[House of Karzath—Later—The Sa Night]
The carriage halted before the carved obsidian steps of House Karzath.
Lady Arinaya descended first. The attendants bowed low, heads dipped in disciplined reverence. Captain Raevahn stood near the archway, armored but relaxed. When his gaze found her, it softened.
He offered a faint smile.
She looked at him—just once—and then passed without acknowledgnt. No nod, no asured courtesy.
Nothing.
Raevahn frowned slightly as she disappeared inside and muttered under his breath, "Did I upset my lady?"
The doors closed behind her. Inside, the corridors of Karzath lay dim and cool, the air thick with incense that never quite masked the scent of old stone.
Lady Arinaya walked with steady steps toward her private chamber; she opened the door—THUD. It slamd shut behind her. Silence swallowed the room.
Then, a voice ca, smooth and familiar, "How was your day... my dear sister?"
Rakhane’s tone drifted lazily from the shadowed couch. Lady Arinaya turned her head slowly toward him.
Her eyes were cold and unblinking, and then—a smile curved across her lips.
Sharp.
Intentional.
She walked forward, her voice softened with practiced warmth, "It was... rather intriguing, my dearest brother."
Rakhane’s smirk deepened; he rose from the couch and strolled toward the bed, and there—another Lady Arinaya lay sleeping.
Peaceful.
Unaware.
Rakhane glanced back at the woman standing before him—the duplicate. The sa gaze. The sa poised stance. The sa coiled restraint.
Only the air around her felt... wrong.
"Well?" he asked quietly. "Did you see the Malika? The consort of the Silver Serpent?"
The woman’s smile widened. She reached beneath her sleeve and slipped a faintly glowing mana stone from within the folds of cloth.
Its surface flickered; the illusion trembled and dissolved. Where Lady Arinaya had stood, Azhrakaal erged. Black hair falling loose. Black eyes gleaming with cruel amusent. He moved with unhurried elegance to the couch and seated himself, leaning back as though the chamber were his own.
"You were correct," he said, voice low and savoring. "That consort of his... is beyond expectation."
His gaze darkened as he exhaled softly, "An alpha bride, so refined... so luminous. I have not witnessed such beauty in many cycles."
Rakhane’s expression hardened instantly. He stepped closer and said coldy, "Do not forget, he belongs to ."
Azhrakaal’s lips curved as he replied smoothly, "Yes, I rember."
A pause.
"But admiration does not equal desire." His eyes flicked toward the sleeping Arinaya. "It rely confirms his value."
Rakhane studied him carefully. "Did he suspect?"
Azhrakaal shook his head once, "The palace seals strain beneath my presence. I cannot wear her face long."
His smile thinned. "But today was sufficient."
Rakhane folded his arms.
"And?"
Azhrakaal’s gaze glead, "The bridge visit proceeds as predicted."
Silence settled heavy between them. Rakhane moved toward the sleeping Arinaya, brushing a finger lightly near her temple—not gently.
"She will wake soon," he said.
Azhrakaal stood and said, "Yes. The spell frays."
He stepped toward the window, pausing briefly.
"Rember," Rakhane added, voice cool. "Entering the palace wearing her likeness was permitted only for today. I will not weaken the seal repeatedly; I will be caught."
Azhrakaal inclined his head as he said softly, "I require only monts. Monts are enough to fracture certainty."
His body shifted.
Bone narrowing.
Shadow coiling.
In the blink of an eye, a small black serpent slid across the polished floor, scaled and silent. He paused at the edge of the window, glancing once more toward the unconscious Arinaya.
A thin hiss escaped him.
"Useful," he murmured.
Then he slipped through the narrow gap and vanished into the descending dusk; the chamber remained still. Rakhane stood alone beside his sleeping sister.
Outside, the wind shifted faintly.
Inside, a plan moved forward, not loud, not rushed, but deliberate, like poison introduced in careful asure.
***
[Many Days Later — Silthara Palace — Emperor’s Chamber]
Night had folded itself gently over Zahryssar.
The Emperor’s chamber was lit only by oil flas trembling in bronze bowls. Shadows stretched long and fluid against carved walls etched with serpents and celestial sigils.
Levin stood near the low table of cedarwood, parchnt unfurled between his hands. The report of High Mage Arkhazuun lay heavy in script before him.
His voice was soft and thoughtful as he said slowly, "So... I did not awaken to sudden power. I did not receive a blessing."
Behind him, sothing vast shifted.
Scaled.
Ancient.
Alive.
Zerat, in his true serpent form, uncoiled from the shadowed marble. His massive body moved with unhurried grace, obsidian scales drinking in firelight. He lowered his great head until it rested upon Levin’s shoulder.
The weight was imnse, yet careful and protective.
