All posts by xwinkxwonkx

Chapter Three

They would say the beast had gone savage. They would say it had chosen blood and earned the chain around its throat. They would say many things. None of them would be true enough to matter.

No longer were they fathers and mothers, friends and lovers. No longer were they people with dreams and jobs. To Alira, they were now a sea of suspects.

Somewhere behind one of those masks was her betrothed. He could be the figure purchasing clean filters for their respirator at the side shop or he could be the one taking the path to the mountainside factories. Whoever he was, he was the new wall standing between Alira and the open sky. But in a place like this, the sky had been lost long ago.

Graal is not a home for the faint of heart, nor the faint of lung. Smog crowned the city like a cruel king. It pooled heavily in the belly of the basin, trapped by an unbroken wall of jagged peaks that hemmed the city in on every side. Clinging to the steep rock faces, massive factories loomed over the streets, their chimneys belching black smoke that had nowhere to go but down.

Dragon’s breath fueled the industry, but it cost people their lives.  Human lungs are fragile things, and they stood no chance against the caustic sulfur that filled the air. Hundreds of people died. Their lungs blistered and burst.

Desperation bred a crude sort of innovation. Folk quickly began fabricating respirators, hastily stitched leather masks stuffed with charcoal to filter the blackened yellow haze.

Still, people died.

Alira’s mother being one of them. Or so they said was her demise.

It was still early morning, yet Graal was sombre and sunless. She heard the shuffling of feet, the low, distorted murmuring of voices, and the rumbling bellows of beasts beneath the surface.

She blended into a crowd along the shops. Chimes dinged as people entered various doors advertising grains, weapons, and the like. Her palms felt slick against her leather gloves as she scanned the signs looking for one in particular.

She rolled her eyes at the weathered slab. Scissors crossed with a needle and thread inscribed above the one name she told herself she’d never speak again.

A wave of emotion rolled through her body. She tensed and sickened even more at the thought. What if it was him who paid for her hand in marriage? This miserable errand turned from a laughable request to possibly her ultimate ruin.

Veyla did, in fact, doom her.

She teetered awkwardly in front of the door, reluctant to turn the knob.

But he was too eager.

The door squeaked as it swung wide, revealing a man who she hadn’t seen in three years.

“Lira, my gem.” Thayer greeted her with a silver tongue amidst golden teeth. He welcomed her with open arms, hoping – or expecting – her to fill them. 

Alira cringed and shouldered through the doorway, trying carefully not to brush against him. But his tall and muscled frame filled the doorway. Her skin touched his, and she recoiled, but he seized the opportunity to hook her wrist and spin her to face him.

Shocked, but not surprised. She was thankful for the respirator that hung between her and any air he might try to share.

He didn’t let go. Instead, he pushed the door closed and then raised his free hand behind her head.

“You don’t need this in here,” he whispered, his thumb finding the ties behind her ear, making her skin prickle.

With a tug, he eased the respirator away and tossed it on a nearby table, landing with a thud.

Sweet, fresh air flooded her nose. Free of toxins and sickly things. If only the respirators could get rid of toxic people.

“There she is.”

The heat rising to her cheeks had very little to do with anger. And that is precisely what made her angry.

She had forgotten how beautiful he was. She was attracted to the most pretty things. After all, her eyes had always been drawn to shiny gems and rare stones. Thayer was like clean cut obsidian, dark and perfectly polished, but could still cut.

He was a masterpiece of a man, and she was a fool for still appreciating the craftsmanship.

She yanked her arm back, this time successfully, though the ghost of his grip lingered on her skin. She stepped deeper into the room, putting a sturdy table between them to regain her senses.

But distance did nothing for her mind. Everything came rushing back to her. The hurt. The jealousy. The other girl’s face. The pleasure of his. Their bodies together.

Alira swallowed hard.

“The dresses.” Her voice catching despite her effort.

Thayer let out a short, airy chuckle. He didn’t move toward her, but his gaze remained fixed on her face, enjoying the flustered color in her cheeks.

“Always so focused, Lira” He murmured, savoring the sound of her name. “The dresses are this way.” He motioned for her to follow with an overly jeweled hand.

