Chapter 27: Seren Face The Council
The Star Chamber had never felt so small.
Aeron stood at the opposite end of the table, facing Lord Castor. Kael flanked his left shoulder with crossed arms. Every muscle on his face coiled like a trap about to spring. Theron leaned one hip against an empty chair, his eyes were sharp as broken glass. Seren remained between them—small, steady, the forest-green gown stark against the black stone. The bruise at her temple had darkened to deep violet overnight; a thin scab had ford along her lower lip where the gag had torn her skin. She held her chin level, eyes clear, refusing to shrink beneath the weight of every stare.
No one had asked her to sit. Neither could anyone dare tell her to leave.
Castor broke the silence first.
"The law is unambiguous," he said, voice low but carrying to every corner of the chamber. " Like I previously said, the mating bond is sacred. Moon-touched. Unbreakable without divine wrath or mutual dissolution—which we all know will not happen here." His gaze moved slowly across the triplets, lingering a fraction longer on Seren. "Therefore this council cannot and will not order you to sever it."
A ripple of tension eased through the room. Shoulders dropping a fraction, breaths released, then tightened again as he continued.
"But sacred does not an convenient."
Lady Veyra inclined her head. "The packs will not kneel to a human queen. The border lords already whisper rebellion. Alpha Magnus watches from the north like a vulture circling a dying beast. And now Lady Sera threatens to withdraw Eastern support entirely." Her voice was calm, asured, the tone of soone stating simple arithtic. "You have placed the realm in an impossible position."
Harrow snorted, the sound wet and angry. "Impossible? It’s treason dressed in romance. Three alphas sharing one human mate? The old clans will see it as weakness. Degeneracy. They’ll fracture before Magnus even crosses the border."
Seren felt every eye flick toward her. So curious, so hostile, one or two almost pitying. She kept her gaze on Castor, refusing to let her hands tremble where they rested at her sides.
Theron spoke before the silence could thicken further.
"Then let them fracture," he said lightly, as though discussing the weather. "And let us put them back together. Stronger."
Harrow barked a laugh that held no humour. "With what? A human figurehead? You think the mountain packs will bow because your little servant slls like a pack now?"
Kael’s growl was imdiate. Low and dangerous.
Aeron’s hand lifted and Kael stilled.
Castor raised his own hand.
"Enough."
The single word dropped like lead into deep water.
He leaned forward, elbows on the obsidian, fingers interlaced so tightly the knuckles showed white.
"I have listened to every argunt," he said. "I have weighed every consequence. Every border report, every rchant whisper, every letter from the eastern houses. And I have reached a conclusion."
The chamber held its breath.
Castor’s gaze moved from face to face, settling at last on the triplets.
"The succession cannot wait for one of you to prove dominant," he said. "Your father left no nad heir. No clear preference. The law allows—indeed, demands, a solution that preserves stability above all else. Therefore, I propose the following:
"The three princes of Silvermoor shall rule jointly. A triumvirate. Equal voice. Equal authority. Until such ti as one of you demonstrates unequivocal superiority—by conquest, by council vote, by trial of blood, or by unanimous acclaim of this body—the crown shall rest on all three heads."
Silence.
Then Lady Corvas spoke, voice soft but cutting.
"And the human mate?"
Castor’s gaze settled on Seren.
"She remains under royal protection. Her existence will not be hidden—denying it now would only fuel worse rumours. But she will not sit at council. She will not wear a crown. She will not be presented as queen until the triumvirate is secure and the packs have been... persuaded."
Seren felt the words settle over her like cold iron chains.
Not queen yet. Protected. But leashed.
Theron’s smile sharpened. "And if we refuse?"
Castor’s eyes never wavered.
"Then this council will be forced to na an interim regent. And the packs will be inford publicly that the heirs have placed personal desire above the realm’s survival."
The threat was unmistakable.
Aeron studied the old wolf for a long mont, long enough that the silence grew uncomfortable.
Then he spoke. Voice calm, asured, and final.
"We accept."
Kael’s head snapped toward him.
Theron’s smile froze.
Seren’s heart stuttered.
Aeron did not look at them. His gaze remained on Castor.
"Joint rule," he repeated. "A triumvirate. Until one proves superior."
