LOGINThe silence broke on the fourth day.Not with violence. With a single rider at the outer gate carrying a council seal and a document that Riven brought to the study unopened and set between Kael and Sera with the expression he reserved for things that had already decided to be complicated.Kael broke the seal.Read it.His jaw went tight in the specific way that meant the contents were exactly what he had been preparing for and still worse than he had hoped."The restitution hearing has been moved up," he said. "Forty-eight hours."Sera felt cold move through her. "Caden.""Caden filed an emergency petition citing ongoing territorial threat from an unregistered supernatural asset." His voice was controlled. Empty of everything except the information. "The panel agreed. They want this resolved before another incident occurs."She held his gaze. "He's cutting our preparation time.""Yes.""He knows we were preparing.""He has people watching the territory boundary." Kael set the documen
Kael found them three hours later.He pushed the library door open with the specific energy of a man who had been looking for Sera and was relieved to find her and immediately suspicious of the context. His grey eyes moved from her face to Damien's face to the council records spread across every surface of the table between them.He stepped inside.Closed the door."You're preparing for the hearing," he said."Yes." Sera held his gaze. "Damien is going to testify."Something moved through Kael's expression. Fast and complicated, several things arriving at once and none of them simple.He looked at Damien.Damien looked back steadily. "You understand what Caden's advocate will do with your testimony," Kael said."Yes," Damien said. "I've been reading the records for three hours. I understand exactly what they'll try to do." He held Kael's gaze. "I also understand that an honest firsthand account of what actually happened is harder to dismantle than a constructed legal narrative." A pau
Damien found her in the library the next morning.Sera looked up from the council records Edda had pulled and found her brother standing in the doorway with his hands in his pockets and that expression on his face she had learned to read before she could read much else. The one that meant he had been carrying something and had finally run out of places to put it.She set down her pen."Sit," she said.He sat across from her. Looked at the records spread between them. At the artifact sitting at the table's edge, glowing faintly in the morning light."I can testify," he said.She looked at him."At the restitution hearing." His jaw was set. Determined in Damien's specific way, braced for argument before argument came. "I was there the night you were taken. I know what happened and why. I know what I did and what I should have done instead." His dark eyes held hers. "A firsthand account from the person whose debt started this entire situation could change the weight of what the council h
Three days of quiet was worse than the assault.Sera felt it in the castle. That particular tension of waiting for something that hadn't arrived yet, pressing into every room and corridor, making the pack's usual easy communication slightly sharper than necessary, slightly more alert than the situation currently demanded.Caden had retreated.He had not gone far.Riven's scouts tracked the Ashveil convoy to a position twelve miles south of the territory boundary, close enough to move fast when the order came, far enough to stay outside the legal grounds for a preemptive strike. Three days of holding that position without any communication, without any movement, without any demand.Just waiting."He's making us wait on purpose," Kael said.He stood at the war map in the study with Riven at his shoulder, both of them looking at the positions marked in red ink south of the boundary. Sera stood across the desk from them, the artifact in her hands, its warmth steady and familiar against he
The aftermath count came in slow.Riven moved through the courtyard with a tablet in hand, cataloguing the damage with the clipped efficiency of a man who had done this before and hated doing it every single time. Six Ashveil enforcers down. Two captured. The rest had retreated when the southern ward held and the eastern distraction failed to produce results.No pack casualties.The relief of that fact moved through the bond like a tide, every connected mind registering it almost simultaneously, the territory's collective awareness settling by degrees as the danger receded into the cold winter dark.Sera sat on the low stone bench near the inner gate with a blanket someone had pressed into her hands and watched Kael move between the wounded with that focused intensity that meant he was checking every person personally before he allowed himself to process anything else.His hands were steady. His voice was calm. But his eyes, when they occasionally found hers across the courtyard, carr
Sera moved before Edda could stop her."Sera—""Stay here. Hold the perimeter." She was already crossing the courtyard, the artifact's warmth pulsing against her chest with every stride, her mark blazing beneath her sleeve in response to the cold patient presence pulling her east.She knew it was reckless.She did it anyway.The east wall sat in shadow, the fighting at the southern breach a distant roar of noise and energy that didn't reach this quiet stretch of stone. Two enforcers should have been stationed here. Sera found them on the ground, unconscious, breathing but motionless, dropped without a mark on them that she could see.Maren stood at the wall's edge.Calm. Composed. Pale eyes already on Sera before she fully entered the open ground between the inner buildings."You came alone," Maren said. "I expected that.""You expected wrong about a few things." Sera held her ground, twenty feet of open courtyard between them. "Like surviving the sealing. Like the territory staying w
The night before the hearing Kael did not sleep.Sera knew because she felt him moving through the castle long after midnight, that familiar warmth in the bond tracking him from the war room to the study to the south corridor and back. She lay in the dark and tracked him and told herself to sleep.
Nobody spoke for a long time after Riven took Daven out.The war room held the silence the way stone held cold. Deep and specific and impossible to warm quickly. The two remaining enforcers stood against the wall with their faces blank in the way faces went blank when something required processing
Kael moved fast.Within an hour he had pulled his senior enforcers into the war room and locked the door. Sera felt it through the bond. That focused on cold energy. The Alpha stripping everything back to the problem.She sat with Damien in the east wing and waited.He looked at the fire. She looke
Damien looked smaller than she remembered.Sera sat across from him and watched him wrap both hands around the cup Mara had brought. The shadows under his eyes were deep. The cut on his jaw had scarred badly. Whatever he had been doing for weeks had cost him in ways she couldn't fully read yet.She







