The Reborn Sovereign of Ruin, Bound by His Star
Chapter 144: The Daughter
Kamal did not speak much on the way.
Arik appreciated that, though appreciation had a strange shape when it came to Kamal. The man had served Goliath, had survived Goliath, had watched the world forget him and then quietly kept breathing beside the ruins until Arik walked back into his life wearing a different name and a face too young for all the ghosts it carried.
Kamal could have said a thousand things.
He said none of them.
Kamal walked half a step behind him, as if he knew better than to stand beside a man who had not decided whether he was going to a sickroom or a grave.
Outside the door, he stopped.
For a moment, the instinct returned.
No.
It was not fear, exactly. Arik refused to call it that. Fear had a form. It could be measured, understood, and used. This was something worse, something entwined between duty and memory, pity and resentment, between the man he knew himself to be and the man whose grief had seemingly crossed over death with its teeth still bared.
Kamal placed one hand lightly against the doorframe, not touching Arik, not guiding him, only being there.
"She knows you are coming," he said.
Arik’s mouth tightened. "Did you tell her?"
"No."
Arik opened the door himself.
The room was pale with early morning, warmer than the corridor, heavy with medicine, clean linen, and the faint burnt-metal trace of old ether damage. Amara was sitting against the pillows near the window.
She looked better than the day she had forced him to see the memories of becoming Goliath’s daughter.
That was not the same as looking well.
Her face was still too thin, her skin too translucent under the soft lamplight, her hair braided loosely over one shoulder with the carefulness of someone else’s hands.
Still, her eyes were clear now.
That was what stopped him.
Amara looked at him as if she had been waiting through sleep, fever, and ruin, and now that he had arrived, she had no intention of wasting the strength it had cost her to remain awake.
"Your Highness," she said.
The title sounded wrong from her mouth.
Arik stepped inside. Kamal remained by the door, quiet as an old shadow, but Amara’s eyes moved to him once and softened in a way that told Arik more than he wanted to know.
"Kamal said you were lucid," Arik said.
Amara’s mouth curved faintly. "That sounds like him."
"It was his generous version."
"Then I should thank him."
"You should conserve your strength."
Her smile deepened by a fraction. "That sounds like you."
Arik did not answer immediately.
He came closer, but not too close. There was a chair beside the bed, clearly placed for him, which annoyed him more than it should have. He did not sit. Sitting would imply that he had agreed to the meeting’s structure, which he had not.
Amara noticed.
"You look angry," she said.
"I often do."
"No," Amara said softly. "This is different."
Arik looked at her then, properly, and something in his chest shifted with an unpleasant, familiar pressure. She had seen Goliath angry, happy and ruined, maybe. She had known the man Arik did not remember well enough to defend himself against.
He looked away first.
It irritated him.
On the small table beside her bed, there was a worn deck of tarot cards wrapped in dark fabric. The sight of them gave him the excuse he needed.
"The cards," Arik said.
Amara followed his gaze, then gave a small, tired laugh. "You came here for those?"
"No. But I am asking about them."
"That is very different, then."
Arik’s eyes returned to hers. "How did you know?"
Amara’s expression stilled.
He did not need to explain. They both knew what he meant. Not the room, not her condition, not the past she had already dragged him through with bleeding hands and too much desperation.
Liam.
The one waiting for him.
The one she had mentioned before Arik had accepted the full form of what Liam would become for him.
Amara lowered her gaze to the wrapped cards, and for the first time since he had entered, she looked as fragile as Kamal’s report had implied.
"My mother taught me," she said.
Arik remained silent.
"It does not come easily. It is not clean. People think cards give answers because they want fate to be polite enough to speak in complete sentences." Her fingers moved slightly over the blanket, as if remembering the weight of the deck. "It is not like that. Sometimes it is a direction. Sometimes an image. Sometimes only the certainty that something is standing in the path even if you cannot see its face."
"And you saw Liam?"
"I saw someone waiting," she said. "I knew there was a person near the place where your future became dangerous."
Arik almost laughed at that, but the sound never made it out.
"My future has been dangerous for some time."
"Yes," Amara said. "But not like that."
His jaw tightened.
She looked at him then, and there it was again, that impossible steadiness, that recognition that did not belong to Arik’s life and yet landed on him as if it had every right.
"How did you know it was me?" he asked.
Amara smiled faintly, not at Kamal, not at Arik, perhaps at some memory neither of them could reach from the same direction.
"The eyes," she said.
Arik’s expression hardened. "Damian has gold eyes; he or any other ether-chosen could pass by you."
"Not like yours."
"That is not an answer."
"It is the only answer I have." Her voice was tired, but it did not weaken. "There was always something that made Goliath Goliath. Not the crown. Not the blood. Not even the ether, though people liked to mistake power for identity because power is easier to fear." She studied him with such painful gentleness that Arik wanted, absurdly, to be cruel just to make it stop. "It was in the eyes. The way he looked at the world as if he had already judged it, found it lacking, and decided to protect it anyway because it belonged to him." 𝚏𝐫𝚎𝗲𝕨𝐞𝐛𝕟𝚘𝐯𝚎𝗹.𝕔𝐨𝗺
Arik’s fingers flexed once at his side.
"I am Arik," he said.
"I know."
"No," he said, sharper now. "You know a memory. A wound you are trying to match to the nearest living body because the alternative is grief."
Kamal inhaled softly, but Amara only looked at him.
Arik heard himself continue and could not stop. "I am not your father standing in a younger man’s skin. I am not Goliath returned to continue whatever he left unfinished. I am Arik Lyon. I have his past somewhere inside me, perhaps. His soul. His damage. His crimes. His love. I do not deny that. But I am not the end of him."
The room went very still.
Arik swallowed, then said the part that had been burning under his tongue since he stepped through the door.
"I am the future of Goliath."
For a moment, Amara only stared at him.
Then she laughed.
It was not mockery. It was too soft for that, too breathless, too close to pain. The laugh shook her once and became a cough before she could stop it. Kamal moved immediately, but she lifted one hand, refusing the fuss with the offended dignity of someone who had once been loved by an emperor and had inherited all the worst habits from him.
When she could breathe again, her eyes were wet, though whether from the cough or something else, Arik did not know.
"You speak very confidently for a man who remembers so little," she said.