Current location: Novel nest Beyond the Ash: The Luna’s Rebirth Chapter 8

"Beyond the Ash: The Luna’s Rebirth" Chapter 8

Hospital

The air was tasting of bleach, cold iron, and the sharp, antiseptic tang of impending grief.

Cassian stood in the hallway. His black formal tunic was ruined—dark, damp stains of Lyra's blood had seeped into the fabric, turning the charcoal wool into something heavy and morbid.

The door to the surgical suite groaned open.

Dr. Aris emerged. The pack physician was a man who had survived two border wars and a dozen succession crises, but tonight, he held no deference to his Alpha.

---

"She's stable," Aris began, his voice a dry rasp. "The head wound required ten stitches. The bruising on her spine will take weeks to fade. Physically, she will recover."

"And the internal damage?" Cassian's voice was a guttural wreck, the sound of a predator whose throat had been crushed. He took a staggering step forward, the sheer magnetic pull of his distress forcing the order from his lips. "The blood, Aris. There was so much red on the marble. I felt her heart stutter in the car. Tell me what happened."

Aris looked at the man who ruled the northern territories—the man who could dictate the movement of armies but couldn't notice the woman sleeping beside him. 

Ten minutes ago.

He had also seen Lyra's eyes when she briefly regained consciousness—eyes that were no longer amber, but a dead, haunting gray. She had gripped the doctor's wrist with a strength that shouldn't have been possible and whispered a single, jagged command: "Do not tell him. Not now."

The doctor looked at the man who ruled the North, a man so blinded by his own crown that he hadn't noticed his wife was carrying his legacy.

"The trauma was extensive, Cassian," Aris said, choosing his words like he was navigating a minefield. "There was significant internal hemorrhaging. We've managed to stop it, but the loss is... You've broken something in her that medicine cannot stitch back together."

"I didn't mean to," Cassian whispered, his head bowing, his dark hair shielding his fac. "I just wanted her to stay. I just wanted her to listen."

"But you used your Aura as a weapon against a mate who never raised her voice to you," Aris said, his voice dropping to a lethal, quiet level. 

The doctor turned and walked away.

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The room was bathed in a dim, watery blue light.

Lyra lay in the center of the bed, her ivory skin almost translucent against the sterile white sheets. A thick bandage was wrapped around her forehead.

She wasn't sleeping. Her eyes were open, fixed on the textured ceiling with a terrifying, absolute stillness.

Cassian entered with the silence of a ghost.

He felt the pull of the mate bond—usually a roaring, electric tether—now feeling like a severed wire, sparking and useless in the dark.

He sat in the chair beside her, wanted to touch her with that familiar, possessive heat, to feel the electric jolt of their connection, to use his strength to pull her back.

"Lyra," he whispered, his voice thick with the gravel of his own mourning.

She didn't blink.

"I will fix this," he said, his hand finally settling on her arm, squeezing with a desperate, magnetic intensity.

He was a king begging a corpse for a smile.

Lyra finally moved her head, her gaze drifting slowly from the ceiling to his face. There was no anger in her eyes. 

"There's nothing left to rebuild, Cassian," she said. Her voice was a hollow echo, devoid of the melody he had taken for granted.

"Don't say that. We still have time. We have the future—"

"The future died on the stairs," she interrupted, her voice as flat and final as a tombstone.

Cassian winced, thinking she meant their marriage. He leaned forward, burying his face in the crook of her neck, seeking a scent that no longer belonged to him.

Lyra didn't shed a single tear. She let him hold her, her body as limp and responsive as a doll's. She looked over his shoulder at the dark window, where the first snowflakes of a long, permanent winter were beginning to tap against the glass.

She knew that the secret she was keeping was the final, lethal blow she would one day deliver to the man who thought he could own her.

"Go home, Cassian," she whispered. "The borders are calling."

Cassian didn't leave.

He stayed by her side all night, clutching her hand and promising her a world he had already destroyed. 

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