Nevernight Chronicles Vk Apr 2026

Vex tilted his head. “The moment the crowd forgets the man and sees only the beast?”

Mia’s hands were shaking. She didn’t care. “Why did you show me?”

Mia slipped into the shadow of the archway as the two men walked past her toward the light. The Grieve was tall, reedy, his net and trident held with a fencer’s grace. The Sun Wolf was a wall of muscle, a spiculus helmet hiding his face, twin gladii already wet with the morning’s sacrifice.

“A slave who refuses to. He disarms, he humiliates, he walks away. The crowd loves him for it.” Vex’s voice dropped. “Today he faces the Sun Wolf. Three murders in his last four bouts. The Wolf doesn’t leave survivors.” nevernight chronicles vk

Vex picked up his own blade—a battered gladius hispaniensis with a chipped edge. “Because tomorrow, I fight the Wolf. And I plan to kill him.” He turned to face the light. “But I needed someone to remember the Grieve’s name. It was Caelius. Freeborn. Sold by his brother for a gambling debt.”

Mia stayed in the dark, counting heartbeats. She did not attend the next day’s games. But she heard, whispered through the city’s sewers and shadows, that the Sun Wolf died with his own sword in his throat, and the man called Vex walked from the arena with the word Numen carved into a fresh strip of skin.

The Wolf spat in his face.

Then he drove his second blade through the Grieve’s knee.

Mia frowned. “A gladiator who doesn’t kill?”

Vex laughed, a sound like grinding gravel. “Everyone in the vomitorium is a shadow, girl. The sun doesn’t touch us here. That’s the point.” He finally glanced back. His eyes were the same grey as the sea before a squall. “You’re not a gambler. Not a whore looking to wet her sandals in a champion’s blood. So why are you here?” Vex tilted his head

He called himself Vex. Not the Vex she knew—the sardonic, scarred Blade who taught her to move in darkness. This Vex was twenty years younger, his jaw still clean of the deep furrow that would later hold a blade’s kiss. He wore the bronze manica on his right arm, the mesh thick with dried sweat, and his chest was a tapestry of old wounds and older sigils: a wolf’s skull, a broken chain, the word Numen scratched in crude ink above his heart.

He walked into the sun.

The fight lasted seventeen heartbeats.