OLIVER GLANCED between them all, clutching Shadow’s carrier like a shield.
"Do I... get to leave the den?"
"That depends," Grayson said. "You expect to just let you walk away with a familiar who now knows the layout of my estate, the strength of my wards, and potentially sensitive information about my household?"
Oliver paled slightly. "When you put it like that, it sounds like a security risk."
"It is a security risk," Grayson agreed.
"I barely know how to pick incense," Oliver protested. "But if it keeps from being hexed, I’ll share my grandmother’s old notes. She did warn about things brewing between the supernatural factions."
That drew silence.
Lucien’s smile sharpened, almost imperceptibly. "Well. Looks like the cat really did drag in sothing useful."
All eyes turned to him.
"Think about it," Lucien continued. "Mr. Thorne here is clearly not a threat. He’s bumbling but honest, which is refreshingly rare in our circles. And he cos from a line of hedge witches, which ans he has connections to the mortal magical community—a community that’s largely stayed neutral in demon politics."
"I don’t have connections," Oliver protested. "I have my grandmother’s address book and a very judgntal cat."
"That’s more than most demons have," Lucien pointed out. "And right now, Grayson and Mailah could use all the allies they can get."
Mailah caught on first. "You want to recruit him?"
"I want to suggest a mutually beneficial arrangent," Lucien corrected. "Mr. Thorne gets to keep his familiar safe from less scrupulous supernatural beings. In exchange, he provides occasional consultation on mortal magical matters and ensures that Shadow doesn’t share secrets with anyone who might use them against us."
"I feel like I’m being drafted into sothing very dangerous," Oliver said slowly.
"You are," Grayson confird. "But you’re also being offered protection. The mont you walked up to my gates looking for your familiar, you beca visible to anyone watching this estate. And trust , people are watching."
Oliver clutched Shadow tighter, his earlier cheer fading into genuine concern. "Because of the thing with the demons and the humans and the collective?"
The silence that followed was heavy.
"You know about that?" Mailah asked carefully.
"Grandmother’s journals ntioned it," Oliver said. "She was worried about growing tensions between supernatural factions. Said sothing big was coming, sothing that would force everyone to choose sides. I thought she was being paranoid—she did that sotis in her later years—but..."
"But she was right," Grayson finished grimly.
Oliver looked between them—Grayson with his controlled fury, Lucien with his knowing smile, Mailah with her engagent ring catching the morning light—and seed to co to a decision.
"Alright," he said. "I’m in. Whatever this is, whatever you’re trying to do, I’ll help. Grandmother always said the Thorne family had a talent for being in the right place at the wrong ti. Might as well make it count."
Shadow purred approval, and sohow, that felt like the most supernatural thing that had happened all morning.
Mailah felt it then—that strange pull again. The sense that fate had quietly rearranged itself, placing another piece on their board.
When Oliver t her eyes, offering a shy, disarming smile, she felt an involuntary thought slip through her mind—Are all n involved in the supernatural world really this beautiful, or does the universe just enjoy testing ?
Grayson’s sigh could have powered a small storm.
"Fine," he said at last, his voice clipped. "You might as well co in before sothing else decides to notice you standing on my doorstep."
Oliver blinked. "Wait—you’re actually inviting inside?"
"Begrudgingly," Grayson muttered. "And only because the cat’s already compromised half my wards."
Lucien smirked. "Progress. I’ve seen him kill for less."
Grayson ignored him, stepping aside to let Oliver pass through the shimring threshold. The young man crossed it gingerly, as if the air itself might bite.
They made their way through the grand hall, down to the estate’s den. The familiar scent of polished wood and faint brimstone lingered in the air, and the wards thrumd like a heartbeat beneath Mailah’s skin.
The mont she stepped into the den, she froze.
The last ti she’d stood here, her pulse had been faltering—Grayson’s hunger barely reined in as he fought not to take too much. She could still rember the way the world had tilted, the dizzying mix of pleasure and fear, his voice breaking as he’d begged her to stay awake.
