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Once Upon a Broken Heart Novel Cover

Once Upon a Broken Heart

When her twin sister is falsely accused of murdering the crown prince, Isla Vane makes a desperate bargain with the mysterious Prince of Ruin. In exchange for three tears of genuine grief, he saves her sister from execution. But their agreement draws Isla into a world of ancient curses, dangerous secrets, and powerful Fates. As she uncovers the truth behind a royal conspiracy, she finds herself growing closer to the immortal prince whose broken heart may hold the key to changing destiny forever.
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Chapter 17

Chapter 17: Grief's Domain

They went to the crossroads.

Of course they went to the crossroads—it was where this had started, and Isla had a cartographer's respect for beginnings that also served as endings. Her father used to say: mark the starting point clearly. The survey must know where it began.

The Old X at midnight, on the last day of the eleventh month, was different from the Old X in September when she'd first stood there. It was different because she was different, and because whatever she'd changed in the shape of things had made the between-leak thicker, the quality of the stones more present. Or perhaps Grief had done that.

Grief was there.

And Hunger was there.

She hadn't expected Hunger. She had the feeling of someone who had adequately prepared for one problem and arrived to find two.

Hunger looked at her with those assessing eyes. He had the feel, tonight, of something that was hungry because it was running out of time to feed—a sharper quality to him, a more present intention. He looked at her the way she'd felt him look at her at the Court of Fates: as something being evaluated as resource.

"You're early," he said to Cassian, pleasantly.

"Hunger," Cassian said. The word was very flat.

"I've been watching this with interest," Hunger said, moving with the particular ease of something that did not experience physical discomfort. "Three hundred years of searching. And then—" He looked at Isla. "A mapmaker's daughter. I did wonder if it would work. Whether the specific grief she carries has the right quality." He tilted his head. "It does, I think. Which is very inconvenient for me."

"Leave," Cassian said.

"I could," Hunger agreed. "But then who would tell her about the wanting?"

Isla looked at him. "What wanting?"

"You've been telling yourself," Hunger said pleasantly, "that what you feel is not love. That you've stayed clearly on one side of the map's edge. That you're not—compromised." He smiled. It was technically perfect. "But I am the Fate of Hunger. I feel every wanting in the world. The wanting to hold. The wanting to stay. The wanting to reach across a table in the back room of a cartography shop and—"

"That's enough," Cassian said, and there was something in his voice that had nothing managed about it—something that had been through a very long time and was finished with patience.

"I just want her to know," Hunger said, still pleasant, "that what she's feeling—the grief she's going to offer—is not going to be clean. It's contaminated. By want. By the specific want to—"

"She knows what she feels," Cassian said.

"Does she?" Hunger looked at Isla. "The grief of knowing someone completely. Clear, unafraid. That's what's required." He tilted his head. "Can you honestly tell me that's what you have? That there's nothing in it that wants him to survive? To be different on the other side? To—"

"Yes," she said.

He stopped.

"Yes," she said again. "There is want. I'm not going to pretend there isn't." She held his gaze—Hunger's gaze, which tried to make you feel the gap between where you were and where you wanted to be. She looked at it clearly. "I want the curse to break. I want the loop to end. I want him to be—whatever he is on the other side of this." She paused. "I also know that what I want doesn't determine what will happen. I can want something and still know the truth at the same time. I can be afraid of loss and still hold the reality of it clearly." She looked at Hunger. "That's what the grief is. It holds the want and the truth simultaneously. The fear of loss and the honesty about loss. I don't have to choose one or the other." A pause. "That's what complete means."

Hunger looked at her.

Grief, behind him, was very still.

"You've thought about this," Hunger said.

"I consulted Love," she said. "I've been mapping it for weeks."

Hunger's expression changed. Very slightly. Something moved behind the assessing eyes—not retreat, but recalculation.

"Grief," Hunger said. "You heard her. The grief is contaminated by want—"

"The grief is complete," Grief said.

