LOGINLyra's POV
They came for me an hour after I returned to my chambers.
I had spent that hour sitting on the edge of my bed in the ceremony gown I still hadn't changed out of, looking at the wall across from me and not particularly thinking about anything. My mind had gone somewhere quiet and flat, the way it sometimes did when too much had happened too quickly and the only option was to stop processing for a while and simply exist.
The knock at my door pulled me back.
It was a palace attendant, young and formal, with the particular expression of someone delivering a message they had been told not to add anything to.
"The Alpha of Blackthorne will see you now, my lady," he said. "In the east reception room."
I stood up. I smoothed the front of my gown out of habit, then stopped, because the gown was wrinkled from hours of wear and smoothing it was not going to change that.
"Thank you," I said.
I followed him out.
I spent the walk down the corridor building the kind of internal steadiness you need when you know something difficult is ahead and you have to be able to function when you get there.
I thought about what I knew. A man who had fought three border wars. A man who had executed his first mate for betrayal. A man whose name had made four experienced court officials physically rearrange themselves in the throne room without being asked to.
I told myself: whatever he is, I will not show him that I am afraid.
That was the plan.
The attendant stopped in front of a set of double doors at the end of the east corridor, pushed them open, and stepped aside without going in.
I went in alone.
The east reception room was not large. A long table in the center, a fireplace already lit on the left wall, and two tall windows on the right looking out over the darkening grounds. Candles on the table, already burning.
And at the far end, seated with the stillness of someone who had been waiting for some time and found it entirely unremarkable, was Kael Blackthorne.
I stopped just inside the doors.
Nothing about him matched the man I had spent the walk here trying to brace myself for.
I had been expecting something that matched the name, something visibly dangerous, the kind of person whose threat announced itself the moment you walked into a room with them. What I found instead was a man whose control ran all the way down to the surface. Dark hair, dark clothing—nothing decorative about either. His hands rested on the arms of the chair with the ease of someone completely at home in their own stillness.
He was tall in the way that came from proportion rather than height alone, broad through the shoulders without the bulk that suggested vanity.
His was the kind of build that came from years of actual use rather than cultivation—a body that had been through things and simply looked like it. His face was angular and settled, the face of a man who had stopped caring whether it was pleasant to look at long before anyone got the chance to tell him otherwise. Dark eyes, very still, the kind that took inventory without advertising the fact.
He was looking at the documents on the table in front of him.
He did not look up when I walked in.
I crossed the room and took the chair directly across from him, because standing there waiting for him to acknowledge me felt worse than sitting down. The chair scraped against the floor as I pulled it out.
He still didn't look up.
But his hand, which had been moving to turn a page, paused.
Just a fraction of a second. His fingers rested on the edge of the paper without completing the motion, and then, as if nothing had interrupted him at all, he turned the page and kept reading.
I folded my hands on the table and waited.
He had a scar along the left side of his jaw. Small, old, long since healed. It was the only thing about his face that suggested any history at all.
He read through the remaining pages without rushing, without any visible reaction to what was in them. When he was done, he picked up the pen and signed in three places. Set it down. Moved the signed pages to one side.
He still had not looked at me.
I kept my hands folded and my face even and said nothing because I had come into this room with one goal, and that goal was not to give him anything he could use.
Then he spoke.
"The ceremony will take place at dawn." His voice was low and even, the kind that didn't need volume to carry weight. "I expect punctuality."
"Understood," I said.
"You'll be given a list of what to bring." He straightened the stack of documents with a small, precise movement. "Keep it manageable. We travel efficiently."
"All right."
He said nothing else.
He didn't ask if I had questions. He didn't acknowledge that I had been publicly rejected six hours ago and was now sitting across from him in a wrinkled ceremony gown being handed a departure schedule. He didn't look at me with pity, satisfaction, or even the basic curiosity most people showed when meeting someone for the first time.
He simply wasn't interested.
Which was something I was accustomed to. I had spent most of my life being unremarkable to people who should have known better. I knew how to sit across from someone like that and not let it land.
I pressed my hands flat against the table and started to stand.
He rose first.
He gathered the documents and stood in one smooth motion, and I noticed as he did how much space he occupied without appearing to try.
He came around the end of the table toward the door.
I was still rising from my chair, which meant he was going to pass me on his way out. I straightened and looked at the fireplace across the room and gave him space to pass.
He passed the end of my chair.
And stopped.
Not a full stop. Not a decision. It was smaller, a single step that caught, just barely, the way a person catches when something interrupts a thought mid-motion. His forward momentum didn't break. His expression didn't change. But the step was fractionally shorter than the ones before it, and the pause was just long enough for me to know that I hadn't imagined it.
Then he kept walking.
He went through the door without looking back. His footsteps faded down the corridor. The room went quiet except for the fire.
I stood there and looked at the empty doorway for a moment.
Then I walked back to my chambers with no clearer understanding of him than when I had entered the room.
I didn't sleep.
I lay on top of the covers in the dark and listened to the palace go quiet around me, the way it always did past a certain hour one sound at a time until there was nothing left.
Sometime past midnight, I heard movement in the corridor outside my door.
A shift of weight. Someone adjusting their position after standing still for too long. Normal, unremarkable except that the sound was coming from the wrong place.
The guard who had been stationed outside my door all day stood three feet to the left of the door frame. I had walked past him five times today, and his position had lodged in my memory without my asking it to. What I was hearing now was coming from the right.
I got up, crossed the room, and opened the door.
The corridor was empty in both directions.
