Format: Trade Paperback
Release Date: July 8, 2025
Publisher: Ace
Source: Publisher
Genre: Fantasy / Romance
Every legend has a beginning.
With their freedom on the line, a young woman and a rakish pirate take their fate into their own hands as they attempt to find a lost mythical isle with the power to save their entire world.
Saoirse yearns to be powerless. Cursed from childhood with a volatile magic, she's managed to imprison it within, living under constant terror that one day it will break free. And it does, changing everything.
Horrified at her loss of control, Saoirse’s parents offer her hand to the cold and ruthless Stone King. Knowing she'll never survive such a cruel man, Saoirse realizes there is only one path forward…she must break her curse.
On the eve of her wedding, Saoirse seeks out the legendary Wolf of the Wild—Faolan, a feral, silver-tongued pirate. He swears to help rid her of the deadly magic, if she’ll use it to locate a lost mythical isle first. Crafted by the slaughtered gods, it’s the only land that could absorb her power.
But Saoirse knows better than to trust a pirate’s word. With the wrath of her disgraced father and scorned betrothed chasing them, Saoirse adds one last condition to protect herself: if Faolan wants her on his ship, he'll have to marry her first.
With their freedom on the line, a young woman and a rakish pirate take their fate into their own hands as they attempt to find a lost mythical isle with the power to save their entire world.
Saoirse yearns to be powerless. Cursed from childhood with a volatile magic, she's managed to imprison it within, living under constant terror that one day it will break free. And it does, changing everything.
Horrified at her loss of control, Saoirse’s parents offer her hand to the cold and ruthless Stone King. Knowing she'll never survive such a cruel man, Saoirse realizes there is only one path forward…she must break her curse.
On the eve of her wedding, Saoirse seeks out the legendary Wolf of the Wild—Faolan, a feral, silver-tongued pirate. He swears to help rid her of the deadly magic, if she’ll use it to locate a lost mythical isle first. Crafted by the slaughtered gods, it’s the only land that could absorb her power.
But Saoirse knows better than to trust a pirate’s word. With the wrath of her disgraced father and scorned betrothed chasing them, Saoirse adds one last condition to protect herself: if Faolan wants her on his ship, he'll have to marry her first.
Maggie Rapier's Soulgazer is the first installment in the author's The Magpie and The Wolf duology. This is the author's romantasy debut with Celtic vibes. With the vibes of a darker, adult Sinbad, this book features sexy pirates, a swashbuckling ocean adventure, and thrilling magic, paired with an aching, & swoony marriage-of-convenience romance. With a heroine in her early twenties grappling with her coming-of-age as she finally takes her fate into her own hands and a slow-burning romance, new adult readers will flock to this angst-filled romantic fantasy.
The story follows Saoirse, a young woman cursed from childhood with volatile magic tied to a soulstone, which allows her to see the souls of the dead and, in some cases, kill with a touch. This power has defined her life, isolating her from others due to her father’s cruel suppression and the fear it inspires. Blamed for her brother’s death and kept hidden in a remote cottage, Saoirse lives in constant terror that her magic will break free. When it does, the consequences are catastrophic, leading her parents to betroth her to the ruthless Stone King, who plans to bind her magic permanently. Desperate to escape this fate, Saoirse seeks out Faolan, the legendary Wolf of the Wild—a charismatic, silver-tongued pirate with a reputation as big as the seas he sails.
Faolan offers to help Saoirse break her curse, but only if she uses her magic to locate the mythical Isle of Lost Souls, a fabled land crafted by slaughtered gods that could absorb her power and save their world. Wary of trusting a pirate, Saoirse adds a condition: if Faolan wants her on his ship, he must marry her first. What follows is a high-stakes quest filled with danger, ancient prophecies, and a growing bond between two people who challenge each other to confront their pasts and embrace their true selves. As they navigate treacherous seas, vengeful pursuers, and the mysteries of their world’s gods, Saoirse and Faolan discover that their journey is about more than breaking a curse—it’s about finding freedom, identity, and love.
