Page 67 of Moonlit Desires
Chapter twenty-four
The Battle
____________
The barrier between realms parts like a curtain of diseased flesh, revealing a landscape that defies natural law.
Lyra steps through first, the mark between her shoulder blades pulsing with newfound power—no longer merely her own silver light but a symphony of energies shared between her and the four guardians who follow in perfect formation.
The ground beneath her feet squelches with putrid moisture, decaying vegetation releasing spores that hang in the air like malevolent constellations.
Above, a sky the color of bruised flesh stretches endlessly, three sickly moons arranged in mocking imitation of the Court's sacred alignment.
"She knows we're coming," Lyra whispers, the words hanging visible in the fetid air before dissipating into a faint silver mist. The ritual's effects linger in her body—skin hypersensitive, nerves alive with magic that hums just beneath the surface.
Each guardian's essence flows through her veins alongside her own: Kael's disciplined strength, Riven's adaptable shadows, Thorne's primal power, Ashen's prophetic clarity.
Kael moves to her flank without command, his golden blade sliding from its sheath with a sound like destiny fulfilled.
The small silver crescent on his chest glows through his battle armor, matching the rhythm of Lyra's mark with perfect synchronicity.
"The Queen has prepared this battlefield to her advantage," he observes, blue-black eyes scanning the twisted horizon where thorned vines writhe with apparent sentience.
"Every plant, every shadow serves her purpose. "
"Not every shadow," Riven counters, mercury eyes gleaming with twilight magic as he weaves screens of darkness around their perimeter.
His shadows move differently now—no longer purely obsidian but shot through with threads of silver that pulse in time with Lyra's heartbeat.
Where the darkness touches twisted vegetation, the corruption momentarily recedes, as if Riven's essence now carries some purifying quality it lacked before.
Thorne circles their position, his transformation already underway.
Golden fur ripples across skin that struggles to contain the beast within, claws extending from fingers that still maintain human dexterity.
The silver mark on his shoulder seems to shift positions as his form changes, always finding the perfect balance point between his dual natures.
He sniffs the putrid air, lips curling back from lengthening canines.
"She's here already," he growls, the words distorted by a mouth reshaping itself for roaring rather than speech. "Watching. Waiting."
Ashen completes their defensive formation, his trembling hands—one steady where the silver mark adorns his palm—sketching protective wards that hang in the air like crystalline webs.
His usually fractured attention seems momentarily unified, colorless eyes reflecting geometries impossible in normal space.
"The Queen approaches through multiple futures," he murmurs, voice clearer than usual.
"She splits her attack across timelines to confuse our defense. "
The corrupted landscape shudders in response to their presence, as if the very ground registers the threat they pose.
Thorned vines retreat from their immediate vicinity, creating a perfect circle of bare earth around them that feels more trap than concession.
The stench of decay intensifies, carrying notes of copper and rot and something sweeter, more insidious—the Queen's personal perfume, designed to cloud judgment and weaken resolve.
Lyra feels the first probing tendrils of the Queen's magic—black-green energy that tests their defenses like fingers searching for weakness in armor.
Her mark responds automatically, silver light extending outward to meet this tentative assault.
Where the energies touch, reality hisses like water on hot metal, steam rising in patterns that resemble screaming faces before dissipating.
"Come out," Lyra calls, her voice steadier than the rabbiting of her heart might suggest. The ritual has changed her in ways she's still discovering—confidence flowing through channels previously blocked by doubt, certainty replacing questions that once paralyzed her.
"Face us directly instead of hiding behind your corrupted garden. "
The air before them thickens, condensing into matter that writhes and twists as it takes form.
Thorns erupt from seemingly empty space, arranging themselves into a framework that flesh and bone soon fill.
The Queen of Thorns materializes through this gruesome birth, her body both terrible and magnificent in its wrongness.
She stands twice Kael's height, her limbs impossibly long and jointed in places no human or fae anatomy would allow.
Her skin—where it can be seen between arrangements of thorns that grow directly from her flesh—gleams with the pearlescent quality of rot advancing across perfect fruit.
Her face might once have been beautiful before thorns erupted from beneath her cheekbones, before her eyes darkened to solid black pools that reflect nothing yet absorb everything, before her lips thinned to bloodless lines that never close fully over teeth like polished obsidian needles.
Most horrifying is her crown—not an accessory but a part of her, thorns growing upward from her scalp in elaborate whorls that occasionally shift position of their own accord.
Black ichor drips steadily from these thorns, falling onto her shoulders where it hisses and steams before being absorbed into her unnatural flesh.
"The little marked one returns," the Queen says, her voice a symphony of discordant notes that slide against each other like rusted metal.
"And she's brought her pretty guardians, all bound up in silver chains of their own making.
" Her gaze—despite lacking pupils or irises—fixes on each guardian in turn, lingering longest on Riven.
"My former shadowmancer remembers the hospitality of my garden, doesn't he?
How thoroughly my thorns explored his essence? "
Riven's shadows darken, momentarily losing their silver threads as memory threatens to overwhelm present purpose.
Lyra feels his distress through their bond—not as abstract knowledge but as visceral sensation, cold dread seeping into her own veins.
She pushes back instinctively, sending silver warmth through their connection until his shadows stabilize once more.
The Queen's lipless mouth stretches in approximation of a smile.
"How sweet. You think your little ritual makes any difference.
" She gestures with elongated fingers, thorns extending from each knuckle like delicate, deadly jewelry.
"You've merely tied yourselves together for more efficient slaughter.
Five hearts beating as one means five hearts stopping with a single thrust."
"Enough talk," Kael says, sword raised in perfect guard position, its golden runes igniting with cold fire that pushes back the gloom. "Your reign of corruption ends today."
The Queen's laughter sounds like glass breaking inside a throat never meant for human sounds.
"So formal, warrior. So righteous. Did you tell your precious queen how many you slaughtered in my name before your conscience grew inconvenient?
" She turns her eyeless gaze to Lyra. "Ask him about the children of the Autumn Court.
Ask how their blood felt on his golden blade. "
Kael's jaw tightens, but his stance never wavers.
Lyra feels his shame through their bond—not fresh and raw but old and scarred, a wound long acknowledged and carried with terrible honor.
She sends him silent reassurance, her trust flowing through their connection to counter the Queen's poisonous words.
"Your manipulations won't work anymore," Lyra says, stepping forward until she stands at the exact center of their formation. "We know who we are. Together and separately."
The Queen's response comes not in words but action.
Her arms extend unnaturally, thorns erupting from her flesh in waves that surge toward them like living spears.
The air fills with the stench of burning metal as the thorns secrete corrosive fluid from their tips—poison designed to eat through magical defenses before devouring flesh beneath.
The guardians respond as one, their movements synchronized not through practice but through the bond that connects them beyond physical space.
Kael's blade describes perfect arcs that sever thorns mid-flight, each cut releasing sizzling fluid that he dodges with dancer's precision.
Riven's shadows solidify into barriers that absorb the projectiles, darkness consuming corruption before spitting out harmless ash.
Thorne's beast form moves with impossible speed, claws shredding thorns that penetrate their initial defenses.
Ashen's wards flare visible at key moments, deflecting thorns that would have found gaps in their protection.
Lyra stands unmoving at their center, her mark blazing through her clothing with intensity that turns night to silver day within their defensive circle.
Through their bond, she feels each guardian's exertion, each moment of pain when defense isn't quite perfect, each surge of determination that follows.
She draws these sensations into herself, filters them through her own essence, then returns them amplified—Kael's strength made greater, Riven's shadows more resilient, Thorne's speed enhanced, Ashen's perception sharpened.