[Kira’s POV]
I woke in fragments.
Light first—soft, warm, nothing like the torches in the cell. Then sensation—clean sheets beneath me, pillows supporting my head, the smell of healing herbs and something floral that didn’t burn when I breathed it in.
Then pain—deep, radiating, the kind that lives in bone rather than skin, a reminder that my body had been at war with itself for weeks and hadn’t finished counting the casualties.
Then Malik’s hand, wrapped around mine. Warm. Steady. Present.
I drifted back under before I could speak.
The next time I surfaced, healers surrounded my bed—three of them, their hands glowing with the pale green light of restorative magic, working in focused silence along my arms, my torso, the places where the poison had done its worst damage.
I could feel what they were doing—pulling toxins from tissue that had absorbed them so deeply the extraction felt like being turned inside out, rebuilding cellular structures that had been methodically dissolved over days of captivity.
Malik sat in a chair beside my bed. He hadn’t moved. I could tell by the shadows beneath his eyes and the rumpled state of clothing he’d clearly been wearing for days that he’d barely slept, barely eaten, barely done anything except sit in that chair and hold my hand and wait for me to come back to him.
My lips moved. The sound that came out was barely a whisper, scraped raw by whatever the poison had done to my throat. “The babies.”
His hand tightened around mine, and when he spoke, his voice was rough with an emotion he wasn’t trying to hide.
“Both stable, Kira. The healers have been monitoring them constantly—their heartbeats are strong, their development is on track, and whatever the poison targeted, your magic protected them. Even suppressed, even weakened, even while it couldn’t protect you—it wrapped around them and held on. They’re safe. You’re going to recover. All three of you.”
Relief flooded through me with a force that made my eyes sting and my chest ache with something too large to contain.
I closed my eyes and let the tears fall—not from pain, not from grief, but from the sheer, overwhelming gratitude of a woman who’d spent days in chains wondering if the heartbeats beneath her palm would survive what was being done to her body.
I slept again. Woke again. Slept. The pattern repeated for what might have been hours or days—consciousness arriving in waves that grew gradually longer, each one bringing more clarity, more strength, more awareness of the room around me and the man who never left it.
The healers came and went. They explained what the poison had done—systematically attacking organ function, degrading magical pathways, mimicking the natural exhaustion of pregnancy so perfectly that even skilled healers might have missed it until the damage became irreversible.
The same compound used on Maelric, they confirmed, though my doses had been more concentrated. If the rescue had come even days later, the damage would have been permanent.
“You’re recovering faster than we expected, Your Majesty,” the head healer told me on what I later learned was the fourth day, her voice carrying the cautious optimism of a professional who’d spent the last week uncertain whether her patient would survive.
“The royal magic is reasserting itself aggressively now that the suppression manacles have been removed. It’s prioritizing the children, which is slowing your own recovery somewhat, but we’ve adjusted our treatment accordingly. Full recovery will take weeks, possibly months. But you will recover.”
Weeks. Months. The words should have frustrated me—there was a kingdom to run, a council to manage, the aftermath of the Order’s dismantling to oversee.
“I didn’t do it alone.” His voice thickened, and he pressed his face against my palm, his breath warm on my skin.
“Theron’s wolves tracked the estate when our scouts couldn’t. Damon’s magic broke the wards. Elara coordinated the assault teams. Maelric identified the location from intelligence patterns my own analysts missed—and he did it while he could barely stand, Kira.”
I could see his eyes filling with water. “Your father dragged himself to the war room every morning and refused to leave until we had a plan. It wasn’t me. It was all of them.”
“You led them,” I said softly, my thumb tracing the dark circle beneath his eye. “You held them together when you were breaking apart inside. You turned your grief into a weapon and pointed it at the people who took me, and you didn’t stop until I was back in your arms. That’s leadership, Malik. That’s what a Commander does. That’s what a mate does.”
His eyes closed, and when they opened, they were wet. “Not Commander. Not tonight.” He turned his face to press his lips against my palm—tender, reverent, the kiss of a man who’d almost lost the only thing that mattered and was still learning to believe he’d gotten it back. “Your mate. If you’ll still have me.”
The answer came without thought, without hesitation, from the deepest place in my heart where the truth lived unedited and unafraid. “Always.”
He lowered his forehead to rest against mine, and we breathed together—his breath warm on my face, my hand still cradling his jaw, the steady rhythm of inhale and exhale synchronizing until I couldn’t tell where my breathing ended and his began.
I slept again. And for the first time since the chains, I dreamed of something other than darkness.


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