Page 129
Story: Fate & Furies
If I ever get out of here, I’ll say it first,she vowed. I’ll be the one to take the leap for him.
More glass shattered, sounding closer this time.
Not knowing why, she ran towards it, only to find that the mirrors behind her had started to crack as frost crept across their faces.
Suddenly there was a surge, and the ear-piercing sound of a thousand mirrors shattering into a million pieces. It grew louder and louder, closer and closer. All the while, Thea raced through the maze, twisting and turning at every bend, her reflections either chasing her or fleeing the flood of glass. She didn’t know which, nor did she care; she just had to get to the centre, had to —
Her heart seized and she skidded to a stop, her boots sliding across the damp ground, her arms flailing to keep her balance.
The space opened up.
Before her stood a colossal mirror. The largest she had ever seen.
She was shown a hundred different versions of herself, distorted and ugly, broken and hollow, raging and vengeful. Thea drew a ragged breath as she saw each angle of herself with clarity, saw the kernel of truth in each of them, along with the falsehoods.
At long last, she locked eyes with herself.
There, she saw every horrible thing she’d ever suspected about herself. Saw the darkest, most rotten parts of the girl she’d been, and the woman she’d become.
Althea Zoltaire faced her shadow side.
‘I…’ she croaked. ‘A Warsword must accept themselves… especially the darkest parts…’ She gulped for air. ‘I accept me. All of me.’
Thea met her own gaze, recognising that every broken part could be reforged into something stronger, something that did not yield in the face of adversity.
Beyond the flawless shine of the glass, beneath the layers of poison she’d been doused in, Thea watched as her reflection at long last cast something back towards her that she understood.
It was her determination.
She watched in awe as it crumbled like ash around her, only to be reborn in the crucible of the maze of mirrors.
As it did, the final expanse of glass cracked in two.
The sheets of mirror fell, crashing to the ground and splintering into millions of tiny pieces of silver.
Only to reveal two elaborately carved doors.
Still trying to catch her breath, Thea wiped the sweat from her brow and pushed the loose strands of hair from her eyes, steeling herself once more.
Both doors swung inward.
A strangled noise escaped her as she realised what they revealed.
Two futures.
One choice.
‘You cannot be both a storm wielder and a Warsword.’Audra’s words echoed through the cavernous chamber.‘You have to choose, Thea…’
Thea’s stomach lurched and a bitter taste spread across her tongue. She hadn’t believed Audra. She had thought… What had she thought? That she was above the laws of the midrealms? That the Furies would make an exception just for her?
Her throat went dry as she surveyed the futures before her.
The first showed her in a field of heather, her very presence singing with storm magic, the magic she’d come to love. Lightning crackled at her fingertips and thunder rolled through the sky. Her power was more than she had ever imagined. From the mirror doorway, she could feel it vibrating through the world – it was hers for the taking, a force so strong she would never again question her place in the midrealms, her worthiness.
The second showed her amid the ashes of an achingly familiar place, wielding a blade of Naarvian steel. Not Malik’s dagger, nor Wilder’s swords… But a blade of her own. A Warsword blade. She was fighting shadow wraiths, cleaving through darkness in a blur of silver. A Warsword totem displayed proudly on her right arm over her armour.
But there was no magic. No storm within her.
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