LOGINSera's POV
I stared at him and didn't move.
He stood one step inside the room, relaxed as always, watching me with those amber eyes that gave away exactly nothing. The firelight caught the angles of his face and made him look like something carved rather than born.
I hated that he was attractive. It felt like a personal insult.
"You said we would discuss what this marriage looks like," I said "So discuss."
He moved further into the room, toward the sitting area, where two chairs faced each other in front of the fireplace. He sat in one of them and looked at me with an expression that said well?
I crossed the room and sat in the other one.
If he was surprised I did sit with just a gesture, he didn’t show it.
"The bond has to be real," he said. "Not performed. Real. Wolf noble houses will be watching… If they believe this marriage is hollow they will use it against both of us."
"Real means different things to different people, and–"
"In wolf culture it means witnessed," he cut me off. "It means a bond that’s been fully established. There are nobles in this palace right now who will test its legitimacy within the first month."
I looked at the fire for a moment. Thinking. He wasn’t entirely wrong and that irritated me deeply.
"And you need it established quickly," I said.
"I need it established before the first council meeting, which is in eleven days," he said. "After that you have a standing. Before that you are just a human woman in a palace full of wolves who have not decided yet whether to respect you."
I turned that over carefully. He was giving me a reason that was about my protection, my position, my power within these walls. Which was either genuine or the most sophisticated manipulation I’d encountered so far. With this man I genuinely couldn’t tell yet.
"You are asking me to trust you?"
"I am asking you to be strategic," he corrected. "Which is something you already know how to do."
He leaned forward slightly, elbows on his knees, and for just a moment he looked less like a king and more like a man having a conversation he’d been rehearsing. Which meant it mattered to him, and I had more leverage here than the room currently suggested.
"Eleven days," I said.
"Eleven days," he confirmed.
I stood up abruptly, and he watched me closely. Something shifted in the room—the firelight, the particular closeness of two people who’d been talking around something and had just stopped talking.
Then, he slowly stood too. We were close. Closer than we’d been in the yard and the ceremony, close enough that I could see the exact color of those amber eyes and the fact that they were not entirely one color—gold at the center, darker at the edges, like something burning from the inside out.
He reached up and touched my face.
Just his fingertips. Jaw to cheekbone, the lightest possible contact, and his eyes stayed on mine the entire time like he was asking a question he didn’t want to say out loud.
And the honest terrible truth was that it was not unpleasant. That was the most dangerous thing that had happened to me since I walked through the gates of the Duskborne palace.
I let it go on for three seconds, then I stepped back. "N-not tonight."
His hand dropped with no sign of frustration on his face. He just looked at me steadily.
"Why," he genuinely asked, although it didn't seem like a question.
"Because I just arrived in a palace full of wolves who have not decided whether to respect me yet," I said, using his own words back at him.
"And I will not start my time here by doing anything that makes me feel less like myself."
Something moved behind his eyes. Too fast for me to read.
“You really think this would make you feel less of yourself?”
I held his gaze without saying anything.
"Okay… okay, that’s fair," he said.
I almost asked him to stop saying that. That is fair, agreed, you have every right. He kept giving me ground in small amounts like a man who understood that generosity was its own kind of control. Or maybe he just meant it. I couldn’t tell yet and that was exactly the problem.
"Goodnight," I said.
He held my gaze for one more moment, then he nodded once and walked to the door.
He paused with his hand on the frame.
"Sera…”
The first time he’d used just my name. Not Commander. Not my Luna. Just Sera, quiet and deliberate, like he’d been saving it. I hated how it sounded in his voice.
"The eleven days stand," he said. "But I meant what I said. The bond needs to be real. For your sake as much as mine."
Then he walked out and pulled the door closed behind him. I stood in the middle of the room for a long moment before sitting down on the edge of the bed, pressed my hands flat on my knees and breathed.
My heart was doing something I refused to give it permission to do. I shut it down the way I shut things down on a battlefield… acknowledge it, set it aside, deal with it later when the immediate situation was no longer trying to kill you.
I thought about what he’d said. About the council meeting. About legitimacy and the eleven days that stood between me and a seat at the table I had negotiated for.
He had not pushed nor demanded. He’d simply made his case, heard mine, and left. Which meant one of two things.
Either he was a man capable of genuine restraint and respect, which would make him the most surprising person I’d ever met. Or he was patient. And patient men were the most dangerous kind because they wouldn't show you the trap until you’d already walked into it.
I got up and checked the door. It had no lock on the inside. I stood there looking at that for a moment—at the handle with no bolt, the frame with no latch, and I understood that this small architectural detail was not an accident. Nothing in this palace was an accident.
I pulled a chair from the writing desk and wedged it under the handle. It wouldn’t stop a wolf, we both knew that. But it would make a sound. And right now, sound was the only alarm system I had.
I got into bed, stared at the ceiling and listened to the palace settle around me… the distant footsteps of guards, the low sound of wind against the stone.
Eleven days. Could I work with eleven days?. Maybe. I closed my eyes and started building a plan.
I was almost asleep when I heard a sound outside my window. Not wind,and obviously not the building settling. Footsteps.
I was already out of bed and across the room before I was fully awake, pressing flat against the wall beside the window, heart slamming, hand on the small blade I kept under my pillow—old habit, the kind that’d kept me alive.
I waited silently, then, slowly, I turned and looked out the window.
