LOGINChapter 83: The Alignment of ShadowsPOV: Varis KadeThe midday light came through the gap in the velvet curtains as a single thin line across my desk. I sat with Eryndor's letter in my hands and read it a second time. The seal, a serpent swallowing a crescent moon, had been broken cleanly. Julian stood by the hearth and waited.Eryndor wrote like a man who had been accumulating patience for centuries and had finally decided to spend it. The script was archaic, unhurried, the handwriting of someone who no longer felt the pressure of ordinary time."He is offering an alliance," Julian said."Alliance is the wrong word," I said, setting the letter flat on the desk. "An alliance requires trust. This is a confluence of interests. A temporary synchronization of objectives."The proposal was simple in the way that only very dangerous things manage to be simple. Eryndor had no interest in the silver throne. He did not want the eastern timber rights or the administrative headache of governin
Chapter 82: The Siphoned StreamPOV: Riven AshfordThe morning council chamber was cold, the kind of cold that comes from stone and early winter and windows that have never fit their frames properly. I sat three seats from the high throne with my ledgers open in front of me and my attention divided between the pages and the man sitting at the head of the table.I have known Kael since we were boys learning how to hold a blade without cutting ourselves. I know the exact set of his shoulders when he is preparing for something violent. I know the rhythm of his breathing when a border report has been falsified and he is deciding how long to let the person responsible keep talking. Today he was neither of those things. He was still the force that held this pack together, still issuing directives with the same flat authority he always used. But the wall he kept between himself and every room he walked into felt different this morning. Less like stone. More like glass.He looked at the Luna
Chapter 81: The River's EdgePOV: Lina HaleIf I had known that opening a supernatural soul bond would feel like leaving every window in the building open during a storm, I might have asked Maren more questions before uncorking that vial.I spent the better part of the morning trying to rebuild something inside my head. I tried imagining a wall. Then a door with a heavy lock. Then the swinging doors of a professional kitchen with a sign on them that said staff only. None of it worked. The gold cord connecting me to Kael wasn't a thread anymore. It was a open channel, and the current ran both ways. I could feel him at the edge of my awareness, a low steady frequency that tasted like pine and cold air and something that was about to happen.The worst part was that I couldn't just close it. Slamming the bond shut now would require a deliberate hard shove against his mind, and because we were currently running on the same emotional circuit I knew exactly what that would feel like on his e
Chapter 80: Drawn's AcknowledgmentPOV: Kael DravenThe darkness didn't break so much as thin out, grey light spreading slowly through the tall windows of my study. I had not moved from the window in hours. The maps on my desk were exactly as I had left them. The scrolls remained unread. For the first time in twelve years of rule, the treason in my council and the pressure at my borders had moved to the edge of my attention and stayed there.I didn't sleep. The gold line connecting my chest to the Luna's wing had settled into a steady deep thrum that vibrated beneath my ribs with every breath. It wasn't intrusive. It was just there, constant and real, the way a healed wound still makes itself known in cold weather.By the time the first sunlight reached the stone floor, I had already made my decision.There are men who survive by ignoring what they cannot explain away. Kings who let cracks widen in the foundation because acknowledging them would require action. I have never been that
Chapter 79: The Open Window: Kael Draven The midnight candle had burned down to a thick pool of wax on the desk. In front of me were the eastern border maps and the encrypted council communications, the cage I had been building around Varis piece by piece over the last two days. The palace was completely still. My mind was in the cold, focused place it goes when I am working through a problem that requires patience rather than force.Then the world shifted.It didn't arrive like a blow. It was more like a heavy iron-bound window being thrown open inside my chest. The mental walls I had maintained for twelve years, the barriers that kept the noise of the pack bond at a manageable distance, stuttered. The link between myself and the Luna didn't hum. It flared. It expanded with a sudden force that I had no preparation for. I dropped the quill. My hand stopped an inch above the parchment and my entire body went still. My lungs locked against the rush of it. The bond was completely open
Chapter 78: Cost of AdmissionPOV: Lina HaleThe candle Maren had left burning was nearly gone by the time I made it back to my chambers. I bolted the door behind me, which felt like a reasonable thing to do even though I understood perfectly well that no amount of iron was going to help with what was currently sitting in my chest.I put the three items on the floor and sat down in front of them with my back against the bed frame and my knees pulled up. The Codex translation on the left, the silver vial in the middle, and Maren's warning circling my head on a loop that showed no sign of stopping."Right," I said to the empty room. "So the choice is die from soul rejection, or open myself up to a supernatural bond with a wolf king who could end me with one hand. Very reasonable options. I really miss when my worst problem was a unreliable fish supplier."The line chef part of my brain, the part that doesn't panic, it just calculates, was already working through what Maren had laid out.
Chapter 49: Regency GambitPOV: Varis KadeFour days.The number had a particular symmetry to it. In ninety six hours the grand performance of the Virel court was going to come apart in a very public and very permanent way. I stood at the window of my private study watching the sun go down, the or
Chapter 48: Treason of Ink and CoinPOV: Kael DravenThe candles in my solar had burned down to hardened wax, but the work was not finished.I had spent the last forty-eight hours going through the pack's external trade records page by page. No guards involved. No, Riven. If there was rot in my lea
Chapter 45: The Psychic PostcardPOV: Lina HaleThe walk back to the palace with Elder Maren had been a blur of polite nods and careful small talk. My body was going through the motions of a "civilized guest," but my mind was miles away, vibrating with the ghost of a vision. Selene hadn’t just sent
Chapter 42: The Architect of ShadowsPOV: Kael DravenI didn't summon Varis to the council chamber. I summoned him to my private solar, a room of stark stone and absolute quiet where the weight of the pack felt more manageable. I stood at the hearth watching the embers die down and waited for the s







