Chapter 75: Chapter 75: Successor
Darius brushed damp hair from my forehead. "We hear you our queen," he said quietly. "We will stand with you forever no matter what happens."
Kane pressed a kiss to my shoulder. "But we will not pretend the north is not coming. We protect what is ours. That includes you."
Rylan’s hand rested low on my stomach. "And we fight beside you. Always."
I smiled and closed my eyes and let their words settle. The keep was quiet outside the chamber door. The ridges lay dark beyond the windows. The north would push again, but tonight the four of us had drawn our own line.
I felt the bond settle deeper, stronger than it had been since the night I returned from Shadowpine. The children slept safe between us. The keep held. The wall I held inside myself was still standing.
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The next morning the war room smelled of fresh ink and strong tea. I spread the northern maps across the table while the kings leaned in close. The children were in the nursery, their laughter drifting down the corridor. I let the sound anchor me as we worked.
Darius traced the narrow passes with his finger. "The scout’s report puts their main camp here. We send a small team to confirm before we commit more riders."
Kane rolled a second map. "We need eyes on every route. If they are moving south, we want to know before they reach the farms."
Rylan tapped the table. "We take the old smuggler trail. Less eyes. We can be in position before they know we are coming."
I looked at the three of them. The bond between us moved steady and warm, the argument from the night before settled into something stronger. They stood with me now, not over me. They had learned.
"We go tomorrow at first light," I said. "Small team. We confirm the camp and bring back whatever information we can. The pack stays ready here. We do not wait for them to reach our walls."
The kings nodded. The bond between us pulled tight, the four of us linked in quiet purpose. The children’s laughter drifted down the corridor again, bright and unfiltered, the kind of sound that cut through every shadow the north tried to cast.
I rolled the maps and set them aside. The bond between us felt solid, the kind of strength that came after too many nights of holding back fear.
I turned to the three of them and felt the bond settle deeper, stronger than it had been since the night I returned from Shadowpine. The children slept safe between us. The keep held. The wall I held inside myself was still standing.
The northern passes narrowed quickly, the ground rising in sharp ridges that cut the wind into icy blades. I rode at the front with six of our best scouts, the horses’ hooves muffled on the damp earth.
The kings had wanted to come with a full force. I had taken only the smallest team that could move unseen. The children were safe inside the walls with the strongest guards we had. I carried their faces with me anyway, the way Lila had hugged my leg before I left, the way Thorne and Elara had reached for me with sticky fingers.
The trail climbed through a stand of stunted pines, the air growing thinner and colder. We left the horses in a sheltered hollow and continued on foot the last mile, cloaks pulled tight, blades loose in their sheaths.
The valley opened below us like a wound in the land, steep sides dropping to a flat bottom where tents clustered around a central fire. Smoke rose thin and gray. Figures moved between the shelters, their movements sharp and purposeful. This was no small raiding party. This was the heart of the northern triad’s camp.
I crouched at the tree line and counted. Twenty tents. At least thirty warriors. Vespera’s successor, a tall woman with silver-streaked hair, stood at the center, her two mates flanking her.
The scarred one carried a heavy axe. The other moved with the restless energy of a wolf that had never learned patience. They were planning something. Maps lay spread on a low table, the firelight catching on the edges.
I signaled the team to spread out. We moved down the slope in silence, boots sinking into the soft earth. The bond between the four of us back at the keep felt distant but steady, a low hum that kept me grounded.
I reached the first tent and slipped the blade from my thigh. The guard inside never saw me coming. I ended him with one clean cut across the throat and lowered him to the ground without a sound.
The fight started when a second guard stepped around the corner. He opened his mouth to shout. I shut him up by quickly driving my sword through his chest before the sound left his lips. freewebnøvel.coɱ
The camp erupted. Warriors scrambled for weapons. Shouts tore through the air. I pushed forward toward the central tent, blade clearing a path. A northern warrior lunged at me from the side. I parried and drove my sword through his shoulder, twisting as I pulled free. Blood sprayed hot across my arm as he yelled in pain and dropped dead to the ground.
The kings would feel this through the bond. I hoped it gave them some peace knowing I was still moving.
We reached the central tent. I kicked the flap open and stepped inside. The silver-streaked woman turned, her eyes locking on mine. She reached for a blade on the table. I drove my sword through her shoulder and pinned her to the ground. "Talk," I said. "Or die slow."
She laughed, the sound rough and bitter. "You think killing me ends this? The northern triad has waited centuries for blood like yours. Your twins carry the broken curse. We will take them and remake it into a weapon that will let us rule every kingdom from the western sea to the frozen north."
I pulled the blade free and ended her life with one clean cut across the throat. Her body sagged. I took the maps from the table and the small iron box beside them. The fight outside was already winding down. We lost one man but many others were injured. They lost nine. The rest fled into the rocks and bushes.
We burned the tents, loaded the horses with their supplies, and took every scrap of paper and map we could find. The ride back was quieter than the ride out. My arm stung where a blade had grazed it. My cloak was stiff with other men’s blood. But the bond between the four of us felt solid, the kind of strength that came after you bled together and still came home.
We reached the gates as the sun climbed higher. Garrick met us in the bailey, his face grim as he saw the blood on my cloak and the empty saddle. The pack gathered quickly, eyes on the maps and scrolls we carried.
I stood in the center of the bailey and unrolled the largest map. "We have their main camp location," I said. "The northern triad is there with the bulk of their force. We strike again before they can regroup."
The pack cheered, the sound raw and fierce. I stood there with the blood still drying on my cloak and the kings at my back and felt the keep shift beneath my feet. The northern triad had drawn its line.
Back in the chambers the children were waiting. Lila ran to me the moment I stepped through the door, her small arms wrapping around my legs. Thorne and Elara crawled across the furs toward me, their knees and elbows working in determined little circles. They were more active every day, their babbles turning into strings of sounds that almost sounded like words. Lila pointed at them and said, "They try to stand again. Like me."
I knelt and pulled all three of them into my lap. Lila climbed higher, resting her head against my shoulder. Thorne pushed himself up on wobbly legs, hands gripping the edge of a low bench. He looked at me, eyes wide with surprise, and took one unsteady step. Then another. Elara saw him and pushed up beside him, her tiny feet finding the floor. She took three steps before dropping back to her knees with a delighted squeal.
Lila clapped her hands and cheered. "They walk! They walk like me!"
I opened my arms and let them tumble into me. Thorne fell against my chest, laughing. Elara crawled the rest of the way and grabbed my braid with both hands. I held them close, their small hearts beating fast against mine, and felt something loosen in my chest that had been tight since the last raid.
The kings joined us a few minutes later. Darius knelt beside me, one hand on Thorne’s back. Kane sat on the floor and let Elara climb all over him. Rylan stretched out with Lila on his chest, his fingers brushing my knee.
The bond between the four of us felt steady and warm. The strike had been fast and brutal, but we had come home with the information we needed. The twins babbled louder, their voices overlapping in excited sounds. Lila asked again about the bad wolves, her small face serious.
I held them close and let their warmth chase away the cold of the ride.