MasukThe moment Aira’s fingers touched her stomach, the baby opened its eyes.The house seemed to stop breathing.Kael made a rough sound in his throat and jerked in her arms as the blackness at the edge of his eye surged hard enough to nearly swallow him whole, but Aira would not let go. She slammed both hands over his chest and shoved herself deeper into the bond, pouring warmth, memory, and fierce stubborn love through the space between them until it burned. “Kael,” she whispered, trembling but fierce, “stay with me. You are here. You are with me. Do not look at her face.” His breath came ragged and torn. The tiny hand in his palm twitched once, then stilled. The baby inside her answered with a bright pulse that rolled through the bond like fire finding dry wood, and for one precious heartbeat she felt him hear her. Really hear her. The blackness in his eye did not vanish, but it hesitated, trapped by the force of her will.Below them, her mother lifted her head slowly, and the root gat
Give me the child.Her mother said it from beneath the floor with tears on her face and the root gate wearing her skin like a veil, and Aira felt the words strike straight through her chest. Kael jolted in her arms as the blackness at the edge of his eye surged hard again, but she would not let it take him. She locked both hands over his chest and shoved herself deeper into the bond with everything she had left, every memory of him, every fierce moment when he had held her through fear, every promise he had made in blood and heat and love. “Kael,” she whispered, trembling but fierce, “stay with me. You are here. You are with me. Do not look at her face.” His breath came ragged and torn. The tiny hand in his palm twitched once, then stilled. The baby inside her answered with a bright pulse that rolled through the bond like fire finding dry wood, and for one precious heartbeat she felt him hear her. Really hear her. The blackness in his eye did not vanish, but it hesitated, trapped by t
Too late.Her mother rose from the broken floor with the root gate wearing her face like a second skin, and Aira felt the whole world lurch under her feet. Kael made a sound that tore through her chest because the blackness at the edge of his eye surged hard again, hungry for the sight of the woman who had raised her, the woman who had loved him enough to stand beside her through every wound and still ended up here. Aira did not let him fall. She locked both hands over his chest and shoved herself deeper into the bond, pouring warmth, memory, and stubborn love into the space between them until it burned. “Kael,” she whispered, trembling but fierce, “stay with me. You are here. You are with me. Do not look at her face.” His breath came ragged and torn. The tiny hand in his palm twitched once, then stilled. The baby inside her answered with a bright pulse that rolled through the bond like fire finding dry wood, and for one precious heartbeat she felt him hear her. Really hear her. The b
Aira kept one hand locked over Kael’s chest and the other pressed hard against the bond between them as the thing below the floor rose with her face twisted over Kael’s father’s body. The sight of it made her stomach turn cold, but she did not let fear swallow Kael this time. She forced herself deeper into the bond until it burned, until she could feel the rough edge of his breathing, the strain in his bones, the fight in his blood. “Kael,” she whispered, trembling but fierce, “stay with me. You are here. You are with me. Do not look at it.” His breath came ragged and torn. The tiny hand in his palm twitched once, then stilled. The baby inside her answered with a bright pulse that rolled through the bond like fire finding dry wood, and for one precious heartbeat she felt him hear her. The blackness at the edge of his eye did not leave, but it hesitated, trapped by the warmth she was forcing through the crack it had found.The thing beneath the floor lifted itself higher, and for one s
The moment the root gate opened its eyes, Aira felt Kael nearly go under in her arms.The blackness at the edge of his eye surged hard and fast, and for one terrible heartbeat she thought he would be lost to it again. She did not let him fall. She slammed both hands over his chest and shoved herself deeper into the bond with everything she had left, every memory of his hands on her skin, every promise he had made in blood and heat and desperate love. “Kael,” she whispered, trembling but fierce, “stay with me. You are here. You are with me. Do not look at it.” His breath came out ragged and torn. The tiny hand in his palm twitched once, then stilled. The baby inside her answered with a bright pulse that rolled through the bond like fire finding dry wood, and for one precious heartbeat she felt the man beneath the darkness answer her. Not whole. Not safe. But enough. Enough to keep fighting.Below them, the thing rising from the broken floor smiled with Kael’s mouth and her mother’s eye
Her mother’s finger stayed pointed at Aira’s belly, and for one terrible heartbeat the whole house seemed to go silent around it.Aira stared down at the hand, then at her mother’s face beneath the floor, and the fear in her chest turned cold and sharp. The baby inside her moved once, slow and deliberate, and the motion felt less like a child turning than a door opening by a fraction. Kael shuddered in her arms at the same time, the blackness at the edge of his eye surging again as the thing with his face below the floor smiled with perfect, hungry patience. Aira did not let him go. She locked both hands over his chest and shoved herself deeper into the bond, forcing warmth through the space between them until it burned. “Kael,” she whispered, her forehead pressed to his, voice shaking but fierce, “stay with me. You are here. You are with me. Do not look at it.” His breath came ragged and torn. The tiny hand in his palm twitched once, then stilled. The baby inside her answered with a
Glass exploded inward.The windows of the pack house shattered as the creature’s roar tore through the night like a storm breaking over the mountains.Aira flinched as fragments of glass scattered across the wooden floor.Mira quickly pulled her back from the window.“Get away from there!”Kael’s w
The growl from the tunnel rolled through the valley like distant thunder.Low.Heavy.Alive.Every warrior standing near the broken cliff felt the vibration beneath their feet.Rowan slowly turned his head toward Theron.“Tell me that’s part of your dramatic storytelling.”Theron didn’t answer.His
The valley was quiet again.But it was not the peaceful kind of quiet.It was the heavy silence that came after battle.Torches still burned along the courtyard walls as warriors moved through the area, helping the wounded and clearing the remains of the fight.The broken cliff on the eastern side
Kael saw it.For a split second, everything else on the battlefield faded.The fighting.The shouting.The clash of steel.All of it disappeared from his mind the moment he saw the hunter stepping out from the shadows behind Aira.The man held a second silver blade.And it was already moving toward







