Chapter 104 The Mercy of the Blade
"He’s cold, Lyra! His skin is turning to marble!" Kael’s scream was a jagged blade in the silence of the nursery. He was pumping Rune’s chest, his silver Mind-Mark flickering like a dying bulb. "The infants didn't just take his mana; they took his life-thread! There’s no spark left to ignite!"
"Move, Kael!" I lunged across the silk sheets, my silver hair snapping around me like a halo of static. I hit the floor beside Rune’s massive, graying form. "Rune! Open your eyes! That’s an order from your Queen!"
"He can't hear you, Lyra," Caspian whispered, his voice a hollow echo of a King. He stood over us, his Mark of the Sun dimmed to a dull copper. "The Body has been emptied. He gave every drop to the Trinity. He’s gone."
"He is not gone!" I shrieked, a faceslap of raw Luna-authority vibrating through the room. I looked at Rune—my Enforcer, my anchor. His chest was still. His amber eyes were half-open, glazed and white. "There is one way. One way to pull a soul back from the Void after the Alpha-spark has failed."
Kael stopped pumping. He looked at me, his face pale with a sudden, academic terror. "No. Lyra, you aren't talking about the Forbidden Seals. You can’t. Those were banned before the First War for a reason!"
"What seals, Kael?" Caspian demanded, his eyes narrowing. "What is she talking about?"
"The Eternal Thrall," I whispered, my golden eyes fixed on Rune’s lifeless face. "It’s a Forbidden Luna Seal. It doesn't jumpstart an Alpha-spark; it replaces it. I would mark him with my own blood-essence. He wouldn't be a King anymore. He wouldn't be an equal in the Quadad. He would be my thrall. My servant. My shadow in the dark until the end of time."
"Never!" Caspian’s roar shook the floating manor. He grabbed my shoulder, his grip bruising. "You would turn my brother into a slave? Into a puppet of the bond? I’d rather see him buried with honor than chained as a servant!"
"Honor doesn't breathe, Caspian!" I shoved him back, the prismatic fire in my veins flaring. "Honor doesn't hold the babies! Honor doesn't protect the North! If I don't do this, he’s a corpse! Is that what you want? A 'honorable' grave while the world burns?"
"He’s a Thorne Alpha!" Caspian countered, his face inches from mine. "He was born to lead, not to follow a leash! You’re talking about stealing his soul to save his meat!"
"I’m talking about keeping him alive!" I turned to Rune’s body, ignoring Caspian’s fury. "Rune! If you can hear me in that darkness... if you want to stay... if you want to see our sons grow... give me a sign! Accept the chain or embrace the dirt!"
The room went silent. The Trinity in the cradle hummed, their golden eyes watching us with a chilling, detached curiosity.
Then, a miracle of the macabre.
Rune’s finger twitched. A single, guttural wheeze escaped his gray lips. It wasn't a word; it was a surrender.
"See?" I snapped at Caspian. "He wants to live! He doesn't care about your pride!"
"He’s not in his right mind!" Caspian yelled. "He’s dying! He’d agree to anything to stop the cold! Kael, tell her! Tell her this is a violation of everything the Thorne line stands for!"
Kael looked from the dying Enforcer to the furious King, then to me. His eyes were wet. "The Thorne line is currently floating five thousand feet in the air because of a woman who rewrote the laws of magic, Caspian. If we lose the Body, the manor falls. If we lose Rune... we lose ourselves. Do it, Lyra. Before the transition is permanent."
"Kael, I will kill you myself!" Caspian lunged for the Architect, but Rune let out another wet, desperate gasp.
"Do... it..." Rune’s voice was a ghost’s rattle. "Lyra... mark... me..."
I didn't wait for Caspian’s permission. I reached for the obsidian dagger—the one that had tasted our shared blood—and sliced my palm open. But I didn't just let it bleed. I focused every ounce of the Great Spirit’s fire into the wound until the blood turned into a thick, glowing mercury.
"By the blood of the Moon and the fire of the Origin," I intoned, my voice deepening into the Sovereign’s growl. "I claim the fallen. I bind the broken. Rune the Enforcer, you are no longer a King. You are mine."
"Lyra, stop!" Caspian tried to grab my arm, but Kael tackled him, the two brothers crashing into the war console in a flurry of gold and silver sparks.
I pressed my glowing palm directly onto Rune’s heart.
The sound was like a hot iron hitting water. Ssssss. Rune’s back arched off the floor, his mouth opening in a silent scream of agony as the Luna-Seal burned its way through his ribs. The emerald Mark of the Earth on his chest didn't vanish; it turned black, the mountain roots twisting into a collar that wrapped around his neck.
"Ugh... AH!" Rune’s eyes snapped open. They weren't amber anymore. They were the exact, liquid gold of my own.
The connection slammed into me like a freight train. I felt his pulse start—not as an independent rhythm, but as an echo of my own heartbeat. I felt his thoughts—not as a partner, but as a sub-frequency of my will.
"Rune?" I whispered, my hand still pressed to his chest.
The giant of a man slumped back, gasping for air. He looked at me, and there was no defiance left in his gaze. There was only a terrifying, absolute devotion. He reached up, taking my hand and kissing the blood-stained palm.
"My... Queen," he croaked.
Caspian stood up, his face a mask of cold, unadulterated fury. He looked at his brother—at the black collar-mark around his neck—and then at me.
"You’ve destroyed him," Caspian said, his voice trembling with a faceslap of pure betrayal. "He’s a ghost in a shell. You didn't save him, Lyra. You just made a pet out of a warrior."
"He’s alive, Caspian!" I stood up, wiping the silver blood from my chin. "That’s all that matters! We have a war to—"
BOOM.
The nursery wall didn't just crack; it vanished in a cloud of purple fire and pulverized stone. The shockwave sent the cradle spinning across the floor, the babies letting out a synchronized shriek of alarm.
"The shields are down!" Kael screamed, scrambling to the cribs. "The Void-tech! They’ve breached the interior!"
Through the dust and the smoke, a massive, obsidian shape stepped into the room. It was Vane, but the Void-Werewolf had doubled in size. His fur was dripping with liquid ink, and his crystalline blades were glowing with a necrotic, ultraviolet light.
Behind him, hundreds of shadow-knights poured through the breach, their eyes fixed on the heirs.
"A touching family reunion," Vane hissed, his voice a chorus of a thousand shattered souls. "The King is broken, the Queen is a tyrant, and the Enforcer is a dog on a leash. This is the 'Goddess' the North fears?"
"Vane," I growled, stepping in front of the babies, my silver hair lashing with fury. "You’re about to find out how tight the leash is."
Vane laughed, a sound like grinding bone. He raised his crystalline blade, pointing it directly at the golden-eyed infants.
"The Trinity dies tonight," Vane declared. "And the Sky-Realm becomes a graveyard."
Caspian drew his golden blade, his Mark of the Sun flaring with a desperate, dying light. Kael shielded the children with his own body.
But it was Rune who moved first.
With a speed that defied his massive frame, the Thrall-King lunged at Vane, his eyes glowing with my golden light. He didn't roar. He didn't hesitate. He fought with the mindless, lethal efficiency of a weapon.
"Protect the Queen!" Rune roared, his voice no longer his own, but a distorted echo of mine.
The war for the floating manor had just entered the nursery, and the blood of the Thorne line was about to paint the clouds red.