We find our footing the way people do after catastrophe — not all at once, but in small recoveries that accumulate until steadiness stops feeling like an achievement and starts feeling like a life.
Damon and I divide the throne the way we should have from the beginning.
I take diplomatic relations and internal affairs — the lords, the trade disputes, the negotiations requiring patience and the ability to smile at someone while calculating exactly how far they can be trusted.
Damon manages military strategy and external threats, channeling the Dark King’s reputation into a shield the realm can stand behind.
We complement each other in ways the court didn’t expect. Where I extend the open hand, Damon holds the closed fist behind it. The tension between our approaches produces decisions sharper than either of us could make alone.
“Lord Ashworth submitted his third request for a private audience this week,” I tell Damon during our morning briefing in the war room. “He wants to discuss the inheritance tax adjustments I proposed last session.”
“Which he opposed so passionately I thought he might actually shift in the council chamber out of sheer indignation.” Damon scans the patrol reports spread before him. “What’s his angle?”
“He’s realized the adjustments benefit his second son’s holdings more than they cost his primary estate. He wants to support them now and pretend he always did. I’m going to let him, because having Ashworth publicly endorse my tax policy is worth the irritation of watching him take credit for opposing it.”
Damon glances up, and the faint smile on his face carries genuine admiration. “You’re getting disturbingly good at this.”
“I learned from watching a king who was raised by the best manipulator this realm ever produced. Difference is, I use the skills for legislation instead of assassination.”
“Seraphine would be appalled,” he says, and the fact that he can joke about her now — lightly, without the darkness flooding the bond — tells me how far he’s come. “She always said governance was beneath her.”
“Governance is beneath anyone who’d rather rule through fear. It’s the rest of us who have to do the actual work.”
I feel his quiet warmth — the steady affection of a brother who trusts his sister completely. It settles into me like sunlight.
Malik arrives midmorning with an update. Damon straightens. I set down the trade correspondence.
“Two additional Broken Crown cells neutralized in the last ten days,” Malik says, laying a marked map across the table.
“One in the Greymist lowlands, one along the southern trade road near the Ashford crossing. Both operations were coordinated with Ironridge.”
“Magnus’s intelligence led to both?” Damon asks.
“His information identified the locations. My operatives verified independently before we moved. In both cases, the targets were exactly where Magnus said.” Malik traces the two sites on the map.
“The Greymist cell was small, six operatives. The Ashford cell was more significant — twelve wolves, including two managing encrypted communications between at least four other cells we haven’t located.”
“Have the captured operatives provided anything useful under interrogation?”
“Fragments. They operate compartmentalized — each cell knows only its direct contacts. But the patterns are becoming clearer. Someone is feeding these cells resources from a central point, and the supply chain runs north through territory we haven’t fully mapped.”
“North,” I say. “Toward Ironridge.”
Malik meets my gaze. “Through Ironridge, not necessarily from it. The distinction matters. The supply route passes through his territory, which could mean he’s the source, or his territory is being used as a corridor without his knowledge.”
“But you suspect something,” Damon presses.
“That’s my function.” Malik’s tone carries no apology. “Operationally, Magnus has been reliable. His wolves have performed well in coordinated actions, and his trackers are among the best I’ve encountered. I concede all of that without reservation.”
I kneel between them, and Lyra crawls into my lap while Castiel reaches for my hand. His grip is firm, and when Lyra’s fingers find his across the space between them, the air changes.
The hum fills the room like a low, resonant chord struck on an instrument too large to see. I feel their combined power pulse through me — a second heartbeat layering over my own, deep and vast, carrying echoes of magic that predates every ritual this realm has known.
My silver markings flare warm on my wrists. The candle flames lengthen and still, frozen in vertical columns. The hum deepens, and the nursery feels like the center of something enormous — a convergence, a threshold, the first breath before a storm that hasn’t decided what it wants to become.
Then Lyra giggles, Castiel releases my hand, and the world settles back as if nothing happened.
The door opens behind me. Malik, drawn by instinct or by the bond, stands in the threshold reading the room the way he reads a battlefield.
“It happened again,” he says. Not a question.
“They touched, and the air changed. I felt it through my markings — their power is growing, Malik. Every day it’s stronger, and they don’t even know what they’re doing yet.”
He crosses the room and kneels beside me, his hand settling warm on Castiel’s back. “Whatever they’re becoming, they won’t face it without us.”
I hold them both against my chest and breathe them in — warmth and that faint, impossible resonance of unnamed power.
My children are becoming something this world has never seen. And I am the only wall between them and everything that wants to use them for it.


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