To her surprise, he still wore the old rings she made him years ago.  The copper was tarnished and the settings were slightly crooked. Their designs too ambitious for her skill at the time. They looked childish among the more fanciful ones he wore. 

She had just begun learning, creating, and her biggest inspiration was Thayer himself and his wild ideas with color. She remembered his excitement when she first started working with metal, the way he’d brought her that tiny amethyst, insisting she make something of it. Now, it rested in the mountainside dirt still wrapped around her mother’s neck.

Years ago, Thayer had the idea to create together. Him and his fabrics and threads and her with her metals and gems. The shop she walked through now could have been theirs. Hers.

Mannequins clothed with traditional Graal linens hid in the shadows while the more colorful dresses and vests were closer to the door. Spools of textures she had no names for colored the wall behind a desk. Large measuring tapes, scissors and sketches that lay strewn about the desk reminded Alira of her workbench back home. No system of organization, yet she knew where everything was.

The back sewing room was quite different. Stuffed with half used fabrics sticking out of cubby holes. Jackets and shirts hung in any open area available. Undyed linens draped from the low ceiling. The room smelled of glue and fermenting dyes.

Thayer stood in the middle next to something that couldn’t – shouldn’t be her dress.

Alira stepped closer despite herself.

Her eyes narrowed. “So this is why prices have increased at The Pit,” she said flatly, gesturing toward the dress. “You’ve been using gems in your dresses?”

“Just yours,” Thayer replied without missing a beat.

Alira crossed her arms, trying to appear unimpressed. “Then you shouldn’t mind if I repurpose them.”

Thayer didn’t flinch. Instead, he moved closer to the gown and began tracing a light, admiring path along the sleek fabric.

“Ever since Veyla mentioned your dress, this is all I’ve been able to imagine you in.” He said.

Alira grimaced. “I’d rather you not imagine me in anything at all.” The words left her too fast.

The silence that followed was immediate and deeply unfortunate. 

Alira winced. “No – that’s not – I mean – “ She dragged both hands down her face and let out a longed defeated sigh. “Don’t imagine me. At all.”

Ashes to Veyla.

Because of her, Alira was thrown into this emotional wreck that could have otherwise been avoided. But also because of Veyla, Alira might have the most beautiful dress at the Furnace Festival.

He watched her for a beat too long before finally turning away with a crooked smile and heavy-lidded eyes.

“Of course.”

Swiping a neatly coiled loc from his face, he gathered two black boxes with silver emblems enlarged on the front and set them on the table between them. He began undressing the mannequins and carefully folded the fabrics in the boxes.

He stole glances at Alira, who stood awkwardly in the doorway. All she wanted was to put her mask back on and blend back into the crowd of people.

He laid two stems of lavender atop each dress before placing the cover on and stepping toward her. He stopped just inches away, the weight of the boxes between them.

“Since you’re so concerned about the cost of gems,” Thayer said, his voice dropping low, “consider it a wedding present.”

Heat overwhelmed Alira’s face, so hot, her cheeks burned. She clamped her teeth together to keep her mouth from falling open.

How could Veyla mention something so… sensitive to Thayer? And then another question, even more alarming, sounded in her mind. When did Veyla mention something so… new?

Unless… he already knew. Unless he was the one.

No. It couldn’t be.

Thayer was a scoundrel, but he wouldn’t have played her hand in this way. 

Would he?

Still, Alira would rather marry this scoundrel than a stranger.

She reached out and took the boxes, her fingers accidentally brushing against Thayer’s. She gripped the cardboard tight enough to dent it. She forced her expression to remain indifferent.

“How generous,” Alira bit out, her voice tight.

She spun on her heel before he could say another word, her mind already rehearsing every word she was going to have with Veyla.

Her boots slipped on the soot-stained street. The boxes fumbled out of her fingers and plummeted to the pavement. Part of Veyla’s dress slipped out, the soot staining the shiny fabric.

Alira quickly gathered the garment back in the box before adjusting her respirator. The ties loosed when she stumbled, sending sour air to her lungs. She tried to hold her breath, but choked as her throat tightened.

