MasukThe palace corridors were different after midnight.
Silent except for the distant drip of water somewhere deep in the stone. Torchlight flickered low, casting long, wavering shadows that seemed to follow Caelan as he walked. No guards escorted him this time. Rowan had simply appeared at his door shortly before the hour, unlocked it without a word, and pointed down the hall. “East tower. Top floor. Don’t get lost.” Then he had vanished back into the darkness. Caelan moved carefully, bare feet silent on cold marble. He wore the same roughspun shirt and trousers from the lower halls. No one had given him anything finer. The silver collar still sat heavy at his throat, a constant weight he could not ignore. He climbed spiral stairs that narrowed with every turn until he reached a small landing. A single iron door stood ajar, faint firelight spilling through the gap. He paused, hand hovering over the latch. The bond hummed louder here, a vibration in his blood that made his skin prickle and his breath shallow. He could smell Lucien even from the threshold: leather, smoke, storm-charged air. Closer now. Undeniable. Caelan pushed the door open and stepped inside. The eastern tower room was circular, smaller than he expected. High windows let in moonlight that silvered the floorboards. A low fire burned in a brazier near the center. Shelves lined the curved walls, filled with scrolls, maps, and strange glass vials that caught the light like captured stars. In the middle of the room stood a heavy oak table, and behind it, King Lucien. He had shed the royal cloak and leathers of the day. Now he wore only a black linen shirt, sleeves rolled to the elbows, and dark trousers. His hair was loose, falling in uneven waves around his face. He looked less like a king and more like a man who had not slept in days. Lucien did not speak at first. He simply watched Caelan cross the threshold, eyes tracking every movement. Caelan stopped several paces away and dropped to one knee out of habit. “Your Majesty.” “Stand.” The command was quiet, almost gentle. Caelan rose slowly. Lucien gestured to the chair opposite the table. “Sit.” Caelan obeyed. The chair was hard, unyielding. He kept his hands folded in his lap to hide the faint tremor. For a long moment neither spoke. Lucien finally moved, circling the table until he stood beside Caelan. Close enough that heat radiated from him. Close enough that Caelan could see the tension in the line of his jaw, the way his fingers flexed at his sides as though fighting the urge to reach out. “You are afraid,” Lucien said. Not a question. Caelan considered lying. Then discarded it. “Yes.” “Of me?” “Of what this means.” Lucien exhaled through his nose, a sound that was almost a growl. “Tell me your name again.” “Caelan Ashford.” “Age.” “Twenty-three.” “Family?” “Dead. Or as good as.” Lucien’s gaze dropped to the collar. “Who put that on you?” “My father. Before he died.” “Why?” “To hide me.” Lucien reached out slowly. His fingers brushed the silver band, then hooked beneath it, lifting it slightly from Caelan’s skin. The touch was careful, almost reverent. “Hide what?” Caelan’s throat tightened. He had never spoken the truth aloud. Not once. “My bloodline.” Lucien’s eyes narrowed. “Explain.” “My mother was not Ashford pack. She was taken from the old royal line. The one your family overthrew three centuries ago.” Silence. Lucien’s grip on the collar tightened fractionally. “You carry the blood of the fallen kings.” “Yes.” “And your pack knew.” “They suspected. My mother never spoke of it after she was captured. But the collar suppressed the royal scent markers. Kept me from being recognized as anything more than a disgraced omega.” Lucien released the collar and stepped back. He turned away, staring into the brazier flames. “Do you know what this means?” “That if the truth comes out, I become a threat. To you. To the throne.” Lucien laughed once, low and bitter. “A threat. Yes. And more.” He faced Caelan again. “The bond does not care about bloodlines or thrones. It only knows truth. And the truth is you are mine.” Caelan’s heart slammed against his ribs. “But the law…” “The law was written by men who feared what they could not control.” Lucien’s voice roughened. “I have ruled by strength and fear for two hundred years. I could rewrite it tomorrow if I chose.” “Then why hesitate?” Lucien crossed the distance in two strides and braced both hands on the arms of Caelan’s chair, caging him in. Their faces were inches apart. “Because if I claim you, I start a war I may not win. Because the council