Current location: Novel nest Beyond the Ash: The Luna’s Rebirth Chapter 5

"Beyond the Ash: The Luna’s Rebirth" Chapter 5

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The silence of the primary suite was no longer a sanctuary; it was a sarcophagus.

Lyra lay curled on the edge of the oversized bed, her body a frantic knot of silk and suffering.

The moonlight filtered through the frost-etched windows, casting long, skeletal shadows across the floorboards. Inside her, something was screaming.

It wasn't a sound, but a searing, rhythmic constriction—sharp, silver-hot wires tightening around her womb.

She gripped the velvet duvet until her knuckles turned the color of bone. Every breath was a calculated negotiation with the agony. Please, she whispered into the dark, her wolf Selene curling into a terrified, whimpering ball within her soul. Not tonight. Please stay.

She was certain she was bleeding. She was certain that the "Ash" of this house was finally claiming the only light she had left.

The heavy oak doors groaned open.

Cassian didn't enter the room so much as he invaded it. He brought the scent of the storm with him—biting cold, wet leather, and the acrid, metallic tang of the war room. 

He didn't turn on the lights. He didn't need to. His storm-gray eyes were luminous in the dark, fixed on the huddled shape of his wife with a mixture of exhaustion and sharp, jagged irritation.

"The servants said you've been bedridden since you returned from the clearing," Cassian said, his voice a low, seismic rumble that vibrated through the mattress. He began to strip off his heavy fur coat, tossing it onto a chair. "They said you refused dinner. Again."

Lyra couldn't answer. A fresh spasm of pain ripped through her midsection, making her vision swim with white sparks. she buried her face in the pillow, her teeth catching her lower lip to keep a sob from escaping.

"Running into a snowstorm without a cloak was a choice, Lyra," he continued, his tone hardening into a lecture. He stepped closer, his presence looming over her like a thundercloud.

"A choice that required my Beta to spend an hour tracking you when he should have been at the southern gate. If you were trying to make a point about General Kael, you've made it. But this performance? This bedridden moodiness? It's beneath you."

He reached out, his large, scarred hand grabbing her shoulder to roll her toward him. His touch was electric, a searing heat that sent a jolt of primal tension through her despite the pain.

When he saw her face, he paused. She was drenched in a cold sweat, her amber eyes wide and glassy with a pain he couldn't identify.

For a heartbeat, the Alpha in him flickered. His fingers tightened on her skin, his thumb grazing her collarbone with a sudden, unintentional possessiveness.

"You're burning up," he muttered, his brow furrowing. But instead of concern, his mind settled back into the safety of cynicism. "Or perhaps you're just finding new ways to punish me for the gala."

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"Cassian," she gasped, her hand moving instinctively toward her stomach before she froze, remembering the secret she was still guarding like a dying ember. "It's not... what you think."

"Then what is this?" He leaned down, his face inches from hers. "You threw away the House brooch. You walked away from the council. You are the Luna of Ashveil, yet you act as if you are a prisoner here."

He didn't see her hand shaking. He didn't see the way she was flinching not from his anger, but from the literal physical agony of trying to hold onto his child.

"I was going to tell you," she whispered, the words slipping out before she could stop them. This was it. The vulnerable confession. The moment she would lay her soul bare and tell him that her 'moodiness' was a human life, a heartbeat, a future. "Tonight. I was... I was trying to say—"

The sharp, electronic chime of a satellite phone cut through the air like a blade.

Cassian's head snapped toward the nightstand. He didn't even look back at her as he reached for it. The interruption was instantaneous, his priority shifting with the mechanical ease of a soldier.

"Report," he barked into the phone.

He stood up, walking toward the window where a digital map projector had been left on the console. He flicked a switch, and a holographic display of the northern territories bled into the air, bathing the room in a cold, blue light.

"Where?" Cassian asked, his eyes narrowing.

Lyra watched him from the bed, the cramps subsiding into a dull, throbbing ache that felt like mourning.

The map showed the red lines of House Ashveil, but it was the silver markers that held his attention. The Vane territory borders were creeping closer, shimmering like a rising tide. The name Lucien Vane was whispered by the device's voice-intel—a return, a threat, a sophisticated encroachment.

"If he's at the southern pass, he's testing the treaties," Cassian growled.

He looked back at Lyra, but his mind was already miles away, lost in the logistics of war and the rivalry of bloodlines. "I have to go. The Vane scouts aren't going to wait for you to finish your grievances."

"We'll finish this conversation when the territory is secure," he said. "Try to be functional by morning, Lyra. The pack needs a Luna, not a weak."

Lyra lay back against the damp pillow, the silk of her gown feeling like ice against her skin. She looked at his broad back, at the man who had protected her body for years while letting her heart starve to death in the shadows.

"Never mind," she whispered.

The words were hollow, a final surrender that he didn't even hear. The door clicked shut, the sound final as a tombstone being set in place.

Minutes later, the low rumble of a high-powered engine vibrated through the floorboards.

Lyra dragged herself to the window, her hand clutching the frame for support.

Below, the twin beams of his car's headlights cut through the swirling white of the storm.

She watched the lights move down the long, winding drive, getting smaller and smaller until they were nothing but two pinpricks of amber in a world of gray. Then, they vanished into the white, leaving her in a darkness so absolute it felt like the end of the world.

Inside her, the silver wire of the cramp tightened one last time. She sank to the floor.

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