Chapter 1 The Girl Who Played with Fire
The smell of smoke always found her first.
Even buried beneath layers of sweat, steel, and the reek of coal, Kaelin Dravyr could taste the faint bitterness of ash curling through the air. It wasn’t from the forges of Coalspire. It was her own magic, bleeding out where her control slipped.
She pressed her gloved hand against her thigh and exhaled slow. Not here. Not now.
The crowd roared as the dueling ring lit with orange light. Two fighters circled the sand pit, blades flashing under the broken glass dome above. The night beyond was black and endless, filled with the constant hum of smog engines. From the stands, voices echoed chants, bets, the clink of coins.
“Next up!” the pitmaster bellowed. “Kaelin of the Pits versus Harn of the Iron Claws!”
That was her cue.
Kaelin pulled her hood low, the scent of scorched leather wrapping around her like armor. She stepped into the ring. Every eye followed her men who had watched her win fifty fights, lose none, and leave her opponents scarred for life.
No one knew why her blade burned red when she fought. No one dared to ask.
Harn sneered as he approached, a hulking brute with arms like iron rods. “Gonna make you scream, Ember Rat,” he growled, spinning a spiked chain.
Kaelin’s lips curled. “Try not to die too quickly. I’m paid by the minute.”
Laughter rippled through the pit, sharp as broken glass. The bell clanged.
Harn lunged.
Kaelin moved like a flame fast, fluid, alive. Steel met steel, sparks flying in blinding arcs. Every strike sent tremors through her bones. The crowd screamed as she ducked, rolled, slashed. The chain wrapped around her wrist hot pain seared her skin.
Her pulse spiked.
Her control slipped.
And the fire inside her always waiting, always hungry answered.
The blade in her hand blazed to life.
Orange and gold light erupted across the pit, licking up her arm. The sand hissed into glass beneath her boots. Harn staggered back, eyes wide with horror as her emberfire coiled around his chain and melted it like wax.
The crowd fell silent.
Kaelin froze, chest heaving.
No. No, not again.
She forced the flame down, her heartbeat thundering in her ears. But it was too late. The heat shimmered through the dome, and above, in the balcony of black marble, a figure stood motionless, regal, watching.
The Prince Regent himself.
His silver hair caught the firelight, eyes cold as tempered steel. Kaelin’s stomach dropped. Ardyn Varell didn’t visit the Pits for entertainment. He came for blood and secrets.
“By decree of the Crown,” he said, voice amplified by magic, “the fight is over.”
Harn collapsed. The chain clattered to the ground. Guards in crimson armor surged into the pit, surrounding her with halberds and enchanted binds.
Kaelin’s mind raced. Run. Fight. Burn them.
But before she could move, one of the guards slammed the butt of a spear into her gut. Air fled her lungs. The world tilted.
As darkness crept in, she saw Ardyn’s lips curve in a faint, satisfied smile.
“The Emberborn,” he murmured. “Alive, after all.”
Then everything went black.
Kaelin woke to silence.
Stone walls. Iron cuffs. A cold chain around her throat, humming with spell ward sigils. Her wrists burned where the shackles touched her skin.
She sat up slowly. Her head pounded, vision blurring as she caught sight of herself in a shard of mirrored metal eyes faintly glowing gold, faint embers dancing beneath her skin.
They’d seen her. All of them.
Footsteps echoed outside the cell door measured, deliberate. She didn’t need to look to know who they belonged to.
Prince Ardyn entered like a blade unsheathed controlled, precise, dangerous. His cloak brushed the floor, embroidered with the sigil of the Sunspire: a dragon pierced by a spear.
“Do you know what they call you, girl?” he asked.
Kaelin glared at him. “I’m sure you’ll enlighten me.”
He studied her as though she were a weapon one he already owned. “They call you the Ember Rat. Pit fighter. Relic thief. But I see something else.”
He stepped closer, the air around him shimmering faintly with power. “I see fire that should not exist. Flame born from dragonblood.”
Kaelin forced a smirk. “Then you need better eyes, Your Highness. I’m just good with a sword.”
“Liar.” His voice was soft, almost kind but the magic beneath it burned cold. “Your kind were wiped out two centuries ago. And yet here you stand, unburned.”
He held out a hand. In his palm gleamed a fragment of dragonbone, carved into a sigil that pulsed like a heartbeat. As he brought it closer, Kaelin’s skin flared the same symbol blazing beneath her collarbone.
Ardyn’s expression shifted from curiosity to certainty. “Emberborn.”
Kaelin bit her tongue to keep from gasping as the relic burned brighter.
He closed his fist. The light vanished. “I should have you executed before dawn,” he said. “But I have a better use for you.”
She spat blood onto the stone. “I’m not your weapon.”
He smiled faintly. “You are whatever I decide you are.”
Then he turned, the door creaking open. “The rebellion stirs again in the east. They claim to guard a dragon’s egg. You will find them for me, Kaelin Dravyr or I’ll burn what’s left of your world to cinders.”
The door slammed.
Kaelin sat motionless, breathing in the silence, tasting iron and ash.
Somewhere deep beneath the city, she felt it a slow, rhythmic pulse. Not hers. Not human.
A heartbeat made of fire.
And with every thrum, the mark beneath her skin glowed brighter.
In the dark, the dragon dreamed.
And for the first time in her life, Kaelin dreamed with it.
---
