Chapter 12 The fall of Trine
When Seraphina woke, the world was quiet.
The scent of smoke and iron still clung to her skin. Her body felt heavy, as though she had been buried under centuries of silence. For a long moment, she didn’t move. Her mind replayed the last thing she remembered — fire, screams, and the elder’s dying voice whispering, “Swear it.”
Then she heard another voice.
“You’re safe. Don’t move.”
Lucen.
She blinked, her vision clearing slowly. They were in a dim, stone-walled room lit by a few dying candles. The sound of dripping water echoed faintly through the tunnels. She recognized it — one of the safe houses beneath Trine.
Lucen sat nearby, his shirt torn, his face streaked with soot. His usual calm was gone, replaced by something closer to fear.
“What happened?” she whispered.
He looked up. “You fainted. The explosion nearly killed you. I pulled you out before the ceiling fell.”
“The others?”
Lucen hesitated. “Gone.”
Seraphina sat up despite the pain in her chest. “All of them?”
He nodded. “The Vale is lost again. The survivors scattered. Elysande made sure of it.”
Her throat tightened. She turned away, hiding the tears burning in her eyes. “I should have stopped her.”
Lucen leaned forward. “You couldn’t have. You were drained, Seraphina. You used too much magic at The Sect. Your power isn’t endless.”
She didn’t answer. She stared at her hands, the faint gold light under her skin flickering weakly. “It feels like the world is dying,” she said softly.
Lucen’s jaw tightened. “That’s because it is.”
He rose and crossed to the far wall, pushing open a wooden hatch. “You should see what’s happening above.”
Seraphina stood on unsteady legs and followed him to the surface.
When she stepped out, the night air hit her like a slap. Trine was burning.
Fires licked through the streets. The sound of screams echoed from every direction. The sky glowed red, painted by chaos. Vampires moved through the smoke like predators, feeding openly, their eyes bright with hunger and madness.
Lucen’s voice was low. “With the Vale gone, there’s no one left to maintain the barrier. The magic that kept this city balanced — that kept the vampires restrained — is gone. The Court’s leash has snapped.”
Seraphina watched as a woman ran across the street, only to be dragged down by a vampire and silenced. Her stomach twisted. “Caelum,” she whispered.
Lucen turned sharply. “What about him?”
“I felt him,” she said, her voice breaking. “When he came to the Gathering… our bond, it— it woke something. I saw the man he used to be. The one I loved. But he’s not that anymore.”
Lucen’s expression darkened. “He’s worse. The Court crowned him king of ruin.”
Seraphina looked out over the burning city. “He doesn’t want to destroy the world. He’s trying to hold it together. I can feel it — the pain, the power tearing at him. He’s slipping.”
Lucen stared at her. “Then he’ll take everything down with him.”
Somewhere across the city, Caelum stood in the center of what had once been Trine’s cathedral square.
The ground was slick with blood. The fires reflected in his silver eyes as he watched his people — his monsters — feed.
He felt her magic still, faint and fading. Every pulse of it made his chest ache. When he had seen her at the Gathering, for one unbearable moment, he had remembered everything — the girl in the Vale forest, the witch who gave him eternity, the light he had sworn to protect.
But he had gone too far. The Court’s power had sunk its claws into him long ago. His throne was built on blood, his name a curse whispered in prayers. To love her again would mean to destroy everything he had created.
He closed his eyes, listening to the distant cries.
A younger vampire approached him, eyes wild. “My lord, the humans are fleeing the lower quarters. Should we pursue?”
Caelum opened his eyes slowly. “No.”
The vampire hesitated. “But—”
“Kill those who stand in your way,” Caelum said softly. “Leave the rest. They’ll run back to us eventually. They always do.”
The vampire bowed and vanished into the smoke.
Elysande stepped from the shadows behind him, her smile faint and cruel. “You’re merciful tonight,” she said.
He didn’t look at her. “Mercy is a habit I’ve been trying to forget.”
She circled him slowly, her presence like a whisper of silk and poison. “You saw her, didn’t you? The witch.”
His jaw tightened. “You already know the answer.”
Elysande’s eyes gleamed. “Then you know what she is now — the last barrier between us and the new age. Her death will seal the balance forever.”
Caelum turned his gaze to the burning city. “And yet you failed to kill her.”
For a moment, something dangerous flickered in Elysande’s expression. “You stopped me,” she said quietly.
He didn’t answer.
“You still feel her,” she said. “Even after all these centuries. She broke you once. She’ll do it again.”
Caelum’s voice was a whisper. “Maybe that’s what I want.”
Elysande stared at him, disbelief turning to fury. “You think love will save you? It will destroy you, Caelum. It already has.”
She vanished into the smoke, her laughter trailing behind her like ash.
Caelum stood alone in the firelight, his heart heavy. The bond burned faintly against his wrist, weaker now but alive. He could feel Seraphina’s exhaustion through it — her pain, her grief, her fading hope.
He closed his eyes. “You should have stayed dead,” he whispered. “It would have been kinder.”
Back beneath the city, Seraphina sank to her knees, her body trembling. The faint echo of his voice reached her through the bond — a whisper, soft and sorrowful.
Lucen placed a hand on her shoulder. “You can’t save him,” he said quietly.
Seraphina lifted her head, her eyes glowing faintly gold. “I don’t want to save him. I want to end this.”
Lucen nodded slowly. “Then rest. When your strength returns, we hunt again.”
Seraphina looked out at the burning horizon. The city screamed. The world burned. And somewhere in that ruin stood the man she once loved, lost to the monster she helped create.
For the first time in centuries, she felt something colder than fear.
Resolve.
“The balance is gone,” she whispered. “Then I’ll build a new one.”
And above them, Trine bled under a crimson sky.