NOVEL Knotted By The Three Feral Alphas Chapter 52: Three Children And New Laws

Knotted By The Three Feral Alphas

Chapter 52: Three Children And New Laws
  • Prev Chapter
  • Background
    Font family
    Font size
    Line hieght
    Full frame
    No line breaks
    Text to Speech
  • Next Chapter

Chapter 52: Chapter 52: Three Children And New Laws

I carried three children and the memory of Niskanen’s blood, and somehow both made the halls feel wider instead of smaller.

Council started at the usual hour. Garrick stood at my right, new beta cloak pinned neat. The gammas filled the benches.

I sat at the head of the long table with Lila on my lap, Thorne and Elara in a shared cradle beside me. The twins gnawed on the leather strips and drooled on everything within reach. No one complained. They had seen me drag a killer through the bailey. A little drool wasn’t going to scare them.

I brought the new law forward without preamble.

"Pups are not to be punished with silver or isolation," I said. "No more locking a child in the cold store for spilling grain. No more silver collars for tantrums. They learn with hands and words, not chains."

A few older gammas shifted. One of them, a man named Calder who still wore the old scars from my father’s time, cleared his throat. "Some pups need a firm hand, my queen."

"They need a safe one," I answered. "We break the cycle here. Starting today."

Garrick scratched the law into the record without hesitation. The younger wolves nodded. The older ones stayed quiet, but they didn’t argue.

The bond between the four of us stayed steady at the table. Darius rested his hand on my knee under the wood. Kane watched Calder’s face like he was memorizing it for later. Rylan leaned back in his chair, axe propped against the wall, grin small and sharp.

After council I went straight to the training yard. The women were already there, blades flashing in the weak spring sun.

I handed the twins to one of the older girls and took my place in the line. My body still carried the softness of birth, but the muscle underneath had come back fast.

I drilled them harder than usual: blocks, footwork, the quick pivot that turns defense into a killing strike. Sweat stung my eyes. My thighs burned. It felt good.

Lila toddled into the yard halfway through, dragging her carved wolf behind her. She stopped at my feet and looked up, eyes bright. "Me too."

I crouched, ignoring the twinge in my back, and handed her a short wooden blade. "Feet apart. Weight on your back leg. When you swing, turn your whole body into it."

She copied me exactly, little face scrunched in concentration. The women slowed their drills to watch. One of them, a tall redhead named Brenna, smiled for the first time since I’d known her. Lila swung. The blade cut clean air. She grinned up at me like she had just won the whole North.

That night the twins’ teeth turned the chambers into a battlefield. Thorne woke screaming first, gums swollen and red. Elara followed minutes later, both of them howling in perfect sync.

I walked the floor with one on each hip while the kings took turns bringing cold cloths and honeyed milk. Lila climbed out of her own bed and followed me in circles, patting my leg every time I passed. "Teeth hurt," she kept saying, like a diagnosis.

Kane took Thorne and rocked him against his chest, scarred hand gentle on the baby’s back. Darius paced with Elara, murmuring low words in the old tongue. Rylan sat on the edge of the bed and pulled Lila into his lap, telling her the story of the first wolf who learned to share his den with three others. The fire burned low. The bond wrapped around the seven of us, thick and tired and alive.

Eventually they settled. Thorne and Elara nursed until their eyes slid shut. Lila fell asleep against Rylan’s shoulder. I stood in the middle of the room with all three of them quiet and felt something click into place.

The next weeks followed the same rhythm. Mornings in council, afternoons in the yard, nights tangled in the furs with small bodies and larger ones pressed close.

I passed another law protecting the women who trained: equal shares of any raid spoils, no more husbands claiming their blades as household property.

The pack grumbled less each time. Garrick enforced it without fanfare. The new Shadowpine wolves settled in, Mira taking over the herb stores and Soren joining the wall guard on the eastern ridge.

One afternoon I found Lila in the nursery trying to teach Thorne how to hold a stick like a sword. He sat on the furs, chubby fist wrapped around it, staring up at her with solemn blue eyes. Elara crawled over and tried to eat the stick. I watched from the doorway until Rylan came up behind me and slid his arms around my waist.

"They’re going to be trouble," he said against my ear.

"Good," I answered. "The North needs trouble like them." fгee𝑤ebɳoveɭ.cøm

The bond hummed steady between us. Outside, the snow melted faster every day. Scouts reported no movement on the eastern ridges. The keep breathed easier. I still woke some nights with the taste of Niskanen’s blood in my mouth, but the children’s breathing pulled me back every time.

We were building something here. Not just walls. Not just laws. Something that might outlast the next full moon and the one after that.

I turned in Rylan’s arms and kissed him once, slow and sure.

Then I went back to the yard to teach my daughter how to swing harder.

************************

The great hall filled after supper that same night. Torches burned low along the walls, throwing long shadows across the tables. The pack came in quiet, boots scraping stone, eyes flicking to the head table where I sat with the kings and all three children.

Lila perched on Darius’s knee, chewing a crust of bread. Thorne and Elara lay in a shared cradle between Kane and me, gnawing on the leather strips like they could chew the whole world into submission.

The air smelled of roasted venison and pine smoke and the faint sourness of too many bodies packed close.

No one spoke much at first. They knew something was coming. Garrick had passed the word after council: the queen would speak. No feast. No music. Just truth.

I stood when the last stragglers found seats. My legs still carried the ache from the long ride south, but I planted my boots and let the bond steady me. Darius’s hand brushed my lower back. Kane’s scarred fingers rested on the cradle edge. Rylan leaned forward, axe propped against his chair like a promise.

I didn’t raise my voice. I didn’t need to.

"You all watched me come back through those gates with blood on my hands and three kings at my back," I said. "Some of you remember the girl they dragged north in chains. Some of you cheered when my father named me traitor. Tonight you hear the rest of it."

The hall went still. Even the fire seemed to hold its breath.

"My sister Lila died choking on poison Niskanen poured into her cup. My father paid her to do it. He wanted my sister sick so the pack would blame me for every border loss, every dead scout, every winter we went hungry. Niskanen gave her too much. She held my sister down while she seized. Then she wiped the cup and pressed it into my hand while I was still screaming."

I let the words land. A few older gammas dropped their eyes to the table. One man, Calder, the same one who had argued against the pup law, rubbed his jaw like the words had struck him.

"I rode south and killed her for it," I continued. "I made her say it in front of every face that once believed the lie. She confessed. She died in the mud where my sister once danced. That debt is paid."

Lila shifted on Darius’s knee. She didn’t understand the words, but she felt the weight in the room. She patted his chest once, small hand steady, like she was reminding him she was there.

I kept going.

"My father let it happen. He sent me north to die so he could keep his grip on Shadowpine. He told you I was the monster. He was the one who traded his own daughter’s life for power. I will not carry his shame anymore. And I will not let any of you carry it either."

Silence stretched. Then Garrick stood. He walked to the center of the hall, cloak pinned neat, face calm the way it always was when he spoke for the pack. He looked at me first, then turned to face the benches.

"I swore to serve the queen who brought order to the North," he said. "Tonight I swear again. No more silver on pups. No more poison in cups. No more lies dressed up as law. The keep stands behind you, my queen. All of us."

He drew his knife, sliced a thin line across his palm, and pressed the bleeding hand to his chest. One by one the pack followed. Blades flashed. Blood welled. Hands hit chests. The sound rolled through the hall like distant thunder.

I watched Calder hesitate, then cut his own palm and press it over his heart. His eyes met mine across the tables. No defiance left in them. Just the dull weight of a man realizing he had backed the wrong side for years.

Use arrow keys (or A / D) to PREV/NEXT chapter