Chapter 35: What the Fire Kept
By Julian Frost · 140 words
Nothing is more seductive than an answer that arrives too easily.
Mara Vey follows the first clue deeper into an empire suspended on islands above a permanent storm, where every answer creates a more dangerous question.
A locked route opens, a witness changes sides, and the opposition moves one step sooner than expected.
Mara Vey keeps the larger goal in view: restore the roads between the islands before famine begins. The immediate problem is smaller, sharper, and impossible to postpone.
The confession is incomplete, yet honest enough to change the temperature of the room.
Prince Caelan offers help but withholds the one fact that would make trust easy.
The recurring signs of maps, constellations, wind return with a different meaning, linking this choice to what came before.
A familiar symbol proves the threat began long before either of them arrived.