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Once Upon a Broken Heart Novel Cover

Once Upon a Broken Heart

After her twin is framed for the crown prince's death, Isla Vane strikes a deal with the Prince of Ruin. To halt the execution, she must offer him three tears of real sorrow. This pact thrusts Isla into a realm of curses and lethal secrets. As she unravels a royal conspiracy, she becomes entangled with the immortal prince. His fractured heart is the pivot for their destiny, forcing Isla to navigate a world where the Fates rule every move.
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Chapter 12

Chapter 12: The Flaw in the Map

She found it on a Wednesday, between two research texts.

She had been cross-referencing the mythology literature—trying to understand the original breach between Ruin and Grief, the thing the texts described only obliquely—and she'd found, in the margin of a very old scholarly commentary, a note in a hand she didn't recognize that read: see Vane archive, northern surveys, cross-reference Ruin's domain boundary, the girl is already in the pattern.

Her name. Vane. Her father's name.

She looked at the note for a long time.

Then she went through the northern survey archive—the surveys her father had conducted in the last five years of his life, before his death. He'd been mapping the northern provinces, the territories that abutted the between-spaces, the places where the mapped and unmapped worlds came closest. He'd been doing it as a commission from a private source.

She found the commission letter in the back of the file.

The commission had come from the Fate Court.

Not all of it—not signed by any specific Fate. The formal Court. But the timing: her father had spent the last five years of his life mapping territories that bordered on the between-space under Fate Court commission, and then he had died, and then Isla had continued his work, and the quality of her grief—the specific grief of a cartographer's daughter who kept mapping after the mapmaker died—

She sat very still.

She thought about what Love had said: he'd been watching you for two years. Since your father died. He said the quality of your grief was the most complete grief he'd felt in a century.

She thought about the commission letter with the Fate Court seal.

She thought about a three-hundred-year-old Fate who had known what quality of grief he needed and who had, or had not, done something to generate it.

She went to the crossroads that night without deciding to.

It was cold. The stars were out. She stood at the Old X and she said his name—not the title, not the Prince, the name: "Cassian."

He arrived within thirty seconds.

He looked at her face and said nothing.

"My father's commission," she said.

He was very still.

"He spent five years mapping the territories near your domain. Under Fate Court commission. Under your commission." She watched his face. "And then he died. And the grief was—complete. Specific. The grief of someone who had been doing the thing you needed a person to be doing, and then was gone, and left someone behind to keep doing it." She heard her own voice, very steady. "Did you arrange it?"

"No," he said.

"Cassian—"

"I didn't arrange his death." His voice was flat and direct and contained something underneath it she couldn't fully identify. "I commissioned the surveys because I needed the northern territories mapped and he was the best cartographer in Aravel. I watched you afterward because—" He stopped. "Because the grief you carried was—because I recognized it. Because it was what I'd been looking for." He held her gaze. "But I did not arrange his death, Isla. I would not do that. Not for the curse, not for anything."

"But you knew about me," she said. "Before the crossroads. You knew about me because of the commission. Because of him. And when he died and you saw the quality of my grief, you—"

"I waited," he said. "For two years, I watched and I waited. I didn't come to you. I didn't engineer the situation with your sister." He was very precise. "Petra's arrest was Hunger's work, Hunger's timing. I had nothing to do with it. When you came to the crossroads, you came because of circumstances I didn't create." A pause. "But I had been hoping you would come. And I had been—ready. When you did."

She stood with this.

"You chose me," she said. "Not as a random person who came to your crossroads. You had been watching me. You'd been—preparing. In some sense."

"Yes."

"You made the vault available. The residue. The Court visit, the introductions, the extended contact—you shaped the conditions for the complete knowing that you need." She held his gaze. "You orchestrated an experience of intimacy that would generate the grief quality you needed."

He looked at her.

"Say it," she said. "Say what's true."

"Yes," he said. "I set the terms of the bargain to create the conditions for complete understanding. I—" He stopped. Started again. "I have been looking for this for three hundred years. I found the quality of grief I needed in you, and when you came to the crossroads, I constructed the bargain to give us the best possible chance." A pause. "Everything I told you was true. I never lied. But I structured the truth to—to lead you toward—"

"To lead me toward knowing you," she said. "Completely."

"Yes."

The crossroads was very cold around them.

She thought about what she felt, which was complicated. Not betrayal, exactly—betrayal required a lie, and he had not lied. Not manipulation, exactly—he had given her information at every turn that she could have used to walk away. The terms of the tears, the nature of the residue, Maren, the vault, his history. Every time he'd told her something she hadn't asked for, it had been something that made the arrangement clearer, harder, more real.

She thought about a person who had organized three centuries of broken promises into a library.

She thought about the coat thread.

She thought about not yet meaning eventually, which meant there was an eventually he was imagining.

She thought about what Love had said: he changed the terms for you.

"When you changed the terms," she said. "When you chose tears over something simpler. What were you—" She paused. "What did you think was going to happen?"

He was quiet for a long moment.

"I thought," he said carefully, "that you deserved the choice. That you deserved to know what I was and what I needed and to decide whether to proceed with that knowledge." He looked at the crossing stones. "I've made three hundred years of bargains where the person didn't fully understand what they were giving me. I thought—" He stopped. "I thought if I was going to ask someone to know me completely, I should—let them choose it. Consciously. Each step."

"Rather than engineering a situation where they fell into it without seeing it coming."

"Yes."

She looked at him.

She thought about what she was angry about versus what she was afraid of, because those were different things and she tried, as a general principle, to keep them sorted.

She was angry because she had not been told, upfront, that she had been selected. That the commission and the two years of watching had given him a head start on their arrangement that she hadn't known about.

She was afraid because the information didn't change anything she'd observed. The vault was still a library. The coat thread was still on the pedestal. He had still told her the truth, consistently, every time she'd asked. The warmth in the residue was still real.

"I need to think," she said.

"I know."

"I need to—" She stopped. "I need to be somewhere that isn't here for a while."

"I understand."

She turned to go. She stopped. Without turning back, she said: "You should have told me. Not at the crossroads—not before I understood enough to know what it meant. But you should have told me before the vault. Before—" She paused. "Before the floor of the back room."

"Yes," he said. Quietly. "I should have."

She walked back to the city through the cold.

Behind her, at the crossroads, she felt the residue—the cold and the patience and, underneath them, the ember. It was not her imagination. It was not the bond flattering her. It was the specific, involuntary warmth of something that wasn't performed and couldn't be managed.

She walked home.

She sat in the back room and looked at the atlas and made no notes.

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