"THE EMBER SIGIL NEEDS TO BE RETRIEVED," Grayson’s voice cut through the quiet.
Mason finished buttoning his shirt, his usual humor nowhere to be found. Carson leaned against the wall, arms folded, watching Grayson with a look that had lost its edge.
Mailah looked at him sharply. "Retrieved?"
"It does not belong in human hands," he said. "Displayed without protection, without understanding. Soone will notice what it is eventually. And when they do, it will not remain behind glass."
Carson scoffed. "You make it sound like so tourist is going to trip over it and unlock Hell."
Grayson’s gaze flicked to him, cool and unforgiving. "All it takes is one person who understands what they are looking at. Curiosity is not benign when it stumbles into power."
Carson straightened. "And how do you plan on taking it back? Breaking into a museum isn’t exactly discreet. Caras. Guards. Alarms. You forget we’re supposed to be setting the standard for exiles this century."
Mason nodded. "We’re in charge of keeping our people invisible. You walk into a museum and tear a relic out of a glass case, and suddenly invisibility becos a suggestion."
Grayson didn’t argue. "We need to discuss the thod," he said.
Mason’s brow creased. "Soon as in... now?"
"Tonight," Grayson replied. "Get Lucson and Ravenson back here for dinner."
"Here?" Carson asked, glancing around the bedroom with its disarray.
"My estate," Grayson said. "Not here."
Mason and Carson exchanged a look—one that carried far more aning than the briefness of it suggested.
Mailah noticed.
She didn’t know why the location mattered, but the look in their eyes told her it did.
Grayson was already turning away.
She followed him out of the room, frustration tightening her steps. By the ti they reached the car, she was done swallowing it.
"Why aren’t we staying?" she asked as the door shut behind her. "If you’re calling everyone in for a eting, why do we have to go back to your place?"
He didn’t answer imdiately. The engine purred to life beneath his hands.
"You don’t have to worry about that," he said at last.
Her jaw clenched. "That’s not an answer."
Silence.
The city lights streaked across the windshield, bright and indifferent.
Mailah folded her arms. "Why is the Ember Sigil so important to you? Not politically. Not strategically. Personally."
He stared at the road.
She waited, irritation giving way to sothing more careful. "You don’t talk about things you don’t care about," she said. "You talk about this."
For a long mont, she thought he would stay quiet.
Then he spoke.
"There was a kingdom," Grayson said at last, his voice low and distant. "Before exile. Before restraint beca a decision instead of a necessity."
The world outside the car thinned, streetlights saring into color and shadow as his words pulled Mailah sowhere else.
********************************************************************
The kingdom of Avarith had not been ant to fall that night.
It was supposed to be a clean taking.
Grayson and his brothers stood at the edge of the gates, the sky above torn open by storm light and distant fire. Towers rose in jagged tiers, warded by old magic that trembled under their presence.
The kingdom had refused the Covenant. It had mocked demon law. It had sheltered exiles who thought themselves untouchable.
They were there to make an example.
The gates fell with a scream of stone.
Carson surged forward first, tearing through the ward-lines with a reckless grin, his power unraveling spells like thread. Mason followed, precise and ruthless, turning defenders into shadows on the walls. Ravenson moved through the chaos like a blade in fog, calculated and cold. Grayson stayed at Lucson’s shoulder, watching the battlefield as if it were a board only he could see clearly.
Grayson waited.
He always waited.
Because when he moved, kingdoms noticed.
The ember inside him stirred—an ancient, all-consuming fire that did not simply burn what it touched. It erased. It devoured magic, flesh, mory.
Among the brothers, only Grayson carried it. Their father had called it inheritance. The realm whispered another word for it: ending.
It was why Grayson had been nad heir.
And why he was feared.
They breached the inner kingdom in minutes. Resistance crumbled. The defenders scattered.
The kingdom’s regent was dragged from the high steps of the citadel, spitting curses in their direction.
"You think conquest makes you kings?" the regent snarled. "You’re nothing but beasts wearing crowns."
Grayson stopped.
It was a small thing. A careless insult from a man already beaten. But sothing in the words caught on the wrong edge of his temper. The ember flared, hungry and sudden.
Lucson felt it before it happened.
