MasukWe brought Elder Sable inside before Lyra fully woke, settling her in the kitchen with tea she accepted without comment on its quality, her sharp eyes moving over every corner of the room as though cataloguing it out of old habit rather than genuine interest. It was there, over the following hour, that she explained exactly what had brought her to our door in the middle of the night."I trained an Anchor child once before," she said. "Nearly a century ago. The last one this world produced before your daughter came along and reminded everyone the bloodline had not gone as dormant as they liked to believe." Something crossed her face, brief and unreadable, gone before I could name it fully, old grief perhaps, or old pride, I could not tell which. "I know what it looks like when that kind of power arrives in a child too young to understand what she is carrying. I know, considerably better than most, what happens to children like her when the wrong people decide to help them understand it
The envoy left without further argument, though the particular quality of his retreat, unhurried, entirely unbothered, told me clearly enough that Kael's refusal had cost him considerably less than either of us hoped it would.That afternoon, two visiting Alphas arrived to discuss the trial's aftermath, allies who had supported the case against Marcus and now wanted assurances about how the territory intended to handle whatever came next. The conversation, civil enough at the start, deteriorated within the hour into something considerably less diplomatic, both men raising their voices over a disagreement about jurisdiction that had apparently been simmering between their territories for years before any of this began, old grievances surfacing with a heat that had nothing to do with Marcus or the Rite Council at all.Lyra wandered into the sitting room partway through it, drawn, I imagine, by the sound of adults arguing in the particular tone children always seem able to identify insta
Gideon joined us at the window within minutes of Kael waking him, and by the time the watchers finally withdrew back into the deeper trees just after sunrise, he had already begun explaining, in the same careful, methodical voice he used for everything, exactly what we were actually facing. Lyra was still asleep down the hall, blessedly unaware of the wolves who had spent the night studying her home from a distance, and I found myself grateful, for once, that Violet had insisted on staying close enough to hear if anything woke her."The Rite Council is not new," he said, settling at the small table where we had opened Lyra's letter only hours before, his voice low enough not to carry beyond the room. "It is old enough that most packs no longer believe it still exists in any meaningful capacity, which is precisely how it has managed to remain effective for as long as it has. It has shaped Alpha politics from the shadows for centuries, rarely acting directly, preferring instead to work
We opened it in the study, just the four of us, Kael, Gideon, Lyra, and me, the door closed against the rest of the household while the estate settled into whatever fragile peace it could manage after the day's ceremony. The candle between us burned low and steady, throwing soft shadows across the desk where Gideon's own documents had once been spread for so many long nights of preparation, the same room where we had built the case that finally brought Marcus down now hosting whatever came next.Lyra sat on my lap, watching with open curiosity as I broke the seal, entirely unaware of the particular dread the rest of us were carrying into this small, quiet room.The letter was formal, precise, written in the same careful, ancient script as the first one that had arrived weeks earlier and been quietly set aside. This one did not request future audience. It requested Lyra's presence, specifically, for what it called a formal evaluation, citing her demonstrated abilities as a matter of co
The ceremony was held three days later, once the Council had finished the last of its formal business, and it was, in its own quiet way, more difficult to stand through than the trial itself had been.Every Alpha who had attended the proceedings remained for it, filling the same grand hall one final time, sunlight falling differently through the high windows now, warmer somehow than it had felt during any session of the trial itself, as though even the light understood the difference between an accusation and a restoration. Elder Thorne rose before all of them to deliver words I had waited eight years to hear spoken with this much weight behind them."By unanimous decision of this Council," he said, "the names of Alpha King Ronan Ashford and Luna Queen Elara Ashford are hereby cleared of every accusation, rumor, and suspicion that has shadowed them since the night of their deaths. Their legacy is restored in full, their honor returned, their memory to be recorded, from this day forwar
The search for Marcus continued through the night without success, and by morning Elder Thorne made the decision to proceed with the remaining business of the trial regardless. Justice for one crime, he said, did not need to wait on the capture of a man who had already been formally condemned for it, and I understood, watching him say it, that he was choosing to give the hall something solid to hold onto in the absence of the closure Marcus's capture would have provided.Selena's sentencing came first.She stood before the Council pale and hollow, none of the composure she had once carried so effortlessly anywhere in her bearing, a woman who had spent the previous night, I suspected, replaying the exact moment her own words had confirmed Marcus's guilt in front of an entire hall, understanding perhaps for the first time in her life exactly what unguarded honesty could cost a person."The Council finds Selena Vale complicit in the events leading to the deaths of Alpha King Ronan Ashfor







