Page 122 of Echoes of Atlas


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After the message, there should have been something more, some warning, some movement, some shift in the way the world carried itself. Instead, nothing came. Morning arrived intact and ordinary.

Patrols moved on schedule, wards held. No runner arrived late or early, no voice rose where none should have. The world behaved, yet I didn’t slow.

My body stayed ready, waiting for the familiar pull that never came. No pressure at my back, no subtle correction to tell me where to stand or what to brace for.

I watched a patrol cross the far arch in perfect cadence, boots striking stone as if nothing had ever been out of place. The stormglass along the outer span was dull and obedient, holding its line without a single tremor.

I drew a slow breath and tasted nothing sharp in it. No iron. No charge. No afterbite of power.

Still, I didn’t relax.

I turned away from the parapet before I could finish the thought.

When I turned, Caelira was leaning against the stone near the inner arch, her hair loose. The tension she usually carried eased out of her posture as if the city had decided to carry it for her instead. She looked rested and unguarded.

I realized she had been watching me. Quietly, in the way you watched something you didn’t want to interrupt.

When I met her gaze, she held it without hesitation, the ease of the night before still intact.

“You’re up early,” she said.

“So are you.”

She smiled at that and held my gaze. The ease of it tugging at something familiar, the same quiet warmth I’d felt the night before when the city had let her belong without question. For a moment, I let myself remember that. Let my shoulders ease. Let the world stay simple.

Heat stirred anyway, low and insistent, the bond waking with it.

I exhaled slowly, forcing the tension out of my hands.

“You know,” I said, tilting my head slightly, “if you keep looking at me like that, no one’s leaving these rooms today.”

Her mouth curved, the smile coming quicker this time, eyes bright with it. “Is that a threat?”

“An observation,” I said. “I’m very good at those.”

She laughed, soft and real, and the sound knocked the air from my lungs before I could brace for it. It was beautiful. I reached for her hand, fingers closing around hers and drew her to my chest.

“Come on, little storm,” I added lightly. “If the city really is as calm as it looks, we might as well take advantage of it.”

She didn’t pull away. Her fingers tightened around mine instead, a quiet confirmation that settled something low and steady in my chest.

“All right,” she said, the words warm and unguarded. “Lead the way.”

We hadn’t moved yet when footsteps sounded in the corridor and a knock sounded at the door.

There was a brief pause, then Joren leaned in, one hand still braced against the doorframe. His head appeared first as if he were testing whether he’d interrupted something important.

“Well,” Joren said, appearing with a grin that suggested he’d already decided how this looked. “I see I’ve arrived just in time to prevent poor decisions.”

Caelira laughed at that.

I didn’t let go of her. One arm remained at her back, steady and careful, her weight close enough that I could feel the rise and fall of her breath.

“Relax,” I said, as a smirk tugged at my mouth.

“If I were making poor decisions, you’d have knocked louder.”

Her quiet chuckle vibrated against my chest, our laughter fading together as my gaze dropped to her, my smile lingering.