Castlerigg Stone Circle, Keswick
The mist parted for him like it remembered the shape of fear.
Alaric moved uphill with boots silent on the slick moor, the wet grass whispering against the leather of his coat. The long black hemâstill damp from the ferryâdragged moss and clay with it, like a funeral veil refusing to lift. Overhead, the sky was a smudged bruise of grey, and the morning sun never showed its face.
His arrival had been quiet. Always was.
The locals at the last inn had looked twice, unsettled by the man who left no footprints and didnât blink when the power flickered. But he paid in coin older than the floorboards, and they didnât ask questions.
They never did.
Now, alone on the moor, Alaric inhaled.
The air here smelled of crushed heather and cold iron. Beneath it, the rot of something that had once been sacred. Heâd been tracking that scent for days. It clung to him, thin and oily, like betrayal on silk.
Castleriggâs stones rose from the mist like teeth in a dreaming mouth. Ancient and patient, some believed the circle to predate Stonehenge. Watching.
Alaric circled them once, then stepped inside.
He knelt slowlyâhis coat folding like wings behind himâand pressed two fingers to the earth. The ritual was simple. A whisper of Old Tongue. A flick of blood from a fingertip heâd bitten raw with an incisor just a touch sharper than you'd expect.
Lightning twitched in the clouds above, as if remembering its place.
The glamour cracked. It didnât shatter. It stutteredâlike breath catching in a throat. And for a moment, the truth bled through.
The spiral pattern carved into the central stoneâmeant to catch and pass soul energy like a lensâwas blackened. Twisted.
Where Unseelie marks should have coiled like threads of remembrance, foreign sigils glowed faintly beneath, pulsing gold. The wrong kind of gold. The Seelieâs goldâbloom-bright and hollow, like flattery offered with a knife behind the back.
Alaric hissed between his teeth.
There was no trace of soul-thread. No echo. No death energy at all.
The gate had been emptied.
Not disrupted. Not broken.
Funnelled.
He stood, too quickly.
For a moment, his reflection shimmered in the wet stone beside him. Waist-length hair, black as wet ink, hung damp around his shoulders. The amber of his eyes glinted in the low lightâstrange and feline, unblinking.
He looked like he belonged in the storm. And he did.
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The shadows around the circle lengthened at his breath, curling inwards like they wanted to be near him. His coat creaked with the sound of worn leather and hidden runes. A long chain hung from one side of his belt, a key at its endâthe old kind, the kind that only opened hidden things that would break a mortal if they saw.
Alaric touched the sigils again.
âTheyâve started early,â he murmured. âBloody fools.â
But beneath the anger was something colderâdread, sharp and precise. He had seen what happened when the balance was tampered with. He had helped rebuild from that wreckage. He could notâwould notâwatch it crumble again.
The return to the Unseelie Court was done without steps. One breath, one blinkâ
âand the moor faded, replaced by stone halls buried beneath the world.
The Unseelie Court was not a place. It was a feeling.
A corridor made of dusk and root. Columns twisted like tree limbs petrified in grief. The air here smelled of winter and memory. The soulwells lay deeper still, humming beneath the earth, fed by those who passed on in peace.
But tonight, they were quiet. Definitely much too quiet.
Alaric found the Queen in her chamber of mourning. She stood alone beneath a curtain of woven threads, fingers brushing a tapestry that never stilled. Her hairâburnished silver and severeâwas bound in dozens of thin braids that marked the centuries of her rule. Her crown had not been worn in an age.
âHuntsman,â she said, without turning.
âI found the gate at Castlerigg,â he replied. âOr whatâs left of it.â
He told her what he saw. He didnât lie, but he didnât raise his voice either. Yet something in his postureâtoo still, too tightâbetrayed the war behind his eyes.
When he finished, the Queen remained still for a long time.
âTheyâre tampering openly now,â he added. âRedirecting soulflow. Not just disrupting transitionsâtheyâre harvesting.â
âAnd you are certain?â she asked.
Alaricâs jaw tensed. âIâve seen the symbols. Theyâre no longer hiding it.â
The Queen turned to him then. Her face was unreadableâregal, exhausted. But something cracked in her gaze when she said:
âIt is not yet our time.â
He flinched, visibly. His shoulders squared too quickly, like a soldier bracing against a blow.
âWith respect, Your Grace, the Veil is thinning. If they shift too many gatesââ
âWe do not act in haste,â she said sharply. âNot again.â
A pause. Then, softer: âYou saw the cost last time.â
His throat worked around a reply he did not give.
Alaric bowed his head, though it burned. Aye,heâd seen the cost. Heâd paid it in full, bloodied and broken and reborn into something crueler than memory. And still, he would do it againâif it meant keeping her safe.
âKeep watch on the northern gates,â she said. âAnd on the girl.â
Alaricâs voice dropped. âShe isnât a girl. Not really.â
He felt the echo of Grey's presence like a thread around his ribsâsoft, insistent, impossible to ignore. Her kindness had settled the ghost theyâd encountered, but it had messed with his head in unexpected ways. No Harrower treated souls like that. Like people. Like grief deserved gentleness.
The Queen raised a brow. âNo. And perhaps she never was.â
He left her chamber without another word, heart like ash in his chest.
The corridors pulsed around him, the shadows lengthening. When he passed the soulwells, he paused.
He placed one hand against the stoneâwarmed not by heat, but by memory.
Nothing answered.
And still, he felt it: something slipping. Something coming undone.
To most, Alaric was an anomaly among his kind. Few Fae registered humans as any anything more than a fleeting ripple, their brief lives over in as much as a breath. But Alaric chose to live among humans many times during his long live. Fought with them, loved them. He has always felt more akin to mortals than he ever did to his own. In the Courts, houghtless cruelty was such a common thing in the company he kept, that kindness drew him like a moth.
Somewhere, in the back of his mind, a whisper he couldnât silence:
If I fail, the balance wonât just tip this timeâit will shatter.