Perfect for fans of Powerless, Lightlark, and Red Queen, this heart-pounding romantasy forces a girl to make an impossible decision: watch the boy she loves get exiled for lack of magic, or pass her formidable powers off as his own.
In a world where dragons soar through the skies and magical abilities are an elite privilege, the ruling family of Ailm’s Keep is on a knife-edge: Can their son Ionain prove that he can channel magic, or will his entire family be cast out in disgrace?
Éadha, a servant girl who loves Ionain, is shocked to discover shortly before the test that she can wield magic herself. It’s extremely rare for a girl to have this talent, especially outside the few great Families. At Ionain’s moment of truth, when it's clear he is about to fail, Éadha makes a desperate gamble to save him from humiliation by pretending her magic is his, forfeiting her own claim to power.
Her decision sends them both to an academy of magic, where she must shield her secret from every grim teacher and scheming student—especially the handsome but enigmatic Gry. As Éadha enters this whirlwind of patriarchy, class, heartache, and jealousy, she also learns about magic’s terrible cost—the human price that Channellers willingly pay to maintain their power.
How far would you go to empower the one you love?
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Cliodhna O’Sullivan is a writer based in Co. Louth, Ireland. She works part-time as a legal counsel. In the last few years, she has taken part in several writer events, including as a panel moderator at a Terry Pratchett conference in DCU and panelist at the Cymera festival in Edinburgh. She’s reasonably fluent in German and plays in a band, Molasha (you can find them on Spotify!). She is married with three children, one of whom is autistic, as well as far too many cats and a dog.
CHAPTER ONE
Behind the great castle known as Ailm’s Keep, there was no more than a suggestion of daylight when a black-clad figure appeared, racing toward its East Tower.
She halted at a massive oak tree near the tower and pulled herself up onto its thick branches; they were still bare and would be for weeks yet. The spring thaw had only just begun. Around her the air was filled with the roar of meltwater pounding down the mountain stream behind the Keep into the small lake just past the oak tree. The thick ice that’d gripped the lake all winter long had shattered overnight, leaving small white islands bobbing and turning in the water. Éadha was glad of the water’s roar, masking any sounds she might make. With her cloak tied back over her shoulders to avoid snagging and her cloud of dark hair tucked inside her hood, she climbed swiftly up through the branches.
Soon she was level with the high wall along the Keep’s central courtyard. Even though it wasn’t quite dawn, already she could see figures moving about below, stable lads lighting fires in big iron braziers to burn off the chill in the air for the crowds arriving later. The courtyard wall was narrow, only just wide enough for one person to balance on top of. Spreading her arms out wide like a dancer and with a small prayer no one would look up, Éadha began inching along over the weeds that’d seeded themselves in cracks. Her foot slipped on a dandelion root and she fell into a wobbly crouch, grabbing the top of the wall with her hands to stop herself falling, while one leg dangled over the long drop.
“Bugger,” she muttered, her heart skittering as she eased her leg oh-so carefully back up onto the wall until she could stand again. The wall ended at the side of the East Tower, and she reached it just as the sun broke free of the horizon. It was going to be a clear day.
Above her was a stone window ledge. She could just reach it if she leaned out and didn’t think too much about what’d happen if she missed. She caught at it, first with her left hand, then, swinging her legs out into space, with her right, offering up her thanks there hadn’t been a Channeller in Ailm’s Keep for the past quarter century to keep its walls whole. It meant there were cracks in the tower wall deep enough to wedge her toes into and push up; she got one elbow over the ledge, then levered the rest of her body up until she was crouching on the narrow stone lip.
