MasukChapter Two — Wolves in Silk
The hall was too long. Too quiet. The kind of quiet that wasn’t an absence of sound, but a holding of it — like the air itself was waiting to see if she would trip. Serenya matched Kael’s stride, hating herself for it. She wanted to drag her feet, to break the precision of their steps, but every time she thought about slowing, she imagined his head turning just slightly… and the humiliation of whatever he might say in front of the guards. The men flanking them wore black armor trimmed with a faint sheen of red, the metal polished enough to catch the lamplight in thin, sharp lines. They didn’t look at her. Not directly. But she could feel them looking. At the far end, a pair of doors as tall as the ceiling swung open. No one touched them. They simply moved, letting the light spill out in a golden flood. The room beyond made her stomach tighten. The vaulted ceiling soared overhead, painted with a storm scene so vivid she half-expected to hear thunder. Thick columns marched down the sides like pale sentinels, and between them stood clusters of people in clothes that looked like they could buy whole streets — deep jewel silks, gold thread, embroidery that glittered when they shifted. Every head turned. It was like walking into the moment after a dropped glass hits the floor — that stretched, sharp stillness before the pieces settle. Kael didn’t slow. His hand brushed her back, the barest contact, but enough to guide her toward the center of the room. Not enough to claim her. Not enough to reassure her. Just enough to remind her she was here because he put her here. “Smile,” he murmured without looking at her. She kept her face still. Not quite a refusal, but not obedience either. Whispers bloomed like weeds. They didn’t even try to hide them. She caught fragments — “Vale girl”—“burned out”—“alive?”— before the voices tangled together again. A figure broke from the crowd — tall, broad-shouldered, armor gleaming in the lamplight. A knight, by the cut of it, though the steel was ceremonial, too fine for battle. He didn’t bow deeply like the others. Just a slight inclination to Kael, eyes flicking — briefly — to her. There was something in that glance. Not pity. Not hunger. Something harder to name, like recognition, or the echo of an unfinished thought. Kael’s steps slowed just slightly, enough for her to notice. His tone cooled a fraction. “You’re far from the outer grounds.” The man’s mouth curved as if he might reply, but he didn’t. Instead, his gaze lingered on her a heartbeat too long before sliding away. Kael moved again, and so did she, though she had the absurd urge to look back at the knight — to see if he was still watching. The courtiers shifted as they passed, silk whispering against silk, jewels winking in the candlelight. Two women in gowns the color of crushed berries bent toward each other, speaking behind fans, eyes darting to Serenya’s gown. The air was heavy here — sweet with incense, undercut by the faint metallic bite of too many candles burning at once. It clung to her tongue in a way that made her want to swallow just to get rid of it. At the far end of the hall, a dais rose like a stage. Two thrones waited there: one of blackwood, carved with curling designs that might have been vines or chains, and the other smaller, draped in scarlet silk that spilled onto the steps like blood. Her throat tightened. Kael stopped before the larger throne. “You’ll stand here,” he said, his voice low enough that only she could hear. “And if I don’t?” The words were out before she could stop them. His gaze moved to her slowly, like a blade being drawn. “Then you’ll stand somewhere else.” He paused just long enough to let her feel the weight of it. “With sharper teeth.” She lifted her chin just a fraction — enough to say she’d heard him, enough to say she wouldn’t break here in front of these people. The great doors banged open again, the sound rolling down the length of the hall like thunder. A herald’s voice carried over the murmurs, announcing a name she didn’t catch. The man who entered moved like someone who belonged to both the battlefield and the ballroom — confident, precise. He carried himself like the weight of armor was second nature. His gaze swept the hall, catching on her for only a moment… and in that moment, there was no court polish in his smile. It was the kind of smile that made promises without speaking a word. Promises that could get her killed.Chapter 38 – A Different Kind of Truth (Serenya’s POV)The journal lay heavy in my lap, its leather cover worn soft with age, the ink on its pages faded yet still alive with secrets. I had read enough to know that Elaria was not just a name from whispers and portraits. She was real—flesh and blood—and she was my blood too. My twin.I traced the curve of her handwriting with trembling fingers, part of me wanting to dive deeper into her words, part of me afraid of what I might find if I turned another page.The air in the small chamber was still, heavy with candle smoke, until a firm knock at the door broke the silence. My heart jolted.“Serenya?”His voice.Caspian.I rose so quickly the journal slid to the floor with a dull thud. For a moment I couldn’t move, couldn’t breathe, until the door opened and he stepped inside.The sight of him unraveled me. His cloak was dusted with ash, his hair damp with the mist that clung to the night outside. His eyes, sharp and storm-dark, searched th