"Yes," Zerat replied, his voice deep as distant thunder rolling across desert plains. "You did not receive power. You claid it."
Levin’s fingers tightened slightly on the parchnt as he asked quietly, "Just because I defeated her? because I ended the queen?"
Zerat’s golden eyes glowed faintly, "No...because you endured her."
A pause.
"Ti bends for those who survive what was ant to consu them."
Levin stared at the script again and murmured, "It is difficult to believe that sothing as imasurable as ti would listen... to ."
Zerat’s tail moved.
Smooth.
Deliberate.
He slid the parchnt from Levin’s hands and carried it toward the nearest fla. Without ceremony, he lowered it into fire.
The edges blackened.
Curled.
Turned to ash.
"There are many things in this world that are difficult to believe, consort," Zerat said quietly as the paper dissolved. "Including you."
Levin blinked faintly and turned his head just enough to glance at him, "What do you an?"
A low sound—almost a hum—vibrated from Zerat’s chest, he shifted. His great body circled Levin slowly, coiling once around his waist—not binding, not imprisoning—but enclosing him in warmth and scale.
Then his massive head moved from one shoulder to the other, resting there with deliberate intimacy.
"Who would have thought," Zerat murmured, his breath warm against Levin’s neck, "that an Alpha could shine like moonlight upon still water."
Levin’s pulse fluttered faintly beneath his skin as he replied softly, "It seems you are in an indulgent mood tonight."
Zerat’s coils tightened just enough for Levin to feel the difference as he said, voice lowering, "I am always indulgent when you stand before , my moonflower."
The title was not playful.
It was worship.
"I wonder," Zerat continued slowly, his voice like ancient scripture being recited at the birth of kings, "how a human such as you commands the obedience of ti... and yet commands the devotion of the strongest serpent in this empire."
Levin turned slightly within the embrace, his palm lifted, and he placed it gently against Zerat’s scaled brow.
"You are not commanded," Levin said softly.
Zerat stilled as he asked, quieter now, "No?"
Levin turned fully toward him. Blue t gold—clear as morning sky eting molten sun. He patted the massive head with fondness rather than authority.
"You choose to respect ," Levin said. "You choose not to reduce to ornant... not to treat as a bride placed beside your throne."
His fingers lingered against the scale.
"And that is why I choose you," he continued, voice steady and sincere, "to be my husband—not by title... but by heart."
For a mont—Zerat did not move, then the serpent dissolved.
Scales withdrew.
Length compressed.
And he stood before Levin in his true form—tall, naked, powerful, the air around him warm with restrained instinct.
He stepped forward and drew Levin close by the waist.
"You truly know," Zerat murmured, voice roughened by sothing deeper than pride, "how to make your husband kneel, consort."
Levin smiled faintly, searching his face, "Is it wrong?"
Zerat’s hands tightened slightly at Levin’s waist—not possessive, but anchoring as he said, "No. If kneeling before my moonflower proves my devotion... then I will kneel every dawn and every dusk."
He brushed his lips to Levin’s cheek—slow, reverent, "I will kneel whenever your heart requires it."
Levin’s breath softened, he rested his forehead lightly against Zerat’s chest as he whispered, "Thank you."
Zerat’s fingers threaded into his hair, pressing a kiss to the crown of his head.
"You provoke ," he murmured, amusent and heat mingling in his tone. "Far more than you realize."
Levin blinked and tilted his head up slightly, "What do you—"
He stopped, because, the air had changed. It thickened.
Ward.
A scent deep and intoxicating began to unfurl—dark lotus and heat and sothing unmistakably primal.
Levin’s pulse quickened as he asked quietly, "Are you entering your rut?"
Zerat’s arms wrapped more securely around him. One hand moved along Levin’s back beneath the fabric of his shirt—slow, deliberate, possessive.
"I believe," Zerat said near his ear, voice lowering to a near-whisper, "it will not be difficult for you this ti."
His breath brushed Levin’s skin, "You have already endured ."
Levin shivered faintly from his touch, Zerat’s forehead pressed against his, "Are you ready, my consort?"
His lips hovered near Levin’s ear as he whispered, "This ti I will not hold back. This ti... I will ensure you carry our child."
Levin’s heart thundered against his ribs, not with fear, with anticipation, with devotion.
He nodded once.
"Yes," he said softly. "I am ready."
Zerat’s expression shifted—not into hunger, but into sothing far more dangerous. Determination. He lifted Levin easily into his arms, holding him as though he were sothing precious carved from starlight.
"Then we prepare," he said, voice low and certain. "First... we cleanse."
His lips brushed Levin’s temple once more. The chamber lamps flickered as he carried Levin toward the inner bathing room.
Outside, the palace slept beneath silent stars.
Inside—The Pri Alpha and his moonflower moved toward union not of conquest—but of promise.
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