Asha made herself small in the boat, a tiny crouched figure all but drowned in a black coat. She could swim, but the terrifying lash of the waves gave her no hope of survival if she fell in. El had disappeared from her senses, but she knew it was him who caused it; a manifestation of anger she for once couldn’t feel, but which tore physically into the world around them instead. His absence left her no protection from the outside. Fear raced her heart like it might burst. Panic made her shake as though her body was no longer her own. And there was worse too.
It only came into sharper relief the closer he drove them relentlessly to shore. It’s not like they had been the only boat on the lake on such a calm day. Her breathing came in sharp sobs, trying desperately to convince her lungs they were not full of water, as her sentient gift was sure they were. And when they lurched to a sudden stop, she rolled with the motion, unable to stop herself. Her body remained curled into itself in the bottom of the boat. Trembling arms cocooned around her head, and she was soaked through to her icy core. The overload left her almost catatonic. Asha was not aware. Caught still in a storm of her own, she could only feel.
Elias Donovan vaulted from the boat and stormed up the shore like some ancient god dredged from the slimy sea and not the gangly adolescent boy he was, throwing a temper tantrum for a lost toy. Sören waited in kingly silence, but his face was grim. He did not savour confrontation, preferring subtler arts to achieve what he wanted. And while he did not quite feel compassion for the destruction wrought — in all honesty, should it bear fruit, he would upend the lake in a watery tempest himself to find what he needed – he did not approve of needless, violent rage. The boy appeared to be alone, which perhaps accounted for his stupidly emotional response. Should Sören actually possess the fucking shard, did Elias really think he could claim it by strength?
His lips pursed. He did not look down at Kemala, though he was aware of her regard for a name different from the one he had given to her. Alvis was business though. He felt no guilt for his revealed duplicity, only annoyance to have to explain it later.
“You employed me to find it,” he said, voice level. He spoke to Elias like a recalcitrant child, knowing it would probably spiral his temper into a deeper frenzy, but he would not do him the favour of meeting him as an equal. “And it is what I have been doing here – searching.”
He spoke not the details, having never planned to reveal his instinct that the creature would be lured by a woman’s power, nor his knowledge that Roopkund’s guardian had been triggered by a man’s. He thought he had discovered the key today, but it seemed the mystery still persisted. In the back of his mind, he puzzled over why the creature had not been drawn to Kemala’s gifts this second time, until a possessive twist considered that perhaps there was another element at play – a third hunter. And that it was possible Elias was correct that the shard had been claimed, just wrong about by whom.
His hands rested in his pockets, unruffled as he stared Elias down. Any ire was contained behind the calculation of his mild eyes. He wondered if there might be retaliation, and he was primed for the possibility, but he also trusted in the company by his side. Kemala once stood alone against a tsunami, and the winds heeded her call. If there was a storm to fear, it was wearing that shawl. “Stop acting like a child and look at the damage you are causing.”
Elias sneered at Alvis, his pale lips curling with the certainty that the man was hiding the prize for himself. That smug silence of his, Elias thought bitterly, was a coward’s shield. Yet Elias could see the cracks. The strongman wasn’t as indifferent as he pretended to be. No, not with the storm tearing apart the lake and its people like a wolf shredding its prey. Alvis’s calm was a lie, and Elias would be the one to break it.
The storm roared at Elias’s command, a feral thing eager to please its master. A twisted grin played on his face as he fed more of his will into its fury. The winds howled like demons, snatching at his coat until it flapped wildly around him, more wing than fabric. Thunder rolled through the heavens, a sound so loud it seemed to shake the marrow of the earth. The lake itself answered his call, the water lifting in unnatural waves, spiraling upward as though defying gravity itself.
Elias turned to take it all in—the chaos, the destruction, the raw power that sang in his blood. But his triumph was shattered the moment he spotted the boat. It tilted, pitched violently, and then flipped like a coin. For an instant, he could see Asha, her pale arms flailing on instinct, before the freezing water claimed her.
Shock lanced through him, cold and sharp as a blade. His confidence faltered, a flicker of hesitation cutting through the storm’s relentless rhythm. Manipulating Alvis was the plan—coaxing him, forcing him, into revealing his secrets. But now…
Now, Asha was drowning.
She was just a girl. He told himself that her life meant nothing to him in the grand scheme of things. And yet, as her head vanished beneath the icy waves, a part of Elias he didn’t fully understand rebelled. Was this the cost of victory? Was this what it meant to wield power?