The torches on either side of my doorway were burning with fresh oil clean and sharp, nothing like the faint smokiness of torches that had been burning for hours. Someone had replaced them quietly while I was lying awake. Without knocking. Without announcing themselves.
And the man standing at my door was not the palace guard.
He was dressed in black from shoulder to boot. On his chest, stitched in silver, was a wolf's head.
He stared straight ahead at the wall across the corridor. He gave no greeting. No explanation. No indication that he was aware of me standing two feet away from him in the doorway.
He was simply there.
I looked at the silver wolf on his chest. At the fresh torches. At the empty space where the palace guard had been.
I closed the door.
I stood in the center of my room in the dark and thought about one thing.
Not the ceremony tomorrow. Not the rejection, not my father, not the contract signed in three places by a man who hadn't once looked at me.
Just this:
He had rearranged my door in the middle of the night without telling me. Without asking. Without offering a single word of explanation.
Why?
That was the question that sat in my chest and wouldn't settle.
I went back to my bed, sat on the edge of it in the dark, and turned the question over without finding an answer, and I already knew I wasn't going to sleep.
Lyra's POVI heard Kael's footsteps before I saw him. I knew them well enough by now to recognize them before he came around the corner. He didn't call out or announce himself. He just appeared in the stable entrance with an envelope in his hand and crossed to where I was standing by the second stall.The stables were at the far edge of the inner grounds, past the training yard and the storage buildings, far enough from the main keep that the sounds of the household didn't reach them. The horses didn't care who I was or what title I held. They just moved and breathed and made the kind of noise that filled a space without demanding anything.I’d been coming here for two weeks.He held it out.I took it.The handwriting on the front was the palace's official script, but the name was mine, and the return address was my father's estate.I opened it and started reading.The letter was two pages.It asked after my health. My comfort. Whether the transition to Blackthorne had been difficult.
Lyra's POVI heard Kael's footsteps before I saw him. I knew them well enough by now to recognize them before he came around the corner. He didn't call out or announce himself. He just appeared in the stable entrance with an envelope in his hand and crossed to where I was standing by the second stall.The stables were at the far edge of the inner grounds, past the training yard and the storage buildings, far enough from the main keep that the sounds of the household didn't reach them. The horses didn't care who I was or what title I held. They just moved and breathed and made the kind of noise that filled a space without demanding anything.I had been coming here for two weeks.He held it out.I took it.The handwriting on the front was the palace's official script, but the name was mine, and the return address was my father's estate.I opened it and started reading.The letter was two pages.It asked after my health. My comfort. Whether the transition to Blackthorne had been difficul
Kael's POVI just could not get it out of my head.That was what really bothered me. I’d spent four years learning how to deal with things, figuring out what they meant, and then putting them away so they did not bother me anymore. I’d done this with things that were a lot worse than what happened at the dinner table.I couldn't do it with this.I sat in my study with the fire low, and thought about the look I had given the merchant. I hadn't planned it. I hadn't weighed whether it was the right political move. My wolf had moved before I did, the same way it had moved at the dinner with Isolde and Ronan, the same way it had moved in the hallway with Gareth.There was no reason for it, no plan. I just did it.That was becoming a pattern I couldn't explain away.I pulled the intelligence file toward me because it was easier than sitting with the other thing.I had read this page before. Weeks ago. I had marked it and moved on because there had been more pressing matters at the time: Iso
BlackthorneLyra's POVThe merchant arrived on a Tuesday.He came with a supply order for the keep's winter stores legitimate business, Gretel had arranged it weeks ago. He was the kind of man who talked through meals, the kind who filled silence because he didn't notice it was comfortable.He sat near the middle of the great hall table, two seats down from one of the junior council members, and he talked through dinner the way he probably talked through everything.I was at the far end of the table, going over a document Kael had passed to me that morning. I wasn't paying close attention to the merchant until I heard my name.He didn't say it like a weapon. That was the thing. He said it like a piece of news he had picked up in the city and hadn't thought twice about."There's talk about your Luna, actually," he said, to no one in particular. "In the capital. Word is she was placed here because there was nowhere else for her to go. The Alpha took her as a courtesy." He reached for his
Lyra's POVKael found me two days after I got back from the eastern quarters.I was in the small study off the west corridor going through the winter welfare requests when he walked in and set a folder on the desk in front of me."Gareth suggested you handle this," he said.I looked up. "Gareth.""He said you'd know what to do with it."He wasn't offering an opinion. He wasn't telling me what to think about the fact that the man who had called me a palace castoff in a corridor three weeks ago had just formally put my name forward for an assignment.He was waiting for me to pick up the folder.I picked it up."Eastern territory boundary dispute," he said. "Two families. Two seasons unresolved. It escalated last week; one blocked the other's access to the shared water source. I need it handled before winter."I opened it and started reading."How much authority do I have?" I asked."Enough to make a binding decision if it comes to that.""When do I leave?""Tomorrow morning. Gareth assi
Lyra's POVThe morning after Gareth walked in with that satchel, Blackthorne moved forward the way it always did.I let it.There were things on my table by breakfast. A note from one of the outer families about a border predator that had taken two of their goats. A question from the eastern quarters about a disagreement over shared storage space going into winter. A request from a packmate I had never spoken to, asking if someone could check whether the winter store allocation was being distributed fairly.None of it had been formally directed to me.It had simply arrived.I worked through each one before midday. The border predator issue I passed to Gareth with a note about which patrol route ran closest to that family's land. The storage dispute I handled myself. I walked to the eastern quarters, listened to both sides, and found a middle arrangement that neither party loved enough to keep arguing about. The store allocation question I brought to Gretel, who already had the numbers







