Chapter 230 The Heart That Should Not Beat
POV: Damien
I have spent so long listening to silence that I almost do not recognize the moment it breaks.
It happens without warning, without buildup, without the kind of shift a man can prepare himself for. One second I am seated beside her as I have been for days that blurred into something shapeless and endless, my hand wrapped around hers, my mind caught between exhaustion and a stubborn refusal to surrender to it. The next second, something changes.
At first, I think I imagined it.
The thought comes instinctively, almost defensively, as though my mind has learned to reject anything that resembles hope before it can take root. I have imagined too many things already. I have heard her voice where there was nothing. I have felt echoes that faded the moment I reached for them.
So when the sensation brushes against my palm, faint and uncertain, I almost dismiss it.
Almost.
My grip tightens around her hand without conscious thought.
I go completely still.
Every instinct sharpens at once, my entire body narrowing its focus to that single point of contact between us. The room fades. The distant sounds beyond the chamber walls disappear. Even my own breathing seems too loud, too intrusive.
There.
Again.
It is not in her hand.
It is deeper.
Subtle.
Buried beneath layers of stillness that have not shifted since the moment she fell from the sky into my arms.
My gaze snaps to her chest.
For a fraction of a second, nothing moves.
Then—
It happens.
A single, shallow rise.
So slight that anyone standing across the room might have missed it. So faint that it could be mistaken for the lingering illusion of breath caught in memory.
But I am closer than anyone has been.
I feel it.
And then I hear it.
A pulse.
Faint.
Unsteady.
But real.
My entire body locks.
For a moment, I cannot move. I cannot think. The world narrows to that single, impossible realization clawing its way through everything I have accepted as truth.
Her heart.
It just—
My throat tightens so abruptly it feels like something is closing around it. I lean forward without realizing I am doing it, my free hand pressing against her chest as though I need confirmation from something more than instinct and desperation.
“Selene…”
Her name comes out low, rough, like something dragged from somewhere deep and unguarded.
I wait.
Nothing.
The silence stretches.
The same silence I have sat inside for days presses in again, threatening to swallow what just happened and reduce it to something explainable. Something I can dismiss. Something I can survive.
My hand presses more firmly against her chest.
“Do it again,” I whisper, the words breaking slightly despite my effort to hold them steady. “I know you can hear me. You always could.”
There is no response.
My jaw tightens.
I refuse to accept that.
The bond hums faintly beneath my skin, a quiet reminder of what I felt only hours ago. The dream. The space between worlds. Her voice, strained but unmistakably hers.
“Selene,” I say again, more firmly this time, leaning closer until my forehead nearly touches hers. “You don’t get to do this halfway. If you’re coming back, you come all the way.”
The room behind me shifts.
I hear movement. The subtle scrape of boots against stone. The quiet intake of breath from someone who has been watching, waiting, hoping for something that none of us truly believed would come.
“Damien…”
Kael’s voice carries from behind me, low and controlled in a way that tells me he is holding himself together by force alone.
“I felt it,” he continues, taking a step closer. “Tell me I’m not mistaken.”
“You’re not,” I reply immediately, my voice leaving no room for doubt.
I hear the change in his breathing.
Sharp.
Uneven.
He stops a few paces away, close enough to see what I see, but far enough that he does not intrude on the space between us.
“What does that mean?” he asks quietly.
I almost laugh at that.
The sound never fully forms.
“It means she’s here,” I say, my gaze still locked on her face, searching for any sign of movement, any shift that might confirm what I already know. “It means the bond wasn’t lying.”
Kael does not respond immediately.
When he does, there is something heavier in his tone.
“It means the threshold is moving.”
The words settle into the space between us with a weight that feels different from everything that came before.
My hand tightens slightly against her chest.
“Then we adjust with it,” I say, my voice hardening as resolve replaces the initial shock. “We figure out what changed and we use it.”
Kael exhales slowly.
“You think it’s that simple?”
“No,” I answer honestly. “I think it’s happening anyway.”
Silence follows that.
Not the empty kind.
The kind filled with awareness. With the understanding that something fundamental has shifted, whether we are ready for it or not.
My attention returns fully to her.
Her face remains unchanged.
Peaceful in a way that used to feel like loss and now feels like something else entirely. Something suspended. Something waiting.
I brush my thumb lightly across her knuckles.
“Do you have any idea what you just did to me?” I murmur, my voice quieter now, more personal. “One heartbeat. That’s all it took.”
The bond pulses faintly in response.
It is subtle.
But it is there.
Alive in a way it has not been since the moment she collapsed.
My breath steadies slowly.
“You’re fighting,” I continue, more certain now. “I felt you. I saw you. You’re not gone.”
Behind me, I hear Kael shift his weight.
“There’s more,” he says, his voice lower now, more focused. “The fragments.”
I finally glance up.
“What about them?”
“They’re reacting,” he replies, his gaze moving toward the far end of the chamber where several of the collected moon fragments have been kept under constant watch. “They weren’t stable before. They pulsed irregularly, like they were waiting for something. Now…”
I follow his line of sight.
The fragments are glowing.
A slow, steady pulse that mirrors something I have only just begun to understand.
My gaze drops back to Selene.
The realization forms with quiet certainty.
“They’re answering her,” I say.
Kael nods once.
“And she’s answering back.”
I lean closer to her again, lowering my voice as though this moment belongs only to us despite everything unfolding around us.
“You hear that?” I murmur softly. “The world is starting to catch up to you.”
My fingers tighten slightly around hers.
“You don’t get to stop now,” I add, more firmly. “You don’t get to come this far and leave it unfinished.”
For a second, nothing happens.
Then—
A faint tremor beneath my hand.
A whisper of movement that feels like the beginning of something rather than the end.
My breath catches.
Kael steps closer, his composure slipping just enough for the tension to show.
“Did you feel that?” he asks.
“I did,” I answer, my voice quieter now, more controlled as I force myself to stay grounded in the moment rather than lose myself to it.
The fragments pulse again.
The light in the room shifts subtly, responding to something none of us can fully see.
Selene remains still.
I lower my forehead gently against hers, closing my eyes for a brief moment as I let the reality of this settle into something I can hold onto.
“You’re not done,” I whisper, the words steady now, certain in a way that leaves no room for doubt. “And neither am I.”
The bond hums faintly in response.