Chapter 1 The Storm That Answered
Chapter 1
The first thing Onix noticed was the sound.
Not thunder.
Breathing.
Shallow. Unsteady. Too small.
That was odd, because the last sound he remembered was very definitely a truck horn and the extremely unhelpful realization that momentum did not care about regret.
So this is either an after life, he thought dimly, or Iâve been reincarnated as something with terrible lung capacity.
He tried to move.
Nothing happened.
Panic flaredâbrief, sharp, and immediately smothered by something warm. Heavy. Encompassing. Like being wrapped in a blanket that didnât ask permission.
Okay, he revised, terrible motor control too.
Light bled through his eyelids, soft and unfocused. Shapes existed, but only in theory. Voices murmured nearby, low and rhythmic, rising and falling in a way that felt... comforting.
Onix took another breath.
This one came easier.
He didnât know how long he lay thereâseconds, minutes, an entire philosophical debate about existenceâbut eventually a thought surfaced clearly enough to stick.
Iâm not dead.
That realization should have been alarming.
Instead, it felt... fine.
The warmth shifted, and suddenly he was being lifted. The world tilted, gently, and a face came into view. A womanâs face. Dark hair pulled back loosely, eyes bright with something dangerously close to tears.
âOh,â she whispered. âHeâs awake.â
Her voice shook.
Onix tried to say something reassuring. Something like Itâs okay, Iâm calm, please donât cry, or at the very least Hello.
What came out was a small, indignant noise that sounded like he was deeply offended by gravity.
â...Heâs perfect,â the woman said immediately, as if this explained everything.
Ah, Onix thought. One of those families.
A second face appeared, this one broader, older, with a kind of quiet steadiness that felt like standing next to a wall that had never once considered falling over.
A man. Tall. Scar along his jaw. Eyes sharp, but softened as they settled on Onix.
âHeâs strong,â the man said.
Onix had no idea how he could tell that, given that Onix currently possessed the physical capabilities of a damp loaf of bread, but he appreciated the vote of confidence.
The man rested a hand lightly on the womanâs shoulder.
âWelcome to the world,â he said.
Something in that sentence clicked.
Not metaphorically.
Literally.
Onix felt it in his chest.
A presence.
Not pain. Not pressure. Just... awareness. Like a door opening somewhere deep inside him.
The air shifted.
No one noticed at first.
The roomâwooden walls, stone hearth, open windowâremained unchanged. The soft morning light didnât flicker. The fire crackled gently.
But outsideâ
A distant rumble rolled across the sky.
The woman stiffened. âIs that... thunder?â
The man frowned slightly and turned toward the window. âThe forecast said clear skies.â
Onix blinked.
The sensation inside him stirred again, curious now. Responsive.
He didnât know how he knew thisâhe barely knew how knowing worked yetâbut the sound outside felt... familiar.
Comforting.
Huh, he thought. Thatâs new.
The rumble came again, closer this time.
The man stepped toward the window, pulling the curtain aside.
Gray clouds were gathering where there had been blue moments before.
Fast. Too fast.
âThatâs strange,â he murmured.
The woman held Onix a little tighter. âAlaric...â
âI know,â he said. âItâs probably nothing.â
Onix yawned.
Or tried to.
What actually happened was a soft spark crackled near his fingers.
It was small. Barely visible. A faint blue flicker, like static snapping off wool.
The woman gasped.
The man froze.
The spark vanished instantly, leaving nothing behind but silence and the distant sound of rain beginning to fall.
Onix, blissfully unaware of the existential implications of what he had just done, closed his eyes.
Okay, he thought, drifting, note to self: lightning exists now.
When he woke again, the rain had settled into a gentle rhythm against the roof.
The room smelled like herbs and warm wood. He felt... full. Tired, but in a good way, like after a long day that had ended exactly where it should.
Voices murmured nearby.
â...never seen anything like it,â a man was saying. Older. Different from before. âA storm forming that quicklyâon the day of his birth, no less.â
âLightning runs in our blood,â Alaric replied evenly. âYou know that.â
âYes, but thisââ The older man hesitated. âThis felt different.â
Onix cracked one eye open.
I feel like I should apologize.
â...heâs just a child,â the woman said softly. âPlease donât start talking like this already.â
There was a pause.
Then the older man sighed. âOf course. Forgive me. New life brings old superstitions.â
Footsteps retreated.
The room grew quiet again.
Onix stared at the wooden beam above him, watching shadows sway as the rain outside slowed.
Lower noble family, he reasoned vaguely, piecing together fragments without quite knowing how. Lightning magic. Storms.
He felt no panic. No dread.
Just... curiosity.
And beneath that, something else.
A sense of waiting.
Not from the world.
From the storm.
It wasnât loud. It wasnât demanding.
It was patient.
As if it had been listening for a very long timeâand had finally heard something it recognized.
Onix smiled, tiny and unconscious of the future.
Well, he thought, drifting back to sleep, this should be interesting.
Onix dreamed of movement.
Not running. Not falling.
Flowing.
Something carried himânot hands, not air, but a rhythm that pulsed beneath everything else. Slow. Steady. Familiar, in a way that made no sense.
When he woke, the world felt heavier.
Not unpleasantly so. Just... present.