The Celtic-inspired backdrop, with its six islands tied to dead gods and the mysterious seventh Isle of Lost Souls, is a standout feature. The magic system, centered around soulstones and Saoirse’s ability to see and interact with souls, is unique and intricately tied to the world’s mythology. The concept of a lost isle that can absorb Saoirse’s power and release trapped souls adds a layer of stakes that feels both personal and cosmic.
Saoirse is a compelling protagonist whose journey from a traumatized, self-loathing young woman to a figure embracing her power is both inspiring and nuanced. Her backstory of abuse, isolation, and manipulation by her father is heartbreaking, and Rapier handles her trauma with sensitivity, allowing Saoirse to grieve and grow without resorting to clichés of rage or rebellion.
Faolan, the rakish pirate, is equally captivating. His larger-than-life persona, reminiscent of a young Jack Sparrow, is tempered by moments of vulnerability that reveal the man behind the legend. His banter with Saoirse and his crew is witty and sharp, adding levity to the story, while his respect for Saoirse’s boundaries deepens their relationship. The supporting cast, particularly Faolan’s crew, adds warmth and humor, embodying the “found family” trope that fans of romantasy will adore.
One
I am the lone magpie in a sea of silver-winged swans. Lithe, artless girls who flick their bone-white skirts to the beat of a bodhrán, heedless of the waves lapping at their ankles. As they revel in their costumes, lit like jewels by the fading sun, I shrink deeper into my feathers and pray the light does not seek me out.
There are dark-eyed, starving things waiting onshore.
Sweat beads across my palms, dots my spine, until the gown clings to my skin, as a man stalks the edge of the water, head bent low like he's scenting blood. A bear's pelt cloaks his shoulders, fur lashed to his wrists with strips of tanned hide. Behind him, a woman arches her back so that braids of kelp stretch taut across her stomach, thousands of shells clattering into a single song. They watch us enter the waves without flinching-two beasts among hundreds, waiting to devour us whole.
A touch dramatic, my brothers would say.
I fight the urge to search for their faces, blink until the beasts become human.
Blink until the sting fades to a distant throb.
Aidan and Conal are not here.
I've waited years to attend the Damhsa Babhdóir, our one tradition to outlive the gods. Six clans gather at the birth of every summer, abandoning their old bloodlust for a chance to strike bargains of marriage instead. For three days we live under a truce, dancing among feasts and finery to form fragile bonds that our noble families can pick apart like crows seeking the choicest bits of carrion. It is a challenge to our bloodlines, a feat meant to be undertaken alone.
But my brothers always swore they'd find a way to guide me. Conal would wait onshore to collect me after the first ritual was done-Aidan smothering his laughter as I trembled among the waves. Beneath the eyes of our sovereigns, they told me I would invite the sun to set upon my youth and would emerge from the water fully grown, ready to wed at last. Or, more likely, resembling a half-drowned rat.
I've never felt their absence more keenly than I do now. It is a snarled knot in my stomach, tangled tighter every time I pull at the threads.
Neither of my brothers will ever see me wed.
A girl wearing an otter's pelt brushes against my skirts. I twist my hands into the limp fabric of my dress and shy away before her skin can touch mine.
It took three months to create this gown. Black and white linen straining against my needle until a thousand wee pleats formed into feathers. I pricked my thumb on nettle, crushing woad to stain the bottom layers that same unearthly shade of blue witnessed every time a magpie takes flight. If I were to spread my arms, wings would fall from the delicate bronze cuffs at my wrists and elbows, ready to catch the wind.
Such a foolish notion, wanting the sea or the open sky. A pitiful grasp at hope.
Cursed things belong in cages, after all.
"Children of the Crescent!"
The voice is the snap of a twig in winter's flame, cutting through the wind without effort. It sails across sea-foam and sand to where we stand among the waves, drawing our attention to the eldest queen-a weathered dagger sheathed in silk. "Descendants of the Daonnaí, those six who sculpted our world anew. Who comes to claim their birthright?"
"I!" Hundreds of voices lift at once. Mine is the barest hum.
"And who among you would dare to slaughter a god?"
No one utters a sound.
Wind tears at Ríona Etain's braid, silver strands splitting her wrinkled face like lightning as she rakes her gaze over our forms. Finds them wanting. "Our ancestors were cunning. Strong. Beautiful. Wise. As reckless gods rotted on their gilded thrones, it was they who plotted the destruction of the divine. Together, the Daonnaí drove the gods down from their mountains and dragged them shrieking out of their golden coves. Together, they brought time to its knees."