Mailah’s breath hitched. She pushed the mory aside, straightening her shoulders as if that could erase the ghost of it. Not now.
Lucien glanced at her briefly—curious, maybe perceptive—but said nothing.
Oliver, blissfully unaware, looked around with wide eyes. "Wow. This place is like.... Do you guys host exorcisms or poetry readings in here?"
"Occasionally both," Lucien said smoothly, lowering himself onto the couch.
Grayson gave him a withering look. "Sit. And don’t touch anything cursed."
Oliver hesitated, then sank into an armchair as if it might bite him. Shadow hopped onto the armrest, tail flicking smugly.
Mailah sat across from Grayson, deliberately focusing on the present—the low hum of magic and the absurdity of a nervous hedge witch sitting in a demon lord’s den.
Oliver’s declaration still lingered between them all, heavy and improbable.
Lucien looked entertained. Grayson looked like he was calculating forty-seven ways this could backfire. Shadow yawned in Oliver’s arms, utterly unimpressed by destiny or its timing.
Mailah just blinked. "You’re in?"
Oliver nodded, though his face said please soone stop before I change my mind.
"I an, I don’t have much of a choice, do I? If I walk out of here, I’m a walking supernatural buffet."
"That’s not inaccurate," Lucien said cheerfully.
Grayson pinched the bridge of his nose. "Wonderful. Another liability."
"Another ally," Mailah corrected, crossing her arms. "We could use one."
"An ally with a cat who steals cursed jewelry," Grayson muttered. "What could possibly go wrong?"
"Plenty," Lucien said helpfully. "But the chaos will be entertaining."
Mailah shot him a look. He smiled—slow, knowing, and annoyingly charming.
Before Grayson could issue another dry retort, Mrs. Baker entered, carrying a tray of tea and a scowl that could banish lesser demons.
By late afternoon, the estate’s library had transford into an accidental war room. Parchnts covered every available surface—maps, sigil diagrams, and scribbled notes in Grayson’s precise handwriting. The air slled faintly of ink, candle wax, and nerves.
Oliver sat at one end of the table, flipping through his grandmother’s journal, while Mailah hovered beside Grayson, trying (and failing) not to be distracted by how unfairly good he looked when he was thinking.
Concentration shouldn’t be this attractive.
Grayson caught her staring once—maybe twice—and smirked faintly without looking up from the parchnt. "If you’re morizing the geotry of my handwriting, Miss, you’re welco to take a picture."
She blinked. "What makes you think I was looking at your handwriting?"
"The angle of your gaze," he said smoothly. "And the fact that I’ve seen that expression before."
Mailah narrowed her eyes. "When?"
"When I offered you coffee instead of walking away," Grayson said evenly.
Lucien, lounging by the fireplace, let out a low, amused hum. "How romantic. Nothing says ’trust ’ like caffeine and a death glare."
"You’re not helping," Grayson said without looking at him.
Lucien’s smile turned lazy. "I wasn’t trying to."
Oliver cleared his throat, clearly eager to steer the conversation away from whatever strange current had sparked between them. "So—uh—these notes ntion a place called the Hollow Market. It’s supposed to be neutral ground for all factions. Demons, witches, humans who ddle with things they shouldn’t—"
"—and thieves, smugglers, rcenaries, and the occasional cursed poet," Lucien supplied, straightening. "A delightful cesspool. Slls like regret and cinnamon."
Mailah frowned. "That sounds... dangerous."
"It is," Grayson said. "Which is exactly why we’re going."
Oliver blanched. "Wait—we?"
"Yes, we," Mailah said, folding her arms, trying to sound braver than she felt. Her heart gave a strange, inconvenient flutter that she promptly ignored. "If we want real information about the Collective, that’s where we’ll find it. We can’t stay hidden forever."
Lucien stretched, his movents as fluid as a cat’s. "Then I’ll drive."
Grayson’s jaw tightened. "No. You’ll draw attention."
Lucien raised a brow. "I’m subtle when I want to be."
"That will be the day," Grayson muttered.
Mailah sighed. "Fine. I’ll drive."
All three n turned to stare at her.
"What?" she demanded. "I passed my test on the first try."
"Yes," Grayson said slowly.
Lucien was nearly doubled over laughing now, delight glinting in his dark eyes. "This is going to be so much fun."
By nightfall, the forest roads had given way to a sprawling maze of glowing stalls and murmured deals. The Hollow Market stretched like a living thing under a tangle of trees whose branches sparkled faintly with sigils. Lanterns swayed, casting shifting colors across faces both human and not.
Mailah couldn’t help staring.
n and won with eyes like molten gold haggled beside so selling vials of bottled lightning. A woman humd softly near a pool of seemingly enchanted water, her song slipping into Mailah’s bones before Grayson gently touched her wrist.
"Don’t listen too long," he murmured. "They sing mories away."
Mailah’s pulse skipped. Not just at the warning—but at the feel of his hand.
"Noted," she said, her voice quieter than intended.
Oliver trailed behind them, eyes wide. "Wow. This is like Etsy but evil."
Lucien chuckled. "You’d be surprised how many of these vendors have online stores."
"Seriously?"
"Of course not."
They turned down a narrow path lined with obsidian lanterns. Grayson moved first, sharp-eyed, scanning every shadow. His energy was tightly coiled, dangerous and protective all at once. Mailah stayed close, trying to read the flickering symbols carved into the ground.
Lucien fell into step beside her. "He’s trying not to show it, but he’s worried about you."
She glanced up at him. "Grayson?"
Lucien nodded. "Demons don’t get attached easily. When they do, it’s... ssy."
Before she could respond, Grayson stopped suddenly. Ahead, a cloaked figure waited—face hidden, scent masked.
"Information first," the figure rasped. "Paynt later."
Lucien muttered, "Typical market logic."
Grayson approached cautiously. "We’re looking for rumors about the Collective."
At the word, the figure stiffened. "You shouldn’t say that here. The walls have ears."
Mailah frowned. "Do the walls also take bribes?"
The figure hesitated—then laughed, a sharp sound like glass breaking. "Brave, this one. You’ll need that."
Before Grayson could press further, a sharp crack split the air. The lanterns flickered violently, and the air turned cold—unnaturally so. The crowd began to murmur. Sowhere behind them, a table overturned.
Lucien’s expression shifted from amused to deadly serious. "We’re being watched."
"By who?" Mailah asked.
He looked skyward. "Not who. What."
Above them, the air shimred. A ripple, like heat—only wrong.
"Mailah, stay close," Grayson ordered.
Before she could ask why, the shimr tore open. A creature stepped through—a shape of shadow and smoke with too many eyes. It howled, soundless but deafening in her skull.
Oliver scread. Shadow hissed. Lucien’s wings—white and ragged—flared open in a flash of light.
Grayson grabbed Mailah and spun her behind him as the creature lunged. His hand flared with crimson sigils. "Cover your ears."
She did—just in ti for him to snarl a command that ripped the air in half. The blast threw the creature back into the stalls, shattering a dozen bottles and scattering rchants who cursed in five languages.
Lucien moved with impossible speed. His light burned the thing’s edges, and for a heartbeat, Mailah saw its true form—a corrupted familiar, twisted beyond reason.
Oliver shouted, "That thing has a binding rune! Soone sent it!"
Grayson cursed under his breath.
Lucien drove his hand forward. The creature scread once, then crumbled into ash. The silence that followed was too still.
The crowd began whispering. Soone shouted Grayson’s na. The sound spread like wildfire.
Lucien’s voice was calm but firm. "We need to leave. Now."
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