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Page 29 of She Who Was Severed (The Ashen Chain Trilogy #1)

Then he’s gone. Turning casually down a slope of broken stone, humming a half-forgotten temple hymn that doesn’t match the key.

I don’t follow.

I stay seated.

The wind pushes ash against my boots. The Chain pulses again—once, low and deep, like it heard everything and is still deciding what to do about it.

I rest my hands in my lap.

I breathe.

And for the first time in days, it doesn’t feel like surrender.

It feels like beginning.

- x -

Ashmere doesn’t breathe.

The city feels stretched too thin—sky like tendon pulled taut, clouds heavy with something that hasn’t fallen yet.

Ash dust creeps along the rooftops like it’s afraid to settle.

Even the wind seems wary, skirting corners instead of cutting through.

The market’s emptied itself down to bones.

Watchers perch on stairwells and ledges with no reason to move.

They don’t know what’s coming. But their bodies do. That’s why they’re already still.

Then the shift hits .

Not sound. Not light. Not even heat at first. Just weight.

A deep, curling pressure that pushes out across the ridge like something exhaled wrong from the world’s chest. I feel it in my teeth.

My knees. The scar on my back throbs once, sharp and precise, like it remembers the mistake I haven’t made yet.

Then I see them.

The wings crest the rise first—broad, shadow-cut things, thick with residual flame. Fire flicks along the edge of every scale, too controlled to be wild, too alive to be conjured. The dragon doesn’t roar. Doesn’t posture. It glides like something that already won. Its body cuts the sky in half.

The moment it breaks the clouds, the temperature shifts. Warm, then hot. Then worse.

Ashmere doesn’t blink.

The dragon wheels once above the outer quarter—broad sweep, low angle. Showing itself. Or maybe showing him.

Kellen rides bare.

No reins. No armor. Nothing between him and the dragon’s spine but smoke, ash, and the last scraps of a coat that clings to his frame like it forgot how to let go.

One boot hangs torn halfway down his calf.

The other is just skin, dirt, and muscle—tight and lean and carved from the kind of heat that doesn’t cool. Doesn’t ask.

His thighs grip the beast like he was born for it. Like the dragon isn’t a creature but a prayer that finally got answered in flesh. And he—he is the offering it took in return.

There’s smoke trailing from his back, curling around his shoulders like fingers. Like the city tried to hold him in. Tried to keep him.

And failed.

He doesn’t lift his chin. Doesn’t signal. Doesn’t show his face like he’s anyone’s to see. He just crouches low, folds into the muscle and spine of that impossible creature like he belongs to it—no, like it belongs to him—and rides the descent like gravity is a lover he’s already tamed.

The fall isn’t violent.

It’s intimate.

Slow and sure, like the kind of touch you don’t see coming until it’s already inside you. Like a hand at your throat and a mouth at your ear and the parting of knees before thought can catch up to need.

And when he lands—gods, when he lands—the stone splits. Not loud. Not dramatic. Just final. A sound you feel, deep and low in the chest, like something has been marked. Claimed. Like the world just got told whose it is.

Heat rolls out in a slow, rippling wave. Not fire. Not flame. Just the aftershock of presence. Of a body that doesn’t know how to be touched without changing the air it moves through. Iron banners bend inward. Metal groans. The wind folds toward him like it wants.

The dragon doesn’t vanish.

It waits.

Wings fold slow. Eyes still lit. A sentinel carved from every ache I’ve ever tried to swallow down.

And Kellen—

Kellen steps down.

And the ground blackens beneath him. Small burns. Barefoot heat. No performance.

Just him.

I watch from the ruins. Half-shadow. Half-melted stone. My breath caught somewhere between my tongue and the part of me that forgets how to lie when he’s near. I don’t move.

Not because I’m scared.

Because my thighs are tight and my mouth is dry and my body is suddenly very aware of how empty it is .

The Chain hums. Low. Deep. Like it feels it too.

Not warning.

Wanting.

And I—

I have to bite the inside of my cheek just to remember how to stay still.

Because if I take one step toward him, I won’t stop.

I won’t.

And he knows it. Gods, he knows. He’s still not looking at me, and I can feel it—can feel the way he’s holding himself still, too. Like if he turns, if our eyes meet, we’ll both forget the wounds and the wreckage and remember only what it feels like to burn for someone who already owns you.

The chain hums again.

It lifts a single half-link off my wrist before settling again. Like it’s trying to feel out the space between us before it decides if it’s safe.

Kellen looks straight ahead. Toward me, maybe. Or through me. His face is scorched clean—not soot, not dirt, just heat-faded clarity. There’s nothing in his expression that says explanation. Nothing that begs forgiveness. Only the aftermath of something he chose not to regret.

I step forward one inch.

The air cracks. Not thunder—deeper. Quieter. Like wood split too fast. Or a truth settling where it isn’t welcome.

He doesn’t speak.

Neither do I.

Around us, the last few bystanders scatter. Not from fear. From instinct. Because the Chain and the dragon are still in the square, and neither has blinked yet.

He shifts his stance.

My spine locks.

The Chain hums again. Not louder.

Closer .

This isn’t reunion. It’s recognition. Of cost. Of violence. Of everything that’s left when fury runs out and the wreckage still breathes.

We hold the distance between us like a wound that might re-open.

And somewhere behind me—maybe in the stone, maybe in the Chain—I feel the truth settle in.

He came for me.

Not to rescue.

Not to fix.

To stand.

And now we both have to decide what burns next.

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