These are not the stories I grew up with. My mother speaks of the gods with reverence-beseeching them night and day to forgive our ancestors' actions. To rid me of the curse they left behind.
But the Slaughtered Ones never respond.
"Bound by a strange darkness, the sun a solitary ring of gold, our ancestors held the gods at their mercy until one after another, they slit their throats. And what did the Daonnaí discover as the gods bled into our starving lands?"
The answer pricks my neck like the stroke of a blade.
"Magic."
I resist the urge to step back, slipping my fingertips over the pulse rushing at my throat instead. Down the golden chain nestled against it, leading to an amulet and its promise of relief-sickening and sweet. Three slender spirals mark the surface in a chalky white, connected by their middles and all rotating left. I hesitate, my finger poised just above a sharp point directly at the center.
Better to be numb than dangerous. To forget rather than mourn.
I press down in a single firm touch as another person jostles my side until the point breaks skin, flooding my veins with ice.
"Ten years it took to hunt the last of the gods down. Another five for their descendants, three for the bastards and blessed. With each fresh slaughter, our islands drank deep until the divine blood called forth magic the likes of which we'd never seen-power they never permitted us to touch."
Ríona Etain raises one gnarled hand into the air, as though breaking the barrier between this realm and the next. It beckons us forward until the waves are only a whisper at our feet.
"What once we had to beg for, we could now take."
A final drum echoes across the water just as I reach its edge, and Ríona Etain smiles-a slash of red that distorts half her face.
I grip my amulet tighter, swallowing hard.
"And so, descendants of the Daonnaí. I ask you again. Who comes to claim their birthright?"
"I!"
Through a haze of salt spray and smoke, the queen lifts a bronze carnyx to the sky. Said to be sculpted by Odhrán, god of her isle, the stag-shaped trumpet produces a sound like I've never heard-half keening, half cry. It weaves between our bodies like a clever spider's web, coaxing us closer until waves become ripples, then nothing but foam and dry pebbles underfoot.
A final note splits the air, like a breakage of time itself.
And then the Damhsa Babhdóir begins.
Silver coins sewn like scales glitter on the back of one lad as he hooks the waist of a crane, sending her crown of sweet-gale blooms flying. It's caught by a girl masked in raven feathers, inky black silk cut across her bare shoulder blades where true wings would be. She twists into the arms of a fawn with white-speckled shoulders, anointing her with the flowers as I jerk clear of their path.
I do not belong to this menagerie. I never had the chance to.
Heat lashes my skin as I stumble farther onto shore, away from the writhing bodies and wild laughter. They've all done this before, somehow-I'm certain of it. Dancing round the Yule fires, gathering at harvest with the rest of their clans. Three girls wind around one another like a braid, while beyond them, men clatter together like boulders with the strength of their embrace.
My throat runs dry to see how easily they all touch, loose limbs outlined in a hazy golden glow.
"Och, would you look where you're going, lass?"
A weathered hand snatches my skirts just as I stumble back from a fire's edge, one of a dozen scattered across the beach.
"I'm so sorry! I-"
But the woman's already lost interest. She stands among a patchwork of elegant figures with lined faces and silver crowns woven of their own braids. Each of them, from the tallest man to the shortest woman, bears the hands of Clodagh tattooed across their collarbone: the markings of the seanchaí.
I nearly cry with relief.
Seanchaí are storytellers, trained from childhood to guard our histories and keep our laws. Above family ties, friendship, payment, or blood, it is their sworn duty to witness our world and reflect what we've become.
They might also be my only chance of surviving tonight.
I shuffle closer and try not to think about how my brothers would tease me if they saw this feeble attempt to get by-but Aidan and Conal never had to undertake a Damhsa alone. Da prepared them to face suitors drunk on power and possibility, willing to do anything to wed a true child of the Daonnaí. His pride cloaked their shoulders; mine still ache with the force of his grip.
"Listen to that lot," the first seanchaí says, her spine notched and jagged beneath the line of her dress. "Carrying on as though it's something to be proud of, breaking the natural order of things. No mention of what came after-or what the slaughter cost."
"Aye, because that's what's on everyone's mind tonight. The consequences of death."
I curl my toes into the ground as they cackle, digging my nails into my thighs.
Death will be a kindness if you make a fool of me, Saoirse.
My father's final blessing, after he unlocked my cell door-careful never to touch my skin. Even after seven years of exile, with the amulet secured at my throat, he won't risk the magic. Not when any small intimacy could allow it in.
Maybe that's why he's never been soft.
You will join the others until I find you, and for star's sake, don't look anyone in the eye. They believe you simple, sent away to heal your fractured mind. You'll earn your place with silence, and, gods willing, we'll put an end to this before the night is done.
I didn't dare ask what he meant by those words, or how I could please him by offering nothing. But if I could talk to the seanchaí . . . my shoulders ease at the mere thought.
I'll just ask for a name. Someone who might want my title or Father's resources-who'd be content to forget me as soon as we wed. Someone who could balance the scales of what I've cost.
Someone I could survive.
Perhaps then I'd earn Da's ambivalence in the place of his outright contempt.
I reach the circle's edge. "Blessed seanchaí?" My voice falters, catching on the wind. "I beg you to h-"
"All the magic in this world is meaningless, so long as we cannot pass on to the next." The oldest seanchaí's veins stretch in purple streaks from one knuckle to the next as he sweeps his hand through the air, narrowly missing my head. I flinch back. "For two hundred years, the dead have choked our lands-thousands upon thousands of souls left to rot. And for what? For those six eejits to preen each other's feathers and polish their pretty crowns?"
"Be fair," another seanchaí says, her hair more copper than silver like the rest. She looks not at the first speaker but beyond, where a cluster of men gather around a single point. Their voices tumble over one another, competing with the music and the elderly storytellers both.
The younger seanchaí raises her voice, a scowl lining her lips. "Ríona Kiara's half-decent at least. I heard she's called for another quest, only this time her cousin is joining."
A scoff. "What, the pup who calls himself a wolf?"
"Aye." The copper-haired seanchaí's words take on an edge. "They say he's never once failed to find what he seeks. And if rumors are true, he's looking for a girl here who can lead him to the lost isle. A girl with-"
"Ocean eyes!"
I whirl away from the seanchaí as though someone's caught hold of my wrist, tugged along by the solitary, fierce thread of that voice. It emerges from the thicket of bodies clustered around the fire nearby, the lines of it blurring the more people join, until suddenly, one figure breaks free from the rest-a man.
No.
A wolf.
He stands half a head taller than me, bare above the waist and painted with streaks of mahogany, umber, and ash. Wayward curls sweep his shoulders, as ruddy brown as an evergreen's bark stripped at the height of spring. When he raises his arms, the air grows thick around him-tinged violet with the essence of twilight and smoke.
And he's wearing a tail.
None of those gathered see the absurdity, their eyes transfixed by the legend walking the earth. But I cannot look away from that ridiculous length of fur-lined cloth, sewn by a shoddy hand into the back of his trousers so it sways with every quicksilver step.
"She'll be something special, this girl. Excellent with her stitching, or a damned good fighter. Blue-eyed, green? Hell, sometimes the sea is pure silver as it was three winters past!"
A roar of laughter breaks out over a story of the Wolf's exploits I've yet to hear-the sort that used to set my heart to flying.
It sours my stomach instead. Aidan hasn't shared a tale with me in seven years.
I start to turn toward the seanchaí again, but I cannot stop watching that pitiful tail. The Wolf of the Wild is a creature belonging to my brothers' stories and my own dreams-ones where sirens can be seduced and shipwrecks survived by cunning and skill. He's a pirate. A myth.
And yet somehow, impossibly . . . just a man.
"The point being, lads, she's here. I feel it in my gut." The Wolf drops his fist, and I swear I feel an echoing tap against my ribs. "And with my cousin's blessing, I'll take her to sea, where that damned island can't play coy any longer."
I stumble back a step. Another. When did I draw so close?
Gooseflesh erupts across my arms as the Wolf twists slightly, until firelight blazes across his profile. Beautiful lips tugged back into a dangerous smile. I retreat as close into the shadows as I can-but I'm not fast enough to avoid them, the legends I once collected like plump berries off a vine.
