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The Delta Siege

last update publish date: 2026-07-14 03:16:31

The roar that tore through the coastal air was not merely sound; it was a physical force. It shattered the remaining glass in the discarded armor of the fallen retrieval team and sent a flock of gulls screaming into the grey horizon. Lucian was no longer hunting; he was asserting his domain.

I stood on the northern lip of the delta, my hands buried deep in the pockets of my cloak. The Unbound had moved with supernatural speed, turning the narrow neck of the river into a defensive fortification. They had rigged the high-pressure gas valves—the same ones Vincent used to power the estate’s furnaces—into a makeshift explosive perimeter.

"He’s leading the cavalry on the main road," the scout reported, his breathing shallow. "He’s not waiting for his infantry. He’s closing the distance at a sprint."

"Good," I muttered. "He's predictable when he's desperate."

"Serafine," the High Priestess whispered, appearing at my side. "If you kill him, the Ashmoor Kingdom will collapse into civil war. Vincent will seize the throne before the King’s body is cold. Your child will have no kingdom, only a target on his back."

"I don't intend to kill him," I said, watching the treeline. "I intend to dismantle his authority."

The forest suddenly went silent. The crickets, the wind, the rustle of the pines—everything died in an instant. Then, a massive shape burst from the darkness.

Lucian didn't ride a horse. He tore through the brush on foot, his human clothes shredded, his body already halfway through a hybrid shift. He was a terrifying tapestry of muscle and rage, his skin glowing with the same raw, unchecked power I had felt in the armory. He didn't stop when he saw the barricade; he plowed through the sharpened logs like they were dry toothpicks.

His guards—the elite Ashmoor vanguard—trailed behind him, their horses foaming at the mouth, their silver blades drawn.

I stepped onto the bridge of the delta, the silver light around me flaring to a blinding, protective dome.

Lucian skidded to a halt twenty feet away. The sight of him was enough to freeze the blood of the Unbound warriors behind me. He was breathing in jagged, wet gasps, his golden-amber eyes wide, darting toward me with a hunger that defied human logic.

"Serafine," he roared, the sound vibrating in the very marrow of my bones. "You do not walk away from your King."

"I am not your subject, Lucian," I replied, my voice amplified by the Moonveil energy, ringing clearly over the roar of the river. "And I am certainly not your cure."

He ignored the barricade. He ignored the Unbound warriors aiming their improvised weapons at his chest. He took one step forward, then another, his gaze locked exclusively on me.

"You are my wife," he growled, his voice a tremor of command and supplication. "You are bound by the law of the Ashmoor throne. Come back, and the Vale lands will be returned to your kin. Come back, and I will execute Vincent before the sun sets."

I laughed, a short, sharp sound that held no humor. "You think you can bargain with the person who holds the leash to your own sanity? You didn't come here to make deals, Lucian. You came here because your body is failing, and you’re terrified of what happens when the man dies and the beast takes over."

He snarled, a low, rumbling sound that made the ground shake. "I will tear this entire territory apart to bring you home."

"Then try," I said.

I flicked my wrist.

The Unbound didn't shoot arrows. They triggered the valves.

The river delta erupted. High-pressure mineral gas, laced with volatile silicates, blasted upward from the concealed subterranean pipes. The air turned into a wall of fire, a concussive shockwave that blasted the vanguard back toward the forest.

Lucian didn't retreat. He stood his ground, the fire licking at his skin, his eyes never leaving my face. He was an unstoppable force, but I had learned his rhythm. I had memorized his reach.

I stepped off the bridge and moved toward him, the silver light around my hands forming into dual blades of condensed energy.

He lunged.

I didn't try to block his strength—he was physically superior in every metric. I used his weight against him. As he swiped, I dropped low, my blades carving deep, smoking furrows into his leather armor. I moved with a speed that startled him, a flicker of motion that left him swinging at empty air.

"You’re fighting a shadow," I shouted, my voice echoing behind him.

He spun, his claws catching the edge of my cloak, tearing it away. He was faster than I expected, his recovery time accelerated by the proximity of my bloodline. He grabbed me by the throat, pinning me against the burning wreckage of the barricade.

Up close, the heat radiating off him was immense. He was a living furnace of repressed rage and terminal corruption. He stared at me, his eyes flickering rapidly between human amber and the dead, sulfurous yellow of the feral beast.

"I can kill you," he whispered, his grip tightening. "I can end this right here."

