Current location: Novel nest The Luna: Marked by Two Alphas Chapter 23

"The Luna: Marked by Two Alphas" Chapter 23

The capital did not welcome them.

As the obsidian-patterned carriage moved through the outer districts, Ariel peered through the heavy velvet curtains. The city, usually a chaotic, vibrant organism of commerce and political posturing, felt unnervingly still. She saw merchants pausing mid-transaction to stare at the passing carriage, their eyes wide with a cocktail of fear and morbid curiosity. She could feel the city's anxiety through the bond—a low-frequency, jittery pulse of apprehension that scratched at the edges of her mind.

It was an exhausting sensation, a constant barrage of thousands of strangers' fears pressing against her consciousness. The weight of the city's collective dread was like being caught in the center of a gathering storm.

"You are shielding us too much," Rhys murmured, his voice a cool, steadying anchor. He didn't look up from the tactical maps, but his hand moved, finding hers beneath the heavy fabric of her robe, his fingers locking with hers. The city is terrified, Ariel. But their fear is not your burden. Let it flow around us, not through us.

Dorian, sitting beside her, shifted to block her view of the window, his presence a wall of searing, protective warmth. He didn't say a word, but through the link, he poured a flood of calm, grounding intent—a testament to his absolute refusal to let anything, not even the ambient suffering of a million citizens, touch her.

"I can't help it," Ariel whispered, her voice barely audible over the rhythmic thud of the carriage wheels. "It's like being in the center of a storm. I feel the city unraveling. Every shopkeeper, every guard, every aristocrat—they are all waiting for the sky to fall."

Then let it unravel, Dorian projected, his mental voice rough and possessive, carrying the heat of a kiln. We are the only stability left in this wasteland. If they are afraid, it is because they have finally realized that the order they relied upon was a lie. You are the truth they were never prepared to face.

The carriage moved deeper into the heart of the capital. The streets became narrower, the architecture more imposing, and the silence more profound. They were approaching the Inner Spire, the seat of the Old Guard's remaining influence. The marble buildings here were pristine, cold, and forbidding, their windows like unblinking eyes watching the arrival of the Triad.

A soft knock sounded against the carriage door—a rhythmic, coded beat. It was Raven. The Shadow Blade leader had merged with the carriage's magical wards, his voice a ghost-like whisper in the air, barely audible over the creaking of the carriage suspension.

"My Lords, the Council is in disarray," Raven reported, his voice devoid of emotion. "The Old Guard has barricaded the inner palace. They have issued a proclamation stripping you of your titles, and they are calling for the military commanders to hold the gates. They are preparing for a trial—and an execution. They have gathered the remnants of the Nullifier order in the grand hall."

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Rhys looked up, a sharp, dangerous light gleaming in his silver eyes. "They think they can legislate our end. They think that by painting a few symbols on parchment and calling it law, they can bind the storm."

Ariel straightened, the weariness of the journey falling away like ash. She looked at Rhys and Dorian, and in their shared gaze, she found the only clarity that mattered. The Council wasn't a threat; it was an invitation.

"We go to them," Ariel decided, her voice gaining a metallic edge. "If they want a trial, we shall provide it."

"It is a trap, Ariel," Rhys warned, though his lips curled into a faint, grim smile, his hand ghosting over the hilt of his blade. "They will have the Spire crawling with nullifiers and spell-binders. The entire hall will be dampened to stifle your light."

"Then we will give them a performance they will never forget," Dorian countered, his hand moving to the hilt of his own weapon, his golden eyes blazing. "If they want a trial, let us show them the justice of the Triad. Let us show them that a cage cannot hold the tide."

Ariel reached into the air, and at her silent command, the carriage's wards shifted. She broadcast a single, subtle pulse through the city's ley lines—a message meant not for the elites, but for the commoners in the streets. She leaked the truth of the Oakhaven massacre, letting the images of the dead assassins and the Triad's decisive victory ripple through the collective consciousness of the capital. She forced the citizens to see the cost of the Old Guard's treachery.

The reaction was instantaneous. The low-frequency hum of fear shifted into a chaotic, mutinous roar. She could feel the ripple effect—the guards at the outer gates began to hesitate, their resolve crumbling as the truth of who was coming for them took hold. The people of the capital, long suppressed, began to stir, a growing murmur that threatened to become a riot.

The carriage slowed as they reached the massive, iron-wrought gates of the Inner Spire. The guards stood frozen, their pikes trembling. They were supposed to be the defenders of the Old Guard, but they were looking at the carriage as if it were a harbinger of the end of the world. They were caught between the mandates of their masters and the sheer, overwhelming reality of the power that had just returned to their city.

"Open them," Ariel commanded, her voice amplified by the bond, ringing out with a clarity that silenced the panicked whispers of the mob. It wasn't a plea; it was the inevitable decree of a queen.

The gates groaned, moving slowly, agonizingly, inward.

Ariel stood. She moved between Rhys and Dorian, taking their hands. The bond surged, a blinding, unified light that resonated through their very marrow. They were no longer the refugees who had fled the sanctuary weeks ago. They were the storm. The dampening field within the gate area tried to push against them, but it shattered against the intensity of their connection.

"They have spent decades building their walls of tradition and deceit," Rhys said softly, his voice a promise of destruction, his gaze fixed on the looming palace.

"And we," Dorian added, his eyes meeting hers with an intensity that burned, "are going to tear them down, brick by brick, until there is nothing left but us."

As the carriage crossed the threshold into the Inner Spire, the city held its collective breath. Ariel looked ahead at the towering, opulent palace that had once been her prison, and felt only the steady, synchronized thrum of the two hearts that beat in rhythm with her own.

The trial was about to begin, but the judges were already broken. As the heavy doors of the Spire loomed before them, Ariel stepped forward, ready to claim the future they had been forged to rule. The shadows of the Spire reached out to claim them, but she didn't flinch. 

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