"Grayson," he said sharply. "Stand down."
The regent laughed. "Do it," he taunted. "Show them what kind of ruler you are."
The ember answered.
Fire tore free of Grayson in a wave that swallowed the square whole. Not fla as so understood it, but sothing brighter, deeper—heat that ate sound, light that hollowed stone.
The ground blistered into glass. The air scread. Towers along the avenue ignited in silent collapse.
The kingdom burned.
Not in chaos.
In obedience to Grayson’s fury.
Lucson swore and threw himself into containnt, weaving counterforce around the spreading inferno.
Mason and Ravenson carved channels through the fire, diverting it skyward.
Carson, reckless even now, plunged into the heat to drag survivors from the edges.
It took all of them.
And still, the fire wanted more.
By the ti the ember was forced back into Grayson’s chest, a quarter of the inner city was gone.
Not conquered.
Gone.
Silence fell over ruin.
Grayson stood amid vitrified stone and drifting ash, the ember still raging in his veins, his breath too steady for what he’d done. The regent was ash at his feet. The kingdom knelt—not in fear of demon law, but in terror of him.
Lucson stepped in front of Grayson, blocking the sight of the devastation.
"That wasn’t command," he said quietly. "That was loss of control."
Grayson said nothing.
"You could have ended the kingdom," Lucson went on. "And you almost did. If we hadn’t contained it—"
"It would not have stopped," Mason said, staring at the glassed horizon.
Ravenson’s voice was colder. "This is becoming a pattern."
The words landed heavier than accusation. They were truth.
Grayson looked at the ruin he had made. Not with remorse. With recognition.
This was the crossroads.
That night, beneath a sky still glowing with afterfire, Grayson made a decision no heir had made before him.
He would take the ember out.
The ritual was older than demon law, a severing ant only for powers that could not be allowed to exist freely.
The ember tore from him in a blaze of white heat that split the night, condensing into an obsidian disk etched with runes ant to hold what could not be destroyed.
The Ember Sigil.
It was not painless.
It was not clean.
But when it was done, the fire inside him was quieter. Contained. Locked away in sothing he could set down.
Grayson looked at the Sigil in his bloodied palm.
"I will not rule with this inside ," he said. "Not until I learn to command it."
Lucson t his gaze. "And until then?"
"I will keep it sowhere I cannot reach," Grayson replied. "If I lose myself again... it cannot be here to answer ."
That was as far as the mory went.
The flashback dissolved into the quiet hum of the car engine.
Mailah stared ahead, breath shallow. "You took the worst part of yourself out... because you were afraid of what you’d do with it."
"I was afraid of what I had already done," Grayson said.
She turned to him. "So you assud you brought the Ember Sigil to Earth... and now you find out your other self gave it to a museum."
His grip tightened on the wheel.
"If I chose to give it away," he said quietly, "then the man I was trusted humanity with the part of that destroys kingdoms."
The estate gates opened ahead of them.
Mailah swallowed. "That’s... a lot of trust."
Grayson didn’t answer.
Behind glass and ignorance, the Ember Sigil waited—holding the fire of a king who had once chosen not to burn the world.
The car rolled through the gates of Grayson’s estate, tires whispering over stone. The lights along the drive cast long, careful shadows across the grounds, illuminating hedges trimd into restraint and symtry—order imposed on sothing that wanted to grow wild.
Mailah watched the estate approach, the familiar silhouette both a comfort and a warning. "So if you take it back," she said quietly, "you’re not just reclaiming a relic. You’re reclaiming... a part of yourself you once decided you couldn’t be trusted with."
Grayson didn’t slow the car. "It is not a matter of trust. It is a matter of responsibility."
"Those aren’t opposites," she said. "They’re usually tangled together."
He was quiet for a long mont. The silence didn’t feel like dismissal this ti. It felt like consideration.
"The ember answers to ," he said. "It always has."
The car ca to a stop. The engine idled, a soft purr in the quiet.
Grayson didn’t move to get out. He stared ahead at the doors, as if weighing whether crossing that threshold would commit him to a path he couldn’t easily walk back from.
"If I take the Ember Sigil back," he said, "my brothers will assu I intend to use it."
"Do you?" Mailah asked.
His jaw tightened.
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