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"Bride of the Black Wolf King" Chapter 43 The Prince Who Chose War

Chapter 43

The Prince Who Chose War

The first eastern city burned before sunrise.

Not from invasion.

From rebellion.

By the time messengers reached the palace, smoke already covered the northern horizon beyond the capital walls while eastern military banners vanished one by one from the border watchtowers.

Nobody understood what was happening initially.

Then Cassian walked into the war chamber smiling faintly.

And everything became worse.

“You started this.”

Kael’s voice carried low across the council hall.

Not accusation.

Recognition.

The eastern nobles surrounding the strategy table looked somewhere between terrified and deeply offended at discovering they’d apparently been participating in a political coup without informed consent.

Reasonable reaction honestly.

Cassian removed his gloves slowly beside the war map table while snow melted from dark green military sleeves onto scattered border reports.

“I accelerated something inevitable.”

“That’s a very elegant way to describe treason,” Fenrir muttered.

No one disagreed.

The atmosphere inside the eastern war chamber had shifted sharply over the last week.

Nobody trusted anyone anymore.

Southern councils wanted Lyra imprisoned.

Northern territories wanted her protected.

Eastern nobles wanted power.

Religious factions had started calling her the Moon Heir openly in lower city districts.

And through all of it—

Cassian kept smiling like a man finally watching years of careful strategy unfold exactly on schedule.

Lyra stood near the massive palace windows overlooking the capital below while silver storm clouds gathered beyond distant mountain ranges.

She could feel the kingdom destabilizing already.

Fear carried through wolves now.

Through instinct.

Through whispers.

“You knew about my bloodline before the others did,” she said quietly.

Cassian looked toward her.

“Yes.”

No denial.

Interesting.

Kael’s irritation sharpened instantly through the bond.

Lyra ignored it.

Mostly.

“How?” Elder Thorne demanded.

Cassian leaned lightly against the strategy table.

“My family preserved records the southern kingdoms destroyed.”

That silenced the room immediately.

“The eastern royal lines traded with the Lunar Houses centuries ago,” Cassian continued. “Some of us remembered what the old bloodlines actually were.”

Lyra crossed her arms slowly.

“And what exactly do you think I am?”

Cassian’s expression shifted subtly then.

Not fear.

Reverence mixed with ambition.

Dangerous combination.

“A correction,” he said softly.

The room went still around the words.

Kael moved half a step closer toward Lyra instinctively.

Protective.

Immediate.

Cassian noticed.

Of course he did.

“The modern Alpha kingdoms built themselves on the bones of the Lunar Courts after the purges,” he continued quietly. “But the old bloodlines weren’t wiped out because they were weak.”

Snow drifted heavily beyond the palace windows now while eastern bells rang somewhere far below across the city.

Warning signals.

Mobilization.

War already moving closer.

“They were destroyed,” Cassian said, “because ordinary rulers feared becoming irrelevant beside them.”

The truth of it settled heavily through the chamber.

No one interrupted.

Lyra felt Kael watching her through the bond again.

Not her power.

Her reaction.

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Always her first.

Cassian stepped closer toward the center strategy map.

“You think the southern councils want containment?” A humorless smile touched his mouth briefly. “They want extinction.”

Fenrir swore quietly beneath his breath.

“They’ve already united military houses along the western border,” Cassian added. “The Vale territories opened mountain routes for troop movement yesterday.”

Lyra felt sick instantly.

Her old pack again.

Always choosing survival beside whoever frightened them most.

Kael’s rage stirred hard enough through the bond that silver light flickered unconsciously beneath Lyra’s skin in response.

Several eastern nobles noticed immediately.

Fear spread visibly along the council table.

Cassian’s gaze lingered on the silver glow.

Too interested.

Lyra noticed that too.

“You want my power.”

The sentence cut cleanly through the chamber.

Cassian didn’t answer immediately.

Which became answer enough.

Finally:

“I want balance restored before kingdoms destroy each other trying to control you.”

“That’s not what I asked.”

Silence stretched.

Then Cassian exhaled softly once.

“Yes.”

Honest now.

Finally.

“I spent my entire life watching weak rulers inherit power through birth while stronger kingdoms bled around them.” His attention remained fixed on Lyra steadily. “You could reshape the world entirely.”

Kael stepped forward immediately afterward.

“Careful.”

The warning landed quietly.

Still lethal.

Cassian looked toward him calmly.

“She already is.”

That part nobody could deny anymore.

The council chamber doors burst open suddenly before another argument could ignite.

An eastern commander stumbled inside breathing hard, snow covering one shoulder of half-fastened armor.

“Southern forces crossed the western ridge.”

The room froze.

“How many?” Fenrir demanded.

The commander swallowed hard.

“Too many.”

Excellent military terminology.

Very reassuring.

More officers flooded into the chamber seconds later carrying battle reports, casualty estimates, fortress breach maps.

The eastern border had collapsed faster than expected.

Not coincidence.

Planned.

“They’re heading directly for the capital,” one commander said sharply.

Another added:

“Several eastern houses already switched allegiance overnight.”

Cassian’s expression darkened slightly.

“There it is.”

Kael moved instantly toward the war maps while commanders gathered around him automatically.

The shift happened without discussion.

Without debate.

Crisis arrived, and every wolf in the room instinctively looked toward the Black Wolf King first.

Lyra watched it happen quietly.

The authority.

The terrifying competence.

The way war settled naturally onto Kael’s shoulders like something familiar enough to almost feel comforting.

And through the bond—

she felt it too.

The cold sharp focus replacing exhaustion.

The immediate instinct to survive.

Protect.

Kill if necessary.

Then suddenly—

Kael looked toward her across the war chamber.

And beneath all the strategy and violence and military preparation flooding through him now—

one thought burned louder than everything else.

Keep her alive.

The realization tightened painfully around Lyra’s ribs.

Because somewhere along the way, she had become the center point around which kingdoms now tilted toward war.

Outside the palace walls, eastern battle horns began sounding across the capital.

One after another.

Closer every minute.

Cassian stepped beside the palace windows slowly while smoke spread darker across the horizon beyond the city.

“The old world is ending,” he said quietly.

Not triumphant.

Certain.

And beneath the storm-dark sky beyond the eastern capital—

thousands of wolves marched toward each other while war finally arrived exactly where everyone secretly knew it would.

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