will call me weak. Because my brother already watches me like a hawk waiting for the kill. And because once I touch you the way I want to, there will be no going back.” Caelan could not look away. Storm-gray eyes held him captive. “Then don’t touch me,” he whispered. Lucien’s laugh was darker this time. “Too late for that.” He leaned closer. His breath ghosted over Caelan’s lips. “But I will give you this one chance. Tell me to send you away. Tell me to give you to another house, another alpha, anywhere but here. And I will do it. Tonight.” Caelan’s pulse roared in his ears. He could lie. He could beg for release. But the bond sang between them, loud and insistent. And beneath the fear was something else. Something that had been starved for years. Want. “I don’t want to leave,” Caelan said softly. Lucien closed his eyes for a heartbeat, as though the words pained him. When he opened them again, the silver had gone molten. “Then you stay.” He straightened, but did not step back. “Tomorrow I will summon the master healer. He will examine the collar. See if it can be removed without killing you.” Caelan swallowed. “And if it can?” “Then we face what comes next. Together.” The word hung between them, heavy with promise and peril. Lucien finally moved away, toward the door. “Return to your room. Lock it. Speak to no one until I send for you.” Caelan rose on unsteady legs. At the threshold he paused. “Your Majesty.” Lucien looked back. “Thank you. For the choice.” Lucien’s expression softened, just for a second. “Do not thank me yet, Caelan. This is only the beginning.” The door closed behind him. Caelan descended the tower stairs in silence, the bond still thrumming in his chest like a second heartbeat. He had chosen. And now the king had chosen him back. In the darkness of the lower halls, something ancient and dangerous stirred awake. The fallen bloodline. The forbidden mate. And two brothers who would soon discover just how far they were willing to go for what they wanted.Twenty years had passed since the final victory at the Crown of Bones.The kingdom had settled into a deep, enduring peace.Dravenhold had become a city of light and growth. New districts rose where ruins once stood, filled with markets, schools, and homes for omegas who no longer lived as tributes. The palace gardens bloomed year-round, a living symbol of renewal. The trade routes were thriving, carrying goods from the western border to the southern territories. The packs had learned to live with the new reality: a king who ruled with both strength and love, and a consort who had once been sent as tribute but now stood as an equal and a voice for change.Caelan walked the familiar path through the palace gardens with Lucien at his side. Their fingers were loosely entwined. The silver band on Caelan’s finger caught the moonlight with every step. The mating bite on his neck had long since faded to a pale, permanent mark — a cherished scar that told the story of a bond that had survived
Fifteen years had passed since the final victory at the Crown of Bones.The kingdom had changed.Dravenhold was no longer a city scarred by war. New districts had risen where ruins once stood. The palace gardens bloomed year-round with night-blooming jasmine and silverpine roses. The trade routes were busy again, carrying goods from the western border to the southern territories. The packs had learned to live with the new reality: a king who ruled with both strength and love, and a consort who had once been sent as tribute but now stood as an equal.Caelan walked the familiar path through the palace gardens with Lucien at his side. Their fingers were loosely entwined. The silver band on Caelan’s finger caught the moonlight with every step. The mating bite on his neck had long since faded to a pale, permanent mark — a cherished scar that told the story of a bond that had survived war, rebellion, and the weight of a kingdom.Elara, now fifteen, walked a little ahead with her younger bro
Fifteen years had passed since the final victory at the Crown of Bones.The kingdom had changed.Dravenhold was no longer a city scarred by war. New districts had risen where ruins once stood. The palace gardens bloomed year-round with night-blooming jasmine and silverpine roses. The trade routes were busy again, carrying goods from the western border to the southern territories. The packs had learned to live with the new reality: a king who ruled with both strength and love, and a consort who had once been sent as tribute but now stood as an equal.Caelan walked the familiar path through the palace gardens with Lucien at his side. Their fingers were loosely entwined. The silver band on Caelan’s finger caught the moonlight with every step. The mating bite on his neck had long since faded to a pale, permanent mark — a cherished scar that told the story of a bond that had survived war, rebellion, and the weight of a kingdom.Elara, now fifteen, walked a little ahead with her younger bro
