Chapter 78: Chapter 78: The Queen They Whisper About
We watched another hour, counting banners and noting weak points in their defenses. When movement stirred near the central tent, I focused the glass again. A tall woman emerged, dark hair braided with bone and silver wire. Power rolled off her even at this distance. She turned her head as if she could sense us watching. I pulled back fast.
We rode home hard, pushing the horses until their flanks heaved. The keep appeared as the sun dropped low, torches already lit along the walls. Garrick met us at the gates, face drawn. I gave him quick orders to double the outer patrols and called a quiet council for dawn.
Inside our chambers the fire crackled low. Lila spotted me first and barreled across the room. "Mama came back!"
I caught her and swung her up, breathing in her familiar scent. Thorne and Elara sat on the thick furs, playing with carved wooden wolves. When they saw me they both lit up.
Thorne pushed to his feet, wobbly but determined, and said his first clear sentence. "Mama fight bad ones?"
The words hit me like a physical blow. Elara clapped her hands and followed with her own. "Papa keep safe."
I knelt fast, pulling all three close. Their small voices carried more weight than any battle report. They understood more than I wanted them to. Lila touched my cheek. "You smell like snow and horses. Did you see the bad ones?"
"Yes," I said softly. "But we see them before they see us. That matters."
Darius entered a moment later, shedding his cloak. He dropped to the floor with us, one large hand covering Thorne’s back. The boy immediately tried to climb him, repeating, "Papa keep safe."
Kane and Rylan arrived together soon after. Kane’s scarred fingers brushed Elara’s hair as she babbled at him. Rylan scooped Lila up and spun her once, earning bright laughter that filled the room. For a short while the threat outside felt distant.
Later, after the children finally slept, the four of us gathered at the low table near the fire. I laid out the rough map I had sketched from memory.
"They’re bigger than we thought," I told them. "Organized. Supplies coming in steady. And the woman at the center... she carries old power. This isn’t random hatred. They have purpose."
Darius traced a finger along the valley. "We can’t wait for them to march. We weaken them first. Supply lines, scouts, anything that starves their momentum."
Kane nodded once, eyes hard. "I’ll lead small teams. Quiet kills."
Rylan leaned back, but his usual grin stayed missing. "And we keep training everyone. Even the older pups. No one sits idle."
I listened to them plan, adding my own thoughts where the bond hummed agreement. Yet part of me stayed with the children in the next room. Their first real sentences still echoed. They saw us as protectors. I refused to let them grow up under constant shadow.
Sleep came late that night. I lay between the kings, their bodies warm anchors, but my mind kept drifting north. The triad was no longer distant thunder. It had form, numbers, and intent.
Dawn brought the council. I stood before the gathered pack and spoke plainly about what we had seen. Faces hardened. Some gammas muttered about the cost, but most listened. When I finished, the hall filled with low growls of agreement.
We would not wait to be hunted.
As the meeting broke, Lila tugged at my hand in the corridor. "Thorne said another word. He said ’strong.’ Like you, Mama." freēwebnovel.com
I smiled despite the weight in my chest and picked her up. Her trust felt heavier than any sword.
The north was moving.
And every choice I made now would decide if my children grew up free or chained by someone else’s curse.
The scouts returned before supper with fresh reports. More wagons. More wolves. The triad was preparing to push south sooner than we hoped.
I looked toward the nursery door and felt my resolve turn to steel.
They would not touch what was mine.
*********************
The alarm bell shattered the evening quiet an hour after the scouts delivered their news. I was already moving, sword belt cinched tight before the second peal finished. Garrick met me in the bailey, breathing hard.
"My queen, I bring news on the outer farms. Eastern ridge. Small force, maybe thirty. They hit fast and started burning fields."
"Mount up," I ordered. "Twenty riders. We end this tonight."
Darius fell in beside me without a word, his presence solid as stone. We rode out under a darkening sky, hooves pounding the dirt road toward the smoke rising on the horizon.
The air carried the sharp bite of burning grain. By the time we crested the ridge, flames licked across two fields and one barn. Northern wolves in half-shifted forms dragged supplies toward waiting horses.
I signaled the charge. Our line swept down like a breaking wave. I picked my first target, a broad-shouldered man torching a storage shed, and drove my blade into his side before he could turn. He dropped with a grunt.
Darius took down two more in quick succession, his strikes efficient and cold. Our riders crashed into the raiders, steel meeting steel in messy, frantic clashes.
One wolf lunged at my horse’s throat. I kicked free of the stirrups, rolled off, and met him on the ground. My sword caught him across the muzzle. He yelped and shifted back to human form, clutching his face. I pressed my boot to his chest. "Yield or die."
He spat blood but stopped fighting. Around us the skirmish wrapped up fast. We lost one rider. They lost eleven dead, with nine taken alive. The rest fled into the trees. We put out the fires as best we could, beating flames with cloaks and dirt while the farm families watched from a safe distance, faces streaked with soot and fear.
I had the prisoners bound and loaded onto captured horses. One of them, a lean man with a scarred jaw, kept staring at me.
"You’re the queen they whisper about," he muttered as we started the ride back. "The one with the cursed kings. Taking you won’t be easy, but she wants those pups of yours."
I leaned down from my saddle. "Tell your friends in the north that if they come for my children, I will paint the snow with every last one of you."
The ride home stretched long under starlight. When we reached the gates, Garrick had torches lit and healers waiting. I handed off the prisoners for questioning and made straight for the chambers. Exhaustion pulled at my limbs, but the need to see the children pushed me faster. freewebnoveℓ.com
Lila met me at the door, her small face set in a fierce scowl that looked too old for her years. She planted herself in front of the inner room where Thorne and Elara slept. "The bad wolves came again?"
"Yes," I said, kneeling to her level. "But we sent them running."
She crossed her arms, eyes bright with unshed tears and something harder. "They want my brother and sister. I heard the maids talking. I won’t let them. I’ll bite them like you did to the man in the wagon."
The memory of that distant night nearly made me smile. Instead I pulled her close, feeling her small body tremble with protective anger. "You are strong, Lila. But you don’t have to fight alone. That’s why we train every day. That’s why your fathers stand with us."
Thorne stirred in the next room and called out sleepily. Lila pulled back and wiped her face. "I’ll watch them tonight. You sleep."
Her fierce little declaration lodged in my throat. I let her climb into the big bed with her siblings, where she curled around them like a tiny guardian. Darius appeared in the doorway, watching the scene with quiet intensity. Kane and Rylan joined soon after, carrying the weight of the day on their shoulders.
We spoke in low voices by the fire while the children settled. The prisoners had already given scraps of information under questioning. More raids planned. A push before the next full moon. But the scarred man’s words lingered. They wanted the twins specifically.
Later, when the keep grew still, I lay awake between the kings. Darius traced a slow line down my arm. Kane rested a scarred hand on my hip. Rylan pressed close from behind, his breath warm against my neck. No words passed between us for a long time. The bond hummed steady, carrying shared worry and shared resolve.
Dawn brought more news. The prisoners broke further overnight. Their leader in the north had promised them land and power if they delivered the children alive. The curse blood, they called it. Something about rewriting old wrongs.
I stood on the training yard later that morning, watching women and older pups drill with renewed fire. Lila trained beside me, swinging a small wooden blade with surprising focus. She glanced at the nursery window every few minutes, checking on her siblings.
"You’re angry," I said quietly.
She nodded once. "They think we’re weak because we’re small. I’ll show the bastards that we are the exact opposite."