Chapter 17: The Rival’s Shadow
Elias stood on the deck of Defiant, the sea roaring as it carried him toward the metal port. The locket in his pocket burned, its pulse a relentless heartbeat. Clara's journal, stowed in his cabin, spoke of the mansion's heart: Clara's blood fed it, and it hungers still. The metal port was his next conquest, but a new shadow loomed, darker than the Kaels.
The port was a forge of wealth, its docks alive with rare alloys. Elias's grandfather's fund had fueled this voyage—new ships, textile mills, alloy forges. His empire was a tempest, unchallenged now that the Kaels' legacy was dust. Merchants in Blackthorn hailed him as Elias, a name that drowned out Kael.
Beatrice's hatred had buried him. After he'd ruined Caspian's painting, her loathing had surged tenfold. Gideon, Celeste, Marina, and Reginald had erased him. But Elias was no ghost now—he was a storm, claiming the sea.
His trading network was unstoppable. Shipbuilding, textiles, rare metals—his investments, funded by Edmund's gold, had crushed the Kaels' empire. The fund was his sword, but Clara's sacrifice haunted him. Her blood fed the mansion's heart—was it his strength, or his doom?
The locket burned, searing his skin. The hum in his mind was a voice, commanding, clear. Elias, it roared, alive in his blood. He gripped it, defiant, refusing its chain.
Harrow met him before the voyage. "A new player's in Blackthorn," he warned, eyes sharp. "Calls himself Riven, tied to old Kael secrets." Elias's gut twisted, the mansion's reach growing.
Jonas stood by, gruff. "Riven's asking about you," he said. "Knows about the fund." Elias nodded, knife at his side, sensing the mansion's hand.
The cargo was packed tight, alloys worth a kingdom. "You're a legend," Jonas said, checking crates. But the hum roared, unsettling, warning. Elias felt the mansion's heart, watching.
At midnight, the locket flared, blinding. Elias clutched it, and a shadow rose from the deck—a man, eyes black, voice a hiss: The heart knows you, Elias. It wore Clara's locket, its form flickering like smoke. Riven, tied to the mansion's heart, was no mere rival.
The shadow vanished, leaving Elias trembling. The hum was deafening, Elias, commanding. The mansion's heart had sent Riven, its hunger targeting him. Was he its chosen, or its prey?
The metal port loomed at dawn. Its docks were chaos, merchants haggling over rare alloys. Elias's ship docked smoothly, outrunning fading patrols. The locket pulsed, angry, the hum a warning roar.
Riven waited on the pier, cloaked, eyes gleaming like the locket. "You wield what's not yours," he said, voice low. "The fund belongs to the heart." Elias's hand tightened on his knife, defiance burning.
"You're the mansion's pawn," Elias said, voice ice. "I'm its master." Riven smiled, cold, and vanished into the crowd. The hum roared, Elias, challenging him to prove it.
The alloys sold for a fortune. Merchants swarmed Elias, offering alliances. Jonas sealed deals, his loyalty ironclad. Elias's empire grew, a blaze across the sea.
He read Clara's journal at night, on the return voyage. A new note: The heart claims all who touch its blood. Clara's sacrifice fed it, and now it sought Elias. The locket's hair was hers, binding him to its hunger.
The hum was relentless, commanding. Elias, it roared, clear as the sea. He gripped the locket, defiant. He'd wield its power, not bow to it.
Back in Blackthorn, Harrow was grim. "Riven's spreading lies," he said. Elias's fleet grew—ten ships now. His warehouses brimmed with textiles, alloys, wealth.
Varren's men struck again. They sabotaged a forge, spilling molten metal. Elias's men stopped them, saved the works. His empire was iron, unyielding.
Elias invested more of the fund. A new textile mill, a shipyard expansion, a forge for rare alloys. The Kaels were gone, forgotten. Blackthorn was his, the sea his domain.
The locket burned, searing. Clara's warning echoed: It takes everything. The hum was a voice, alive, commanding. Was it Clara's sacrifice, or the heart's hunger?
He didn't sleep. The sea roared in his dreams, wild, endless. The mansion's power was in him. Or was it his own?
