Chapter 249 THE GATHERING OF GIANTS [THE FINAL REUNION]
EPILOGUE TEN
LUCIEN’S POINT OF VIEW
I’ve spent my entire life evaluating assets, calculating risks, and maintaining a perimeter. In the old days at Ravenscroft, I thought power was about how many people feared you. I thought a legacy was built on the number of students and teachers you showed the extent of your power to. I thought the best thing to hear was the sound of people scurrying away once they sensed that either the horsemen or I was approaching.
I was wrong……so fucking wrong. A part of me wondered what would have happened if Roxanne hadn't betrayed me, or if Matt hadn't betrayed Sloane. Would we be here right now? In this form of our nirvana? Or would we go on to live different lives, never even crossing paths?
I tried to picture it. A life without Sloane, but no matter how hard I tried, it ended with us meeting. Whether I would be the CEO of some company, and she my secretary, or a rich heiress, I would hate it at first because of how her brilliance unnerved me. No matter what, I would always be Lucien for Sloane, and she, Sloane for Lucien.
It was the only way it had to be.
I stood on the edge of the terrace, leaning against a stone pillar, my eyes tracking the movement of the people below. This was the Mercer-Evermore-Ravenscroft summit, but for the first time in history, no one was looking for a knife in their back.
"You’re thinking of some sort of alternate universe again, aren’t you?” I heard her sweet voice before I felt her presence standing beside me. Turning, I saw my wife, Sloane stepped up beside me, looking like a literal goddess in a dress the color of a midnight sky. She leaned her hip against the silver railing, swirling a glass of one-hundred-year-old wine we brought out from mom’s wine cellar. She was the only person who could read my silence and detect what went on in my mind.
The only person I didn thave to leave my walls up around.
"It’s a habit," I admitted, reaching out to tuck a stray blonde curl behind her ear. "Though I have to say, the security is appalling. Cassian is currently being held hostage by a three-year-old."
Sloane laughed, a rich, melodic sound that still made my pulse accelerate. We looked down at the fountain, where Cassian was soaking wet, holding Maya on his shoulders while Robyn cheered. The most lethal man I knew was currently a human splash-pad.
"Look at them, Lucien," Sloane whispered, her voice softening. "Really look at them."
I let my gaze wander.
To the right, Theo and Seraphina were in their own world. Theo was painting a portrait of her under the willow tree, his movements steady and sure. He wasn't the broken boy with the shaking hands anymore; he was a man who had found his muse and his peace.
On the open lawn, Ace and Amara were living in beautiful chaos. Their twins were a blur of energy, and Ace was grinning, a real, genuine smile that didn't hide a gamble or a lie. He had finally hit a jackpot he didn't want to trade away.
And then there was the center of the storm. Kai and Aurora.
They were standing near the rose garden, watching their daughter, Jade, play with our son, Archer. Kai had his arm around Aurora, his hand splayed over her waist in a gesture so protective it was almost territorial. He looked at her not just as his wife, but as his savior. The emotionless man had finally found something worth the armor, and his green emerald flower, as he called her for years with us, had finally found a soil where she could bloom.
"We did it," Sloane said, stepping into my space. She placed a hand on my chest, right over my heart. "We survived it all…Eldric, my fake father….everything chaotic, and we came out on top, Lucien. We built a world where our children don't have to hide….they can be their true selves.”
I looked down at her, the woman who was once my greatest enemy and was now my greatest strength. I thought about the fake dating, the blackmail, and the fire we had walked through together.
"I used to think being a King was the highest honor," I murmured, pulling her flush against me. "But I was wrong. Being your husband... and being a part of this... that’s the only throne I ever wanted."
I looked out at the brothers I had called allies, who were now simply my family. I saw Silas and Everleigh, my mother, and Sloane’s parents, along with the other elders standing near the terrace steps, the architects of our survival, watching the legacy they had nearly died to protect.
The sun began to dip, casting long, golden shadows across the grass. The air was filled with the sound of laughter, the clinking of glasses, and the shrieks of children who would never know the hell we endured.
"Checkmate, Lucien?" Sloane teased, looking up at me with that fiery spark in her eyes.
I leaned down, pressing my lips to hers in a kiss that tasted of victory, of peace, and of a decade of devotion.
"No," I whispered against her lips. "Not checkmate. Just the beginning of the next move."
As the stars began to peek through the twilight, the Horsemen stood united, not by blood or by war, but by the love that had finally, irrevocably, set them free.
THE END.