No one paid her a glance. Not the diggers walking home from the mines nor the burners who motioned their jeers at her. To them, she was just another body in the gray. Another pair of lungs coughing up ash. No one worth stopping for.

Alira swallowed hard against the burn in her throat. She tightened the straps and forced her next breath through the filter. Better. Not clean. Never clean. But survivable.

A burner leaned against a wall ahead, laughing under his breath as he watched her struggle.

“Wouldn’t want to ruin those pretty things.” He called out.

Her fingers curled around the boxes as she picked them back up. She considered snapping back, but instead, she adjusted her grip and kept walking.

The buildings thinned as she neared the jagged scar carved into the eastern mountainside. The city didn’t end so much as it surrendered. The road narrowed until the black mouth of the cavern filled the end of it, dark and waiting.

Her heart beat faster with each step toward The Scrape. Toward Veyla. Toward dragons.

She rolled the High Crown’s words over her tongue like a prayer.

Chained. Controlled. Compliant.

The High Crown wouldn’t lie. His word was the bedrock of the city. If he said the monsters were contained, then the fear rising in her throat was nothing more than an error in judgment. To doubt the High Crown was to doubt the very ground beneath her feet.

She passed a massive rusted drainage grate, where runoff from the wards pooled in dark viscous puddles. The smell was sharp even through the respirator. Burnt metal and wet ash.

A sudden sound made her flinch. A low, dragging scrape. Scales against stone. 

She had arrived.

The black maw of The Scrape loomed before her, ready to devour. Growls escaped like the rumbling stomach of a hungry predator.

She should turn back. She still had work waiting. Still had orders to finish before the Festival. Those things were safer than this. Safer than the place where dragons were mended enough to scrape by with a few more years of labor.

Chained. Controlled. Compliant.

She was safe. That’s what they assured.

She pulled the boxes tight against her chest, using them as a flimsy cardboard shield as she crept through the entrance.

Torches did a poor job at lighting the space. Her eyes adjusted slowly. The sound of heavy iron chains dragging over stone pulled her attention to the far left corner.

Laced in chains as thick as her waist, lay a dragon.

Not the charred black or sickly gray she expected, but white. It’s wings were lined in shimmering gold, and its scales had the translucent, milky depth of fine quartz. 

Alira stared, breathless. A hot, bitter lump rose in her throat. It was a beautiful, haunting thing – and she hated it for that. She wanted it to look like a murderer. She wanted it to look like the thing that had turned her father’s laugh into a memory and his workshop into a tomb.

How can something that leaves so much ash look so much like light?

Its sides rose in slow, shallow breaths. Its eyelids drooped, as if even the effort of keeping them open was too much.

A shadow peeled out of the dark corner. A man.

He wasn’t from Graal; Alira was certain of that. He lacked the slumped shoulders and heavy booted footfalls of of the local men. He wore a respirator and gripped a soft glowing chain in his hand. Enchanted. The dragon was leashed to him. 

He moved with a terrifying lack of fear, stepping right into the dragon’s reach and resting a hand against the side of its long, slender neck.

Alira’s pulse spiked. She waited for the snap of jaws or the spray of red, but the beast only shivered under his touch.

Chained. Controlled. Compliant. The High Crown hadn’t lied. The monster was broken.

Veyla appeared then, her golden braid hung over her shoulder. She carried a bucket with a cloth draped over the edge and a syringe the size of her forearm. She didn’t hesitate as she entered the cage. Alira’s sister didn’t look like a girl mending a monster, but instead, tending to something fragile.

Veyla dipped the cloth, wrung it once, then reached beneath the dragon’s wing. Veyla worked quickly, exposing a tender patch of skin and driving the syringe in without pause.

The creature tensed, a ripple of muscle sliding under quartz scales. But the man whispered to it, his hand never leaving the creature’s neck. Slowly, the dragon slumped.

Alira’s chest tightened, something unfamiliar and uncomfortable curling beneath her ribs. She found herself watching the dragon’s flank, waiting, her own lungs frozen.

Breathe, she pleaded silently. Please.

When the dragon finally took a long, shuddering breath, Alira exhaled with it, stunned by her own compassion.

