The night was alive with fire and shadow. Orianne crouched behind a broken wall of jagged stone, the wind whipping her hair across her face, salt and smoke in her lungs. Below, on the rocky shore, he fought. Prince Vaelion Arkhearth, heir to Hearthscale, son of kings, an Elf-kin of legend. He was real. And he was terrifying. The beast was like nothing she had ever seen: scales black as drowned nights, eyes that burned like embers, claws that shredded stone as if it were parchment. And yet, Vaelion moved through it with a grace that could belong only to the immortal bloodline of Elf-kin. His glowing blue sword flashing, every motion precise, every strike measured. He was fury made flesh, a storm that refused to bend. Orianne's breath caught. Her pulse raced. She had trained in herbs, healing, and the small, safe miracles of Hearthvale. She had never felt the kind of hunger, the kind of pull, that now coiled in her chest. He was fire. He was chaos. He was the kind of apocalypse she craved.The beast roared, shaking the cliffs and splitting the night, and Vaelion's silver eyes-storm-laden, ancient-flashed with a light that was almost magical. Almost vulnerable. Almost... like he needed to be seen. Her heart stuttered. She longed to step forward, to throw herself into the fray, to feel the same dangerous, intoxicating pulse of survival thrumming through him. Somewhere, the sea hissed its own warning, waves clawing at the rocks, echoing the terror and the promise of what was coming. Orianne knew, in the marrow of her bones, that she could never go back to ordinary life. Not after this. Not after seeing him fight, not after feeling the pull of destiny, grief, and desire tangled together like threads of stormlight in her chest. The night had chosen them. The sea had chosen them. And the world-if it survived the coming darkness-would remember the night Orianne of Hearthvale first saw the Elf-kin prince who was both her reckoning and her salvation.