The mansion was a tomb of ruin. Lamps flickered, shadows forming Elias's face, accusing. The scratching was a scream, tearing every wall. Cold spots froze the air, fires dead.
Beatrice stood in the foyer, heart shattered. Elias's absence was a wound she'd carved. Her hatred, sparked by Caspian's rage, had buried him. Guilt was a fire, consuming her soul.
She'd called his name, voice broken. The mansion answered with howls, not his. No servants remained, driven out by Clara Kael's curse. The house was alive, vengeful.
Gideon sat in the empty hall. "Elias took everything," he said, voice raw. The Kaels' empire was gone, their routes stolen. His pride was ash, his fight dead.
Marina hid in Celeste's room. The scratching was a roar, relentless. Shadows moved in her mirrors, Elias's eyes staring. She sobbed, candles useless, falling.
Caspian was a ruin. His sketches were chaos—Elias's face, claws, shadows. He drank, muttering curses. "He's the curse," he slurred, eyes wild.
Reginald abandoned hope. The hum roared, drowning prayers, chants useless. Whispers screamed their names, cold, cruel. The mansion was their judge, merciless.
Beatrice found a hidden locket in Elias's room. Like Clara's, etched with C.K., pulsing with life. It burned her hand, alive with the heart's hunger. Her fear drowned guilt, choking her.
Celeste uncovered Clara's final plea. Her blood fed the mansion's heart, for Edmund's ambition. The fund claimed Elias now, as it had her. The Kaels were its prey, broken.
Gideon heard no more rumors. Blackthorn mocked him, empty of Kael ships. "Elias won," he whispered, voice breaking. The docks belonged to another.
Marina saw Elias in her dreams. His face was shadowed, eyes too dark, accusing. She woke screaming, the hum a roar. The mansion was tearing them apart.
Caspian locked himself in the attic. Shadows formed Elias's shape, relentless. He smashed a mirror, glass shattering. The whispers laughed, calling his name.
Beatrice stood by the cliffs, sea roaring. Her hatred had been righteous, certain. Now, it was ash. Elias's absence was their ruin, body and soul.
The family gathered, fractured. No letters came; merchants served Elias now. Their empire was dust, his a storm. The mansion judged them, unforgiving.
The phenomena grew wilder. Windows shattered, doors slammed. Screams echoed their names, not Elias's. The Kaels were broken, their empire gone.
Elias stood in his shipyard, new ships rising. The fund fueled his empire—shipbuilding, textiles, alloys. Merchants flocked to him, the Kaels forgotten. His name was a legend, unstoppable.
Jonas brought a new deal. A port rich in rare spices, beyond the metal route. The Kaels had feared it, but Elias didn't. He'd claim it, seal their end.
Varren's men struck at dawn. They poisoned a textile shipment, spoiled silks. Elias's men caught it, saved the goods. His empire was iron, unyielding.
Harrow warned of Riven's moves. "He's gathering men," he said. "Tied to the mansion." Elias nodded, ready, sensing the heart's shadow, closer now.
The locket burned, searing. Clara's journal warned: It takes everything. The hum was a voice, commanding. Elias, it roared, alive in his veins.
He didn't sleep. The sea filled his dreams, endless, wild. The mansion's power was in him. Or was it his own?
Harrow met him at dusk. "You're a king," he said, grinning. Elias showed him the spice port's route. It was reckless, but they'd win.
A letter came, unsigned. It offered an alliance, far beyond Blackthorn. Elias's empire was spreading, boundless. The Kaels were gone, shadows fading.
Varren struck at midnight. His men stormed the shipyard, torches blazing. Elias fought, knife flashing, Jonas at his side. They drove them back, blood on the docks.
The hum roared, victorious. The locket was alive, searing. Elias stood in the wreckage, untouched. He was a storm, reshaping the sea.
Blackthorn was his. The docks sang his name, not Kael. The Kaels' empire was dust. Elias's was rising, boundless.
He looked to the cliffs. The mansion loomed, fog-wreathed, watching. It had given him power, freed him. But was he its master, or its pawn?