"Then do it," I challenged, refusing to blink. "Watch your kingdom burn while Vincent picks over the bones of your legacy. Watch your wolf consume your memory until you don't even remember your own name. Is that the victory you want?"

He didn't move. His thumb traced the pulse at my throat, his hand shaking.

"I can't let you go," he muttered, the confession almost breaking his voice. "I don't know who I am without you."

"Then you were never a King," I whispered. "You were just a vessel for your own hunger."

I didn't strike him. I did something worse. I opened my mind.

I let the Moonveil bond go cold.

I forcibly severed the link, pulling the silver energy back into my own core, effectively starving his wolf of the stabilize-agent it had become dependent on.

Lucian shrieked—a sound of absolute, agonizing deprivation. He fell to his knees, his hands clawing at his chest, his skin turning a sickly, mottled grey. The transition was instant. Without the tether, the feral rot surged forward, unchecked.

He looked up at me, his eyes pleading, before the golden light vanished completely, swallowed by the void.

The Alpha King was gone. The beast was here.

He rose, his posture shifted into a terrifying, hunched predatory stance. He wasn't thinking; he was reacting. He looked at the Unbound, then at the river, then at me. He was going to kill everything in sight, starting with me.

"Now!" I screamed to the Unbound.

The cliffs above collapsed.

Not a simple rockslide, but a coordinated detonation of the cavern ceilings. A literal mountain of granite and shale plummeted into the delta, sealing the path between the forest and the coast.

Lucian roared, turning toward the sound of the collapse, but it was too late. He was trapped in the pocket of the delta, surrounded by the Unbound, his tactical team cut off by the fire.

I stood on the far side of the debris, watching him. He clawed at the stone, his nails sparking against the granite, but he was trapped. He was the most powerful being in the world, and he was currently a prisoner of his own failure.

"Contain him," I ordered the Unbound, who stood in awe of the spectacle. "But do not harm him. If you touch him, you die."

I turned away, my legs feeling like lead, my head spinning. I had done it. I had trapped the King, dismantled his vanguard, and secured my perimeter.

But as I walked back toward the bluff, I felt a sharp, stabbing pain in my stomach—the first reminder that my autonomy wasn't just about my life anymore.

The High Priestess met me at the top of the rise. She looked at the smoldering delta, then at me.

"You have won the battle," she said, her voice heavy with portent. "But you have just guaranteed that the war will be total. He will not stop. He will tear the earth apart to find you."

"Let him try," I said, looking out at the endless grey sea. "I’m no longer the one running."

I took a deep breath, the cold air soothing the fire in my veins. The transition was complete.

I was the Ruined Bride no longer. I was the architect of my own destiny, and God help the man who tried to stand in my way.

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    The throne room was no longer a place of pageantry; it was a command center. I sat on the obsidian chair, my fingers tracing the cold carvings of the Draven crest. Below me, the castle was a hive of frantic activity. The remnants of the Royal Guard, having witnessed the collapse of the silver-filtration systems and the submission of their King, were terrified into a fragile, hollow loyalty. They didn't serve me because they loved me; they served because they feared the silver light that now permanently hummed beneath my skin.Diacina stood at the base of the dais, her eyes scouring the reports brought in by the scouts. "Vincent’s network is unraveling, but it’s messy. He had agents embedded in every major pack from here to the coastal border. If we purge them too quickly, we risk total societal collapse. We lose the silver mines, and we lose the tax base.""Then don't purge them," I said, my voice echoing off the high, vaulted ceiling. "Re-educate them. Make them understand that their

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    The roar that tore through the coastal air was not merely sound; it was a physical force. It shattered the remaining glass in the discarded armor of the fallen retrieval team and sent a flock of gulls screaming into the grey horizon. Lucian was no longer hunting; he was asserting his domain.I stood on the northern lip of the delta, my hands buried deep in the pockets of my cloak. The Unbound had moved with supernatural speed, turning the narrow neck of the river into a defensive fortification. They had rigged the high-pressure gas valves—the same ones Vincent used to power the estate’s furnaces—into a makeshift explosive perimeter."He’s leading the cavalry on the main road," the scout reported, his breathing shallow. "He’s not waiting for his infantry. He’s closing the distance at a sprint.""Good," I muttered. "He's predictable when he's desperate.""Serafine," the High Priestess whispered, appearing at my side. "If you kill him, the Ashmoor Kingdom will collapse into civil war. Vi

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