Veyla and the man exchanged quiet words, muffled by the cavern’s appetite for sound. When Veyla eventually turned to head deeper into The Scrape, leaving the man alone with his sleeping captive, Alira didn’t follow.

She should go. But she didn’t want to forget this beautiful dragon or this moment. The fear was still there, but the hate had found a crack.

The puzzling stone came to her mind, glimmering its many colors.

She found her inspiration.


https://pin.it/39YIsBjfR

Dragon divider: https://www.clipartmax.com/middle/m2H7d3N4Z5A0A0A0_dragons-divider-zps4f32a6fe-fantasy-divider/

Chapter Two

He gripped the orders in his hand, knuckles turning as pale as the paper.

The whip sang a short, wicked note before biting into Veyla’s back. A spray of bland rice and watery tomato stew dribbled past her lips as she winced. She stared hard at the chipped ceramic bowl, her knuckles white where she gripped her spoon.

“Whores! The both of you!” Ilyana’s voice was raspy, thick with the scent of cheap fermented grapes and old bitterness. “Wasting my coin so you can play dress up.”

“We use our own coin,” Veyla hissed. “What we have left anyway after you’ve picked our pockets while we sleep.”

Veyla’s hands trembled slightly as she lifted a linen napkin, embroidered with a faded crest of a House that no longer existed. She dabbed her lips just how their mother used to.

“I don’t keep strays in this house out of love.” Ilyana sneered, the whip coiled in one hand and a dented metal cup in the other. She tossed her head back, draining the syrupy drink in greedy gulps.

“Lira’s coin is the only thing keeping your cup full of red.” Veyla spat. She finally looked up, her eyes dark with venom.

Alira’s spoon paused halfway to her mouth. She kept her gaze fixed on the swirling red broth of her stew, trying to shrink small enough to disappear into the wood grain of the table.

She had always wondered why Ilyana insisted on these nightly “family” dinners when every word spoken was a blade. She accepted the marks on her skin as the tax for having a roof.

“Yes, Lira,” Ilyana drawled. She sat across the round table with an empty bowl, an empty cup, and eyes just as empty. Empty of warmth. Empty of love. “Why don’t you make good of yourself and pour me some more red.” She gestured lazily for the stone pitcher.

Alira felt Veyla’s silent protest radiating off her like a fever. Don’t do it. Don’t give in. But Alira knew the price of defiance. 

Veyla fought with her tongue, but Alira tried not to fight at all.

She carefully folded her napkin, aligning the edges with precision, and reached for the pitcher.

The red liquid glugged out, dark and thick, filling Ilyana’s cup to the brim.

Ilyana grinned, showing teeth stained a soft purple. “Yes, you’re right. Lira does keep my cup full.” Her smirk sharpened into something jagged. “Now, pour it again!”

In one blurred motion, Ilyana hurled the contents of the cup directly into Alira’s face.

The world turned a stinging, acidic crimson. The red soaked into Alira’s hair, her eyes, and the thin fabric of her linens. She sat frozen, the liquid dripping off her nose and chin, pooling in her lap like a fresh wound.

“Pour. It. Again,” Ilyana commanded.

Alira’s hands shook so violently, the pitcher clattered against the metal rim of the cup.“Enough!” Veyla roared. She pounded her fists onto the table, the force of it rattling the dinnerware. “If father we’re still here, he’d-”

“What could a dead man do” Ilyana cut her off, her voice a whip of its own. “Take one of his swords and slice me in two?” She mocked.

“You would wish he would be that merciful.” Veyla replied. The anger in her eyes curdled into something black and bottomless.

“Mercy is for the weak. They replaced mercy with cruelty, and with cruelty is how we will survive.” Ilyana said, her voice turning cold and sharp.

“We are not dragons,” Veyla growled, her fingers clawing at the rough wood of the table. “We are your nieces. Only devils deal cruelly to their own blood.”

Alira set the pitcher down too quickly. The cold red sent shivers over skin. She felt small. Stained.

 “Ha!” Ilyana mocked with an ugly, gurgling laugh. “Nieces? Not much longer.” She took a slow sip of the fresh drink. “Finally found some ashen fools willing to pay for the pair of you.”

