Chapter 23 The Void Between Heartbeats
The nursery, once a sanctuary filled with the scent of cedar and soft furs, had transformed into a cold, alien tomb. The violet mist didn’t just cloud my sight; it felt predatory, licking the warmth from my skin like a physical tongue. Beside me, Cassian was a statue of strained muscle, his teeth bared in a silent, feral snarl as he fought a psychic battle I couldn't even see.
Silas was screaming in my arms, a raw, terrified sound that tore through my soul and echoed off the stone. I tucked his small head under my chin, my hand white-knuckled around the hilt of my obsidian dagger.
"Stay back," I hissed at the shadows encroaching from the doorway. My voice sounded thin and hollow, as if the mist were swallowing the sound waves before they could travel.
The central figure, wearing that polished-bone mask, tilted its head with a sickening, slow curiosity. It didn't breathe. It didn't blink. It simply drifted forward, its tattered red robes trailing behind like a fresh spill of old blood.
"The Shadow Wolf clings to the physical," the creature’s voice echoed, vibrating inside my skull rather than through the air. "But the Moonveil belongs to the Ancient Dark. You were never meant for a throne, Aria. You were meant for the Altar."
"I don't belong to anyone but myself!" I snapped. I lunged, my blade aimed at the hollow where a heart should have beat.
I was one of the fastest in the North, but it was like stabbing a cloud. My blade passed through the red robes with a nauseating lack of resistance. I stumbled, the freezing essence of the creature seeping into my marrow. It felt like plunging my entire arm into a frozen lake.
"Aria!" Cassian’s voice broke through the haze.
He moved with a sudden, violent burst of speed, tackling the entity away from me. But something was wrong. His shift was fracturing; his form flickered between black fur and human skin, and his golden eyes were dimming. The violet mist was a poison, a spiritual toxin designed to sever the link between a shifter and their soul.
"Get Silas out!" Cassian roared, his voice cracking with sheer agony. He had his hands buried in the creature’s robes, trying to anchor it, but his arms were shaking. "Go to the lower catacombs! The silver-lined walls... they might block this emptiness!"
"I'm not leaving you!" I cried, circling for an opening.
"Aria, look at him!"
I looked at Silas. My son’s face was turning a terrifying shade of pale, his screams fading into weak, rhythmic whimpers. The mist was draining him faster than us; he was so young, his soul so new he had no armor against a hunger this ancient.
My heart shattered. I looked back at Cassian, who was being forced to his knees by the crushing weight of the creature’s presence. He looked at me, and in that moment, I saw the ultimate clarity in his eyes. He wasn't just my mate; he was a father.
"Save our son," he whispered. "I'll find you. I always find you."
I turned and ran. Every step felt like I was tearing a piece of my own chest away. I burst through the nursery door and into the hall, but the fortress I knew had vanished. The torches were out. The walls were weeping a black, oily substance, and the violet mist was everywhere.
I found Leo at the end of the corridor, huddled against a pillar with a practice sword. He looked small and terrified, but when he saw me, he stood tall.
"Aria! Where’s Cassian?"
"He’s holding them back. Leo, we have to go. Now!"
We sprinted for the hidden stairs that led to the ancient catacombs beneath the mountain. Behind us, I heard a sound that will haunt me until the day I die—a howl of pure, agonizing loss. It was Cassian’s wolf, let out in one final, desperate cry before silence reclaimed the palace.
We reached the heavy iron doors of the catacombs. I threw my weight against them, the silver-etched symbols on the metal glowing faintly as they sensed my bloodline. We scrambled inside, and I slammed the bolts home.
The air here was different. It was stale and smelled of dust, but the violet mist couldn't penetrate the heavy silver lining. Silas’s breathing evened out, his color returning slowly as the draining effect finally stopped.
I slumped against the door, sliding down to the cold floor. I pulled Silas tight against my chest, my tears finally falling in the dark.
"He’s gone, isn't he?" Leo whispered, sitting beside me.
"No," I said, my voice hard and sharp as a blade. "He’s not gone. They’ve taken him, or they’ve suppressed him, but he’s still there. I can feel the bond. It’s thin like a thread of silk, but it hasn't snapped."
I looked down at the moonstone ring on my finger. It was still black, but a tiny, microscopic speck of gold was pulsing at the center. It was Cassian. He was fighting.
I reached out and took Leo’s hand, my eyes narrowing in the darkness. The Syndicate had been a threat of flesh and blood, of greed and chemicals. This was something else, something ancient and spiritual. But they had made the same mistake the Director had.
They had underestimated what I would do for my mate.
"Leo," I said, my voice steadying. "I need you to be the Alpha for a while. Watch Silas. Watch the survivors."
"What are you going to do?"
I stood up, wiping the tears from my face with the back of my hand. I reached into my boot and pulled out my second dagger. I looked at the dark iron door, knowing that the woman who walked back out of it wouldn't be the Luna who had spent the year learning to be soft.
"I spent my life as an assassin," I whispered. "I’ve killed men, and I’ve killed monsters. Now, I’m going to kill whoever thinks it can take my King."
I leaned down and kissed Silas’s forehead, then gave Leo a fierce, quick hug.
The Shadow Wolf was done playing Queen. I was going back into the mist, and this time, I wasn't stopping until the mountain was stained red with the blood of gods.