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The Keep

Author: Didi's Pen
last update publish date: 2026-06-29 14:08:58

Lyra's POV

I had spent the entire journey bracing myself.

I built a picture in my head: cold stone, hostile faces, a place that matched the name of the man who owned it.

The Keep appeared as the trees thinned at dusk, massive and dark, built from stone that looked like it had been standing for centuries and had no plans to stop. It wasn't decorated or dressed up. It was just solid, in the way that things built by people who don't need to impress anyone tend to be.

It looked exactly like what it was.

The carriage rolled through the gates. Wolves lined the courtyard on both sides, not formally arranged, just present and watching. None of them spoke. They tracked the carriage with their eyes as it passed and said nothing.

I kept my face still and looked straight ahead.

A woman met me at the main entrance, middle-aged, practical build, the kind of face that didn't spend energy on expressions it hadn't earned.

"My lady. I'm Gretel. I manage the household. I'll show you to your chambers."

I followed her inside.

She led me up a staircase and down a long corridor to a door near the end. She pushed it open and stepped aside.

I walked in and stopped.

The fire was already lit. Not just coals, a proper fire, the kind you build when someone is coming and you want the room warm when they arrive. The bed was made up. A writing desk sat against the wall. Food on the small table near the fire. Bread, meat, something warm in a covered bowl. Tea, still steaming.

And the window on the far wall faced east.

I stood there and took in all of it.

"Is something wrong, my lady?" Gretel asked.

"Are all the guest rooms kept this way?"

A small pause, but there. "The Alpha gave specific instructions for this room."

I didn't answer. I crossed to the window and gazed out at the dark grounds below.

The east-facing window would catch the morning sun first. Someone had thought about that before I arrived.

"Dinner is on the table when you're ready," Gretel said. "Pull the cord by the bed if you need anything."

"Thank you," I said.

She left.

I stayed at the window after she left, staring out at a place I hadn't chosen, thinking about a fire that had been lit before I got here.

I had eaten and was sitting at the writing desk when the knock came.

I already knew who it was.

I opened the door.

Kael stood in the corridor in the same dark clothing from the journey. He moved into the room without waiting for an invitation, not rudely, just like a man who wasn't accustomed to needing one. He stopped a few feet in and surveyed the room once. Not inspecting. Just orienting.

"A few things," he said.

"All right."

He stayed standing. I stayed in the chair.

"Your title is Luna of Blackthorne. The pack will address you as such. You're expected at formal pack meals twice a week, Mondays and Fridays. Your time is your own outside of that until we establish a formal role."

"What access do I have to the grounds?"

"All of it inside the walls. Outside, I ask that you take someone with you. The outer forest borders rough territory." He said it like information, not a restriction. "It's geography, not a rule about you."

"Understood."

"The pack will take time to adjust. Some of them will be direct about it. If anyone gives you a real problem, bring it to me."

"I can handle myself," I said.

"I know."

He moved on before I could decide what to do with that. "Kitchens are open to you at any hour. Gretel reports to you on household matters now, not just to me."

I hadn't expected that. I didn't show it.

"One more thing." He said it in the same tone as everything else, like it was a minor logistical detail. The east wing library. You have access. Whenever you want."

"That's your private wing," I said.

"The library is yours to use."

No explanation. No eye contact. He moved past it like he'd mentioned where the extra blankets were kept.

I sat with that for a moment.

Then he turned toward the door.

"Wait." The word came out before I'd decided to say it.

He stopped.

"Why did you agree to this marriage?"

The room went quiet.

He stayed with his back to me, one hand near the door. I watched his jaw shift, a small movement, barely visible, like he was weighing something he hadn't planned on being asked tonight.

Then he turned just enough.

"Because the queen asked," he said.

But he didn't leave immediately.

His gaze moved to the table near the fire, the food I'd barely touched, the tea gone cold in the cup. Something crossed his face, too fast to catch. He crossed to the fireplace, picked up the iron, and adjusted the logs without a word. The fire caught and pushed more warmth into the room.

He set the iron down and left.

The door clicked shut behind him.

I sat in the chair and fixed my eyes on the fire he'd just adjusted.

Because the queen asked.

Six words. Technically true. Completely empty as an answer.

He had signed a marriage contract, prepared a room, offered his private library, and then fixed a fire he had no obligation to touch, and he wanted me to believe the queen asked him to do all of it.

The answer wasn't the thing that stayed with me.

It was the pause before it. And then the fire.

I went to bed because there was nothing else to do.

I woke all at once.

No sound, no movement, just suddenly and completely awake, the way your body wakes when it has decided something without asking you first.

The room was dark. The fire had burned low.

I turned my wrist over in the dark.

The mark was glowing. Faint and barely there, like an ember that hadn't decided yet whether to catch or fade. It pulsed once, slow, and then it was gone.

I stared at the ceiling and thought about a fire adjusted without comment and a pause that had lasted just a second too long.

I didn't sleep again until morning.

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  • The Luna He Gave Away    CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE: The Letter He Didn't Write Alone

    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.

  • The Luna He Gave Away    CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE: The Letter He Didn't Write Alone

    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

  • The Luna He Gave Away    CHAPTER TWENTY: The Question He Asked First

    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

  • The Luna He Gave Away    CHAPTER NINETEEN: The Rumor Reaches Blackthorne

    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

  • The Luna He Gave Away    CHAPTER EIGHTEEN: Gareth

    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

  • The Luna He Gave Away    What Grows in Silence

    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

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