Alira’s blinked. “…pay?” Her voice came thin. “What are you -”

“Marriage.” Ilyana cut in, almost bored.

The words struck Alira harder than a blow. She would have preferred the sting of the whip.

With wide eyes, she searched Ilyana’s face for any hint of jest, but only found a smug satisfaction. She turned sharply to Veyla.

Veyla hadn’t moved. She stood silent and rigid. Her jaw tightened, but she didn’t look at Alira.

She was too still. Too quiet. It was wrong.

“Veyla…?”

Veyla exhaled softly through her nose, not taking her eyes away from Ilyana.

“Then you’ve given us a mercy.” She said.

Alira stared at her.

Ilyana’s brows lifted in amusement.

Veyla’s mouth curved, “To be rid of you at last. I hadn’t thought you capable of such kindness.”

Something flickered in Ilyana’s eyes, but she only huffed and lifted her cup.

Alira’s chest tightened. “Mercy?” She whispered. “Veyla, what are you saying?”

Veyla didn’t look at her. “Would you rather stay?”

The question cut clean.

Alira recoiled like Veyla lashed the whip herself. “That’s not -” Her voice broke. “You don’t even know who they are.”

“Simple diggers with soot in their lungs. A coin purse has no name, girl.” Ilyana offered a dismissive wave of her hand.

“But only Highborne Houses have marriage contracts.” Alira questioned more than stated.

“Seems some still view us as one.” Ilyana said, pride lighting her eyes. She turned to Veyla and held her cup high, “Wasn’t Lira’s coin that paid for this red, Veyla. It was you. Though you weren’t worth much.”

A tear carved a path through the red stains on Alira’s cheek.  Her throat tightened until the air came thin.

“When?” The only question Veyla asked.

“I didn’t intend to keep them waiting. After the Furnace Festival.” Ilyana smiled.

A heavy knock sounded at the door. 

Ilyana slammed her cup down with an irritated sigh. She stood, the whip still clutched in her hand, and walked toward the entryway.

From the other room, a deep, muffled voice rumbled. Alira couldn’t make out the words. Her heartbeat downed out the world. She looked down at her hands, wringing the red-soaked fabric, watching the droplets splash onto the floor.

Veyla’s shadow fell over her. Alira looked up. Her sister’s eyes had softened, but she did not speak.

Ilyana marched back in, her wrinkled face flushed.

“Veyla, grab your mask and trench. We’ve another at The Scrape.” She pointed a gnarled finger at the floor under Alira. “Lira, clean this mess up. Every drop or you’ll see more than the whip.”

Ilyana turned on her heel and vanished into the hall.

Alira looked down at the pooling red liquid at her feet. It appeared they didn’t survive at all.


Images taken from Pinterest.
Spilled wine: https://pin.it/3Ozz41ej0
Woman pouring wine: https://pin.it/21HMVEX7x

Book 1: A Broken Ballad

First, thank you for being here. Truly. Whether you’re a friend of mine or you’ve just stumbled across this story, it means more than I can say that you’re taking a chance on this world and these characters.

This book has lived in my head (and heart) for a while now, and getting to finally share it with you feels a little surreal.

New chapters will be posted irregularly. I’m a wife and mom first, and a writer second, which means life sometimes gets in the way of a consistent posting schedule.

That said, I am committed to telling this story.

If you’d like to stay updated, I highly recommend subscribing so you’ll be notified whenever a new chapter gets posted. That way, you won’t miss anything!

They bound dragons in chains, and bound her to a marriage she never chose…

Bound by blood and betrayal, dragons lived enslaved to the Highborne Houses, forced to mine, harvest, and breed for human greed. Alira was raised to fear them. They told her dragons are monsters, and she believed them.

Until the magic controlling the dragons begins to fray and binds her to one.

As the truth unravels, Alira is forced to question everything she’s been taught. The husband she never wanted is not what he seems, and neither are the creatures she was taught to hate. As loyalties shift, secrets surface, and rebellion kindles, Alira must decide where she stands when the line between monster and master begins to blur.

Because if the dragons are freed… will they save the world – or burn it?