Fifteen years had passed since the final victory at the Crown of Bones.The kingdom had changed.Dravenhold was no longer a city scarred by war. New districts had risen where ruins once stood. The palace gardens bloomed year-round with night-blooming jasmine and silverpine roses. The trade routes were busy again, carrying goods from the western border to the southern territories. The packs had learned to live with the new reality: a king who ruled with both strength and love, and a consort who had once been sent as tribute but now stood as an equal.Caelan walked the familiar path through the palace gardens with Lucien at his side. Their fingers were loosely entwined. The silver band on Caelan’s finger caught the moonlight with every step. The mating bite on his neck had long since faded to a pale, permanent mark — a cherished scar that told the story of a bond that had survived war, rebellion, and the weight of a kingdom.Elara, now fifteen, walked a little ahead with her younger bro
Fifteen years had passed since the final victory at the Crown of Bones.The kingdom had changed.Dravenhold was no longer a city scarred by war. New districts had risen where ruins once stood. The palace gardens bloomed year-round with night-blooming jasmine and silverpine roses. The trade routes were busy again, carrying goods from the western border to the southern territories. The packs had learned to live with the new reality: a king who ruled with both strength and love, and a consort who had once been sent as tribute but now stood as an equal.Caelan walked the familiar path through the palace gardens with Lucien at his side. Their fingers were loosely entwined. The silver band on Caelan’s finger caught the moonlight with every step. The mating bite on his neck had long since faded to a pale, permanent mark — a cherished scar that told the story of a bond that had survived war, rebellion, and the weight of a kingdom.Elara, now fifteen, walked a little ahead with her younger bro
Fifteen years had passed since the final victory at the Crown of Bones.The kingdom had changed.Dravenhold was no longer a city scarred by war. New districts had risen where ruins once stood. The palace gardens bloomed year-round with night-blooming jasmine and silverpine roses. The trade routes were busy again, carrying goods from the western border to the southern territories. The packs had learned to live with the new reality: a king who ruled with both strength and love, and a consort who had once been sent as tribute but now stood as an equal.Caelan walked the familiar path through the palace gardens with Lucien at his side. Their fingers were loosely entwined. The silver band on Caelan’s finger caught the moonlight with every step. The mating bite on his neck had long since faded to a pale, permanent mark — a cherished scar that told the story of a bond that had survived war, rebellion, and the weight of a kingdom.Elara, now fifteen, walked a little ahead with her younger bro
The royal legions continued their march north toward the capital, the weight of war slowly lifting from their shoulders with every passing day.The southern wilds gave way to gentler hills and familiar forests. The air grew cleaner, the mist thinner. Wounded soldiers rode in carts, but their spirit
The royal palace felt heavier in the weeks following the latest Shadow Crown demand. Caelan stood in the war room beside Lucien, maps of the southern wilds spread across the long table. The bond between them hummed with quiet tension — not the sharp fear of early battles, but the steady weight of a
The great hall smelled of death and victory.Blood pooled in the cracks of the black marble. Bodies of Shadow Crown warriors lay where they had fallen, their old royal banners trampled and torn. The surviving nobles stood in stunned silence, many clutching wounds or leaning on guards for support. T
Dawn broke cold and sharp over Blackthorn Pass.The royal legions formed ranks on the wide plain before the narrow mouth of the pass. Silver and black banners snapped in the wind. Thousands of armored wolves stood ready, swords drawn, claws extended, eyes fixed on the fortified enemy lines ahead.C







