The sun rose over the Capital, which was rude, honestly. The sun should have had the decency to stay behind a cloud considering the absolute disaster on the ground.
The Grand Pavilion—once the jewel of the Royal Gardens—was now a very expensive pile of firewood.
Primrose sat on a mostly intact marble bench, staring at the ruins. She was wearing a dress covered in soot, her hair was a bird’s nest, and she had a ring on her finger worth more than a small island.
"So," Primrose muttered to herself. "I’m engaged. And homeless."
"Technically," a smooth voice corrected from behind her, "you are transient. Homeless implies poverty. You are merely... displaced."
Caspian sat down next to her. He had somehow managed to clean the dust off his blue velvet coat, though his hair was still damp from the water shield. He handed her a cup of tea.
"Where did you get tea?" Primrose asked, taking it greedily.
"I boiled the water in the air and stole a tea bag from a surviving waiter," Caspian said calmly. "Drink. You look like a raccoon."
"Thank you, darling," Primrose sighed, leaning her head on his shoulder.
A few feet away, the Council of Cubs was waking up. They had camped out on a pile of velvet curtains that Rurik had scavenged from the wreckage.
Vali popped his head up, his wolf ears twitching. He shook himself like a wet dog, sending a cloud of grey dust everywhere.
"That was awesome!" Vali cheered. "Did you see the roof go boom? Can we do it again?"
Jasper sat up slowly. The Snake Cub looked like a tragic Victorian orphan. His silk robes were ruined.
"No," Jasper said flatly. "I have sand in my scales. I feel gritty. This is a violation of my human rights."
Orion was currently lying in a decorative fountain that Caspian had refilled. He blew a bubble. "The humidity here is unacceptable. My gills are dry."
Arjun was already awake. He was doing push-ups next to Rajah.
"One hundred and two!" Rajah counted, looking proud but exhausted. "Good form, son. The enemy never sleeps, so neither do we!"
"Yes, Father!" Arjun squeaked, his arms shaking.
Primrose watched them. They were dirty, tired, and traumatized... but they were together.
An hour later, the adults gathered around a makeshift table (which was actually a door Rurik had ripped off its hinges and balanced on two rocks).
Rajah, Leonora, Rurik, Cassian, Lucien, Caspian, Primrose, and Jax.
The mood was grim.
"We can’t stay in the Capital," Rajah said, crossing his massive arms. "The Boss knows we’re here. He can target the open sky. Next time, he won’t drop a roof. He’ll drop a mountain."
"My territory in the North is out," Rurik grunted. "Open tundra. Nowhere to hide from aerial attacks. Plus, Vali would freeze."
"Hey!" Vali shouted from the background. "I have fur!"
"The Sea is safe," Caspian offered. "My underwater citadel is impenetrable."
"For fish," Cassian pointed out, adjusting his glasses. "The pressure would crush the land-kin children unless we kept shields up 24/7. And Jasper gets seasick."
"I do not!" Jasper yelled. "I just... prefer stability!"
"We need a fortress," Leonora said, wincing as she adjusted the bandage on her arm. "Somewhere with a roof. Somewhere the Boss’s Void eyes can’t see."
Silence fell over the table.
Then, the shadows in the corner lengthened.
"There is one place," Lucien said softly.
Everyone turned to the Panther Lord. He was standing in the shade of a broken pillar, arms crossed.
"The Obsidian Jungle," Lucien said. "My estate."
Rurik frowned. "The Nightshade Territory? Isn’t that place... you know. Creepy?"
"It is secure," Lucien ignored him. "The canopy is three hundred feet thick. Sunlight does not touch the ground. Void magic relies on line-of-sight from the sky. In my jungle, the sky does not exist."
He looked at Primrose.
"And," Lucien added, his voice dropping an octave, "I have the Great Library. If Cassian wishes to study the Void Crystal... that is where the answers are."
Primrose felt a chill. She remembered Chapter 14. She remembered the story of the locked box.
She looked over at the kids.
Silas was sitting apart from the group, holding a piece of burnt toast. When Lucien said Obsidian Jungle, Silas went very still.
His ears pinned back against his skull. The toast dropped from his hand.
He didn’t scream. He just... vanished. Not magically, but mentally. His violet eyes went flat. He pulled his knees to his chest.
The Box, Primrose thought.
She stood up and walked over to him. She knelt down, ignoring the dust on her dress.
"Silas?" she whispered.
Silas didn’t blink. He was staring at something a thousand miles away.
"Dark," Silas whispered. The word was so quiet it was almost a thought. "Too dark."
Primrose’s heart broke. He was five years old. He shouldn’t have to be brave about going back to the place where his parents died and he was locked in a vault.
"It is dark," Primrose agreed softly. "But look."
She held up her hand.
Whoosh.
A ball of soft, white Fox Fire appeared in her palm. It wasn’t hot; it was warm and comforting, like a nightlight.



VERIFYCAPTCHA_LABEL
Comments
The readers' comments on the novel: Raising Beast Cubs to Find a Husband