The mory shifted abruptly. A year, maybe two.
Dexmon was standing on a wall of white marble, overlooking a field that stretched to the horizon. Banners snapped in a cold wind. Armor clinked in formation below. The sky was the color of a bruise, and the air tasted like iron and wet earth.
Natalia stood on the rampart.
She was in armor, lightweight combat plate fitted to her fra, her white hair tied back and her green eyes scanning the field below. There was no crown on her head. Natalia wore steel and leather and the quiet, unflinching composure of a woman who had been told her whole life that she was disposable and had decided, without announcent, that she was going to be useful instead.
Ronan stood in front of her.
He was in full battle gear, sword at his hip, his dark hair pushed back from a face that carried the weight of a man about to lead wolves into a war he wasn’t certain they’d survive. He was Asher’s second in command, his right hand, the sa position he’d held since they were boys playing at soldiers in a marble courtyard. The title had changed. The loyalty hadn’t.
Natalia’s composure cracked.
His hands cupped her face. His thumbs swept across her cheekbones, catching the tears before they fell. "You’ve done harder things than this, Natalia."
"I’ve never done this." Her voice broke. "I’ve never had to stand on a wall and watch two people I love ride toward a thing that could kill them."
Two people. She said it without thinking, and the words hung between them, too honest to retract, too raw to address.
And Dexmon understood, watching this exchange, with a clarity that ached, that in ten thousand years the geotry hadn’t changed
Ronan didn’t flinch. He kissed her forehead. Slow. Deliberate. A man morizing the geography of the woman he loved in case the map was all he’d have left.
"I’ll co back."
"You don’t know that."
"I know that I refuse to be the reason you cry on a wall in armor that doesn’t fit." The ghost of a smile. "Besides, Asher needs to correct his formation calls. He still confuses left flank with right flank under pressure."
She laughed. Wet. Wrong. A laugh that collapsed into a sob before it finished, and she pressed her face into his chest and gripped his armor with both hands.
"Co back to ," she whispered into the steel. "Please."
"Always."
He held her for ten more seconds. Then he let go, stepped back, and walked toward the staircase without turning around, because turning around would have ant seeing her face, and seeing her face would have ant staying, and staying would have ant letting Asher ride into a war without his brother beside him.
Asher was already mounted at the front of the column. He watched the exchange from a distance, his face empty, then caught Natalia’s eye.
For one unguarded second, the masks fell. Both of them at the sa ti. Every performance, every lie, every "I’m fine" and every "we’re friends" dissolved, and what was left was the raw, unedited truth that they had been carrying since the night she broke their matebond in a marble corridor.
She still loved him.
He still loved her.
And neither of them would ever say it again, because she had made a choice and he had honored it and Ronan was between them now, loved by both, deserving of both, and they would swallow this for the rest of their lives if that’s what it took to keep the three of them intact.
Thousands of years apart and Dexmon still felt her grief, her love, her guilt, her longing, arrive in his chest at the sa ti.
Asher turned his horse toward the field.
The column moved forward.
The mory dissolved into white.
✦✦✦
The mories blurred. Faster now. Violent.
Dragon fire against black sky. Formations breaking. Dark Fae pouring through rift tears in the atmosphere, their bodies wrong, too many limbs, too many mouths, moving in patterns that defied geotry.
Asher caught flashes. A siege line collapsing. A young rider falling from a dragon and disappearing into smoke. A wall of gold light erupting across a battlefield, shielding an entire flank from a barrage of dark magic that would have annihilated everything behind it.
Natalia.
She stood at the center of every engagent like a lighthouse in a hurricane. No crown. No title.
Just gold magic blazing from her hands and a will so relentless that the Dark Fae changed their formations around her the way water changes course around a stone that refuses to move.
This was not the girl who had stood in a reception hall holding a fertility statue with trembling hands. This was not the woman who had cried on the floor while Odette’s people destroyed her room. This was not the version of her who had needed Ronan to carry her and Asher to catch her.
Dexmon watched her and felt, for the first ti in these mories, not grief. Awe. Pure, uncut awe at the woman Serena’s soul had been in its second life.
Her power protected every warrior on the field. It healed wounds mid-combat, sealed rift tears before they widened, and burned through dark magic with a ferocity that made seasoned commanders stop and stare.
She was magnificent.
This was what Serena would beco. And the thought of it made his chest burn with sothing that had no na.
He had never seen that much raw power channeled through her body. The gold light that erupted from her hands didn’t flicker or waver. It held. Steady and absolute, a wall between her people and annihilation, maintained by a woman whose nose was bleeding and whose legs were shaking and who refused to let either of those things matter.
Dexmon’s throat tightened. Serena had no idea what lived inside her. No idea what she was carrying. And he was watching the proof of it burn across a battlefield ten thousand years before she was born.
Dexmon could feel how much it cost her, even through the mory. The exhaustion that settled into her bones after each battle. The nosebleeds she hid. The trembling in her hands that she controlled by clenching them at her sides.
She gave everything. Every ti. Until there was nothing left.
Dexmon watched Asher’s face and recognized every line of it.
The jaw tight with restraint and worry. But under it, his eyes were bright with sothing fiercer than love. A man who knew, with absolute certainty, that she should be by his side as his queen.
Protective pride. Dexmon knew that feeling. He wore it every ti Serena did sothing that reminded him she was not fragile, had never been fragile, and would burn anyone who made the mistake of treating her like she was.
She wasn’t his. But the soul was the sa, and the pride was the sa, and watching an army flinch away from the woman he loved was the most satisfying thing he had ever witnessed in any tiline.
She collapsed after the last engagent. Her knees hit the dirt and her hands braced against the ground and gold sparks still flickered from her fingers because her body had forgotten how to stop giving even after there was nothing left to give.
Ronan was there before she hit the ground. He pulled her against his chest and held her the way Dexmon held Serena after every fight, every breakdown, every mont where she pushed herself past the point where any sane person would have stopped.
He had watched Serena’s soul in its first life survive slavery, survive sabotage, survive the loss of a fated mate, survive a matebond severance that nearly killed her, survive a war that should have buried her. And instead of breaking, she had beco the most powerful thing on the field. She had beco the reason people survived.
He was going to spend the rest of his life making sure the woman sleeping in his bed in Drakenfell knew exactly what she was. What she had always been. What she would always be.
Not because she needed him to tell her. Because she deserved to hear it from soone who had seen the proof written across ten thousand years of history.
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