Prologue Chapter IV Title: The Hidden Edge She found the blade in a place no girl was meant to be. Beneath the warped floorboard of the old preparation room—long abandoned, its velvet cushions worn by time and ghosted with ash—there lay a stash of things once hidden and forgotten: half-burned parchment, a shard of a mirror, a vial of something bitter and black… and a dagger wrapped in oilcloth. Mira touched it as though it might bite. The hilt was worn, the edge dulled in places—but the weight. The weight was perfect. She pressed it against her palm, closing her fingers slowly, reverently. She didRead More →

Prologue Chapter III Title: Alia’s Test The first time she was given the cup, Mira hesitated. It wasn’t the gold of it, though it was fine—too fine for a girl barely of age. It was the stillness of the liquid within. Clear. Fragrant. Deceptively sweet. Alia watched her with unreadable eyes. “You are not a child now,” she said simply. “You are a mirror.” Mira blinked. “A mirror,” Alia continued. “You reflect what they want to see. Until they forget that you’re not theirs.” The room was warm with the scent of roses and something richer beneath—amber, wine, and sweat. A man’s laughter echoed fromRead More →

Prologue Chapter II Title: The Silver Voice and the Painted Room It was the voice that kept her awake. Not her own. Mira barely spoke then. Not to the other girls, not even to Lady Alia unless spoken to. But his voice—that voice—slipped through the walls in the middle hours of the night, when the music had long faded and even the incense grew thin in the air. He sang in a language she didn’t understand. But it curled around her bones like seaweed in the tide—low, mournful, and alive. They called him The Silver Voice. He was not a noble. Not a customer. HeRead More →

Prologue Chapter I Title: “Where the Sea First Took Her”(Standalone Childhood Chapter 1) The salt burned before she understood its name. She remembered only the roar, not the storm—the ship that brought her was no grand galleon, but a low, creaking hull that reeked of fish, rope, and tears. They didn’t call her Mira then. She was something smaller. Something less. The child had arrived to the port-city known only as Vharos, sold off in a whisper between men who never said her mother’s name. The House that took her in was not a brothel. Not exactly. It was a training hall veiled behind incense,Read More →