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Now reading: Chapter 29: Tell Maddox I Saw Her Too from Wolf Princess Sold to the Dragon King, a Fantasy novel by TheLoneQuill.

Guinevere woke with her hand at her throat.

The bruise was still wet, and there were no arms around her.

She rembered his fangs in her neck, and the sense that sothing bad had happened before, but the details were fog.

On the other side of the stone, n spoke the way they only spoke when kingdoms had already bled.

"Cinderfall Keep fell at dawn. The garrison surrendered without a fight. Kael’s banner is flying from the eastern tower."

"Surrendered." Maddox’s voice was flat. "Or turned."

"Turned. The garrison commander was Hollis’s cousin. Secondary contact from the sweep. We cleared him too late."

She was up before her body could vote on it, pulling on a short silk robe and slippers.

Maddox looked up when she entered. His gold eyes tracked her in the doorway.

"You should be resting," he said.

"I rested." She moved to the table. "What happened."

It was asked as a statent. She had heard enough through the walls to know the answer was bad.

Sterling answered because Maddox’s jaw was doing the thing it did when he was deciding between speaking and breaking furniture.

"Kael moved while the Keep was in lockdown. Three border territories have declared for him. Cinderfall Keep, Thornmarch, and the Blackspire garrison. All three fell without resistance. All three had personnel in secondary contact with Kael’s n during his ti in custody."

He placed three iron markers on the map in a line that ran diagonally from the northeast to the southwest.

"The dark mage’s work is in every one of them. Wards failing. Mindlinks severed. Our scouts reported two companies in Thornmarch whose dragons could shift but could not produce fla."

Gwen studied the map. She had grown up in a throne room watching her father play kingdoms like chess pieces. The pattern was familiar.

Then she zeroed in on Sterling’s hand, hovering a second too long over the Blackspire marker, followed by the pulse at his throat. She shook her head once, coming out of whatever that was.

Maddox’s brows furrowed, watching her.

She didn’t et his eyes when she spoke.

"He is isolating you. It’s obvious."

Sterling looked at her. His expression shifted by a degree. The degree that ant he had arrived at the sa conclusion and was recalibrating his assessnt of the woman standing beside him.

"Yes. The three keeps form a line that cuts Velkaris diagonally. Every kingdom east of that line is severed from Drakencrest’s mindlink network and supply routes. He is carving the continent in half."

"Eighteen east of the line. Confirm?" Guinevere asked, eyes on the map.

Sterling didn’t answer until she looked up at him.

"Yes. Unexpected that a wolf would know—"

"Basic geography?"

The words were out before she could catch them. Guinevere Lunaris did not cut people off mid-sentence unless they were Cassian and being very dumb, and Sterling was neither. She felt the room register it the sa mont she did.

Silence dropped like a guillotine.

"He is giving them a choice," she continued. "Declare for him while they still can, or be on the wrong side of the line when it hardens."

Sterling’s second recalibration was visible.

"That is exactly what he is doing."

Maddox’s fist ca down on the table. The iron markers jumped. The maps shifted. The sound was loud enough to carry through the stone and into the hallway beyond, and three guards outside the door stiffened at once.

"I will burn every keep he touches to the foundation." His voice was the voice of a man holding a leash on sothing enormous, and the leash was fraying. "I will turn Cinderfall into a landmark people use to teach their children what happens when you fly the wrong banner."

Rage poured into Guinevere like boiling water, filling her chest. It was so violent that spots danced in her vision and blood whooshed in her ears. For one blinding second she saw the room through gold-slitted eyes.

She smothered the flinch, but still stumbled forward, catching herself on the table. Blood trickled from her nose. It took her a mont to understand that the one-way door of her matebond had just blown wide without warning.

Maddox’s head snapped to her and every ounce of rage went out like a candle in a storm.

"You will do none of those things," Sterling said, handing Guinevere a handkerchief without looking at her. "Because every keep he has taken is full of your own people, and burning them would prove his argunt that you are unfit to rule."

Maddox’s eyes were still locked onto Guinevere when he spoke again.

"Ryker."

Ryker stepped forward in armor that did not exist on the wolf continent. Black plate, dragon-forged, fitted so precisely that the steel moved like muscle when he did. The Ryker who cracked jokes on battlefields was absent, and the man in his place was the High General of Drakencrest.

"War column. Two thousand. I take Cinderfall first, then swing south to Thornmarch." Ryker’s voice was crisp. Efficient. "The Blackspire garrison is the anchor point. If I take Cinderfall and Thornmarch, Blackspire folds or starves. Three moves. Ten days."

"Kael will anticipate the column," Sterling countered.

"Kael can anticipate whatever he likes. I will still be faster."

Maddox held Ryker’s gaze across the table. The look between them was the kind that held years of shared wars and shared silences and the specific trust that existed between two n who had saved each other’s lives enough tis to stop counting.

"Take the column. Cinderfall first. Do what needs to be done."

Ryker inclined his head. "Commander."

He turned towards the door. Then stopped on the other side. He saw Gwen standing there. She looked small.

"Keep Maddox alive while I am gone."

His voice was light. The delivery was practiced. The smile that ca with it was the one he used when he wanted a room to think everything was fine.

"Keep yourself alive," she said.

He opened his mouth.

The quip was supposed to co here. The joke. The deflection. The specific brand of Ryker humor that turned every serious mont into a punchline. She could see it loading behind his eyes, the setup already written, the delivery already rehearsed.

Nothing ca out.

His mouth stayed open for one second. Then closed. The silence that followed was louder than anything he had ever said in her presence.

Ryker looked at her. Really looked at her. The way he had looked at her the first morning on the training field, when she had split an arrow and he had gone quiet in a way that did not match the man she was learning.

He stepped forward and pressed his forehead to hers.

Gwen went still. His hands stayed at his sides. The contact was forehead to forehead and nothing else, and it lasted three seconds, and it was the most vulnerable thing she had ever seen a dragon do.

"If I do not co back," he said, low enough that only she could hear, "tell Maddox the real reason I followed him to Nyros was because I saw her in my dreams too."

Her breath caught.

He pulled back. His eyes were bright. Wet at the edges in a way she had never seen and would never see again.

Then the mask ca back. Smooth. Instant. The grin slid into place and the shoulders squared, and Ryker Stormvale walked past her and through the door and down the corridor, his black armor catching the torchlight, his coin flipping once in the air.

He caught it without looking.

The sound of his boots faded.

Gwen stood in the doorway. She did not turn around. Her throat was tight and her eyes were burning, and she was holding onto the doorfra because her legs had made a decision about structural integrity that she was overruling through sheer force of will.

Behind her, Maddox was watching.

He had heard nothing. The words had been for her alone, pitched below even dragon hearing at that distance. Whatever Ryker had said to his wife, he would learn from her or he would never learn it.

"Gwen."

She turned. Her eyes were wet.

Maddox crossed to her. His hand ca up to the side of her face, his thumb catching the tear that had escaped. He did not ask what Ryker had said.

He pulled her against his chest.

She let him.

Outside, in the eastern courtyard, a red dragon launched into the sky.

Two thousand dragons followed at once. The thunder of wings hit like a siege ram.

Stone dust rained from the ceiling. Torches blew out.

A wall of hot wind blasted through the window, ripping Gwen’s silk robe tight against her body and scattering maps across the floor.

In the sudden darkness, Maddox’s arms tightened around her like he was afraid the sky itself would take her next. His lips moved against her hair, and the voice that ca out was his, and the words were not.

"I left my mark in more places than your neck, little wolf."

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