The stone walls of Moloch's fortress pulsed with a living heat, the kind that settled beneath your skin and made your bones feel like kindling. Even the air tasted scorched. Nejire didn't flinch.
She moved like smoke through the obsidian halls, her cloak dragging behind her in silent threat. Vampire guards lined the way to the throne chamber, heads bowed, eyes averted. Not out of respect. Out of fear.
Moloch was more myth than man—a shadow behind flames, a voice that echoed in the bones of the fortress. He did not sit among his court. He did not need to. His presence was everywhere. In the heat that never cooled. In the silence that followed his name.
As Nejire stepped into the War Hall, the temperature dropped like a blade to the spine.
The room was vast and dark, the only light cast by twin rivers of fire running along the walls. A massive war table stood in the center, its surface charred and claw-scarred, maps half-burned and marked in blood. There was no throne, no welcoming gaze—just the sense that she was being watched from every flame that flickered.
A prisoner knelt at the far end of the chamber, a werewolf, bound in chains of obsidian and silver. Smoke curled from his mouth as he panted in pain, chest heaving. His eyes found Nejire and widened.
"You're late."
The voice didn't come from the prisoner. It came from the fire itself. From the walls. From beneath the stone.
Low. Cold. Yet burning.
Nejire dropped to one knee, fist to the floor. Her eyes stayed low, but her spine remained straight.
"Report."
The flames beside her surged, forming brief, ghastly images—skulls, eyes, fangs. Watching.
"We took the province of Hollowfang," Nejire said. "Thirty-nine casualties. Four prisoners. No survivors on their end."
"No survivors," the voice murmured, like it was tasting the words. A moment passed, then—"Except one."
She raised her chin. "A scout escaped before we arrived. He ran north. Toward the Citadel."
There was silence. Not peace. The kind of silence that stalks just before a scream.
Then the fire coiled around the werewolf prisoner, tightening like a serpent. He thrashed once, twice, and then there was a sickening crack as his spine snapped backward.
He didn't scream. There wasn't time.
The flames fed on him. Until he was nothing but smoke.
"The Citadel still stands," the voice said. Calm. Unbothered.
Nejire stood. "Because they still believe they can win."
"Fools," the fire hissed. "Hope is the last illusion of the dying."
The heat grew oppressive. Sweat beaded along her brow despite herself. Her bond to Moloch ran through her veins like old magic, and right now, it was boiling.
"They have begun to rally," she said. "The Betas are stirring. Klaus of Blackmaw is urging rebellion. His scent was in Hollowfang."
A different heat stirred in the room.
"Klaus..." the voice repeated. This time lower. As if amused. As if recognizing something.
"He fights like one with nothing to lose," Nejire added. "And he's seen too much. We can't keep underestimating him."
The voice exhaled, a sound like the crack of a tree splitting in fire.
"Then it is time. You will go to the Wall."
A gust of wind blew through the chamber, though no doors had opened. Candles went out one by one, until only the twin flame-rivers remained.
"The old fire sleeps in your blood. Let it wake. Let it burn away the weakness you cling to."
Her fists clenched at her sides. Weakness. He meant the questions she hadn't voiced. The hesitation that had crept into her bones.
"I do not cling," she said.
"You feel, child."
His tone cut sharper than any blade.
"That feeling will be your undoing. You are my fire. My blade. My ruin. You were not born to question. You were born to end."
Each word burrowed into her flesh like molten hooks.
"Go. Take the flames. Let them consume what's left of your restraint."
A new path ignited before her—an arrow of fire stretching from the war table to the chamber doors. Her orders were clear.
Her rage? Even clearer.
"As you command," she whispered.
And turned toward the Wall.
~~~
The Wall of Flame was not a wall at all. It was a rift in the world's skin. A vertical gash of molten light, pulsing with primordial fire.
Only the generals of Moloch's bloodline could walk through it.
Nejire stood before it now, wind whipping her cloak around her armored frame. Her braid hung heavy down her back, ends singed from battle. Her eyes narrowed against the heat, though it did not burn her.
She felt it before she entered.
A pull.
It wasn't fire. It wasn't power. It wasn't rage.
It was someone.
She shook it off and and stepped into the flames.
Fire swallowed her whole. It screamed against her armor, licked at her skin, crawled into her lungs. It devoured every thought, every memory—except one.
A scent.
Wolf.
Not just any wolf.
Him.
Nejire staggered forward, lips parted, a low sound escaping her throat. Not pain. Need.
She saw him. Not clearly. A vision. A man in blood-soaked armor, eyes like thunder, mouth curled in fury. He was roaring, not at her—for her.
And she wanted to tear him apart.
She wanted to be torn.
Her claws unsheathed against her will.
And then she was through.
The Wall spit her out onto cracked obsidian, steaming and breathless. Her knees hit the ground. She didn't care.
The flames had spoken.
And for the first time in her life, Nejire felt unmoored.
That night, in her war chamber, she sat alone with a map of the Citadel. Her hands hovered over it like a curse.
Klaus.
The name had come to her like lightning in the flames. She'd never met with the Beta of Blackmaw but her blood knew him somehow.
She slammed her fist down, cracking the map table.
"No," she whispered. "I refuse."
But fate did not care for what she wanted.
She called for her steed, a massive hellmare born from bone and night. Armor was strapped. Swords were sharpened.
As she rode to the gates, her second-in-command, Varka, approached. He was lean, cruel-eyed, and loyal only to war.
"General," he said. "The Wall marked you."
She said nothing.
"Where do we march?"
She looked toward the horizon, where the mountains held the last standing werewolf stronghold.
The Citadel.
"We burn it down," she said.
Then, quieter "Before he reaches me first."