Current location: Novel nest Beyond the Ash: The Luna’s Rebirth Chapter 4

"Beyond the Ash: The Luna’s Rebirth" Chapter 4

ADVERTISEMENT

The air in the Great Hall of House Ashveil didn't just smell of expensive pine and aged bourbon; it tasted of blood and impending frost.

Lyra stood at the periphery of the gala, her spine a rigid line of ivory silk. Every breath was a calculated victory against the nausea that had been her constant companion for three days. Beneath the heavy, embroidered fabric of her gown, her hand hovered—invisible and protective—over the slight, still-flat curve of her abdomen. She was a woman carrying a miracle in a house that only worshipped steel.

The hall was a symphony of predatory grace. Alphas and Betas from the northern territories moved like shadows draped in velvet, their scents clashing in a suffocating haze of musk and dominance.

"Lyra," the voice was a low, seismic rumble. "You look like you're miles away."

As his hand settled on the small of her back, his large palm searingly hot against the silk, Lyra felt that familiar, traitorous jolt of electricity. Her wolf, Selene, stirred in the dark, a faint, whimpering echo of the devotion she once felt. "The elders are watching."

"I'm observing. A Luna's duty, isn't it?" she said, her voice a practiced melody of Luna-grade composure.

Cassian's grip tightened, his thumb grazing the side of her waist in a gesture that looked like affection but felt like a claim.

He didn't ask if she was tired. He didn't notice the way her pulse was hammering against the thin skin of her throat. He only saw the crown she was supposed to wear.

Across the room, the crowd parted for a woman who moved with the lethal precision of a sharpened blade.

General Kael.

She was draped in charcoal leathers and silver fox fur, her scent—acrid iron and cold smoke—cutting through the perfume of the room. She was the architect of the Ashveil border wars, the woman whose counsel Cassian prized above all else because she spoke the language of casualties and conquests.

"Alpha," Kael greeted, her eyes skipping over Lyra as if she were a decorative tapestry. "The reports from the western pass are in. We need to divert the winter grain subsidies to the front lines. The scouts are starving."

Lyra felt the hollow ache in her chest sharpen. "General, those subsidies are for the families in the lower valleys. If you divert them now, the nurseries won't survive the first freeze."

She spoke from the heart, the instinct of a mother-to-be mingling with the empathy of a Luna. For a second, she looked at Cassian, hoping for the man who had once promised to protect the weak.

Kael let out a sharp, dismissive huff. "The valleys are protected by the soldiers, Luna. If the soldiers fall, the nurseries are just a buffet for the Iron-Claw pack. Strategy requires a stomach for sacrifice. Something you seem to lack."

A few nearby Betas chuckled, the sound like the clicking of dry bones. Lyra felt the heat of humiliation rise to her cheeks. She turned to Cassian, her amber eyes searching his flinty gaze for a shield.

ADVERTISEMENT

Cassian didn't look at her. He looked at the map Kael had produced.

"The General is right," Cassian said, his voice cold and final. "We cannot afford sentimentality when the borders are screaming. Lyra, your concern is noted, but this is a matter of survival, not charity. Go find the elder's wives. Leave the logistics to those who understand the weight of a blade."

The silence that followed was a physical strike. In front of the most powerful wolves in the North, the High Alpha had just stripped his mate of her voice. He had reduced her to a decorative ornament, a woman whose heart was a liability rather than a strength.

"Of course," Lyra whispered, the words tasting like ash.

She stepped out from under his hand—that possessive, searing hand that could hold her so tightly yet never feel her breaking. Cassian didn't even notice the withdrawal. He was already deep in a hushed, intense conversation with Kael, their heads bent together over a scroll.

Lyra drifted through the crowd, her ears ringing with the whispered judgments of the guests.

"...he hasn't touched her properly in a year, they say." "...she's a ghost in that house." "Did you hear the rumors from the southern ports? Lucien Vane has returned from abroad. They say he's brought a new kind of power with him. Sophisticated. Patient." "Lucien wouldn't let his Luna stand in the shadows like a shamed pup. He was always a gentleman, even before he was an Alpha."

The mention of Lucien Vane—the "Silver Wolf" whose name was spoken with a mix of fear and reverence—felt like a cold breeze in the sweltering hall. He was the man who noticed the silence. He was the man who, rumors said, understood the world without needing to burn it down first.

The walls of the Great Hall began to close in. The scent of the roast meat from the buffet made her stomach lurch, and the weight of the secret in her womb felt like a physical anchor dragging her into the floorboards.

She needed air. 

Lyra slipped through the side doors, ignoring the curious glances of the guards. She didn't grab a cloak. She didn't look back. She pushed through the heavy oak exit and stepped out into the freezing night.

The snowstorm was a white wall of chaos. The wind shrieked through the pines, biting at her exposed shoulders and tearing through the silk of her gown. The cold was a relief—a physical pain to match the emotional carnage inside.

She walked until her feet were numb, the lights of the manor becoming dim, amber blurs in the distance. Her wolf, Selene, gave a final, broken howl in her mind, a sound of total surrender.

Lyra stopped in the middle of a clearing, her breath coming in ragged, crystalline puffs. She reached up to her chest, her fingers fumbling with the heavy silver brooch that pinned her Luna sash. It was a masterpiece of House Ashveil—a snarling wolf head with rubies for eyes. It was a symbol of her rank, her marriage, and her prison.

She looked back toward the manor, where Cassian was likely still standing next to General Kael, oblivious to the fact that his world was about to go silent.

With a sharp, violent tug, Lyra ripped the brooch from her silk bodice. The fabric tore with a visceral sound. She stared at the silver trinket for a moment, the weight of it in her palm representing three years of being starved for a single kind word.

She opened her hand.

The brooch hit the fresh snow without a sound, the red ruby eyes staring up at the dark sky before being swallowed by the white.

ADVERTISEMENT

You May Also Like

Compartilhar Link

Copie o link abaixo para compartilhar com seus amigos: