Lord Mordyn made two mistakes. The first was threatening Kael with a speech that had a preamble. The second was assuming Kael would wait for it to finish.
"You will surrender the vessel or face the consequences outlined in Section Fourteen of the accords," Lord Mordyn ordered. "The penalty for interference with Eclipse Court property is death by consumption. Your blood and your flame would be drained while your heart still beats. Your dragon would be extracted and mounted. Your name would be struck from every—"
Kael’s blade moved.
The stroke was so fast it left an afterimage in the bioluminescent light. One motion. Clean. Committed. The blade entered the space between Mordyn’s fourth and fifth cervical vertebrae and exited through the opposite side of his neck effortlessly.
Mordyn’s head separated from his body. It turned once in the air, obsidian eyes still holding the expression of a creature who had been mid-sentence and had not yet processed the interruption. It hit the moss with a wet thud. The body followed, wings spasming once before going still.
"I’m not your standard dragon, dipshit."
The clearing held its breath for one full second before Kael started moving through it.
His blade took the nearest fae at the throat before the creature finished processing that its lord was dead.
Two lunged towards him, and he took both of their heads in a single backswing. "That’s three. Is there a chain of command after decapitation, or do you all just freelance now? Genuinely asking."
One was crawling towards Guinevere’s ankle with its fangs out. He drove his blade through it before she registered it was coming. "Four. She is not for you."
Another lunged from above. He sidestepped and opened its chest. "Five. No." A sixth landed behind him. "Six. Also no."
He looked at the remaining fae the way a teacher looks at a class that hasn’t done the reading. "Does anyone want to be seven, or have we learned something?"
None of them moved. He swung, cutting another head off. "That’s seven." He glanced at the others. "What part is unclear? Run, you fucks."
The rest scattered. Wings spread, and the clearing emptied of fae in under four seconds. The clicking faded into the canopy.
Kael did not stop.
His iron eyes found Nicholas Shadowfell kneeling beside Guinevere, and the trajectory of his blade did not change. He crossed the clearing in four strides, blade rising, the angle of his approach carrying zero ambiguity about what he intended to do to the wolf king touching the woman his dragon had called mate.
Guinevere’s instincts took over. She pushed herself up in a blur, planting herself between Kael’s blade and Nicholas’s throat with her chin up and her eyes locked on his.
Kael’s blade stopped one inch from her throat.
The steel held there, steady, catching the bioluminescent light along its edge. His breathing was controlled. His arm was locked. The blade did not waver, and neither did the flat, unimpressed expression he leveled at her over the top of it.
"Cute."
"They are wolves, and they came to help me."
Kael considered it with the patience of obligation and the disinterest of a mind already made up. His iron eyes moved from her face to Nicholas, then to the Beta bleeding behind him, then back to Guinevere with the detached assessment of a man who was calculating the value of mercy and finding the number unimpressive.
"Then they can run free."
Guinevere looked down at the blade against her neck. Her body was trembling in waves she could feel in her teeth, the shaking of muscles that had been pushed past exhaustion and past adrenaline and were operating on the last reserves of something that existed beyond both. Her skin was burning. Her palm was bleeding. Dark magic was still crawling through her bloodstream from Mordyn’s touch.
She looked back up at him.
"You are not going to hurt me."
A bluff. The words came out steady. Quiet. She’d been held at bladepoint by this man more than once and was willing to gamble.
Kael’s jaw shifted. Something moved behind his iron eyes that he did not let reach the rest of his face. The blade stayed where it was, one inch from her throat, and the silence between them held a weight that neither of them was willing to name.
"Put it away," she said. "And I’ll go with you."
The jungle clearing was about to become the most politically complicated twenty square feet on the continent. Because Sterling Emberfell was about to come through the treeline with the kind of timing that turns standoffs into catastrophes.


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