Castor exhaled—once, quietly, the sound of a man who had expected worse.
"Then it is decided."
Lady Veyra leaned forward. "And the girl?"
Aeron’s answer was imdiate.
"She remains ours. Protected. Hidden from formal court until the transition is complete. After that..." He let the sentence hang, heavy with unspoken promise. "We will see what the Moon intends."
Harrow opened his mouth to protest.
Castor raised a hand again.
"It is decided," he repeated, the words final as a gavel.
The councillors exchanged glances—so relieved, so furious, all calculating the new shape of power.
Seren felt the weight of every stare like physical pressure against her skin.
She kept her spine straight.
The bond thrumd. Fierce protectiveness from all three alphas, laced with sothing new.
Frustration.
Resignation.
And beneath it all, a single shared certainty:
This bought them ti.
But it also put a spotlight on every move they made from this mont forward.
The doors opened.
The councillors rose, chairs scraping against stone, robes rustling.
Aeron turned first, offering Seren his arm.
She took it.
Kael fell in on her other side.
Theron walked behind. His smile back in place, but eyes sharp as obsidian.
They left the chamber together.
In the corridor outside, the palace was already waking, servants hurrying with trays and linens, guards changing shifts, whispers spreading faster than fire through dry grass.
Aeron’s voice was low, ant only for the four of them.
"They’ll watch us now. Every word. Every glance. Every night we spend with her."
Kael’s jaw tightened. "Let them watch."
Theron’s tone was lighter, but no less dangerous. "They’ll see unity. Strength. And if they push..."
Seren finished the sentence quietly.
"They’ll see what happens when they threaten what’s ours."
The bond flared—bright, fierce, unbreakable.
They turned the corner toward the eastern wing.
And stopped.
Lady Sera stood at the far end of the corridor—crimson gown stark against pale stone, hair gleaming like polished bronze under torchlight.
She was not alone.
Two Eastern guards flanked her. They were tall, silent, with hands resting on sword hilts.
Sera’s smile was slow and perfect.
"I had hoped to speak with you privately," she said, gaze sliding from Aeron to Seren and back again. "But since you insist on parading your... acquisition in public..."
She stepped forward.
One of her guards moved with her and then stopped abruptly.
Because Kael had shifted half a step—half-wolf, claws flexing, growl vibrating through the stone.
Sera’s smile never faltered.
"Careful, Prince Kael," she said softly. "I co in peace. For now."
Aeron placed himself between Sera and Seren.
"Speak," he said.
Sera tilted her head.
"I withdraw my offer of alliance," she said simply. "The Eastern Pack will not stand with a triumvirate that elevates a human above its own bloodline. My father’s betrothal contract is void. Consider this as a formal notice."
Aeron’s voice was velvet over steel.
"And if we consider it a declaration of hostility?"
Sera’s eyes glittered.
"Then you consider correctly."
She turned—skirts sweeping—then paused.
Looked back over her shoulder at Seren.
"Enjoy the spotlight while it lasts, little mortal," she said. "It burns brighter the closer you get to the fla."
She walked away.
Her guards followed.
The corridor fell silent.
Seren’s hand tightened on Aeron’s arm.
"She’s going to move against us," she whispered.
Aeron’s voice was calm.
"Yes."
Kael cracked his knuckles.
Theron smiled—small, lethal.
"Then we move first."
They continued down the corridor.
Behind them, in the shadowed alcove where no one had noticed her standing, Elowen watched them go.
Her fingers curled around a small glass vial.
The sa one she had taken from Sera’s sleeve during the earlier confusion outside the chamber.
Silver nitrate.
Dissolved. Concentrated. Lethal.
She smiled slowly.
And slipped away toward the servants’ passages.
Where no one would see her.
And no one would hear the soft clink of glass against glass as she prepared sothing far louder than poison.
Sothing that would echo through every hall in Silvermoor by nightfall.
The bond flared again—warning, sharp, urgent.
And this ti, all four of them felt it at once.
Not just danger.
Certainty.
Elowen was no longer waiting for an opening.
She was making one.
Right now.
And sowhere in the lower kitchens, a single tray was being prepared—three crystal goblets, three servings of spiced wine.
One drop.
That was all it would take.
The ga had just begun.
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