Cael’s POVIf anyone had asked me what had changed inside the palace over the last week, I would have answered with one word, ‘Nothing.’But that would've been a lie. The palace was exactly the same. The walls hadn't moved. The council remained just as exhausting. The nobles still argued over matters they would never agree on. The servants continued rushing through the halls as though the world would end if breakfast was served a minute late.Nothing had changed at all. Except for my attention.Or rather...Who kept stealing it.I looked away from the report spread across my desk for what had to be the fifth time in ten minutes. Logan noticed. He always did."You've read that paragraph four times.""I know.""And?""And what?""You've been staring at the same page without turning it."I sighed."I'm thinking.""No."He leaned back in his chair, looking far too pleased with himself."You're distracted."I finally looked up."Careful."He grinned."I am."I closed the report."There is
Sera’s POVI meant it when I said I wouldn't allow myself to get distracted by Cael or the palace. And certainly not by the confusing feelings that insisted on showing up whenever he looked at me for a second too long.I had come to the Duskborne Dynasty for a reason, which I keep on reminding myself. Every day, it felt like I forgot that reason was a day my people paid for my carelessness. So, I stopped allowing myself idle hours.The palace woke before sunrise, and I made sure I did too.By the time the eastern sky was painted with streaks of pale orange, I was already dressed and standing on the balcony outside my chambers with a cup of tea growing cold between my hands. The palace looked peaceful from above. Servants crossed the courtyards carrying baskets of fresh bread and flowers, guards changed shifts at the gates, and cooks disappeared into the enormous kitchens with carts full of vegetables and meat.It looked ordinary, but then I knew too well that it wasn't. Nothing inside
Sera’s POVIf someone had taken a painting of the Duskborne Dynasty at that very moment, they would have called it perfect.The skies were clear, painted in bright shades of blue. The gardens surrounding the palace bloomed with colors so beautiful they almost looked unreal. Palace servants moved efficiently through the grounds, warriors trained in designated areas, and nobles carried themselves with the confidence of people who believed they belonged to something great.On the surface, everything looked exactly the way a powerful kingdom should look.Peaceful.Orderly.Strong.The problem was that I had spent most of my life looking beneath surfaces.And beneath this one, something felt wrong.I walked beside Cael through one of the palace courtyards, forcing a pleasant smile whenever someone looked our way.The public tour had officially begun.Unfortunately for me.Fortunately for the people who loved gossip.Everywhere we went, eyes followed us.Servants bowed.Warriors greeted us.
Sera’s POVThe realization hit me all at once.One second, I was buried in Cael's arms, crying like my world had just ended. The next, every ounce of awareness came rushing back.My eyes widened.Moon Goddess.What was I doing?I detached myself from him so quickly that I nearly stumbled off the bed.Heat flooded my face as I took several steps backward.The room suddenly felt too small.Too quiet.Too embarrassing.I couldn't believe that had just happened.Me.Sera Vale.Commander of the Human Resistance. The woman who had spent years earning respect on battlefields. The woman who had stared death in the face more times than she could count. I had just been clinging to a man and crying into his chest. Not just any man.Cael.The same Cael I had argued with yesterday. The same Cael who had reminded me that I was temporary. The same Cael who had looked me in the eyes and reduced my entire position to a contract. I immediately wiped my face with the back of my hand. The tears only mad
Sera’s POVSleep came easier than I expected.After everything that had happened throughout the day.. the meeting hall, the argument with Cael, the discovery of the strange mark on my window, and the memories it had stirred.. I should have been awake for hours.Instead, exhaustion won.I didn't even remember when my eyes closed.One moment I was lying in bed, staring at the ceiling and trying not to think about anything.The next, I was somewhere else entirely.At first, I didn't recognize the place.The sunlight was too warm. The air was too soft. It looked familiar. Painfully familiar. Then I saw the willow tree. And my heart stopped."No..."The word left my lips as a whisper, and that was not because I was afraid. Because I knew exactly where I was.This was our place. Mine and Sela's.The place we used to hide whenever we wanted to escape our responsibilities. The place where we spent countless afternoons talking about impossible dreams. The place where my twin sister had once p
Lira’s POVI had kept smiling until the doors of the meeting hall closed behind me.The moment they did, the smile vanished.Gone.The sound of my heels echoed through the corridor as I walked. My steps were steady. My breathing was calm. Anyone who saw me would think I was perfectly fine. But I wasn't.I was angry.No, angry wasn't enough.I was humiliated.That human had humiliated me.The memory played over and over in my head.Sit down.The meeting isn't over.Such simple words.Yet everyone had heard them.The elders.The council members.The representatives.Every single person in that room had watched me sit back down.And the worst part?I couldn't even argue.Because she was right.The meeting wasn't over.She was the Luna.If I had challenged her in front of everyone, I would have looked petty and immature, aside that, everyone knew how risky it was to challenge such a figure.So I sat down.Like a child being scolded.My jaw tightened.I hated her. I hated the way she spoke
Sera’s POV ; I did not breathe properly, this wasn't because I could not breathe, it was because for the fact that breathing right now simply felt like a permission that would allow something outside of me to notice me. The window was slightly covered by thick black curtains, it was night time an
Sera's POVWe arrived at Dusk borne Palace by nightfall, which I suspected was deliberate. The palace looked almost impossible at night, lit from within by thousands of lights that turned every window gold, the dark stone towers rising against the sky like something that had grown there rather than
Sera’s POVMorning came grey and cold.I hadn’t slept all through the night. I’d sat at my window and watched the cooking fires light up one by one in the settlement below as people rose before dawn the way hungry people always do… because empty stomachs don’t let you sleep past first light.I wash
Sera’s POVThe alarm bells of Thornwall hadn’t rung in three years.When they rang now, I was already running. I’d been in the war room, staring at a map that kept telling me the same terrible truth; we had food for forty more days, ammunition for twenty, and hope for about three.I’d been trying t







