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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 22

Chapter 22: North

The Corvin case formally concluded in the second week of December.

It was not simple—nothing involving a palace guard who had killed the crown prince under Fate influence was going to be simple, and the legal precedents for human action under supernatural coercion were limited and largely untested. What emerged was a judgment that Isla thought was as accurate as the available language could manage: Corvin had acted. Corvin bore responsibility. The circumstances were extraordinary. The sentence was prison rather than death, with a recommendation for review.

Corvin, in his cell, made no appeal.

Soren was formally protected as a witness. He moved into the room above the cartographer's quarter studio that Petra had quietly arranged for him, and he and Petra continued their Tuesday evenings, now at the cartography shop, with Isla making tea and occasionally discussing the northern surveys. Petra had a glow about her, the specific glow of a person whose life was moving in a direction they'd chosen. Isla found this satisfying.

What remained:

The legal case was closed. The loop was broken. The vault was empty and beginning, slowly, to fill with honest records. Cassian was learning what it meant to be a Fate without a defining curse, which he described as disorienting but not unpleasant, which she read as: uncomfortable and interesting simultaneously.

They had not—she had not—addressed the thing that lived in the bond's quiet channel.

She had been mapping it for weeks. The warmth, the presence, the specific quality of glad to be here that reached her through the bond and that she'd stopped pretending was only one-directional. She had been careful, and she remained careful, but she was also a cartographer who had been taught that notes filed and not used were notes wasted.

She filed the notes.

She did not use them yet.

Petra asked, in the second week of December, on an evening when Soren was there and the shop was warm with tea and four people's conversation: "What's north of the border surveys?"

Soren looked up from his book. "The territories your father surveyed for the Fate Court commission are the furthest north the current maps go."

"And beyond those?"

"Unmapped," Isla said.

"What would you find if you mapped them?"

"The territories that border the between-space," Cassian said. He'd been at the corner of the table with the library text—the same one, she thought, or a different one, she'd lost track—and he'd looked up. "The places where the mapped and unmapped worlds approach each other most closely." He paused. "Your father's commission was to establish the boundary clearly. He got close."

"But not finished," Isla said.

"The northern boundary is still—estimated," Cassian said. "Your father's notes indicate he believed the actual border was another two days' travel north of his final survey point."

Isla looked at the atlas.

The unfinished northern survey. The commission her father had taken and not completed. The maps with her father's handwriting on them and the empty space at the top of each one where the edge was marked here, survey ends. Territory continues.

She looked at Cassian.

"We should finish it," she said.

He looked at her. He didn't say anything for a moment.

"Yes," he said. "We should."

They left in the third week of December, when the ground was hard with early frost and the days were short and the light had the particular quality of winter that was honest about its limitations.

She brought the atlas. She brought her father's field kit—the compass and the measurement instruments and the notebook with his handwriting in it, the last survey points he'd established, the beginning of the notation system she would continue. She brought her own kit beside it.

He brought nothing physical. He brought three hundred years of geographic memory and the between-space navigation and the knowledge of the territories that approached his domain. She'd described this to Petra as the world's most useful field companion, and Petra had looked at her with the twin's particular accuracy and said: "That's not the reason you want him there."

"He's also useful," she'd said.

"Isla."

"I'm still mapping," she'd said. "I'll know when I'm done mapping."

Petra had given her the look that meant: I know you know, I'm waiting for you to say it. But she'd let it go.

Travel with Cassian was—different from travel generally.

He knew where things were, to begin with, in the way of a person who had been everywhere at least once in three hundred years. He knew which waystation had the best fire and which village had the best bread and which road became unreliable after rain. He navigated by terrain rather than maps, which she found both useful and slightly irritating (she had maps; they should use them), and after two days she'd worked out a system where she navigated by maps and he corrected the maps in real time and she updated the notation.

"Your father did it this way," he said on the second evening, looking at her field notebook.

"He described using the land as primary survey," she said. "The map as the record, not the guide." She looked at the corrections she'd been making. "He trusted people who knew the terrain well."

"He was right to." Cassian looked at the notebook. "The way he noted the border areas—where the surveyor's certainty diminished—it's very accurate. He could feel the between-space influence on the territory. He had some sensitivity to it."

She looked up. "My father."

"Yes."

"He could feel the between-space."

"Not navigate it. But he noticed when territory had been affected by its proximity. His maps of the boundary territories are the most accurate human-made maps of those areas I've seen." A pause. "That was why I commissioned him."

She looked at the field notebook. Her father's handwriting, neat and careful, every notation its own small decision.

"Did you tell him what you were?" she asked.

"No."

"Did he know?"