The voice of Grief was the first time she'd heard it directly. It was—enormous in the way the thing itself was enormous: present in every room, present in the spaces between things, the voice of something that had been everywhere for as long as emotions existed.

"The grief contains the want," Grief said. "That doesn't contaminate it. Complete grief always contains want. The grief of a whole self—of someone who knows the truth and still wants things to be different—that's the most complete form." A pause. "That's what I built the curse to require."

Hunger looked at Grief.

"You—" Hunger began.

"I'm tired," Grief said. "I've been sustaining this loop for three hundred years because the conditions weren't met. The conditions are met." Another pause, and something in that pause had the quality of an admission. "I've been tired of it for a long time."

Hunger looked at the crossroads. At Isla. At Cassian.

"If the loop breaks," he said, "I lose—"

"Considerable power," Grief said. "Yes. As do I." A pause. "I find I don't object."

Hunger's expression moved through several configurations.

Then, slowly, he stepped back from the crossroads.

Not gone. But back.

"I'll be watching," he said. "When this fails—"

"Then you'll be watching for a long time," Isla said.

Hunger looked at her one more time. Then he dissolved into the dark.

The crossroads was quiet.

Grief turned its enormous presence toward her.

"You're ready?" it said.

"Yes," she said.

"The loop breaks when the grief reaches me," Grief said. "When I receive it—I'll know whether to dissolve the mechanism or sustain it." A pause. "I've known for some time which way I intend to choose. I've been waiting for the grief itself."

She looked at Cassian.

He was looking at her. Not with the management expression. Not with the carefully neutral Fate face. Just looking at her, with the deep-water eyes that had resolved into something she could read clearly now: tired and present and, in this moment, more himself than any version of himself she'd seen.

"You'll still be you, after," she said. "Whatever changes."

"I don't know that," he said.

"I do," she said. "The vault is organized by texture. That doesn't change with a curse." She paused. "The coat thread is on the pedestal. That doesn't change."

He said nothing for a moment.

"Isla," he said.

"Yes."

"Whatever happens after—" He stopped. "If I'm—different. If the Fate of Ruin without the curse is something—diminished, or changed, or—"

"Then it's a new territory," she said. "We map new territories." She held his gaze. "That's what we do."

He was quiet.

"All right," he said.

She turned to face Grief.

She thought about her father's atlas. The southern coast, the notations. The northern surveys, the incomplete final commission. The maps that recorded what he knew and marked honestly where the knowing stopped, because marking the limit was as important as marking the territory.

She thought about Petra at six years old with the caterpillar, the absolute conviction that shared wonder was the whole point.

She thought about the vault—the texture-organized library of broken things. The coat thread on the pedestal.

She thought about the rain-watching evening and the floor of the back room and the conversation at the crossroads about wanting to be in something instead of witnessing its end.

She thought about Maren, who had understood him and died. She thought about Calla, who had made him a coat because he looked cold.

She thought about what complete grief was. About holding the want and the truth simultaneously. About being afraid and clear at the same time.

She let it surface.

Not the general grief of knowing someone well—the specific grief. The particular weight of knowing that this was three hundred years of loneliness coming to whatever end it was coming to, and she couldn't determine the outcome, and the wanting was in her like light through a lens, and the grief was clear because the wanting was clear. She didn't push the wanting away. She held it. She held it alongside the truth: this is real and this is his and I have known it and that knowing is mine now and whatever happens—whatever he is on the other side of this—the knowing was real.

The tear fell.

It didn't feel like the first two. The first two had been weight lifting—relief, like a tide receding. This was different. This was—surrender. The specific surrender of someone who has been holding a very precise piece of truth and releases it not because they're done with it but because they trust where it's going.

It landed in his hand.

The gold of it was different from the first two—not brighter, but deeper, the gold of something very old and very complete.

And then everything happened at once.

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