Current location: Novel nest Bride of the Black Wolf King Chapter 29 The Eastern Offer

"Bride of the Black Wolf King" Chapter 29 The Eastern Offer

Chapter 29

The Eastern Offer

Cassian returned to Blackfang exactly one week later.

Which confirmed two things immediately:

First, eastern Alphas apparently lacked survival instincts.

Second, Kael was about to become everyone’s problem again.

“You invited him back?” Fenrir stared across the war room like someone personally betrayed by architecture itself.

Kael didn’t look up from the military report in front of him.

“He requested diplomatic passage.”

“That’s not what I asked.”

Silence.

Fenrir leaned both hands against the strategy table dramatically.

“You know he’s flirting with your wife for sport.”

Kael finally looked up then.

Slowly.

“That’s not why he’s here.”

Fenrir blinked once.

“Oh. That answer is somehow worse.”

Lyra learned about Cassian’s arrival from the wolves first.

Again.

The fortress wolves had developed a deeply inconvenient habit of reacting to political tension before actual announcements reached anyone.

By midday, half the lower courtyards buzzed with restless pacing and irritated growling while northern guards doubled patrol rotations near the eastern gates.

Mirelle looked up from her embroidery once and sighed.

“That man brings chaos with him.”

“Which man?”

“The charming one.”

That narrowed the possibilities considerably.

Cassian entered the western council hall that evening wearing dark green formal military attire trimmed with silver eastern insignias, looking entirely too composed for a man knowingly walking back into another Alpha’s territory after nearly getting strangled at a ballroom.

Several northern nobles visibly tensed the moment he arrived.

Kael didn’t stand to greet him.

Also noticeable.

Lyra sat farther down the council table beside Elder Thorne while trade advisors argued quietly about eastern shipping routes no one genuinely cared about anymore.

Because everyone understood the real conversation hadn’t started yet.

Cassian’s attention found Lyra almost immediately.

And unfortunately—

he smiled.

It wasn’t flirtation this time.

Not entirely.

Something more calculating sat behind it now.

“You look healthier,” he said conversationally while taking his seat across from the council table.

Kael’s grip tightened slightly around the papers in front of him.

Tiny movement.

Still visible.

“The moon fever passed,” Lyra replied carefully.

Cassian leaned back slightly.

“For now.”

The way he said it made Elder Thorne visibly unhappy.

Which felt impressive considering the old man usually looked mildly disappointed by existence in general.

The meeting lasted another painful hour before finally collapsing under the weight of everyone pretending not to discuss the obvious.

Moon-born bloodlines.

Awakened fortress magic.

The fact that several northern territories had already started sending “trade inquiries” suspiciously close to military scouting attempts.

Eventually Kael dismissed the council entirely.

Not politely.

Efficiently.

The nobles filtered out quickly afterward, relieved enough to practically flee.

Fenrir paused beside Lyra on his way toward the door.

“If anyone starts another prophecy tonight,” he muttered, “I’m setting something on fire.”

Reasonable response honestly.

Only four people remained inside the council chamber afterward.

Kael.

Lyra.

Cassian.

Elder Thorne.

The atmosphere shifted immediately.

Cassian folded his hands loosely over the table.

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“Well,” he said lightly, “now we can stop pretending this visit concerns trade routes.”

Kael’s expression remained unreadable.

“Then speak carefully.”

The warning settled softly through the chamber.

Not loud.

Still dangerous.

Cassian ignored it completely.

Naturally.

“The kingdoms already know,” he said while looking directly at Lyra. “Not everything. But enough.”

Lyra’s stomach tightened.

“How?”

“The fortress lights. The wolves.” Cassian shrugged slightly. “Stories travel faster than armies.”

Unfortunately true.

Elder Thorne spoke quietly from beside the fireplace.

“The southern courts?”

Cassian’s expression darkened slightly.

“Terrified.”

That answer should not have felt satisfying.

Yet.

Cassian leaned forward slightly then.

And for the first time since arriving—

the charm dropped completely.

“The western territories are already discussing containment.”

The room went still.

Lyra frowned.

“Containment.”

“A polite word for imprisonment if they can manage it.” Cassian’s gaze sharpened. “Execution if they can’t.”

Kael’s entire posture changed subtly at the word.

Not dramatic.

Worse because it wasn’t.

“And your eastern territories?” Kael asked evenly.

Cassian looked toward him calmly.

“We prefer adaptation over panic.”

“That sounds suspiciously diplomatic.”

“It means I’m offering an alliance before the others decide fear is easier than reason.”

Silence followed.

Heavy.

Strategic.

Lyra stared at Cassian carefully now.

“You’d ally with me because of my bloodline?”

Cassian held her gaze steadily.

“I’d ally with the woman capable of making an entire fortress kneel accidentally.”

The honesty of it hit harder than manipulation would have.

Kael spoke before Lyra could answer.

“No.”

Simple.

Immediate.

Cassian looked unsurprised.

“You don’t even know the terms.”

“I know enough.”

“You know you can’t protect her alone forever.”

That landed.

Lyra saw it hit Kael instantly.

Because beneath all the tension and possessiveness and fear—

that remained his deepest weakness.

The possibility of failing her.

Cassian continued more quietly now.

“The old kingdoms will fracture soon. Some will worship her. Others will hunt her.” His attention shifted briefly toward Lyra again. “Either way, she needs political leverage before war begins.”

War.

The word settled cold beneath Lyra’s ribs.

Because nobody in the room argued it anymore.

Kael rose slowly from his chair.

The movement alone changed the atmosphere.

“You’re not offering alliance,” he said calmly. “You’re offering ownership with prettier wording.”

Cassian stood too.

“And you’re confusing protection with isolation.”

The tension between them thickened immediately.

Not merely jealousy now.

Ideology.

Two dangerous men looking at Lyra and seeing entirely different futures.

Kael’s voice lowered.

“She stays in Blackfang.”

Cassian’s expression sharpened.

“She’s not territory.”

That silenced the room harder than shouting could have.

Because for one brief terrible moment—

Lyra realized both men genuinely believed they were trying to save her.

Just in completely opposite ways.

The silence stretched painfully afterward.

Then unexpectedly—

Cassian looked toward Lyra directly.

Not Kael.

Her.

“If you ever decide you want another option,” he said quietly, “the eastern territories will open their gates to you willingly.”

No manipulation.

No flirtation.

A real offer.

And that was the dangerous part.

Because for the first time since arriving in Blackfang—

Lyra actually felt tempted.

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