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Read an Excerpt From The Dragon and the Sun Lotus by Amélie Wen Zhao
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Young Adult
Read an Excerpt From The Dragon and the Sun Lotus by Amélie Wen Zhao
A decade ago, the Kingdom of Night began the war against the Kingdom of Rivers…
By Amélie Wen Zhao
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Published on February 25, 2026
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We’re thrilled to share an excerpt from The Dragon and the Sun Lotus, the second part of Amélie Wen Zhao’s young adult Three Realms duology, publishing with Delacorte Press on March 3.
A decade ago, the Kingdom of Night began the war against the Kingdom of Rivers, ravaging the lands and releasing mó—beautiful, ravenous demons—to roam free, drinking the souls of mortals. Now the mó have made it beyond the magical wards of the immortal realm—the Kingdom of Sky—and will not stop until the entire world falls to darkness.Àn’yīng is determined to banish the mó to their realm and return the mortal realm to peace. But a stunning betrayal has turned the tides of this war: Her handsome rival from the Immortality Trials and the man she was falling in love with, Yù’chén, is now the enemy. Yù’chén is half mó, his mother none other than Sansiran, the Demon Queen of the Kingdom of Night… and the monster responsible for killing Àn’yīng’s father.There is one hope for the future, though. The boy in the jade—Àn’yīng’s lifelong mystery guardian and heir to the last mortal Emperor—Hào’yáng. Àn’yīng and Hào’yáng must join forces to rally an army that stretches across realms, from the Four Seas of the Dragons to the Phoenixes of the Golden Desert. But first, Àn’yīng must awaken to the immortal power slumbering in her own veins.
Àn’yīng
Xī’lín Village, Central Province, Kingdom of Rivers
Another roar rips through the air. Overhead, She of the Moon-Frosted Sea dances before Qióng’qí, engaging the beast in battle, her silver, serpentine form cutting against its mass of darkness.
Suddenly, the dragon lets out an anguished cry—one so foreign and yet so human in its heartbreak. As she lifts her head in the direction of the battle waging behind me, a terrifying pain sears across my chest. My hand darts to the jade pendant at my collarbone.
Hào’yáng.
Fleet and Striker are in my hands, their power becoming an extension of me as I pivot, adrenaline and spirit energy thrumming through my blood, my hands and feet in a harmonious weave.
Táo’wù towers over a patch of rubble. Amidst wood splinters and stones and tile is a figure in gold.
Hào’yáng is kneeling, which strikes me as horribly wrong, yet as I close the distance, I make out his hand clutched to his side—and how his gold armor and white shift are stained red.
Táo’wù lets out a roar of triumph. It rears on its hind legs, swordlike claws heavy enough to crush entire houses, and leaps for Hào’yáng.
Something cool and hard presses against my collarbone. I stumble, momentarily thrown off-balance. Then I reach into the folds of my wedding gown and draw out a sword.
It’s more slight than other longswords, made of a metal I cannot place: one that glows a soft blush, the color of sunrises. Its hilt, a deep-green woven through with veins like a leaf, warms beneath my fingers as I lift it. Somehow, in my hands, it is as light as a feather… and it rests in my palms as though it has always belonged there.
I have seen this blade, on many occasions. I know with a bone-deep recognition, what it is:
It’s Lady Shī’yǎ’s lotus, transformed into its sword form.
My skin begins to dance with light, pouring into the weapon, as I leap into the air and lift it over my head.
Then I plunge it through Táo’wù’s tusked, open maw.
The hellbeast’s scream fractures the ground as it reels back, crashing into a nearby house. Overhead, the seam splitting the skies trembles, the scythe moon and night stars within rippling like the surface of a lake.
I land by Hào’yáng’s side. He kneels, sword driven into the ground before him, other hand clutching his side to stem the flow of blood.
“Àn’yīng?” he rasps as I kneel before him, patting him down to check for more injuries.
“I’m here,” I tell him. “I’m here, Hào’yáng.”
He blinks rapidly, and I’m close enough to see my reflection in his eyes—the lotus’s light dancing over my skin and radiating from me. “You’re… beautiful.”
A sob bubbles in my chest, which I turn into a laugh. “You tell me this now? When my wedding gown is ruined and our banquet destroyed?”
He slumps against me. His breathing is shallow, fast, and I am suddenly more terrified than words can describe as I hold him.
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The Dragon and the Sun Lotus
Amélie Wen Zhao
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The Dragon and the Sun Lotus
Amélie Wen Zhao
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I press my fingers to my lips and whistle.
From somewhere nearby comes a responding whinny— followed by a roar.
Hào’yáng’s grip tightens against my back. “Go,” he breathes. “They’re after me. Go, Àn’yīng.”
Beyond us, Táo’wù is stirring from the wreckage of a house. Behind us, the ground shakes as Qióng’qí closes in. Yet the world seems to slow and fall away as I hold my boy in the jade.
There are a handful of moments in life when the meaning of destiny becomes clear. As Hào’yáng’s blood warms me and his life energy ebbs away, my mother’s words to him come back to me:
Your life will be a vessel through which the good of the Kingdom of Rivers is governed. Your heart and your soul will be buried under this vast decree beneath the Heavens, child.
There will be no space for love or a life for you.
And yet, Hào’yáng is here with me, so alive and so human. To most, he is the heir and the captain, cold and distant and powerful—yet to me, he is so much more. He is my guardian in the jade, with the warmth in his eyes reserved only for me, the rare smiles I’ve come to love coaxing from him, lighting my skies like a glimpse of the sun. He is my political ally: When his brows crease, his gaze goes unfocused and a calculating look appears in his eyes, a look I’ve come to recognize when his brilliant mind is at work.
And then there are the parts of him that have threaded into my heart like the currents of a sunlit river. The Hào’yáng whose touch stirs those tides, whose gaze sets my world on fire like the sun burning flames into the sea.
The one whose kiss slammed the waves of an entire ocean into my chest.
If he must hold the weight of realms on his shoulders now and for the rest of his life, I will not let him do so alone.
As She of the Moon-Frosted Sea stops before us, I clasp his chin between my hands, forcing his eyes to meet mine. “I’m not going anywhere without you,” I tell him, and without waiting for a response, I hoist him onto the dragonhorse’s scaly back. I loop my brocade belt around her and strap Hào’yáng down. Then I slide on behind him and we’re off, gaining speed as we rise into the air. Behind us, roars of the two hellbeasts follow us into the night.
Red seeps from Hào’yáng onto the dragonhorse’s scales.
I brush a thumb along the hilt of my birth mother’s lotus sword, feeling the grooves of its etchings against my skin, an ancient calling that might have been the start of my destiny.
“We make for the immortal realm tonight,” I say, glancing to the distant horizon. She of the Moon-Frosted Sea’s ears twitch back to me; her scales ripple dimly in the cloud-swathed night as she gallops. I grip my lotus sword tightly, its blade trailing an aurora glow through the darkness. “My mother’s lotus vessel has recognized me. It’s time I declare myself as Yī’lín Shī’yǎ’s heir and summon her army.”
Excerpted from The Dragon and the Sun Lotus, copyright © 2026 by Amélie Wen Zhao.
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