Inside the city, the command wing slled like blood and humiliation.
The generals stood over the Supre’s unconscious body with a quiet tension that did not break into panic. They were trained n. Panic was for civilians and cowards. This was sothing else.
This was the mont after a god bleeds.
One general knelt and checked the Supre’s pulse again. "Alive," he said.
The other stood by the window, watching the outer district. He could see the gate chanism from here, and he could see the first small groups leaving.
"They’re going," he murmured.
The kneeling general did not look up. "Let them."
"They’re leaving the walls."
"They’re leaving the rules," the kneeling general corrected.
Silence settled.
A guard entered with a report clutched in both hands like it might bite. "Supre’s periter orders are still active," he said quietly. "The n are asking if they should enforce."
The general at the window turned his head slightly. "And what do you think."
The guard swallowed. "I think if we enforce, we start killing our own."
The kneeling general stood slowly. "If we don’t enforce, we admit the rules were never stable without him."
The other general stared out at the small figures walking away. "Maybe the rules were never stable at all."
That was the first truly dangerous sentence spoken in the command wing.
A twitch ran through the Supre’s fingers.
A slow inhale filled his lungs.
His eyelids fluttered.
The generals went still.
The Supre opened his eyes.
His gaze snapped into focus imdiately, sharper than a man should be after being beaten unconscious.
He swallowed once, jaw tightening as pain registered.
Then he spoke.
Not to ask what happened.
Not to ask who had struck him.
Not to assess casualties.
He asked the only question his delusion allowed.
"Where is she."
The Supre did not wake slowly.
He surfaced with a violent inhale, as if the unconsciousness had been an inconvenience rather than a defeat. Pain followed a heartbeat later, sharp and hot across his jaw, down his ribs, pulsing at the base of his skull where stone had greeted him without rcy. He did not flinch from it. He catalogued it.
Blunt force trauma. Controlled strikes. No killing intent.
They had held back.
The thought steadied him more than it should have.
He lay still for several seconds, eyes fixed on the ceiling above the command wing, and allowed mory to return in pieces. The chamber. The surge of fox scent. The way she had shaken when Voss fell. The way she had not looked at him.
That last detail tried to cut.
He adjusted it.
She had been overwheld.
She had been destabilized by violence. Not rejecting him. Not turning from him. She had been forced into reaction by the aggression of other males who refused to understand the fragility of her position.
His jaw tightened.
They had pushed her too far.
He rolled slowly onto one elbow and sat up. The generals were there, standing a careful distance away, expressions neutral but not empty.
"You’re conscious," one said.
The Supre touched his jaw, felt the swelling, the misalignnt. He pressed his tongue gently to the inside of his teeth and tasted blood.
"Where is she," he asked.
There was no greeting. No request for damage reports.
Just her.
The generals exchanged a glance that was too quick "She left the city," the second general answered carefully.
Silence filled the space like thick smoke.
"She was taken," the Supre said.
The general did not correct him.
"She left with them," he said instead.
The Supre stood.
The motion was steady. Too steady for a man who had just been beaten unconscious. He adjusted his shoulders once, as if settling into a weight that felt more familiar than the ground.
"She would not have chosen that," he said.
The words were not defensive. They were declarative.
"She was frightened," he continued. "She was destabilized by the conflict. Her scent was erratic. She was not in a state to make decisions."
One of the generals hesitated. "She spoke clearly."
"She was overwheld," he corrected sharply. "There is a difference."
The silence that followed was no longer neutral.
It was careful.
The Supre stepped toward the window that overlooked the outer district. He could see the gates from here. He could see the road stretching toward the ridge.
The exodus began in trickles a pair here, a trio there like the first drops of rain before a storm.
Not a flood.
Just enough to feel the shift in the air.
"They think this is freedom," he murmured.
"They are choosing," the first general replied.
The Supre’s gaze hardened.
"They are panicking."
He turned back toward them.
"She ca into this city and destabilized instinct that had been regulated for months. That is not betrayal. That is biological influence. The n who surrounded her exploited that influence. They positioned themselves as protection when they were the source of escalation."
He believed it.
That was the most dangerous part.
"She trusted this city," he continued, voice lowering. "She walked into my command hall. She allowed proximity. She responded to my control."
One general swallowed.
"She also said she did not want to be hoarded."
The Supre’s eyes flashed.
"She does not understand what hoarding is," he snapped. "Protection is not hoarding. Structure is not imprisonnt."
He began to pace.
"She is rare. She is destabilizing. If she is placed in an uncontrolled environnt, males will fracture. Violence will multiply. She requires containnt not to limit her, but to protect her."
The pacing stopped.
He looked up.
"I love her."
The room absorbed that statent in stunned quiet.
It was not whispered.
It was not ashad.
It was absolute.
"She does not understand what she ans to this city," he continued, almost softly now. "She walked through the corridors and n straightened without realizing why. She entered the training level and instinct sharpened across three floors. She did not see it. I did."
