“They say, O Auspicious King,” she whispered, “that the Enchanted One was not born of clay and breath, but of a wish whispered into a storm. He stood upon the obsidian cliffs of the Third Sea, his skin shimmering like moonlight on oil, and his eyes—fixed forever on a horizon that did not exist. In his right hand, he held a bird of glass that sang the secrets of the future; in his left, a rusted key that unlocked only the heart of a mountain. To look upon him was to forget your own name; to speak to him was to lose your voice to the wind.”
Shahryar leaned in, the bloodlust of the morning forgotten. “And did he speak? Did the mountain open?”
Scheherazade smiled, a shadow of the coming dawn flickering in the window. “The mountain did more than open, Majesty. It breathed. But to hear how the Enchanted One traded his glass bird for a single drop of human grief, you must wait until the stars return to their stations.”