The window in front of her was made of dragonglass, the thick, wavy glass formed when a dragon burned the far sands of Westport, where the Channellers fought their endless battle to hold them back from Domhain’s mainland. Through the glass was a large bedroom with stone walls hung with tapestries of the great Channeller battles. To the right, the embers of a fire glowed in a slate fireplace, casting a golden-red glow over the room. Directly in front of her stood a large four-poster bed with a worn velvet cover, perfectly smooth and clearly not slept in. At the end of the bed sat a young man of about seventeen or so. He was already dressed in a cambric shirt of fine white linen and dark pants. His elbows rested on his knees as he stared into the dying fire, while his tawny, tangled hair stood on end, as if not too long ago he’d been pushing his hands through it. Éadha stared in at him for a moment, her expression unreadable, then rapped once on the glass.
Ionáin turned his head at the sound, looking wholly unsurprised to find a tall, hooded girl dressed in black crouched at his bedroom window. Standing with a small stretch, as if he’d been sitting still a long time, he crossed the room to swing open the latch.
“Hey,” he said, turning away again.
“Hey,” said Éadha, easily swinging herself in through the window and sitting down on the ledge, as if she didn’t feel entitled to come any farther in. The window was high off the ground, so that at full stretch, her long legs in their battered leather boots only just grazed the floor. Lowering her hood, she gripped the window ledge, tense now as she watched Ionáin. He’d gone to stand in front of the fire. To his left, on a rosewood stand, hung a set of long, heavy robes embroidered with gold thread and embellished with precious stones. His Reckoning robes.
“Did you sleep?” said Éadha quietly.
“Nah. No point even trying. You?”
Éadha shook her head while Ionáin cleared his throat before going on. “I’ve had an idea though.”
“Oh yes?” said Éadha.
“How about if I just tell them—my Family and all those Masters and Channellers downstairs right now—that it’s a bit unfair, really, to reduce my entire existence to whether I have this one mystical ability, here in my head.” He tapped his temple before looking across at Éadha with a small smile. “Then they might reconsider all this?”
He gestured toward the ornate robes and past them to his bedroom door. Beyond it, they could already hear the sounds of the Keep coming to life.
Éadha gave a small snort of unwilling laughter. “Do I think that if you point out to those old men downstairs that their precious centuries-old Reckoning ritual is in fact ‘quite mean,’ Master Dathin will slap his forehead and say, ‘You’re so right, let’s just cancel the whole thing’?”
“Well, yes,” said Ionáin, a grin breaking across his face as he looked at her. “I mean, I do have other good qualities.”
“Such as?” said Éadha, her voice teasing now.
“Have you seen me with kittens? Not to brag, but I’m fairly sure I’m the world’s best kitten wrangler.”
At this Éadha laughed out loud before leaning back against the window and folding her arms. “Ah, well then, absolutely. They’ll probably thank you for pointing out the cruelty of their system, tell your Family they can hang on to the Keep regardless, maybe channel some repairs, and be gone by lunchtime.”
They both chuckled, though it only lasted a few seconds before trailing away, their hearts not really in it. After all, the stakes were too high on this, Ionáin’s Reckoning day. The day he turned seventeen and the day he’d finally find out if he had the ability to channel magic or if instead he—and his Family—would lose everything. His father, Aedan, had failed his Reckoning a quarter century earlier, and the rule was ironclad. If two successive generations of a Family failed their Reckonings, the gift was deemed to have died out in their bloodline and the Family was disavowed.
Silence descended between the two of them, broken only by the soft whump of ash collapsing in the grate and throwing out sparks. Éadha felt all the tension return to her body.
Ionáin, meanwhile, stuck his hands out in front of him and said, “I can’t seem to stop them from shaking. I’ve been trying, you know, all last night.” He looked up at her, and this time the simple anguish in his eyes twisted her heart—the shared knowledge that in the next few hours he’d either be the savior or the damnation of his Family, and he had absolutely no control over which it’d be.
“It’s funny,” he went on. “I’m almost as worried I’m just going to embarrass myself when I walk out there in front of everyone. I’ll stutter or, I don’t know, trip over those stupid robes.”
“You won’t though,” said Éadha. Ionáin turned to look...
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