With a snarl, he flung his will outward, and the storm obeyed. The winds died suddenly, and the lake responded with an unnatural stillness, as though holding its breath. The waters shifted under his control, drawn back and away from the shoreline until they rose into a towering wall, higher than any tree, higher than the gods themselves. The pressure of holding it strained every fiber of his being, yet he pressed on, wading through the sucking mud and silt to find her.
There she was, curled in on herself, her body limp and trembling. She looked so small, so fragile, in that moment. He knelt beside her, his scrawny frame trembling with effort as he reached for her. “Ashavari, you will be the death of me,” he croaked, his voice barely audible over the roar of displaced water. She didn’t respond. Panic licked at the edges of his mind as he gathered her into his arms, her soaked form heavier than he expected.
The strain was unbearable. Holding the lake at bay was like trying to restrain a wild animal with his bare hands. Still, he gritted his teeth and hauled her upward. Mud caked his boots, his footing slipping as he stumbled closer to the shoreline. That was when he saw it—the chasm.
It wasn’t just a dip in the lakebed. It was a vast, yawning abyss, its jagged edges plunging into endless darkness. The sight froze him in place. He stared into the void, awestruck by its sheer enormity, its unknowable depths. It whispered to him, called to some deep part of him that longed to understand the mysteries hidden far below. For a moment, he felt weightless, as though the pull of the chasm was stronger than gravity itself.
But Asha shivered violently in his arms, jolting him back to reality. The life clinging to his chest was fragile, too fragile for him to indulge his curiosity now. Swallowing his awe, he tore himself away from the edge and trudged back toward the shore. Each step was harder than the last. The wall of water behind him trembled as his strength waned, droplets beginning to cascade down its surface. He wouldn’t be able to hold it much longer.
At last, he reached solid ground. Alvis stood there, impassive as ever, his sharp features unreadable. Another figure—a woman Elias barely registered—hovered beside him, her dark eyes flicking between the towering wave and the soaked, shivering girl in Elias’s arms. He shoved past them without a word, his boots squelching in the mud as the water behind him collapsed. The wave surged forward, rushing to reclaim the shore with an earth-shaking crash.
“Come on,” Elias snapped, his voice rough with exhaustion. He didn’t wait for a reply. There was no time. If Asha was going to live, she needed help. And as much as he hated to admit it, he couldn’t do this alone.
Kemala’s reaction when the storm bringer referred to Sören as "Alvis" was sharp but silent, her expression hardening like stone. Judgment flickered in her dark eyes. Which name was the truth? Sören or Alvis? And if he’d lied about that, what else had he lied about? The questions churned in her mind, but there was no time to voice them. The storm was still raging, and it was growing fiercer by the second.
Kemala clenched her fists, trying to steady her breathing. She wanted—needed—to confront him, but this wasn’t the moment for arguments. Her focus turned instead to the storm, its ferocity so overwhelming that she began to doubt whether she could do anything to stop it at all.
The clash between the storm bringer and Sören was nearly as violent as the tempest itself. Tension crackled in the air, raw and electric, as the two exchanged words and willpower in equal measure. Kemala closed her eyes and centered herself, drawing deep into the core of her tenaga dalam. The ancient oneness filled her, threading her soul to the earth, to the sky, to the energy humming in the air around her. She raised her arms, trying to seize the invisible threads of the storm and bend them to her will. But it was like trying to push a boulder uphill—an impossible, grueling effort against a force far stronger than she anticipated.
Her breath hitched when the storm surged again. The wind screamed, the rain pelted down like needles, and the waters churned with a relentless hunger. Kemala threw everything she had into holding the forces back, gritting her teeth as she fought the escalation. But it wasn’t just a battle with the natural world anymore—this was will against will. Hers against his. And the storm bringer was winning.
When the boat overturned, the scene unfolded in a horrible instant. Kemala’s sharp eyes caught the sight of a girl tumbling into the water, her arms flailing before the icy waves swallowed her whole. Her chest tightened in anger, and her frustration boiled over. He did this. The storm bringer’s recklessness had pushed everything too far. Kemala’s glare shot toward him, and she felt a flicker of satisfaction as his expression faltered.
Still, she focused on the towering wall of water that rose like a monstrous tidal wave, ready to crash down and obliterate them all. Summoning all of her strength, she redirected her efforts, forcing the water to hold its place. Her power pushed against his, barely keeping the deluge at bay. Cold seeped into her bones. She was drenched, exhausted, and shaking from the strain.
