<b>Chapter </b><b>78 </b>
C
Magic coils around my fingertips, ck–gold and pulsing like a second heartbeat. The air before me hums <b>as </b>I reach out, the weave of reality trembling beneath my touch. Behind me, the others wait in taut silence. Layah sits at my heels, tail flickingzily, but her eyes gleam with something ancient and electric.
“Focus <i>on </i><i>Mchi</i><i>,</i>” she says softly. <i>“</i><i>You </i><i>know </i><i>his </i>signature now. <i>Let </i>it guide you.<b>” </b>
I nod. I do know it, storm–forged, sharp, steady. The anchor I need. I reach for that thread and let my power crack open the portal.
The portal shimmers into existence with a low whine, edges flickering like lightning caught in ink.
“You sure about this?” Xavier asks.
“No,” I say. “But I’m going anyway.” And with that, I step through…straight into a veryrge, very opulent bathroom. Steam curls in the air. There’s music ying faintly from a speaker tucked into the corner. And in the center of it all stands Mchi. Dripping wet. Wearing only towel. We all freeze. He freezes. There’s a tense beat as water drips from his hair onto the marble floor.
“I swear Levi said ten more minutes,” he mutters, looking skyward like he’s questioning every life decision that brought him to this moment.
Noah coughs beside me<b>, </b>clearly trying not tough. Haiden doesn’t even bother; his shoulders shake, his hand mped over his mouth.
Layah, naturally<b>, </b>looks regal and unbothered as ever. <i>“</i><i>Nice </i><i>tiles</i><b><i>,</i></b>” shements.
“I am going to throw Levi back into a portal next time he visits,” Mchi growls, grabbing a second towel and wrapping it around his shoulders as he storms toward the door. <b>“</b>Come on. Since you’re here, you may <b>as </b>well meet her. Just try not to traumatize anyone else on the way out.”
We follow him out, me<b>, </b>four mates<b>, </b>my hellhound, all trailing calmly from a steaming bathroom like this is the most natural thing in the world. Waiting just outside the bathroom are Arztec and Julius.
Arztec gives <b>us </b>a single raised eyebrow. “Really?<b>” </b>
Julius smirks. “Was this a dramatic entrance or just a bad sense of direction?”
“She opened the portal,” Mchi snaps, gesturing to me.
“She’s still new to this<b>,</b><b>” </b>I mutter.
“Clearly,” Arztec <b>deadpans</b>!
I roll my <b>eyes </b><b>as </b>we fall into step with them.
The castle is an ancient, elemental ce carved into the mountain itself. Veins of amber glow faintly in the walls, pulsing with steady, grounded magic<b>. </b>Everything smells of <b>stone</b><b>, </b>fire, and old power. <b>Massive </b>windows frame jagged mountain peaks outside, and thick rugs bear the sigils of long–forgotten houses, Magic hangs in the air like mist<b>, </b>ancient and humming. We walk in near silence, the tension mounting with each step. At the end of the hall, two obsidian doors wait, nked by twin wolf statues, one carved <b>of </b><b>silver</b>, the other of iron. Mchi stops in front of them.
“She’s inside,” he says quietly. “Elira…mum”
My throat tightens<b>. </b>
“She knows you’reing,” Julius adds<b>, </b>unusually gentle.
Layah brushes against my leg. “<i>Ready</i><i>?</i>”
“No,<b>” </b>I whisper. “But I’m going anyway.”
I step forward. The doors swing open without a sound. Warm golden light spills out, washing over me like sunlight after a storm. The room beyond is nothing like I expected, not <b>regal </b>or cold or carved from stone like the rest of the castle. It’s a sanctuary. Vines creep up <b>the </b>walls, blooming with flowers that glow faintly, petals shifting from silver to violet. A wide firece burns low in the corner, firelight dancing over shelves filled with ancient scrolls, weathered tomes, and jars of dried herbs. The scent is rich and heady,vender, smoke, wild honey, and something older<b>… </b><b>and </b>in the center of it <b>all </b>sits a woman. She rises as I step in. She is taller than I imagined, wrapped in soft midnight robes that shimmer like oil on water. Her hair is ck with streaks of gold. Her eyes, when they meet mine, steal the breath from my chest, mirror
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reflections of my own<b>, </b>but older, stormier, worn by time and <b>loss</b><b>. </b>
“Mum,<b>” </b>I breathe.
<b>A </b>long silence stretches between us. Then she steps forward, <b>slowly</b><b>, </b>like I’m a creature that might bolt. Like she’s afraid I’ll vanish.
<b>“</b>You look just like I imagined,<b>” </b>she says, voice soft, cracking at the edges. “But you feel like so much more.<b>” </b>
I don’t know what to <b>say</b>. I didn’t expect the grief in her eyes. The raw ache in every line of her face.
“I thought maybe you’d died. That you didn’t want me<b>.</b><b>” </b>I whisper more to myself.
<b>Her </b>breath catches, and she closes the space between us. She stops inches away, trembling.
“I wanted you,” she says<b>, </b>voice trembling now, too. “I wanted you every day. But the witches took you before <b>I </b>could hold you. I screamed your name before I even knew what it was. I begged the gods, the old ones, the monsters, anyone, just to see you again<b>.</b><b>” </b>
She reaches up, slowly, carefully. <b>“</b>May <b>I</b><b>?</b><b>” </b>
My nod is barely a breath, but it’s enough. Her hand touches my cheek, and I swear the bond between us weeps. Her thumb brushes beneath my eye. She stares like she’s trying to memorize the face she never got to raise.
“I didn’t know who <i>I </i>was for a long time,” I murmur. “They cloaked me. Hid me from myself<b>. </b>I grew up thinking I was broken. Wrong. Dangerous<b>. </b>
Alone.”
“You were powerful,” she says. “And they feared that. They wanted to use that.”
“They did use me,” <b>I </b>say. “He made me a spell. They’re going to try to tear down the world and rebuild it for themselves<b>, </b>using me<b>.</b><b>” </b>
She nods, tears slipping down her cheeks now. “I know… I should have burned it all down to find you. I didn’t. I was a coward.”
“No,<i>” </i><b>I </b>say. “You were hurting. That’s not cowardice.”
She smiles<b>, </b>shaky, small, but <b>real</b><b>. </b>“You are <b>so </b>much more than I dreamed. You’re ethereal.”
Layah huffs from her ce at the door. <i>“</i><i>She </i><i>gets </i><i>that </i>from me.”
Iugh, just <b>a </b>little, broken at the edges and Mum does too. “<b>I </b><b>see </b>you got a rare gift.” She looks over Layah, already making the connection between <b>us</b><b>. </b>
I don’t know who moves first. Maybe we both do. But suddenly we’re there, in each other’s arms, and I’m not a goddess or a weapon or a <b>spell</b>…I’m a daughter and <b>she’s </b>not a queen or a legend or a memory<b>, </b>she’s a mother…my mother. For a long, long moment, we just hold each other. She presses her lips to my temple. “I love you, I never stopped<b>.</b><b>” </b>
“I know,” I whisper<b>. </b>
And in the soft warmth of that room, with the fire glowing and my mates outside and <b>Layah </b>standing with me, the ache of all those lost years begins to knit itself into something <b>new</b>, not whole but healing,
This work, Goddess of the Underworld
by Sheridan Hartin<b>, </b>is an exclusive intellectual property legally contracted with NovelSnack. Any reproduction, distribution, or upload outside NovelFlow, AnyStories, NovGo, and Readink is unauthorized and constitutes copyright infringement
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