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Chapter 3: Forbidden Flames

Author: Ozioma
last update publish date: 2026-06-18 17:21:23

The days that followed blurred into a delicate balance of courtly duties and hidden longing. Omega Cassian Vale found himself constantly aware of the changes within his body. A persistent warmth had settled low in his belly, and his scent seemed richer, sweeter than before, so much so that he'd taken to wearing a heavier oil of crushed lavender and cedar shavings just to mask it before council sessions. His chest felt more sensitive beneath his robes, tender in a way that made even the weight of formal silk uncomfortable by midday. Waves of nausea came and went at unpredictable hours, usually just after he woke, sometimes again in the deep afternoon when the smell of roasting meat drifted up from the castle kitchens. He told himself it was stress, the strain of secrecy, the exhaustion of stolen nights, but a quiet voice in the back of his mind knew better, had known for weeks now, and grew harder to silence with each passing day.

It was his handmaiden, Wren, who noticed first.

She had served him since childhood, a steady, watchful presence through every season of his life at court, discreet in a household where discretion was currency. She found him one grey morning kneeling over a washbasin in his private chamber, pale and trembling in the aftermath of sickness, his knuckles white against the basin's rim. Her eyes went first to his face, drawn and damp with sweat, then, slowly, carefully, the way one might approach something fragile, to the loosened ties of his sleeping robe, to the new fullness at his waist that he had been hiding under looser cuts of silk for weeks now, telling the seamstress it was simply a change in fashion he preferred.

"My lord," she whispered, kneeling beside him on the cold stone floor, her hand hovering before it settled, featherlight, against the curve she'd uncovered. "How far along are you?"

Cassian's breath caught in his throat. There was no use denying it now, not with her hand already resting there, wonderingly, against the life growing beneath his skin. He closed his eyes, feeling something between relief and terror unspool in his chest, relief that someone finally knew, terror at what knowing might cost her.

"I don't know exactly," he admitted, voice shaking as he sank back against the wall. "Two months. Maybe closer to three, now."

Wren's expression shifted through several things at once, shock, fear, and beneath it, something fiercer. Loyalty, plain and unshakable. "The king," she said quietly. "It's his."

It wasn't a question, but Cassian nodded anyway, unable to summon the words.

"Then you have to tell him. Before someone else finds out first, a physician, a laundress who notices your linens, anyone." She gripped his hand where it rested over his belly, urgency threading through her voice. "You cannot carry this alone much longer, my lord. Not in a castle with this many eyes."

"I know." Cassian pressed his hand over hers, grateful beyond words that at least one person in this gilded, watchful place looked at him with nothing but concern. "Tonight. I'll tell him tonight, I swear it."

But the court, as it so often did, had other plans for him.

Barely an hour after he'd dressed and composed himself enough to appear presentable, a summons arrived, not from Kael, but from Prince Rowan's steward, informing Cassian that he had been selected to join a delegation of lesser nobles touring the eastern garrison that very afternoon. It was an assignment far beneath his standing, the kind typically given to minor functionaries eager to curry favor, and Cassian understood at once what it truly was. Rowan wanted him away from the castle. Away from Kael. For reasons he could not yet name, though every instinct screamed a warning.

To refuse would draw more attention than to comply, so he swallowed his frustration, dressed for travel, and climbed into the waiting carriage as the midday sun cut hard shadows across the courtyard stones. He did not know, as the gates closed behind him, that the moment he was gone from the castle walls, Prince Rowan moved.

In a locked study three floors above the throne room, Rowan met not with allies this time, but with a problem.

His chosen witness, a disgraced border captain named Hollis, paid handsomely to swear before the court that he had seen Cassian meeting secretly with scouts from the enemy packs, sat rigid across the table, his jaw set, his hands flat and unmoving before him.

"I won't perjure myself before the king," Hollis said, low and hard. "Not for coin, not for you, Your Grace. If this unravels, if anyone thinks to question the timeline of my supposed sightings"

"It will not unravel." Rowan's voice was silk laid over steel, unhurried, almost gentle. He reached into the folds of his coat and set a single folded document on the table between them. Not payment this time, but something far colder, proof, carefully constructed, that Hollis's own brother owed debts to men who did not forgive debts quietly, debts forged just convincingly enough to hang the man twice over should anyone come looking.

"You'll testify precisely as we discussed," Rowan continued, watching the color drain slowly from the captain's face. "Or your brother answers for crimes he never committed, before magistrates who will not care for the truth of it. Someone pays a price either way, Captain. The only choice left to you is whether it is a stranger's life on that gallows, or your own brother's."

Hollis said nothing. His silence was answer enough, and Rowan allowed himself the smallest, coldest smile before rising and letting himself out.

Alone in the corridor beyond, some of the composure slipped from Rowan's features, not guilt, precisely, but the tightness of a man aware he was running out of room to maneuver cleanly. Coercion was not elegant. It left threads, and threads could be pulled by anyone patient enough to look. But time had become his enemy. Every week that passed, the omega's belly grew fuller beneath his robes, and with it grew the danger that Kael would notice himself, would confess the truth to the assembled court before Rowan could strike first, would perhaps even claim the omega openly as his mate, child and all, and make the entire scheme worthless. The accusation had to land before the pregnancy became undeniable. Before it became something the realm might, against all custom, choose to forgive.

Cassian returned past midnight, exhausted from the long ride and the strain of maintaining pleasant courtly conversation while his body ached and his mind circled endlessly back to Wren's warning. He went straight for the hidden passage behind the old tapestry, resolved now beyond any doubt. Tonight. No interruptions, no delays, no losing his nerve at the last moment. Kael would know the truth before the sun rose over Shadowfang's towers.

But when he slipped at last into the royal chambers, breathless and steeling himself, he found them empty. The fire had burned low. A young servant, apologetic and half-asleep on his feet, informed him that the king had been called into emergency council with Prince Rowan regarding troubling reports from the border, and was not expected to return before dawn.

Cassian sat alone on the edge of the great fur-covered bed, one hand pressed protectively to the curve of his belly, and felt, for the first time since this had all begun, a fear that went beyond discovery. It was the fear of watching walls close in slowly, deliberately, around something he could no longer protect through silence alone.

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  • The Alpha King's Pregnant Omega   Chapter 22: The King's Doubt

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