Eliza followed the sound, her bare feet padding lightly against the castle's cold stone floors. The music was growing louder and deeper, resonating through the once vibrant halls.
As she moved, she noticed something strange.
The castleâonce a decaying ruinâseemed⦠different.
The cracks in the walls were vanishing, the faded tapestries regaining their deep, rich hues. The twisted, skeletal chandeliers flickered with a stronger, more defiant glow, and the broken statues lining the corridors stood a little taller as if remembering their former majesty.
The air itself seemed lighter.
Had the castle always been healing? Or was somethingâsomeoneârestoring it piece by piece?
The music surged, no longer just drums, but layeredâan eerie, enthralling harmony.
A guitar.
A deep, sorrowful wail of strings, vibrating through the stone and marrow of the kingdom itself.
Elizaâs breath hitched as she reached a set of heavy doors. They were different from the others, not worn or crumbling, but carved with intricate patternsâswirling vines and blooming roses woven into the dark wood.
With hesitant fingers, she pushed them open.
A garden.
Not a ruined, dying plot of land like she had expected, but a perfect sanctuary, untouched by time.
The grass was lush, thick, and wild, bathed in the cool silver glow of the Forever Moons. Crooked trees stretched toward the sky, their leaves glistening like gemstones, swaying gently in an unseen breeze. Flowers of every imaginable color blossomed in the soft light, their petals curling as if whispering secrets to one another.
There were stone pathways, winding gracefully through the greenery, leading to park-like elementsâbenches carved from obsidian and white marble, a crystal-clear pond reflecting the moonâs glow, ivy-laced archways that framed the night-like painted windows.
And at the heart of it all, beneath an arch of black roses, was them.
An undead band.
A skeletal drummer, arms moving with unnatural precision, tapping out a steady, thunderous beat against a set of drums carved from bone.
A violinist, their instrument made of polished ribs and strings of pale, silken hair, drawing a bow with a haunting, aching melody.
An organist, seated before an instrument of bones, the keys clicking as skeletal fingers danced over them, playing deep, sorrowful notes that vibrated through the air.
And in the centerâa guitar of bone.
Its body is sculpted from a massive ribcage, its strings glistening with some otherworldly sheen. And there, strumming it with dark grace, was him.
Tenebrae.
Draped in flowing black, the prince stood at the center of the macabre symphony, his long white hair illuminated under the moonlight, his glowing green eyes half-lidded, lost in the music.
And he was singing.
His voice was raw, powerful, laced with something almost painful to hearâan emotion Eliza couldnât quite name.
âThereâs a darkness hidden in me,
Black fire calls my name,
One step from giving into rage,
Torn apart by those I loved,
Locked away inside their hell,
My life has started to fade.â
Elizaâs breath caught.
She wasnât alone.
A small figure bumped into her side, startling her.
She turned to see Opal, the young Udine girl, standing just behind her. Her wide, ocean-blue eyes were transfixed on the scene before them, her small hands clutched tightly to the front of her robe.
Neither of them spoke.
Neither of them dared to.
They simply stood there, listening.
âI ran to you, to stop the pain,
Always running to your arms, Evil Queen,
But now I see, you were not good for me.â
The band surged with him, the violinistâs bow slicing across the strings, sending a chilling, heart-wrenching note through the garden. The organ groaned like a lamenting spirit, and the drummer pounded against the bones, sending deep tremors through the earth.
But Tenebrae didnât falter.
His fingers moved skillfully over the bone guitar, each note deliberate, every word dripping with something bitter and real.
âThis kingdom around me, full of potential and promise,
I wonât build you up just to let you fall!â
âThis time, Iâll meet them face to face!â
Eliza felt something deep in her chest twist.
âThereâs a fire inside of me,
Always burning, drowning inside,
Evil Queen, now I see,
You were never good for me.â
His voice carried through the garden, rising into the night, wrapping around the castle itself like an unchained spirit.
Eliza had never heard this Tenebrae before.
This wasnât the cold, calculating prince who spoke in clipped, emotionless words.
This wasnât the distant lich who kept himself locked away.
This was something raw, something aliveâsomething full of fury and sorrow.
And the music, the way it coursed through the garden, how the skeletons played as though they had been waiting centuries for this momentâthis was not a performance.
This was true.
Eliza swallowed, her throat suddenly dry.
She glanced at Opal, who was staring, completely mesmerized.
The young girl did not speak.
She did not cry.
She simply listened, as though the words were reaching somewhere deeper than she had known she could be reached.
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And maybe⦠maybe they were.
Eliza turned back to Tenebrae.
He hadnât noticed them yet.
Or if he had, he did not care.
He simply kept playing.
And for the first time, Eliza wondered how much of himself he had been holding back.
After some time.
The castle had long since returned to its usual eerie quiet, the echoes of music fading into the shadows of the night. But Eliza found no peace. She wandered the halls, her thoughts tangled with frustration and unanswered questions.
