[Kira’s POV]
Months passed. Spring turned to summer, and the world softened.
My pregnancy progressed normally. The children grounded my power—every uncontrolled flare, every shattered window, gone. Replaced by magic that knew exactly what it was protecting.
I ruled alongside Damon, our twin bond stronger than ever. The council stopped testing and started following. The realm settled into something I barely recognized: peace. Order remnants collapsed without Seraphine. The prophecy question was closed.
Malik fussed over me constantly. Midnight honey cakes, dawn berries, rubbing my swollen feet with hands that could kill a man in seconds. He talked to my belly every night—long, quiet conversations that made me cry every single time.
“You’re going to be an incredible father,” I told him one evening, watching him press his lips against my stomach.
He looked up with eyes that held everything he’d never been able to say to the council or the court. “I’m going to be a terrified father. But I’ll figure it out. We don’t do anything halfway, remember?”
Damon and Elara married in midsummer. When Damon lifted her veil, the look on his face made every wolf in the hall fall silent. I gained more than a sister-in-law. I gained a true friend.
Labor came with the harvest moon. Long and painful. Malik held my hand through every moment, his voice my anchor through the worst of it.
I delivered twins. A boy and a girl.
Malik laughed through his tears, cradling our daughter against his chest with trembling hands. I held our son, his tiny face scrunched and furious and perfect.
“Castiel,” I whispered, tracing his cheek. “For the morning star that burns brightest before dawn.”
“And her?” Malik asked, his voice rough and breaking.
“Lyra,” I said. “After the constellation that guides lost travelers home. And for my mother.”
His eyes glistened. “She’d be proud, Kira. Your mother would be so proud.”
“She’d be proud of you too,” I said. “The omega-born Commander who loved her daughter fearlessly enough to build a family the realm said he didn’t deserve.”
He pressed his forehead to mine. “They were wrong about a lot of things. They were especially wrong about that.”
Damon arrived within the hour, Elara beside him. He stood in the doorway and stared at the bundles in our arms, and through the twin bond I felt him shatter and rebuild in the span of a single breath.
“A boy and a girl,” he said, his voice barely holding together. “Of course it’s twins. This family doesn’t know how to do anything simply.”
“Come hold your niece,” I said.
He crossed the room and took Lyra from Malik’s arms with a gentleness that would have stunned anyone who’d only known the Dark King. She stirred against his chest, one tiny fist curling around his finger, and Damon went completely still.
“She’s got your grip,” he murmured. Then, quieter: “She’s got Mother’s face.”
Through the bond, something vast and quiet opened between us. Not words at first—just feeling. The kind of feeling that doesn’t fit inside language because language was invented by people who’d never shared a soul with someone else.
She’s perfect, Kira. His voice in the bond was raw in a way he’d never have allowed aloud, not with Malik and Elara in the room, not with anyone watching. They’re both perfect.
You’re going to spoil them rotten, aren’t you. I say, practically giggling at the thought.
Absolutely. Shamelessly. Without apology. A pause. Then, softer—the voice of the boy who’d sat alone in a throne room and asked how he was supposed to know the difference between love and manipulation–
I never thought I’d have this. Family that was real. That wasn’t performance or strategy or someone maintaining me for a purpose.
My throat tightened so fiercely I had to look away from him before the tears spilled.
You have it now. All of it. And it’s not going anywhere, Damon. I told him softly.
I know. And the miracle was that he meant it. No walls behind the words, no armor, no analysis searching for the trap. Just certainty—warm, unguarded, absolute. The same certainty I’d felt from him in the ritual circle, in the war room, in every moment he’d chosen me over the fear Seraphine had carved into him. I know, sister.
Lyra made a small, disgruntled sound against his chest, and Damon’s expression shifted into something so tender it made every other face he’d ever worn look like a mask he’d finally set down.
Elara leaned against his shoulder, her hand resting over his heart. “Uncle Damon. It suits you.”
“I will succeed.”
His hand fell from my wrist. His eyes closed.
Maelric died before dawn.
I stood at the window as the sun rose, a baby in each arm, watching golden light spill across a kingdom at peace.
Malik appeared behind me. His arms wrapped around all three of us, his chin resting on the top of my head.
“What did he say to you?” he asked quietly. “At the end. I saw your face when you came back.”
I leaned into him. Breathed in cedarwood and frost and the safety that scent had always meant. “He said there will always be people who will try to take our children for their power. To use them against the others. To—”
Malik was silent for a long time. His arms tightened.
“We won’t let it happen,” he said. “We will keep our children safe, and we will!”
“What if we cannot?”
“We will, Kira. They have a mother like you.” His lips pressed against my temple. “A father willing to burn the world down to keep them safe.”
But beneath the peace—something ancient had stirred. I’d felt it in the pulse of unknown magic between my children’s joined hands. Felt it in the terror on a dying king’s face.
I held my twins closer. Pressed my lips to each small head and breathed them in. Milk and warmth and the faintest trace of that impossible, unnamed magic.
This was just the beginning.


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