Current location: Novel nest Bride of the Black Wolf King Chapter 7 The Hall Beneath the Fortress

"Bride of the Black Wolf King" Chapter 7 The Hall Beneath the Fortress

ADVERTISEMENT

Chapter 7

The Hall Beneath the Fortress

Lyra lasted exactly three days before curiosity ruined her common sense.

In fairness, Blackfang fortress practically invited bad decisions.

Every corridor seemed to lead somewhere older than the kingdom itself. Hidden stairwells disappeared behind tapestries. Locked iron doors lined the lower halls. Servants stopped talking whenever certain sections of the castle were mentioned aloud.

And every single person she asked about the western wing gave her the same answer:

“No one goes down there anymore.”

Which, unfortunately, only made her want to see it more.

The opportunity came during the first heavy storm of the season.

By late afternoon, snow hammered against the fortress walls hard enough to rattle the windows while most of the household crowded into the lower halls near the kitchens and fireplaces.

Kael had left before dawn for border inspections with Fenrir and half the northern patrol.

At least that was what Mirelle told her over breakfast.

“You’re thinking too loudly again,” Mirelle murmured while pouring tea.

Lyra looked up innocently.

“I haven’t said anything.”

“You haven’t needed to.”

By evening, Mirelle had fallen asleep near the fire in Lyra’s chambers with a book still resting open across her lap.

Lyra waited another twenty minutes before finally standing.

Carefully.

Quietly.

The kind of quiet people learn after spending years trying not to attract attention inside dangerous households.

The western corridors were colder than the rest of the fortress.

Not abandoned exactly.

Just forgotten.

Dust gathered heavier along the stone floors while old northern banners hung faded between iron torch brackets. Most of the servant traffic disappeared the farther Lyra walked.

Eventually even the music from the lower halls faded away.

Only the storm remained.

Wind groaned faintly through distant stone passageways somewhere deeper underground.

Lyra carried a single lantern as she descended the narrow staircase behind the old archive hall.

The air changed immediately.

Cooler.

Damper.

Ancient.

The scent reminded her strangely of old churches and frozen caves.

At the bottom of the stairs, the corridor opened into something much larger.

Lyra stopped walking.

The underground hall stretched across the darkness beneath the fortress like the remains of another kingdom buried underneath Blackfang itself.

Massive stone pillars disappeared upward into shadow while old silver symbols covered the floor in worn circular patterns she didn’t recognize.

And along the walls—

murals.

Dozens of them.

Lyra moved closer slowly.

The paintings looked ancient enough that parts of the pigment had already faded into the stone, but the figures remained disturbingly vivid beneath lantern light.

Wars.

Wolves.

Kings kneeling beneath eclipsed moons.

Women standing beside battlefields with silver eyes glowing against black skies.

Not ordinary women either.

The figures felt mythological.

Dangerous in the way old gods often were.

Her footsteps slowed near the largest mural at the center of the hall.

The woman painted there wore flowing silver robes stained dark at the hem as though she’d walked through blood before reaching the throne behind her.

ADVERTISEMENT

Long pale hair cascaded over one shoulder.

Moon symbols glowed faintly along her throat and wrists.

And her eyes—

Lyra’s breath caught painfully.

They looked exactly like hers.

Not similar.

Exact.

The same pale silver-gray color.

The same strange ring of lighter silver around the pupils.

Even the expression unsettled her.

Calm.

But not gentle.

Like someone powerful enough to stop pretending softness mattered.

Lyra lifted the lantern higher unconsciously.

Beneath the mural, old northern text had been carved directly into the stone.

She couldn’t read all of it.

But one phrase stood out immediately.

The First Queen Beneath the Moon

A strange pressure gathered suddenly beneath her ribs.

Not pain.

Recognition.

The same feeling she’d experienced during the wedding ceremony when the silver markings first reacted beneath her skin.

Her fingers brushed lightly against the stone wall.

And the markings along her wrist flared silver instantly.

The lantern flickered violently.

Wind swept suddenly through the underground hall though there were no open windows anywhere belowground.

Lyra stumbled backward.

The mural’s silver eyes seemed almost brighter now beneath the shifting light.

Watching her.

Then something behind her moved.

Not loudly.

Just enough.

The quiet sound of boots against stone.

“You shouldn’t be here.”

Kael’s voice echoed through the underground chamber low and steady behind her.

Lyra turned too quickly.

Kael stood near the staircase entrance still dressed in dark winter leathers from the border patrol, snow melting slowly from his coat onto the stone floor beneath him.

He must have returned to the fortress recently.

Very recently.

One leather glove still rested half-removed in his hand like she’d interrupted him before he’d fully stopped moving.

For a second, neither of them spoke.

Kael’s attention moved from her face to the glowing silver marks along her wrist.

Then to the mural behind her.

And slowly back again.

The atmosphere in the hall changed almost immediately.

Not threatening exactly.

Heavier.

Like the room itself had suddenly become aware of him.

“I got lost,” Lyra said.

It was a terrible lie.

Both of them knew it.

Something dangerously close to amusement flickered across Kael’s face before disappearing again.

“You walked through three restricted corridors.”

Lyra glanced away briefly.

“Maybe I was committed to the experience.”

That earned an actual reaction.

Small.

But real.

Kael looked at her for half a second like he wasn’t entirely sure whether she’d just made a joke.

Then his attention shifted back toward the mural.

And whatever softness had briefly surfaced vanished completely.

“You touched it.”

Not a question.

Lyra looked toward the stone wall.

“I didn’t mean to.”

Kael crossed the hall slowly after that.

Not hurried.

Not angry.

Which somehow made Lyra more nervous than shouting would have.

The underground chamber suddenly felt much smaller with him inside it.

He stopped beside her near the mural.

Close enough that she caught the familiar scent of smoke and cedar beneath the snow clinging to his coat.

Kael stared at the painted woman for several long seconds without speaking.

Then finally:

“That mural is older than Blackfang itself.”

His voice sounded different here.

Quieter.

Almost careful.

Lyra looked back toward the silver-eyed queen.

“Who was she?”

Kael remained silent long enough that she almost thought he wouldn’t answer.

Then:

“A story people stopped telling a long time ago.”

“That sounds suspiciously like a yes.”

This time the amusement lasted slightly longer.

Barely.

But enough that she noticed.

Kael finally turned toward her fully.

And once again, his attention lingered too long on her eyes.

Not in admiration.

In calculation.

As though every answer only made him more uncertain instead of less.

Then his gaze dropped slowly toward her glowing wrist.

The silver marks still hadn’t faded completely.

Kael stared at them in silence.

And somewhere beneath the fortress, deep enough to feel more than hear—

something ancient growled back.

ADVERTISEMENT

You May Also Like

Compartilhar Link

Copie o link abaixo para compartilhar com seus amigos: