Current location: Novel nest Beyond the Ash: The Luna’s Rebirth Chapter 11

"Beyond the Ash: The Luna’s Rebirth" Chapter 11

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The silence of House Ashveil had become a physical weight, but for Cassian, the air was suddenly screaming.

He sat on the floor of the empty nursery, the ultrasound image clutched so tightly in his scarred hand that the edges had begun to tear. The room was a monument to a future he had personally executed. He stared at the hand-painted stars on the ceiling—stars Lyra had commissioned in secret while he was busy mapping out trade routes and border skirmishes.

Then, the heat hit him.

It wasn't the warmth of a fire or the touch of a mate. It was a violent, volcanic surge of hormones—the

Rut

.

Usually, the Rut was a time of dark, heavy intimacy, a period where his Alpha instincts demanded proximity to his Luna to ground his soaring power. But Lyra was gone. The jasmine and cream scent that usually acted as his anchor had been purged from the house, replaced by the hollow, metallic tang of his own grief. Without her, the Rut didn't feel like a biological cycle; it felt like an exorcism.

Cassian's blood began to boil. His vision swam with a predatory red tint, and the muscles in his back coiled until they threatened to snap his spine. The Alpha within him—the beast that had been raised on a diet of dominance and conquest—was howling for its mate, only to find a vacuum.

He stood up, his breathing a series of ragged, wet gasps. He looked at the ornate, hand-carved cradle in the center of the room.

"I was going to tell you that night."

The words from the note vibrated in his skull, timed to the frantic thud of his own pulse. He walked to the wall where a large, leather-bound calendar hung—a record of pack duties and military drills. His eyes fixed on a specific date, marked with a small, faded ink circle that he had never bothered to ask about.

The night of the gala. The night he had unleashed his Alpha aura on the stairs.

The realization hit him with the force of a physical blow. He traced the timeline in his mind with the agonizing precision of a man counting his own sins. Every sharp word, every cold shoulder, every moment he had chosen the crown over the woman... it all led to that one, singular moment of arrogance. He hadn't just broken her spirit. He had used the very power meant to protect his legacy to extinguish it.

"I killed him," Cassian whispered, his voice a guttural wreck. "I killed my own son."

The grief turned into a white-hot explosion of kinetic energy.

He didn't scream. He simply struck. His fist went through the mahogany paneling of the nursery, the wood splintering like dry bone. He turned on the room with a feral, uncoordinated violence. He tore the silk hangings from the windows, shredded the hand-woven rugs, and overturned the heavy oak furniture as if he were trying to find the missing heartbeat beneath the wreckage.

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He moved into the primary suite, a hurricane of shadow and rage. The sexual tension that had always hummed between him and Lyra—the dark, magnetic pull that had been his only way of communicating love—now felt like a jagged blade twisting in his gut. His body was screaming for the woman he had starved for three years, a physical hunger so absolute it made his teeth ache.

He smashed the obsidian table where she had left her jewelry. The diamonds scattered across the floor like frozen tears. He tore the heavy velvet drapes from the bed—the bed where he had turned away from her in his sleep, where he had let her weep in total silence.

"Lyra!" he roared, the name a jagged shrapnel in his throat.

He wasn't just destroying the house; he was trying to destroy the man who had lived in it. He caught his reflection in a tall, silver-framed mirror—the storm-gray eyes wild, the face drained of all color, the hands stained with the dust and splinters of his own home. He saw the monster she had escaped.

With a snarl, he drove his elbow into the glass. The mirror shattered into a thousand jagged pieces, each one reflecting a fractured version of his failure.

The Rut was peaking now, a fever that turned his sweat to ice and his thoughts to ash. The house felt too small, the stone walls closing in like a coffin. He needed to be outside. He needed the world to hear the sound of a king who had turned his own palace into a graveyard.

Cassian burst through the double doors of the balcony, the freezing northern wind hitting his bare chest like a lash. Below, the valley was a vast, white expanse of silence, the lights of the pack village flickering like dying embers in the distance.

He gripped the stone railing, his knuckles white, his chest heaving as he looked toward the northern border. She was out there somewhere, shrouded in a silver mist he didn't understand, protected by a man who had never needed to lose her to value her.

The Alpha of House Ashveil threw his head back.

It wasn't a command. It wasn't a call to war. It was a desperate, soul-shattering howl that tore through the mountain air, a sound of total, catastrophic ruin. It was the cry of a predator who had finally realized he was the one who had set the trap.

The howl vibrated through the valley, shaking the frost from the pines and making the wolves in the distant village tuck their tails in primal terror. It was a confession in a language that needed no words—a public admission of the void he had created.

As the last echoes of the howl faded into the wind, Cassian collapsed onto the balcony, his forehead pressed against the freezing stone.

The Rut was still burning in his veins, a relentless, agonizing fire, but the rage had been replaced by a crushing, absolute hollow.

He looked down at his scarred hands. They were the hands of a ruler. They were the hands of a warrior.

Cassian realized with a soul-searing finality that they were also the hands that had buried his only happiness.

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