There are stories about dragons… and then there are stories about what happens when those dragons are no longer the villains.

A Broken Ballad is a dark fantasy steeped in control, rebellion, and trust.

In this world, dragons are not majestic, untouchable legends. They are enslaved.

Controlled by the Highborne Houses, they are forced into labor. Their strength is exploited and their will is stripped away. And like everyone else, Alira has been raised to believe this is right.

She has been taught one thing her entire life: dragons are monsters.

And she believes it… until she can’t.

Everything changes when the magic binding the dragons begins to fray and binds Alira to one of them instead.

Alira is forced to confront her fears.

This is a story about unlearning. It’s about peeling back the lies you’ve been raised with and deciding who you are when everything familiar falls apart.


If this world calls to you, you can begin the journey here:

👉 Read Chapter One

Chapter One

The jewel was a child born of agony, but he meant for her to feel only its love.

The door couldn’t keep out the monsters.

Not the ones outside, bellowing and laboring heavily. Even from the mines far below, their roars reached the threshold of Alira’s room.

Those weren’t nearly as scary as the monsters inside. The ones inside Alira’s head.

Memories are monsters too, as Alira’s often were. They were equally as loud and raging as the dragons beneath, no matter how tightly you shut the door. No matter how long you pretend not to hear.

And they were loud tonight.

Cries of a wailing woman rang beneath the roof. Alira closed herself behind the door. Latched it. Walked away to sit at her table where beads rested in clumps of color.

She sat, stringing beads, and drowned out the screaming with singing.

Hours bled into an eternity, when the screams finally stopped. Alira’s last note met the last bead on the thread when her doorknob rattled.

“Lira.” Her sister’s voice was hollow.

Alira sat silent.

Another rattle.

Her sister sighed, “She’s gone.”

Her mother died while she was stringing beads.

She tossed the untied thread into her bottom table drawer. Beads scattered and collided with each other in a shower of clatters. She slammed the drawer shut.

Now, Alira sat at the same table with the same haunting sounds seeping through the seams of her door. The drawer with the beads still remained shut, never opened. Even after three years.

She rolled a peculiar stone between her fingers. It seemed confused and refused to settle, wanting to be many colors all at once. In one angle, it flashed of an eager green and blushing pink. With a different twist, it pouted a bruised purple and cautious orange.

Typically, she traded coin for rare rocks at the Open Pit in town. But this rock she received from an anonymous commission left at her window in a shabby wooden box. When she opened the box, the strange stone sat nestled in a bed of gold coins with a scribbled drawing of a ring jutting out. Signed with the initials “K.K.”

No name. No preferences. No ring size.

She turned the stone again, watching the colors shift.

What do you want to be? 

Alira glanced back and forth between the simple sketch and the stone. Was it a design? A request? There was no hint.

“That’s helpful.” She murmured dryly.

With a sigh, she set the strange rock in the top drawer, pulled out a worn sketchbook and charcoal stick, then slid the drawer closed.

Weary eyes skimmed over the foxed parchment. Lists and sketches colored the pages. 

Many of her jewelry sketches now walked around her city. Dangling from women’s ears, fastening men’s belts, or lacing ladies’ bare necks. Some sketches were still ideas and wishes that hadn’t come to life yet.

None sparked any inspiration for this mystery ring.

Alira flipped to the last page. Her list of commissions for the upcoming Furnace Festival.

This time of year proved to be her busiest. The Festival gave an excuse for folk in her city to spend coin on luxuries like jewelry and dresses instead of necessities.

Each custom design showcased different aspects of the Furnace Festival, and largely, her city. A matching set of necklaces for the Dallin twins mimicked two parts of a flame. Beaded sterling silver textured with ripples dangled from hooks like dripping steel for the blacksmith’s wife. Black tulle clasped in a crown imitated the wispy smoke that rose from the factories and furnaces for another. Men were also frequent customers, requesting rings, belt buckles, or cuff links.

She crossed off the completed pieces. Only two remained. It should have been easy, but it wasn’t. Full creative control was given to Alira, which was both a wonder and a curse. Countless possibilities tingled in her fingertips. Yet, her fingers remained uninspired. Inept. Inadequate.