"I think—" Cassian paused. "I think he suspected what the commission was related to. He never asked directly." A pause. "He left a note in the final survey file. I found it when I reviewed the completed portions. It said—" He stopped. "It said: For whatever this is for, I hope it helps. The territory is beautiful and deserves to be known."

She sat with this by the fire of a waystation in the northern territories, with the frost on the window and the night coming in fast.

"He would have liked you," she said.

Cassian was quiet.

"Not in spite of what you are," she said. "Because of it. He had enormous respect for things that attended carefully to the world." She looked at the notebook. "He would have found the vault library—" She paused. "He would have understood it immediately. He kept his own archive. Every commission, every survey. Long after they were useful." She paused. "He said the world deserved to be recorded. Not for anyone's use. Just—recorded. Because it was real."

"The same reason I visit the broken promises," Cassian said.

"Yes," she said. "Exactly that."

The fire burned between them.

"What do you want?" she asked. The question she'd asked twice before—once in the shop, once at the crossroads. His first answer had been: to stop witnessing, and be in something. His second had been longer, about wanting to be a person attending to something. She was asking again because she thought the answer might be different now. Complete acts ran their course; you noticed when the configuration had changed.

He looked at the fire for a long time.

"This," he said. "This specifically." He didn't gesture—didn't indicate any particular element of the room or the journey. He was looking at the fire and meaning: this. Being here. In this territory. Recording it with you.

She looked at the fire.

She held what she felt, which she had been mapping for two months and knew the complete shape of, and she held also the clear understanding of what it was. Not just warmth. Not just the specific gladness she felt from the bond. Something larger than both. The thing that lived between understanding someone completely and choosing to continue. The thing Love had described. The thing she'd been being careful about and had decided to stop being careful about somewhere between the second and third waystation.

"I want that too," she said.

He looked at her.

"I've been mapping it for two months," she said. "The feeling. Making sure I knew exactly what it was before I named it." She held his gaze. "I know what it is."

He was very still.

"It's not the bond," she said. "It's not the residue. It's not the curse mechanism or the compact or the extended proximity." She paused. "I would have—" She stopped. Started again. "If I had met you at the crossroads with no crisis, no desperate sister, no compact. If I had met you at the crossroads and learned who you were—" She paused. "The vault organized by texture. The coat thread. The honest answers. The way you warned me before it served you." She held his gaze. "I would have arrived here anyway."

He said nothing for a long moment.

"Isla," he said.

"Yes."

"You should know," he said, "that I don't entirely know what I am now. The Fate of Ruin without the curse is—a new configuration. I'm still—"

"Mapping it," she said.

He looked at her.

"So am I," she said. "We've established we're both doing that." She paused. "That's not a reason to stop."

"No," he said. "It isn't."

The fire burned.

"This is very strange," he said, "for me."

"I know."

"I haven't—in three hundred years, I haven't—" He stopped. "The intimacy of—" He stopped again, in the way he stopped when the word he needed was outside his existing vocabulary.

"Yes," she said, because she understood what he was trying to say. "For what it's worth, it's a bit strange for me too."

He looked at her with the deep-water eyes that had resolved, over two months, into something she could read as clearly as a well-made map.

"You're laughing at me," he said. Not offended. Slightly wondering.

"A little," she said. "The most patient being in the world and you're nervous."

"I'm not nervous," he said, with the dignity of three centuries.

"You've been turning that cup for ten minutes," she said.

He looked at the cup. He set it down.

She was laughing now, properly, the way she didn't do often—freely, in a warm room with frost on the window, and he was looking at her with an expression she'd never seen on him before, something that had not quite made it to his face in three hundred years: delight. The specific delight of someone who has been in the cold for a very long time and has just, for the first time, felt warmth that was genuinely meant for them.

She stopped laughing.

They were looking at each other in the firelight.

"Can I ask you something?" he said.

"Yes."

"The notation," he said. "In the atlas. The one you wrote before the crossroads. Here knowledge ends. Continue." He paused. "Did you know then? When you wrote it?"

She thought about it.

"I knew I was choosing," she said. "I knew I was choosing clearly. What I was choosing—" She paused. "I think I knew. I was just still mapping it."

"And now?"

"Map's complete," she said.

He reached across the space between them and took her hand—not the grip of a bargain, not the catch of someone falling, not the courtesy of assistance. The simple taking of something offered, both hands around hers, careful and present and warm.

She looked at their hands.

"There are still three weeks of survey work," she said.

"I know."

"And when we get back, Soren will want the interview."

"I know."

"And Fortune is going to be insufferable about being right."

"She already is," he said. "She sent me a note. Just the words I told you with a probability attached."

She laughed again, and the firelight was warm, and the frost on the window was very far away, and the bond between them was quiet and clear and honest, the way channels were clear when nothing was flowing through them except what was real.

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