She had learned that waiting for Tenebrae to explain things to her was uselessâhe wouldnât. He never did.
So she went looking for Mirabella instead.
As she approached Tenebraeâs chambers, she slowed. The heavy doors always closed to all but his most trusted, were just barely cracked. Through the sliver of space, moonlight spilled onto the polished floor, casting long shadows over the deep violet and black of his bedding.
And thereâon the edge of his grand, darkly regal bedâshe saw her.
Mirabella.
The stitched woman was draped across his sheets, her clockwork-fabric clothing fanned out like delicate embroidery, brushing over his pillows, his coversâhis space.
As if she were claiming it.
Elizaâs breath caught, an unfamiliar tightness twisting in her chest. It wasnât her place to say anythingâit wasnât her place, period.
And yet, she turned sharply on her heel and left, jaw tight.
She found Lady Aura in the kitchen, her elegant centaur form moving with practiced ease as she cleaned up with a flick of her fingers, magic weaving through the room. Her tailâa long, scorpion-like appendageâswayed lazily behind her as she began preparing what looked to be a meal.
Eliza lingered in the doorway before stepping forward.
âHello, Lady Aura,â she greeted, keeping her voice even. âHow are you this⦠evening?â
Lady Aura chuckled at her formality. âThe same as I am every evening, my lady. And you?â Her sharp, knowing eyes flickered to Eliza as if sensing the unrest behind her words. âWould you like a snack?â
Eliza shook her head. âNo, I can wait until dinner. But I was hoping you could⦠fill me in on something.â
Aura turned her full attention to her now, tilting her head slightly in curiosity. âOh? And what might that be?â
Eliza hesitated for only a moment before speaking. âI often hear a lot of music in the castle,â she said, carefully keeping her tone casual. âAt times, I mean.â
Aura gave a soft, almost wistful nod. âThe young master loves to play. Always has. It is one of his greatest outlets.â
Eliza already knew that much. But she had heard the pain in his voice when he sang. Music was an outlet, yesâbut it was also a confession.
And so she asked, âWhat exactly did Lilith mean to him?â
The warmth in Lady Auraâs expression faded slightly. She didnât answer immediately. Instead, she looked at Eliza, really looking at her, as if measuring something in her gaze.
âYou know,â she finally said, crossing her arms over her chest, âI have known the young master since before he became a Lich. And in all that time, I have only ever seen him look at one other woman the way he once looked at Lilith.â
Eliza felt her breath hitch.
She didnât ask who the other woman was. She didnât have to.
Something sharp, something ugly twisted inside her. Jealousy.
Why?
She pushed it down, schooling her features into neutrality as Aura continued.
âLilith and the young master⦠We all thought they were meant to be,â Aura admitted. âSo much so that I was already preparing for a wedding.â She exhaled, shaking her head. âAll of itâevery last bit of itâwas a deception. A carefully orchestrated attempt to leave this kingdom weakened, to strip the young master of his power. We believe she was working alongside another kingdom⦠to obtain the crown.â
Eliza latched onto that. âThe crown?"
Aura nodded, though there was hesitation in her voice. âI do not know much. I am no necromancer. But I do know that the crown allows a necromancerâor a Lichâto undergo trials. To ascend."
âAscend to what?"
âI do not know,â Aura admitted. âBut the closer you get to ascension, the stronger you become. The former king was powerful, but he never ascended. I suspect there is more to it, but it is a mystery known only to those who walk the path of the undead.â She paused, then added carefully, âI do know this⦠The crown is not to be taken lightly. Once worn, it can only be removed once without severe consequences. Death, if the wearer is fortunate.â
Eliza felt a chill crawl up her spine.
âI am just glad the young master was able to keep it on while he was trapped in your realm,â Aura said with a relieved sigh.
Eliza stiffened.
That⦠wasnât true.
He hadnât kept the crown on.
He had been forced to remove it.
And it had nearly killed him.
Her stomach churned, anger rising alongside the shame that had been buried deep since she first arrived. She had been part of it. Part of his imprisonment. Part of the experiments. Part of the agony they put him through.
What gave her the right?
What gave the organization the right?
She needed to leave.
Mumbling an excuse, she turned and walked quickly out of the kitchen, her pulse thrumming in her ears.
As she walked the empty corridors, her mind was spinning.
A Lich was supposed to be a being of undeath, decayed, and hollow, a creature that had forfeited its humanity in exchange for power.
But Tenebrae wasnât.
He still felt things.
He wasnât a mindless husk, nor was he the monstrous horror she had been conditioned to expect.
And if the crown was supposed to make him stronger, yet he hadnât ascendedâ¦
What if being forced into her worldâa world with no magicâhad returned him to his humanity?
What if the cost of his power was directly tied to this place?
What if his magic worked differently here, affecting his body in ways even he didnât fully understand?
What ifâ¦
What if he wasnât a monster at all?
The thought shook her.
