Hadishaha
Vael was made to be a weapon.
For sixty-three thousand years, kings pointed him at enemies, empires named him terror, and armies learned that black armor meant death. Human skin alone could kill him, so no one touched him.
Then Mira did.
Not with bare hands. Not carelessly. She wrapped her fingers, asked permission, and taught an ancient weapon the shape of gentleness.
When the empire executes her to regain control of him, Vael does not mourn like a man. He breaks the world like a blade.
To return Mira, he must take three crowns: the crown of the body, the crown of memory, and the crown of the soul. But every crown asks a more terrible question.
Is love still love if it refuses to let the dead say no?
A dark fantasy tragedy about grief, resurrection, consent, and the difference between love and possession.