And now there was an injured girl to deal with.
When the waters finally calmed and the winds died down, Kemala was trembling—not just with fatigue, but with fury. She shot Sören a glare, one that spoke volumes, assuming he was not innocent in all this. She didn’t need words to convey her thoughts: This is your fault. All of it. For now, though, she swallowed her anger. There was no time for it. She had no choice but to follow the others toward whatever shelter they could find.
The hostel was too far, and the roads were clogged with storm debris. Eventually, they came across a small inn. The storm’s fury had left its mark here as well—shingles were scattered across the ground, and part of the roof sagged dangerously. A worker stood outside, inspecting the damage when they approached.
“We need a room. Right now!” Kemala shouted up at him. Her voice was sharp, cutting through the muffled drizzle of leftover rain. The man didn’t respond beyond a lazy wave of his hand, clearly indifferent to their plight. Kemala didn’t wait for an invitation. She stormed ahead, shoving the door open and searching until she found an empty room. It was small, damp, and smelled faintly of mildew, but it would do.
“This will work,” she called back to the boys. “Get in here.”
When they entered, she was already in action. “Put her on the bed,” she commanded, nodding to the injured girl in their arms. Her voice brooked no argument. “I need to get her dry. If one of you two fool-headed men has any sense, you’ll start that fire. Then get out. Decency, remember?”
Neither of them moved quickly enough for her liking. “Go!” she snapped, her glare like daggers. “And when you’re done playing with matches, find a doctor. She could have water in her lungs, and I’m no miracle worker.”
The storm had dissipated, but Kemala’s frustration had not. She fixed both men with a look that could have stopped the storm itself. “And no more temper tantrums from either of you along the way,” she warned. “We don’t have time for egos.”
Without waiting for a response, she turned her attention to the girl on the bed, peeling away the drenched layers of fabric and replacing anger with determination. If no one else was going to do the right thing, Kemala would.
Sören was largely unmoved by the life which was held in the balance, not through callousness, but because the destruction Elias wrought in his temper was likely to touch far more lives than the single one he appeared to care about. His eyes cast about the lake and the beleaguered shoreline. The damage was meaningless, and he did not like it. But more importantly, the power displayed was of a magnitude Sören had not before comprehended. It would require reassessment.
He glanced at Kemala, seeking her judgement, but only saw the ferocity of her restrained anger. Elias’s idiocy was hardly Sören’s doing, and he resented being categorised alongside such poor self-control. The child raged in a wild tantrum, while Sören had had complete mastery of their encounter on the lake. Yet he recognised the unresolved ill between them, frustrated that his own affairs would now have to wait. A muscle flexed in his jaw.
As Elias limped from the lake he barely looked capable of maintaining his hold on the girl in his arms, let alone carrying her all that way, but Sören did not offer his help. Let the boy feel the weight of that soul; let him feel every miserable, worried step, and perhaps think twice next time.
Kemala herself was soaked and trembling, and it earned a longer look from him as she began to orchestrate them. But he knew better than to say anything.
The inn was poor quality, even without the storm-damage. Kemala was a dervish; one that it was better to allow to run its course. Inside the damp room Sören’s fist tightened, lighting the fire as instructed. “Don’t forget to tend to yourself as well, Kemala,” he said. No doubt his only response would be the fiery arrows of her scorn, but she already suffered the cold of Siberia more than most. He dropped his bag by the door, containing the supplies they had had in the boat. Then he pressed a hand to Elias’s shoulder to guide him out, indifferent to whether he went easily or not.
The door closed. Elias was likewise drenched under his grip, his coat plastered to his scrawny form, and Sören let go before he could shake himself free instead. If he imagined a reckoning he would be disappointed. If anything Sören was pensive. He rubbed his face and headed back out to the inn’s foyer.
Such was her stupor, Asha did not notice when her sentient senses instead became her reality. The fear and panic gripped as tightly as the sudden darkness and cold. The leather coat dragged her down quickly, and she didn’t fight it. Then, suddenly, there was absence and silence; a weight that blanketed everything but the speed of her frightened heart, and the short shallow gasps of her struggling breath. She curled into it. But the moment of respite didn’t last. Some small part of her realised it was Elias; that he had dropped the shield of his power now. But the tendrils of his panic were no comfort. It didn’t matter. By now the shock stole the consciousness right from underneath her.