"You currently support Bram Hethryn's textile routes." I don't waste breath on pleasantries. "Withdraw your backing. Tonight."
"We have contracts?—"
I materialize the signed documents between my fingers and let infernal fire consume them to ash. "Had. Past tense."
The second elf rises with practiced fluidity, his hand sliding toward the ornate hilt of a concealed blade tucked beneath his midnight-blue vest. The movement is swift, calculated—the sort of motion that speaks of training in the shadowed academies where dark elves learn to kill with artistry.
I pin him to the crumbling stone wall with shadow alone, tendrils of darkness wrapping around his throat and limbs like living restraints. His polished boots dangle six inches offthe mold-stained floor, violet eyes bulging as he claws at the shadows constricting his windpipe. The air around him thickens to syrup, each desperate attempt to draw breath becoming a futile struggle against the infernal power I've woven into the very atmosphere.
"Withdraw your support from Hethryn's operations," I repeat, my voice carrying the weight of judicial decree, each word echoing off the damp walls of this forgotten corner of the Undercity. "Or I collect the blood debt your house still owes from the famine contracts of seven winters past."
The eldest's face drains of what little color his ashen complexion possessed, his ledger-stained fingers trembling as comprehension dawns. "Those debts were settled through the grain tributes—we paid in full?—"
"Review your ledgers more carefully." I release the choking elf with a gesture, and he crumples to the filth-covered floor like a discarded puppet, gasping and retching as air floods back into his starved lungs. "You'll find that interest has compounded considerably under infernal law. The terms were quite... generous... at the time."
They agree within minutes.
Predictable.
When I returnto Ilyra's home hours later, Bram's voice carries through the walls—sharp, acidic.
I slip through shadow into the corner of the living room.
Bram paces the cramped living space like a caged predator stalking invisible prey, his pale hands clenched so tightly the knuckles have gone bone-white against his ash-toned skin. The fine dark leathers he wears—tailored to perfection and worth more than this entire hovel—whisper with each agitated turn he makes across the worn stone floor. His luminous violet eyes holda dangerous glitter, the kind that promises violence to anyone foolish enough to cross him.
"House Vyrenth withdrew their support without notice," he snarls, each word dripping with barely contained fury. The silver-blond hair at his nape has come partially loose from its binding, lending him a wild, unhinged appearance that makes the small room feel even more suffocating. "Do you comprehend what their defection means for the wedding arrangements? The trade agreements? The entire political structure I've spent months constructing?"
Vaelra hovers near the meager fireplace like a moth drawn to flame, her carefully composed facade cracking under the weight of his rage. Her hands twist together in an endless cycle of anxiety, the silver streaks in her dark hair catching the dim light as she bows her head in supplication. "But surely the core agreement still stands? You'll still—" Her voice wavers, hope and desperation warring in every syllable. "Mariselle and I will be provided for once you and Ilyra are wed? The terms we discussed?—"
"Provided for?" Bram whirls on her with the fluid grace of a striking serpent, his eyes now blazing with an incandescent fury that makes the air itself seem to crackle. "Youdaredemand reassurance from me? You dare question your superior when my own position has been compromised by these political machinations?"
The threat in his voice is unmistakable—cold, calculated, and absolutely lethal. Vaelra shrinks back against the stone mantle, her face draining of color.
Ilyra stands motionless near the doorway like a statue carved from living shadow, her dark eyes fixed on the unfolding scene with an intensity that speaks of careful observation. She watches every gesture, catalogs every word, her silence more eloquent than any protest could be.
Bram crosses the space between them in three predatory strides, his movements fluid and purposeful. Without warning, he seizes Ilyra's slender arm in his pale grip, his fingers digging into the soft flesh hard enough to leave bruises that will bloom purple-black within the hour.
Summon me.
My hands curl into fists.
Call my name, Ilyra. Give the command.
"I'm doing you a favor," Bram hisses into her face. "I could take her right now. Drag her to my estate tonight and be done with this charade. She belongs to me already—the wedding is just ceremony. I'm beinggenerousby offering you and your daughter anything in return."
The steaks of shimmering ember along my skin glow white-hot. Celestial chains bite into my shoulders and I welcome the pain because it's the only thing keeping me from tearing his throat out without permission.
Please.
But Ilyra doesn't flinch.
She stands perfectly still, dark eyes locked on Bram's face with an expression I've never seen before.
Not fear.
Not submission.
Something colder. Sharper.