Chapter 37 – The Journal of Elaria I barely slept. When I finally closed my eyes after Caspian’s abrupt departure, my mind kept replaying the tension of the night—the whispered urgency of his soldier, the shadow in Caspian’s expression before he left. It was as though something heavy pressed on his shoulders, something he refused to name. And then there was me, lying in his bed with his scent still lingering in the sheets, wondering whether I was a fool for trusting him or a fool for not trusting him enough. The darkness behind my eyelids brought no peace. Only the echo of questions. The Queen. The portrait. The way Caspian’s voice had faltered when I pressed him too close to the truth. By dawn, I gave up on sleep entirely. The manor corridors were hushed when I slipped out. Caspian’s men didn’t stop me; perhaps they thought I was harmless, or perhaps he had left some quiet order not to restrain me. Either way, I was grateful. I needed space from him, space to breathe, to t
The knock at the door still rang in my ears long after Caspian’s man had gone, swallowed back into the night. I sat at the table, staring at the dying candle as its flame flickered and twisted, shadows crawling across the stone walls. My chest felt tight, as though the air itself had grown heavier. Caspian had turned his back to me, his broad frame cast in gold and shadow, shoulders tense as if he carried the weight of an entire kingdom upon them.I should have spoken first, demanded answers, but silence pressed harder than words. When he finally turned, his eyes met mine with a storm I couldn’t name.“Kael has moved,” he said simply, though the words were thick with meaning. “He’s closer than we feared.”The weight of his voice sank into me. Kael—always the phantom, the shadow just beyond reach—now loomed nearer. My breath caught, and I pressed my palms against the table to steady myself.“How close?” I asked. The question scraped my throat, though I tried to make it sound steady.“C
Chapter 35 — Firelight and Strategy (Serenya’s POV)The day stretched long in the quiet manor, the air heavy with the scent of herbs drying near the window. I sat by the hearth, pulling my knees to my chest, watching as Caspian leaned over the wooden table with a map unrolled before him. His brow furrowed in thought, the firelight sharpening the edges of his features.I had grown used to studying him in silence — the way he always seemed half in the present and half in some memory, the weight of secrets resting heavy on his shoulders. But today, I couldn’t bear the silence any longer.“We can’t hide here forever,” I said softly, my voice breaking the hush of the room.His dark eyes lifted, locking with mine, and I felt that familiar ripple of tension. He didn’t answer immediately; he never did. Caspian’s silences were deliberate, thoughtful, a habit of someone who had learned long ago that words could be weapons.“No,” he agreed finally, his voice low. “We cannot. Kael won’t rest. And
Chapter 34 — Whispers of the Past (Serenya’s POV)The morning had settled into a slow rhythm, the manor quiet except for the occasional whisper of wind through the ivy and the soft hiss of the fire. I found myself lingering by the hearth, tracing the faint patterns of warmth across the wooden floorboards, and watching Caspian move with that same careful deliberation that had drawn me in yesterday. There was a patience to him, a quiet command that seemed to exist even in this secluded corner of the world. And, though I tried to ignore it, it made my pulse quicken in ways I had not felt in a long time.I caught him glancing at me from the corner of his eye, and I realized that something had shifted overnight. There was less restraint now, a subtle tension in his shoulders, as if he were weighing the distance between us. It reminded me painfully of those stolen moments at the palace — moments that had been both tantalizing and forbidden, where every glance, every touch, was laced with da
Chapter 33 — The Quiet Manor (Serenya’s POV)The morning light crept lazily through the narrow window of the small manor, painting long, thin stripes across the wooden floor. Serenya blinked against the soft brightness, the ropes around her wrists now gone but the faint marks on her skin a constant reminder of the night before. The quiet was almost foreign — no music, no clatter of servants, no the distant echo of the palace. Just the low crackle of the fire and the rhythmic sound of Caspian moving across the room.Her heart jumped slightly as she watched him, not from fear, but from curiosity. He was bending over the hearth, sharpening a dagger with a focus that made her stomach twist. She couldn’t help but notice the careful precision in his movements, the way his dark hair fell over his eyes, and the faint scars along his knuckles. Even in this small, secluded space, he carried himself like a predator who knew exactly what he wanted — and she had to admit, that part of him fascinat