His jaw clenched.
"They think they are protecting her. They are suffocating her with chaos. They forced her into bloom. They forced her to destabilize."
The generals remained silent, but their heads began to nod in slow, synchronized understanding. Of course why would anyone leave paradise for this blood soaked nightmare willingly? She must have been manipulated, exploited. Used.
The Supre’s gaze turned inward, and sothing in it fractured slightly, though he would never call it that.
"She will co back," he said quietly.
There it was.
Not hope.
Certainty.
"She will realize the instability they surround her with. She will realize what discipline provides. She will rember who tried to create order around her instead of tearing it down."
He stepped toward the central command table and placed both hands on it.
"We will not pursue her," he said.
That surprised the generals.
"We will not chase her into chaos. We will build sothing she cannot ignore."
The first general exhaled slowly. "What does that an."
The Supre looked up.
"It ans this city becos worthy."
The changes began within the hour.
Containnt protocols were not dissolved.
They were rewritten.
The Supre stood in the central hall and addressed the city not as a defeated commander, but as a man who had seen revelation.
"She is not gone," he told them. "She is waiting."
n filled the hall. So skeptical. So still shaken from watching him fall. All listening.
"She left because she was destabilized," he continued. "She left because we were not prepared to house what she is."
He let the word hang.
What she is.
"She is not property," he said, voice resonant. "She is not spoil. She is not a commodity to be fought over."
A few n stiffened.
"She is a queen without a throne."
The language shifted sothing.
"She requires structure," he continued. "Not chaos. She requires reverence, not scrambling hands. She requires a city that understands that strength is not consumption."
He did not ntion Snow Team.
He did not ntion Victor by na.
He refrad the narrative entirely.
"They convinced her that freedom lies in unregulated instinct. They convinced her that sharing without order is protection."
His mouth curved slightly, not quite a smile.
"They are wrong."
He stepped down from the platform and walked among them.
"This city will open its gates. Not for escape. For gathering."
The murmurs sharpened.
"There are won in the outer territories. Beast won. Survivors. Hidden."
The word hidden carried weight.
"We will bring them here," he said calmly. "Not as prisoners. As citizens. Under structure. Under law."
One man near the front swallowed. "And if they refuse."
"They will not refuse sanctuary," the Supre answered.
He believed that too.
"We will build a city where won are protected from wandering packs. Where instinct is not allowed to devolve into violence. Where access is earned, not grabbed."
The n listened.
So felt hope.
So felt hunger dressed as hope.
"We will build a holy city," he said.
That phrase echoed.
"A place of discipline. A place of order. A place worthy of her return."
And then he learned sothing that crystallized the delusion into architecture.
"The Church of the Light," one of the generals said later, in private. "They were spreading it."
The Supre went still.
"Explain."
"Talk of her as salvation. Of warmth. Of chosen strength."
The Supre’s eyes sharpened.
It clicked.
They had already begun framing her as sothing sacred.
They had begun constructing a narrative around her that did not include him.
Very well.
He would own the narrative.
"Build it," he said.
The general blinked. "Build what."
"A cathedral."
The word settled heavy.
"Stone. Visible from the outer ridge. High enough that it casts shadow across the lower districts at dusk."
The general stared.
"You’re serious."
"She will see it," the Supre said quietly. "From wherever they camp. She will see what we are building in her na."
He began issuing orders.
An entire central district would be cleared and repurposed. Labor reassigned not for punishnt, but for construction. Architects pulled from engineering corps. Stone cut from reinforced walls that had once symbolized containnt.
If the Church of the Light wanted a symbol, he would give them one.
But it would be his.
"They call her Light," he murmured to himself later, standing alone in the half-cleared square where the cathedral would rise. "Then we build her a throne in the center of it."
He closed his eyes and imagined her walking back through the gates, not frightened, not confused, but understanding.
Understanding that he had done this for her.
Understanding that discipline was devotion.
Understanding that love was structure.
"She does love ," he whispered.
The thought wrapped around his mind like armor.
"She responded to . She blood for ."
He ignored the mory of her kneeling over Voss he ignored the way she had not looked at him.
He reconstructed it.
"She was overwheld by violence. She will rember who offered control."
He opened his eyes.
Behind him, stone was already being dragged into place.
ssengers were dispatched into outer territories with orders to locate and retrieve beast won. Not with chains. With promises. With protection.
The city would beco sanctuary.
The city would beco holy.
And when she returned, because she would return, she would see what he had built in her absence.
He would kneel if necessary.
He would offer the throne
He would crush any man who stood between her and the city that had remade itself for her.
Outside the walls, far beyond the ridge, Snow Team made camp and believed they had broken sothing.
Inside the walls, sothing far more dangerous was being constructed.
Not rage.
Not revenge.
Faith.
And the Supre stood at its center, jaw still fractured, ribs still aching, eyes bright with a devotion that had crossed the line from love into doctrine.
He did not see the madness in it.
He saw destiny.
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