He blinked against the light and immediately regretted it. Everything was still too bright, too sharp, like his eyes were still negotiating their contract with reality.
A soft chuckle came from nearby.
âCareful,â a womanâs voice said. âYou glare like that and youâll scare the furniture.â
Onix turned his headâslowly this timeâand found the same woman from before seated beside his cradle. She looked less tearful now, more tired, but her smile was gentler for it.
âGood morning,â she said. âOr afternoon. Timeâs been a little... flexible today.â
Onix opened his mouth.
A yawn escaped instead.
She laughed quietly. âIâll take that as approval.â
Iâm being bullied by a woman who thinks yawning is conversation, Onix thought. This is my life now.
He shifted, testing his limbs with cautious intent. His arms respondedâpoorlyâbut they responded. Fingers curled, then uncurled again.
Control was... minimal.
But not nonexistent.
Interesting.
âYouâre already very observant,â the woman murmured, watching him with keen eyes. âMost newborns donât look like theyâre planning something.â
I feel seen.
Footsteps approached from the other side of the room, heavier, deliberate. The manâAlaricâentered carrying a small bundle of folded cloth. He paused when he saw Onix awake.
âThere he is,â he said quietly. âHow are you feeling, son?â
Onix stared at him.
Son, his mind echoed. Right. That checks out.
Alaric studied him for a moment longer than strictly necessary, eyes narrowing slightlyânot with suspicion, but with something closer to assessment.
âHeâs calm,â Alaric said at last. âToo calm.â
The womanâSeraphine, Onix realized distantlyâsnorted. âYou say that like itâs a flaw.â
âFor a Stormborn?â Alaric replied. âItâs unusual.â
Onix had no idea what a Stormborn was yet, but it sounded like a job title with unreasonable expectations.
Seraphine adjusted the blanket around him, her fingers careful, precise. âHe didnât cry much last night,â she said. âBarely fussed at all.â
âThatâs because he already used all his energy summoning a storm,â Alaric muttered.
In my defense, Onix thought, I did not know that was an option.
As if responding to the thought, a faint tingling stirred in his chest again. The same sensation from beforeâsubtle, patient.
The room did not change.
No sparks. No thunder.
Just... awareness.
Onix focused on it, curious.
Nothing happened.
He relaxed.
The sensation settled.
Alaric exhaled slowly.
Seraphine looked up at him. âDid you feel that?â
âYes,â he said. âBut it stopped.â
They shared a glance.
Onix decided this was probably a good time to pretend to be a normal baby.
He scrunched his face and made a small, indignant noise.
Seraphine immediately softened. âOh, there it is. Hungry?â
Yes, Onix agreed internally. Letâs go with hungry.
Laterâafter feeding, and what Onix would generously describe as an undignified amount of being heldâhe found himself resting in a cradle near the window.
The rain outside had slowed to a drizzle. Sunlight filtered through thinning clouds, catching on droplets clinging to the glass.
Peaceful.
Almost too peaceful.
A third presence entered the room without sound.
Onix noticed immediately.
The man who stepped inside moved differently from Alaric. Lighter. Quieter. His steps barely disturbed the floor, and the air around him felt... stretched, like it had been gently pulled thinner.
Wind magic.
Onix didnât know how he knew that.
He just did.
The man bowed his head slightly to Alaric and Seraphine. âMy lord. My lady.â
âEldric,â Alaric said. âYou didnât have to come so soon.â
âI felt something shift,â Eldric replied calmly. His gaze driftedâthen settled squarely on Onix.
The air changed.
Not violently. Not suddenly.
It was as if the breeze itself had paused to listen.
Onix blinked up at him.
Eldricâs brows rose a fraction.
âWell,â the man said quietly. âThat explains it.â
Seraphine stiffened. âExplains what?â
Eldric didnât answer right away. He stepped closer, studying Onix with an intensity that felt... respectful. Curious. Not fearful.
âHeâs not loud,â Eldric said at last. âBut heâs not empty either.â
Onix yawned again, mostly because it seemed like the correct response to being stared at.
Eldricâs mouth twitched.
âHe listens,â Eldric added. âThatâs rare.â
Alaric crossed his arms. âYouâre talking like heâs already grown.â
âIâm talking like the wind does,â Eldric replied. âIt doesnât care about age.â
A pause followed.
Then Seraphine said softly, âHeâs just a child.â
âYes,â Eldric agreed. âAnd children grow.â
Onix felt the presence in his chest stir againânot restless, not excited.
Waiting.
The storm outside finally broke apart, clouds thinning until blue sky returned, as if nothing unusual had happened at all.
Eldric inclined his head once more. âI will help however I can,â he said. âIf you wish.â
Alaric nodded slowly. âWhen the time comes.â
Eldric turned to leave, stopping only once at the doorway.
âWelcome to the world, young master,â he said, not unkindly. âTry not to break it.â
Onix gurgled.
No promises.
That night, as the house slept and the rain faded completely, Onix lay awake in the dark.
He could feel the storm.
Not outside.
Inside.
It wasnât demanding. It wasnât raging.
It was patient.
Waiting for him to grow strong enough to move with it.
Onix closed his eyes, a tiny smile tugging at his lips.
All right, he thought. But weâre doing this my way.
The storm, somewhere far beyond the clouds, seemed to agree.