It terrified her.
Eliza couldnât shake the thoughts from her mind.
If he wasnât the monster⦠then what did that make them?
What did that make her?
The things they did to him. The things she had played a part in.
The experiments. The pain. The countless hours of treating him like something to be studied rather than someone.
The thought made her stomach twist with disgustânot at him, but at herself.
She didnât have time to dwell on it before the rhythmic clanking of metal filled the corridor, followed by the unmistakable voice of Zanac.
âOhhh laaaady Eliiiiza!â
She turned, finding the overweight, metallic butler approaching, dressed impeccably in his signature dark vest and long coat, his gleaming metal frame polished to perfection.
She had always found his voice strangeâdeep, yet almost whistling through his frame, as if the very air had to work around the iron confines of his body.
"Itâs just Eliza, Zanac,â she corrected, shaking her head. âNo need for âLady.ââ
Zanac gasped dramatically, clutching his chest with one tin hand. âNonsense! Absolute nonsense! You are Lady Eliza, and I shall always treat you as such!â
She rolled her eyes but smiled despite herself. âAlright, alright. Whatâs this about?â
Zanac smoothed his vest with exaggerated precision. âNow, we must get you dressed."
Eliza blinked. âDressed for what?â
Ignoring her, he retrieved a small piece of parchment from his coat pocket, tossed it into the air, and set it aflame with nothing but a flick of his fingers.
The embers curled in the air before vanishing completely.
Eliza raised a brow. âWhat was that?â
âAh!â Zanac beamed. âA message spell. A most convenient form of communication! One may sign a pact to send messages to each other across short distancesâthough do be careful, as these pacts are dreadfully difficult to break. And message spammers can be most bothersome.â
Eliza nearly choked on a laugh. âWhat did you just call them?"
âMessage spammers,â Zanac repeated with a straight face.
She covered her mouth, actually laughing now. âEven this place has spam callers?â
Zanac simply nodded sagely.
Mirabella arrived soon after, though Eliza knew exactly where she had been and had no interest in making things more awkward.
It wasnât long before she and Opal had been properly dressed and enchanted.
She had never worn anything quite like it.
A gown of midnight black, woven with delicate silver embroidery that shimmered under the candlelight. The fabric was impossibly soft, weightless against her skin, yet it moved like flowing water, hugging her frame in all the right ways.
Dark silver earrings dangled from her ears, carved into intricate spirals that seemed to catch the dim glow of the castleâs torches, reflecting light like tiny stars.
Her hair had been gathered into loose, elegant waves, half pinned back with onyx hairpins shaped like blooming roses.
And her eyes.
They looked different now.
Somehow deeper, darkerâor perhaps it was just the way she was beginning to see herself.
When she stepped forward, Opal gasped.
The young Undine girlâs oceanic eyes widened in delight, and she clapped her hands together, her tail flicking slightly beneath the hem of her own dark gown.
âPretty!â Opal whispered in awe.
Eliza felt heat creep into her face, unused to such attention. She kneeled slightly, brushing Opalâs cheek. âThank you, sweetheart. You look beautiful too.â
The childâs face lit up, glowing under the Forever Moons.
And with that, they were ready.
Zanac led them into the court of the castle, where a grand black carriage awaited.
The horses that pulled it were massive, strong, their coats as white as bone, but their eyes pulsed with an eerie green glow.
Elizaâs breath hitched.
This wasnât just an ordinary carriage ride.
Something felt dark but comforting about the energy crackling in the air, something unnatural yet regal.
And then he arrived.
Tenebrae emerged from the castle, draped in his usual black and silver robes, his expression unreadable.
âDo not open the door until the trip is over,â he instructed, his deep voice carrying effortlessly across the courtyard. âAnd do notâunder any circumstancesâopen the windows.â
Eliza frowned. âWhy?â
âThe miasma.â
The air around the carriage pulsed, glowing faintly as Tenebrae traced symbols in the air with his clawed fingers. Enchantments. Protection wards.
She felt them settle over her like a second skin, wrapping around the carriage itself in a barrier of power.
Then, without another word, Ten opened the carriage door, motioning for them to enter.
Eliza took one last look at the horsesâat the way their glowing green eyes followed herâand stepped inside.
The door shut behind them, sealing them in near silence.
Outside, the air shifted.
A rift opened before themâa swirling, black abyss stretching into nothingness.
Eliza shivered.
Zanac, standing outside, blew a whistle.
A sound echoed in responseâa low, guttural groan.
Then⦠a hand reached out.
Not human.
Not alive.
A long, decayed hand, dripping with something dark, emerged from the rift.
Elizaâs pulse skyrocketed.
She barely caught a glimpse of what Zanac handed itâa small boat anchor and⦠something red. Something wet.
A heart.
Before she could react, she was yanked inside.
The carriage lurched forward.
The doors locked.
And as the rift swallowed them whole, the castle of Goodnight faded behind them.