"Together, we'll find the Isle of Lost Souls!"
I close my eyes. Breathe in the crowd's violent swell of hope. Breathe out the beautiful lie.
It does not exist.
Still, my body remembers praying for the island, lungs burning with the need to push forth a song. I would plead daily for the god-forged utopia to return, begging until my knees bled for the chance to touch its healing waters, said to cure soul wounds, break curses, and even release the dead.
I am the lone magpie in a sea of silver-winged swans. Lithe, artless girls who flick their bone-white skirts to the beat of a bodhrán, heedless of the waves lapping at their ankles. As they revel in their costumes, lit like jewels by the fading sun, I shrink deeper into my feathers and pray the light does not seek me out.
There are dark-eyed, starving things waiting onshore.
Sweat beads across my palms, dots my spine, until the gown clings to my skin, as a man stalks the edge of the water, head bent low like he's scenting blood. A bear's pelt cloaks his shoulders, fur lashed to his wrists with strips of tanned hide. Behind him, a woman arches her back so that braids of kelp stretch taut across her stomach, thousands of shells clattering into a single song. They watch us enter the waves without flinching-two beasts among hundreds, waiting to devour us whole.
A touch dramatic, my brothers would say.
I fight the urge to search for their faces, blink until the beasts become human.
Blink until the sting fades to a distant throb.
Aidan and Conal are not here.
I've waited years to attend the Damhsa Babhdóir, our one tradition to outlive the gods. Six clans gather at the birth of every summer, abandoning their old bloodlust for a chance to strike bargains of marriage instead. For three days we live under a truce, dancing among feasts and finery to form fragile bonds that our noble families can pick apart like crows seeking the choicest bits of carrion. It is a challenge to our bloodlines, a feat meant to be undertaken alone.
But my brothers always swore they'd find a way to guide me. Conal would wait onshore to collect me after the first ritual was done-Aidan smothering his laughter as I trembled among the waves. Beneath the eyes of our sovereigns, they told me I would invite the sun to set upon my youth and would emerge from the water fully grown, ready to wed at last. Or, more likely, resembling a half-drowned rat.
I've never felt their absence more keenly than I do now. It is a snarled knot in my stomach, tangled tighter every time I pull at the threads.
Neither of my brothers will ever see me wed.
A girl wearing an otter's pelt brushes against my skirts. I twist my hands into the limp fabric of my dress and shy away before her skin can touch mine.
It took three months to create this gown. Black and white linen straining against my needle until a thousand wee pleats formed into feathers. I pricked my thumb on nettle, crushing woad to stain the bottom layers that same unearthly shade of blue witnessed every time a magpie takes flight. If I were to spread my arms, wings would fall from the delicate bronze cuffs at my wrists and elbows, ready to catch the wind.
Such a foolish notion, wanting the sea or the open sky. A pitiful grasp at hope.
Cursed things belong in cages, after all.
"Children of the Crescent!"
The voice is the snap of a twig in winter's flame, cutting through the wind without effort. It sails across sea-foam and sand to where we stand among the waves, drawing our attention to the eldest queen-a weathered dagger sheathed in silk. "Descendants of the Daonnaí, those six who sculpted our world anew. Who comes to claim their birthright?"
"I!" Hundreds of voices lift at once. Mine is the barest hum.
"And who among you would dare to slaughter a god?"
No one utters a sound.
Wind tears at Ríona Etain's braid, silver strands splitting her wrinkled face like lightning as she rakes her gaze over our forms. Finds them wanting. "Our ancestors were cunning. Strong. Beautiful. Wise. As reckless gods rotted on their gilded thrones, it was they who plotted the destruction of the divine. Together, the Daonnaí drove the gods down from their mountains and dragged them shrieking out of their golden coves. Together, they brought time to its knees."
These are not the stories I grew up with. My mother speaks of the gods with reverence-beseeching them night and day to forgive our ancestors' actions. To rid me of the curse they left behind.
But the Slaughtered Ones never respond.
"Bound by a strange darkness, the sun a solitary ring of gold, our ancestors held the gods at their mercy until one after another, they slit their throats. And what did the Daonnaí discover as the gods bled into our starving lands?"
The answer pricks my neck like the stroke of a blade.
"Magic."
I resist the urge to step back, slipping my fingertips over the pulse rushing at my throat instead. Down the golden chain nestled against it, leading to an amulet and its promise of relief-sickening and sweet. Three slender spirals mark the surface in a chalky white, connected by their middles and all rotating left. I hesitate, my finger poised just above a sharp point directly at the center.
Better to be numb than dangerous. To forget rather than mourn.
I press down in a single firm touch as another person jostles my side until the point breaks skin, flooding my veins with ice.
"Ten years it took to hunt the last of the gods down. Another five for their descendants, three for the bastards and blessed. With each fresh slaughter, our islands drank deep until the divine blood called forth magic the likes of which we'd never seen-power they never permitted us to touch."
Ríona Etain raises one gnarled hand into the air, as though breaking the barrier between this realm and the next. It beckons us forward until the waves are only a whisper at our feet.
"What once we had to beg for, we could now take."
A final drum echoes across the water just as I reach its edge, and Ríona Etain smiles-a slash of red that distorts half her face.
I grip my amulet tighter, swallowing hard.
"And so, descendants of the Daonnaí. I ask you again. Who comes to claim their birthright?"
"I!"
Through a haze of salt spray and smoke, the queen lifts a bronze carnyx to the sky. Said to be sculpted by Odhrán, god of her isle, the stag-shaped trumpet produces a sound like I've never heard-half keening, half cry. It weaves between our bodies like a clever spider's web, coaxing us closer until waves become ripples, then nothing but foam and dry pebbles underfoot.
A final note splits the air, like a breakage of time itself.
And then the Damhsa Babhdóir begins.
Silver coins sewn like scales glitter on the back of one lad as he hooks the waist of a crane, sending her crown of sweet-gale blooms flying. It's caught by a girl masked in raven feathers, inky black silk cut across her bare shoulder blades where true wings would be. She twists into the arms of a fawn with white-speckled shoulders, anointing her with the flowers as I jerk clear of their path.
I do not belong to this menagerie. I never had the chance to.
Heat lashes my skin as I stumble farther onto shore, away from the writhing bodies and wild laughter. They've all done this before, somehow-I'm certain of it. Dancing round the Yule fires, gathering at harvest with the rest of their clans. Three girls wind around one another like a braid, while beyond them, men clatter together like boulders with the strength of their embrace.
My throat runs dry to see how easily they all touch, loose limbs outlined in a hazy golden glow.
"Och, would you look where you're going, lass?"
A weathered hand snatches my skirts just as I stumble back from a fire's edge, one of a dozen scattered across the beach.
"I'm so sorry! I-"
But the woman's already lost interest. She stands among a patchwork of elegant figures with lined faces and silver crowns woven of their own braids. Each of them, from the tallest man to the shortest woman, bears the hands of Clodagh tattooed across their collarbone: the markings of the seanchaí.
I nearly cry with relief.
Seanchaí are storytellers, trained from childhood to guard our histories and keep our laws. Above family ties, friendship, payment, or blood, it is their sworn duty to witness our world and reflect what we've become.
They might also be my only chance of surviving tonight.
I shuffle closer and try not to think about how my brothers would tease me if they saw this feeble attempt to get by-but Aidan and Conal never had to undertake a Damhsa alone. Da prepared them to face suitors drunk on power and possibility, willing to do anything to wed a true child of the Daonnaí. His pride cloaked their shoulders; mine still ache with the force of his grip.
"Listen to that lot," the first seanchaí says, her spine notched and jagged beneath the line of her dress. "Carrying on as though it's something to be proud of, breaking the natural order of things. No mention of what came after-or what the slaughter cost."
"Aye, because that's what's on everyone's mind tonight. The consequences of death."
I curl my toes into the ground as they cackle, digging my nails into my thighs.
Death will be a kindness if you make a fool of me, Saoirse.
My father's final blessing, after he unlocked my cell door-careful never to touch my skin. Even after seven years of exile, with the amulet secured at my throat, he won't risk the magic. Not when any small intimacy could allow it in.
Maybe that's why he's never been soft.
