Current location: Novel nest The Luna: Marked by Two Alphas Chapter 1

"The Luna: Marked by Two Alphas" Chapter 1

The silver-blonde hair that usually fell in a neat, silky sheet down Ariel Winter's back was currently pinned up in a messy, hurried twist. A few loose strands clung to her damp temples as she lifted another heavy crate of winter grain, setting it down onto the damp stone floor of the Lunar Sanctuary's western storehouse.

It was freezing. The Sanctuary sat directly on the jagged, razor-sharp border between the Northern and Southern Alpha territories, catching the worst of the sub-zero mountain winds. But Ariel barely felt the chill. Her body was burning through its own reserves, fueled entirely by pure, stubborn adrenaline and coffee that had gone cold three hours ago.

"We need forty more blankets for the Southern refugees in Sector Four," Ariel said, her voice raspy but clear as she checked a leather-bound ledger. She didn't look up at the three Sanctuary elders standing near the hearth, wrapped in thick, opulent furs. "And the children in the Northern camp are showing signs of frostbite. I need the silver-leaf salve distributed by nightfall."

Elder Garrow, a man whose face had hardened into lines of permanent disapproval over his sixty years, exhaled a plume of gray smoke from his pipe. "The salve is expensive, Ariel. And the Northern Alphas have not paid their tithe for this quarter. We must think of the Sanctuary's resources."

Ariel finally looked up. Her moonlight-blue eyes, usually soft and empathetic, flashed with a dangerous, quiet fire. "The people freezing in those trenches do not have quarterly budgets, Garrow. They have children. If the Sanctuary won't give them medicine, I will carry it to them myself."

"You forget your place, girl," Garrow sneered, taking a step toward her. His voice took on the grating, heavy edge of an elder asserting dominance. "You are the Daughter of Two Moons. You were given to this Sanctuary to pray, to be a beacon of the prophecy, and to obey the council—not to play logistics manager for packless strays. You will finish these ledgers, and then you will return to the altar."

Ariel felt the familiar, crushing weight of her childhood settling over her shoulders. 'One day you will save the kingdom.' That was what they always said. What they really meant was: 'One day, your sacrifice will keep us comfortable.' She opened her mouth to argue, her heart hammering a ragged rhythm against her ribs, preparing herself to swallow her pride and beg for the refugees.

She never got the chance.

The massive, iron-reinforced oak doors of the storehouse were suddenly thrown open with a deafening bang.

The freezing northern gale howled into the room, instantly extinguishing the fire in the hearth. The sudden drop in air pressure was accompanied by a suffocating, terrifyingly heavy pressure that made Elder Garrow's breath hitch in his throat. It was a dominant Alpha aura—cold, sharp, and utterly absolute.

Through the swirling snow of the threshold stepped Rhys Evernight.

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At 6'4", the Strategy King of the North filled the doorway, a towering silhouette of absolute authority. He wore a heavy, dark-furred tactical coat, his obsidian-black hair dusted with white snow. His face was an unreadable mask of hard angles and sharp lines, but it was his eyes—piercing, silver-grey like a winter storm—that immediately swept the room.

They bypassed the elders entirely. They ignored the guards. They locked directly onto Ariel.

Rhys took three measured, heavy strides into the room. With every step, the oppressive pressure of his aura expanded, forcing Elder Garrow and the other council members to take a clumsy step backward, their previous arrogance vanishing into thin air.

"Lord Evernight," Garrow stammered, bowing his head slightly, his voice trembling. "We—we did not expect a diplomatic inspection from the Northern Crown until next week."

Rhys didn't look at him. His gaze remained fixed on Ariel. He noticed the dark, violet bruises of exhaustion under her moonlight eyes. He noticed the slight, almost imperceptible tremor in her hands as she gripped the edges of the heavy ledger. He noticed the way her posture was rigid, holding herself up by sheer force of will because she believed resting was a sin.

He hated it. He hated every single person in this room who made her feel like she had to bleed to be valuable.

"The inspection is today," Rhys said, his voice a low, deep baritone that vibrated through the stone floor. He finally turned his silver-grey eyes toward Garrow, the temperature in the room seemingly dropping another ten degrees. "And it seems I arrived just in time to hear a pack elder speaking to a sacred Luna as if she were a common servant."

Garrow paled. "I—I was merely reminding Lady Ariel of her duties—"

"Her duty is to the realm, not to your ledger balances," Rhys cut him off, his voice completely level, devoid of emotion, which only made it ten times more terrifying. He stepped directly into Ariel's space, his massive frame effectively shielding her from the elders' eyes. "The Northern Crown is releasing the silver-leaf salve immediately. If I hear of a single child freezing tonight, I will hold this council personally responsible. Clear the room. Now."

The elders didn't need to be told twice. Clutched in fear, they bowed frantically and scurried out the side doors, leaving the cavernous storehouse in dead silence.

The moment the heavy doors clicked shut, the oppressive Alpha aura vanished, leaving only the quiet crackle of the dying embers.

Ariel let out a breath she hadn't realized she was holding. She turned back to her ledger, her fingers turning the pages with forced focus. "You shouldn't have done that, Rhys. Garrow is spiteful. He will make things difficult for the Northern refugees just to spite you."

"Let him try," Rhys said softly. He didn't sound like a king anymore. He just sounded like Rhys.

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He walked around the heavy wooden table, closing the distance between them. Ariel kept her eyes glued to the numbers on the page, her heart racing for a completely different reason now. Rhys was close enough that she could smell him—scents of dark cedar, crisp winter air, and the faint, comforting metallic tang of a warrior's blade.

"Look at me, Ariel," he murmured.

"I can't. I have to finish this sector distribution before the Southern delegation arrives," she lied, her voice tight. A formal diplomatic missive bearing the golden lion wax seal of Dorian Ashcroft sat on the corner of the desk, a constant reminder of the other storm brewing on her horizon. "If I don't organize this, people will slip through the cracks. I have to be useful. If I'm not doing this, then what am I even here for?"

Rhys's heart ached at her words. What am I even here for? She still believed love and safety had to be earned through endless labor.

Before she could flip to the next page, Rhys reached out. His large, calloused hand—the hands of a man who spent his nights training until his skin split open—gently but firmly caught her wrist. He didn't squeeze. He didn't use force. He just held her, warm and steady against her freezing skin.

Ariel froze, her breath catching. She looked up, her moonlight-blue eyes clashing with his silver-grey ones.

"You are here because you exist," Rhys said, his voice thick with an intensity that made her chest tighten. "Not because of what you can give them. Not because of what you can save."

With his other hand, Rhys calmly reached down and closed the thick ledger. He picked up the heavy iron key sitting on the desk, slid the ledger into a reinforced iron drawer beneath the table, closed it, and locked it with a sharp, echoing click.

Ariel gasped, her exhaustion flaring into panicked frustration. "Rhys! What are you doing? Give that back! I have work to do—"

"Tomorrow," Rhys said, entirely unbothered by her anger as he casually slid the iron key into his deep coat pocket.

"Rhys, I swear to the Moons, this isn't a joke," she snapped, taking a step toward him, her hands balling into fists against his chest. "People are relying on me! I can't just stop!"

Rhys didn't move an inch. He stood there like an unbreakable fortress, letting her vent her exhaustion against him. He looked down at her, his expression softening into something so profoundly tender, so quietly fierce, that it completely stole the air from her lungs.

"You can fight the council, Ariel. You can even fight the gods who marked you," he murmured, his voice low, scraping against the quiet of the room as he gently brought his hand up to cup her jaw, his thumb wiping away a smudge of ink from her cheek. "But tonight, you are going to sleep."

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