
“Their hearts are divided,” her mother said. “Some still remember the prophecy — that a daughter of the Vale, born of mercy and fire, would one day shatter the veil between life and death. Others have already pledged to Elysande. They will see you as a threat to everything they’ve built.”
Seraphina turned away, her chest tightening. “I never asked for any of this. I only wanted to be left alone.”
Her mother stepped closer, touching her arm gently. “The balance doesn’t ask what we want, only what we are. You were born for this, Seraphina. The gate between worlds, and the one meant to guard it.”
Her mother’s hand was warm — too warm for something that should have been dead. “I had to refuse death,” she said softly. “I bore the curse so I could find you when the time came. The gods demanded a keeper, and I obeyed. I have walked through centuries alone for this moment.”
Seraphina’s voice broke. “You lived like this — waiting? Watching me run from everything?”
“I was never far,” her mother said. “The Vale watches its blood.”
Seraphina met her eyes, tears threatening. “And if I fail?”
Her mother’s expression softened. “Then all things will return to what they were before — chaos. But if you succeed, the balance will be reborn. Not as it was. As it should be.”
For a moment, silence filled the shop again, heavy but not cruel. The candle’s smoke drifted between them like a thread of silver.
Finally, Seraphina whispered, “Why me? Why not you? Why not Elysande?”
Her mother’s gaze darkened. “Because I chose wrong once. When the gods asked who would bear the power of the Vale, I named her. Elysande was brilliant, but her heart was bound to envy. You were born later, pure — forged from my regret. You are the second chance the world gave me.”
Seraphina closed her eyes, feeling the weight of that truth settle like stone. “Then you cursed yourself for me.”
Her mother smiled faintly. “It was never a curse. Only a promise.”
The cat brushed against Seraphina’s leg, purring softly. The moment felt fragile — the kind of peace that comes before something breaks.
Her mother’s glow began to fade, her form softening like mist.
“Wait,” Seraphina said quickly. “Don’t leave me again.”
“I’m not leaving,” her mother’s voice said gently, already distant. “I am part of what you are. When the time comes, listen to the Vale within you. It will know the path, even when you don’t.”
The light dimmed, then vanished completely. The room was quiet once more.
Seraphina stood still, her hands trembling. The candle’s smoke curled upward, twisting into the faint shape of a serpent before fading into nothing.
She looked down at the cat, whose mismatched eyes watched her like it understood.
“The world is waking,” she murmured. “And so am I.”
Outside, the rain began again — soft, steady, and endless.
But somewhere in the distance, beyond the mortal hum of Trine, the Vale whispered her name.