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Chapter 24- the bloom of betrayal

  The neon haze of Virelia dimmed as stormclouds gathered above

  its steel towers. From the highest floor of the Dravien Syndicate’s

  obsidian skyscraper, the city looked like a pulsing circuit of blood

  and light.

  Inside the council chamber, the Dravien family gathered. A hall of

  glass and black stone, its walls etched with mafia sigils that

  shimmered under dim crimson light. At the center—resting in a

  crystalline case—was the Serpent’s Crown. Even sealed, its

  green-silver aura bled across the floor like spilled venom.

  Kael Dravien stood at the head of the table, silent, brooding. His

  blade leaned against his chair, faint storm-aura licking along its

  edge. His presence alone kept the council in check—though

  whispers spread like smoke.

  Elaris sat at his side, circuits glowing faintly beneath her skin, her

  mechanical wings folded tight. She had not spoken since they left

  the serpent’s cavern. The runes that had appeared there—the

  murals of prophecy—were now etched faintly across her arm,

  pulsing in sync with the Crown.

  “Kael,” one of the elders muttered, voice heavy with warning.

  “Artifacts carry their own curse. You bring danger to our bloodline.”

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  Kael’s reply was a storm in a single word.

  “Silence.”

  But Xyren wasn’t silent. His gaze swept across the glass walls, his

  neon-green eyes burning like a fractured star. “Someone’s coming.

  The prophecy wasn’t just about the Crown… it spoke of a flower

  that blooms from ash.”

  The heavy double doors creaked open.

  And she walked in.

  Lysira Nyte. Codename: BLOOMFALL.

  Every step dripped with elegance sharpened into menace. A

  velvet-black gown trailed behind her, woven with threads of shifting

  holographic petals. Her wings—crystalline, edged with obsidian

  thorns—glimmered as though made to slice rather than fly. She

  was beauty honed into a weapon.

  “Kael…” she purred, her voice smooth and venomous, “…still

  chasing crowns instead of thrones?”

  The entire council froze. Some looked at Kael, some at her. But his

  silence was louder than all their murmurs. His eyes lingered on

  hers—too long, too familiar.

  Elaris rose from her seat, sparks running through her circuits. “You

  must be Bloomfall.”

  Bloomfall’s lips curved into a smile too sharp to be kind. “And you…

  must be the machine who pretends to be a fairy.”

  The insult slid like a knife under Elaris’s skin, but she didn’t flinch.

  Her metallic feathers lifted, faint light flaring at her core. “Better a

  machine who can feel… than a fairy who knows only how to betray.”

  A ripple of tension surged through the room. Elders shifted, some

  glancing nervously toward Bloomfall. Then one of Kael’s uncles 41

  moved forward, his robe sweeping the floor, and—shockingly—

  bowed not to Kael, but to Bloomfall.

  Whispers exploded. Betrayal had found its roots.

  “You’ll never hold the throne without me,” Bloomfall declared,

  spreading her wings wide, each obsidian shard catching the neon

  glow. “The prophecy doesn’t belong to her… it belongs to us.”

  At that moment, the Serpent’s Crown flared violently. The

  crystalline case cracked, spectral serpents swirling out, hissing and

  coiling across the ceiling. They projected a new vision across the

  glass walls—

  A mirror, fractured into infinite shards. In every reflection, a

  different future: cities burning, flowers blooming from blood,

  shadows devouring neon light. And in each, a faint silhouette of

  Xyren, distorted, fractured… splintering into something darker.

  Elaris staggered, clutching her arm as the runes seared into her

  skin. Kael drew his blade instantly, the storm aura crackling like

  thunder.

  Xyren’s voice was low, trembling with something deeper than fear.

  “The next relic…” His eyes burned emerald, reflections splitting

  behind him. “…the Mirror Engine.”

  Bloomfall smirked knowingly. She had been waiting for this.

  And in the fractured glass, one reflection of her lips moved out of

  sync, whispering a promise no one else heard:

  “Blood must bloom… before the crown can rule.”

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