Her father used to tell her that it was never her hands holding her back, but her mind. He was a master with metals too, but of the weapons and butchery sort. It was him who showed her how to manipulate metal and shape it when she brought home her first gem. He saw both the gem’s potential as well as his daughters.

She glanced at the table’s bottom drawer and clutched the book to her chest.

Her doorknob rattled.

A sharp gasp hitched her breath, and the book slipped from her fingers.

Another rattle followed by a knock.

“Lira, you need to stop locking your door!” Her sister’s words reached Alira before she unlatched the door and swung it open. “Really, why do we even have locks in this house?” Veyla grumbled as she entered Alira’s bedroom turned atelier.

Releasing a shaky breath, Alira mumbled, “To keep out the monsters.” The latch made a soft click as the door closed.

“What was that?” Veyla turned slightly as she bent to retrieve the dropped sketchbook.

Shaking off the panic, Alira faced her older sister. “What do you need, Veyla?”

Veyla perched herself atop Alira’s worktable, not minding the metal shavings or pointy tools that prodded her skirts. She crossed one booted foot over the other, and she thumbed through the sketchbook, her eyes never leaving the colorful scribbles. “Hm, I thought I heard you say something about monsters.” She snapped the book shut and hopped off the table, leaving the book where she sat.

Alira snatched it and opened the top drawer, returning the book back to its place.

Veyla’s sharp eyes and quick fingers plucked the stone from the drawer before it shut. She scrutinized it closely, holding it between two fingers. “Looks like a crystal. Maybe quartz?”

Alira huffed and swiped it from Veyla’s greedy hands. “It’s not a quartz. It’s something I’ve not come across before.” She placed it back in the drawer. “Someone commissioned it for a ring.”

Veyla’s eyebrows quirked up. “A rock like that one must mean a marriage token.”

“All the more pressure.” Alira huffed a sigh. If Veyla presumed correctly then the mystery ring had to be perfect. But who would choose such an odd rock like that for a marriage token?

“Did you only come to snoop through my belongings or did you need something?” Alira asked again, placing her hands on her hips and cocking her head to one side.

“I have a request,” Veyla playfully winced. “Well, really it’s a surprise,” Veyla hopped off the table with a full grin, her hands landing on Alira’s shoulders.

“If it’s another bracelet made out of a live snake, then I politely decline. I love jewelry, but preferably pieces that aren’t potentially poisonous.”

“Nonsense, I got us dresses for the Festival,” Veyla exclaimed. “I knew you were going to wear the one from last year, but you say it best, ‘Last years fashion is as dead as the ash we walk on.’”

Alira shook her head, “No, I only say that to get folk to purchase new pieces.” A hint of a smile crossed over Alira’s face. “But thank you. I’ll wear the dress as long as it doesn’t try to bite me.”

“No,” she slowed, “But the seamster might.” A playful pout played at her lips as she withdrew from Leira’s shoulders and took several steps back.

Alira let out a sound that was a half strangled groan and half whimper. “You can’t be serious.” She wrestled the words out through tight teeth.

There was only one seamster who would love to sink his teeth into Alira. Whether for passion or pain, she found both equally revolting.

“When he heard one of the dresses was for you, he immediately started pulling rolls and sketching, calling your  silhouette his ‘greatest unfinished canvas’. He was quite poetic about it all.”

“Of course he did,” Alira said flatly. “He’d probably make the bodice out of spite and iron filings just to see me squirm.”

“Oh, don’t be so dramatic. He’s brilliant.”

“He’s insufferable.”

“Talented.”

“Senseless.”

“Passionate.”

“Veyla.”

“Yes, Lira?”

“If the dress hisses at me, I’m setting it on fire.”

Veyla grinned. “Then you’ll match the Festival decorations perfectly.”

Alira dragged a hand down her face. “You’ve doomed me. I hope you know that.”

“It’s a win – win. You get the gown, and we get something to look at other than your charcoal stained linens.” Veyla looped her arm through Alira’s, entirely too pleased with herself. “Now, let’s go face the real monster in this house and try to survive dinner.”