You will join the others until I find you, and for star's sake, don't look anyone in the eye. They believe you simple, sent away to heal your fractured mind. You'll earn your place with silence, and, gods willing, we'll put an end to this before the night is done.
I didn't dare ask what he meant by those words, or how I could please him by offering nothing. But if I could talk to the seanchaí . . . my shoulders ease at the mere thought.
I'll just ask for a name. Someone who might want my title or Father's resources-who'd be content to forget me as soon as we wed. Someone who could balance the scales of what I've cost.
Someone I could survive.
Perhaps then I'd earn Da's ambivalence in the place of his outright contempt.
I reach the circle's edge. "Blessed seanchaí?" My voice falters, catching on the wind. "I beg you to h-"
"All the magic in this world is meaningless, so long as we cannot pass on to the next." The oldest seanchaí's veins stretch in purple streaks from one knuckle to the next as he sweeps his hand through the air, narrowly missing my head. I flinch back. "For two hundred years, the dead have choked our lands-thousands upon thousands of souls left to rot. And for what? For those six eejits to preen each other's feathers and polish their pretty crowns?"
"Be fair," another seanchaí says, her hair more copper than silver like the rest. She looks not at the first speaker but beyond, where a cluster of men gather around a single point. Their voices tumble over one another, competing with the music and the elderly storytellers both.
The younger seanchaí raises her voice, a scowl lining her lips. "Ríona Kiara's half-decent at least. I heard she's called for another quest, only this time her cousin is joining."
A scoff. "What, the pup who calls himself a wolf?"
"Aye." The copper-haired seanchaí's words take on an edge. "They say he's never once failed to find what he seeks. And if rumors are true, he's looking for a girl here who can lead him to the lost isle. A girl with-"
"Ocean eyes!"
I whirl away from the seanchaí as though someone's caught hold of my wrist, tugged along by the solitary, fierce thread of that voice. It emerges from the thicket of bodies clustered around the fire nearby, the lines of it blurring the more people join, until suddenly, one figure breaks free from the rest-a man.
No.
A wolf.
He stands half a head taller than me, bare above the waist and painted with streaks of mahogany, umber, and ash. Wayward curls sweep his shoulders, as ruddy brown as an evergreen's bark stripped at the height of spring. When he raises his arms, the air grows thick around him-tinged violet with the essence of twilight and smoke.
And he's wearing a tail.
None of those gathered see the absurdity, their eyes transfixed by the legend walking the earth. But I cannot look away from that ridiculous length of fur-lined cloth, sewn by a shoddy hand into the back of his trousers so it sways with every quicksilver step.
"She'll be something special, this girl. Excellent with her stitching, or a damned good fighter. Blue-eyed, green? Hell, sometimes the sea is pure silver as it was three winters past!"
A roar of laughter breaks out over a story of the Wolf's exploits I've yet to hear-the sort that used to set my heart to flying.
It sours my stomach instead. Aidan hasn't shared a tale with me in seven years.
I start to turn toward the seanchaí again, but I cannot stop watching that pitiful tail. The Wolf of the Wild is a creature belonging to my brothers' stories and my own dreams-ones where sirens can be seduced and shipwrecks survived by cunning and skill. He's a pirate. A myth.
And yet somehow, impossibly . . . just a man.
"The point being, lads, she's here. I feel it in my gut." The Wolf drops his fist, and I swear I feel an echoing tap against my ribs. "And with my cousin's blessing, I'll take her to sea, where that damned island can't play coy any longer."
I stumble back a step. Another. When did I draw so close?
Gooseflesh erupts across my arms as the Wolf twists slightly, until firelight blazes across his profile. Beautiful lips tugged back into a dangerous smile. I retreat as close into the shadows as I can-but I'm not fast enough to avoid them, the legends I once collected like plump berries off a vine.
"Together, we'll find the Isle of Lost Souls!"
I close my eyes. Breathe in the crowd's violent swell of hope. Breathe out the beautiful lie.
It does not exist.
Still, my body remembers praying for the island, lungs burning with the need to push forth a song. I would plead daily for the god-forged utopia to return, begging until my knees bled for the chance to touch its healing waters, said to cure soul wounds, break curses, and even release the dead.


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