Chapter 18 : The Political Claim (Kael's Public Intimacy)
The council hall was a sea of bared teeth and low growls. Wet fur, ancient dust, and the slow rot of the Thorne legacy clogged the air, thick enough to taste. Every pair of eyes—amber, gold, muddy brown—was locked on me. Or rather, on the silver glow I couldn’t fully suppress no matter how hard I tried.
“Head up, Lyra,” Kael murmured behind me, his voice cool and steady against the back of my neck. “They aren’t looking for a queen. They’re hunting for weakness. Don’t give them a single blink.”
“I can barely feel my legs,” I muttered, my heart slamming against my ribs. “The energy’s still spiking. If I lose control here, I’ll wipe out the front row.”
“Then don’t lose control,” he said calmly. “Lean into me.”
His hand settled at the small of my back—low, firm, possessive. It wasn’t just guidance. It was a statement. Kael’s scent, sharp slate and rain, wrapped around me, smothering the sweet metallic edge of my Luna power. To the room, I didn’t look dangerous. I looked claimed.
“Lord Kael!” a booming voice cut through the hall.
Elder Vance stood near the central dais, thick as an oak trunk, his expression twisted with contempt. “You call this a council? You drag a former ward into the inner sanctum and expect us to kneel to a girl who was in shackles yesterday?”
“Vance,” Kael replied mildly, his voice carrying effortless authority, “sit down before you embarrass yourself further. She is not a ward. She is the Silver Luna. And the shackles were a mistake my father is currently paying for in the dark.”
“The Alpha is the Alpha until he’s dead!” someone shouted from the benches.
“The Alpha is whoever holds the power,” Kael shot back. His grip tightened, pulling me flush to his side. He leaned in, lips brushing my ear—intimate to the crowd, tactical to me. “Left flank. Count Vane. Weighted cane. Smile at him.”
I did.
I met Count Vane’s gaze and let the silver in my eyes flare just enough. His fingers froze around the cane. Then, slowly, he let go.
“Faceslapped by a girl,” someone muttered.
Snickers rippled through the hall.
“Good,” Kael whispered. “Now speak. Short. Sharp. Make it clear we aren’t your jailers anymore.”
I stepped forward, breaking contact. The loss of Kael’s energy felt like plunging into ice water, but I held steady. I faced the wolves who had treated me like a shadow my entire life.
“You speak of tradition,” I said. My voice rang out, steady, resonant. The hall fell silent. “You speak of the Alpha’s law. But the law changed the moment the obsidian mirror shattered. The Silver Territory no longer belongs to a man who sells his own blood to the Fae.”
A roar of outrage surged—then died as I raised my hand. The pressure of my aura crushed the sound into nothing.
“I am the Silver Luna,” I continued. “The Thorne line survives only because I allow it. Until the curse of the Triple Soul is understood and our borders are secure, I am claiming the Thorne brothers—Caspian, Kael, and Rune—as my provisional Consorts. They are my protection. My swords. Anyone who challenges them challenges me.”
Silence followed, thick and suffocating.
I saw Caspian near the door, frozen, eyes blazing with shock and feral pride. Kael stood beside me, calm and composed, though satisfaction rolled off him like heat.
“Consorts?” Vance sneered. “You’ve turned Alpha-heirs into lapdogs?”
“I’ve turned them into the reason this territory survives,” I snapped. “Unless you plan to stabilize the ley lines yourself, Vance?”
He had no answer.
Kael stepped forward, hand returning to my back. “The council is adjourned. Any dissent may be addressed to the Enforcer units. Rune is eager to exercise his authority.”
The hall broke into movement. Wolves dispersed with lowered gazes and muttered protests. We’d won the room—but the air still crackled with unrest.
“That was effective,” Kael murmured as we walked. He didn’t release me. If anything, he drew me closer. “You made us untouchable and placed yourself at the center of the pack.”
“I feel like a fraud,” I whispered as my knees finally trembled. “I’m using you.”
“That’s leadership,” he replied quietly. “Mutual exploitation for survival. But don’t confuse strategy with—”
“LYRA!”
The scream tore through the hall.
I turned.
Seraphina burst from behind a tapestry, her face twisted with madness. She wasn’t shifting—she’d gone beyond that. In her hand gleamed a slender silver blade etched with suppression runes.
“You ruin everything!” she shrieked, lunging. “You stole the brothers! You stole the house! You’re a stain on the Thorne bloodline!”
Time fractured.
I reached for my power—but it stuttered. The blade flashed toward my throat, aimed for the scar, meant to end everything.
I never felt the steel.
Kael slammed into me, spinning me behind him.
The sound was wet. Final.
Kael gasped as the blade drove into his side, just beneath his ribs. Seraphina froze, horror replacing fury.
“Kael!” I screamed, catching him as he collapsed into me.
His blood soaked my dress, warm and sharp with slate and rain. He clutched the blade, fighting to keep her from twisting it.
“No—no,” I sobbed as my power erupted. Silver force slammed into Seraphina, hurling her into the stone wall with a bone-cracking impact.
Guards flooded the hall. I didn’t see them.
I only saw Kael.
His skin was pale, his eyes unfocused. The silver blade hissed where it met his blood, black smoke curling from the wound.
“Stay… on script,” he rasped, a bloody smile breaking through. “They… saw me bleed for you.”
“Don’t talk,” I begged, pressing glowing hands to his side. My power fought the blade’s poison—and lost ground.
The hall watched as their new Queen knelt in blood, holding her dying consort.
The victory was real.
And it was costing us everything.