Chapter 26

Sylas

The war chamber felt too large without an army to fill it.

Sylas stood at the head of the stone table, claws scraping the ancient surface as he surveyed the four males who had answered his summons.

Not the full war council. Not the commanders who attended every strategic briefing and reported back to factions whose loyalties shifted with the political winds.

These were different. Handpicked. Tested in blood rather than ceremony.

Ryxin prowled the chamber’s perimeter, restless energy radiating from every coiled muscle.

His tail swept behind him in sharp arcs, the spines along its ridge catching torchlight each time he passed the wall sconces.

He hadn’t stopped moving since they’d left the corridor where Elsa’s scent trail had gone cold.

Couldn’t stop. The same fury that clawed at Sylas’s chest had sunk its teeth into his brother and refused to let go.

“These are the ones?” Ryxin’s voice came out rough, dismissive. He didn’t look at the assembled males. Didn’t trust himself to assess them calmly.

“These are the ones.” Sylas let his attention settle on each male in turn. “Keth. Vor. Dren. Hask.”

Four Knights who had never attended a war council meeting.

Four males whose careers had been spent on the fortress’s bleeding edge rather than its political center.

Two of them bore scars from Fallen encounters—the white slashes of claw marks that hadn’t healed cleanly, the puckered tissue where acid had eaten through fur and flesh.

The third, Vor, carried himself with the contained stillness of someone who had learned to track prey through terrain that would kill a lesser hunter. The fourth—

“You brought a healer.” Ryxin finally stopped his pacing, attention fixing on the smallest male in the room.

Hask didn’t flinch under the scrutiny. His fur was grayer than the others’, the silver-white of age and experience rather than battle damage.

A satchel hung at his hip, bulging with supplies that clinked softly when he shifted his weight.

Deep lines carved the fur around his muzzle—the marks of someone who had seen too many wounds, patched too many bodies, and lost too many despite his best efforts.

“I brought someone who can keep the females alive once we find them.” Sylas let the words carry the weight they deserved. “Unless you’d prefer to drag Ari out of whatever hole Vask has put her in, only to watch her die because we couldn’t treat her injuries fast enough.”

Something shifted in Ryxin’s expression. The raw fury banked, replaced by something colder. More focused. He gave Hask a single nod—acknowledgment, if not approval—and resumed his circuit of the room.

Vor stepped forward. The tracker was lean where the others were broad, built for speed and endurance rather than brute confrontation.

His eyes caught the torchlight at angles that suggested enhanced night vision even by Yzefrxyl standards.

Scars crisscrossed his forearms—not from battle, but from brush and branch and the thousand small wounds accumulated by someone who spent more time in wilderness than civilization.

“My King.” His voice was quiet, deliberate. “The scent trail in the lower corridors. I can follow it, but the chemical interference is—”

“Deliberate.” Sylas pushed away from the table. “Designed to confuse tracking. Which tells us something useful.”

Keth—the largest of the assembled Sabers, his shoulders nearly spanning the width of the chamber’s narrow doorway—tilted his head. “That whoever took them expected pursuit.”

“That whoever took them expected conventional pursuit.” Sylas moved to the chamber’s side wall, where an older map hung—not the tactical display of the war council’s planning room, but something carved into stone generations ago.

The under-fortress, laid bare in all its twisting complexity.

“They’re anticipating search parties. Organized sweeps with enough personnel to cover ground but too many bodies to move quietly. ”

Dren spoke for the first time. He was the youngest of them, barely past his majority, but the scars that crossed his muzzle suggested he’d earned his place through something other than lineage.

“The pit access corridors have multiple routes. If we commit forces to a standard search pattern, they can move the prisoners through secondary passages. Keep them one step ahead indefinitely.”

“Or worse.” Ryxin’s voice cut through the chamber. “If they see us coming with numbers, they eliminate the evidence. Dead females can’t be leverage.”

The truth of it settled into Sylas’s gut like stone.

Three human women, fragile by Yzefrxyl standards, held by someone who had already demonstrated a willingness to use them as weapons.

If Vask—or whoever controlled this operation—decided that the political cost of holding them outweighed the benefit, the solution was simple.

Final. The kind of choice that ambitious males made when their gambles started to fail.

The bond remained silent in his chest. That hollow absence where Elsa should have been, where her presence had anchored something wild in him that he’d never quite managed to anchor himself.

Without her, the old instability crept back in.

The edge of feral madness that whispered about blood and bone and the satisfaction of tearing threats apart with his own claws.

He pressed his palm flat against the ancient map, feeling the grooves and ridges that marked passages carved before his bloodline had taken the throne.

“The court expects a response.” He kept his voice even, controlled—the voice of a king rather than a maddened mate. “Vask is counting on it. A public display of the Alpha’s weakness. Proof that a human female has compromised the crown’s judgment.”

“Then give them one.” Ryxin stopped at the far end of the table, palms braced against the stone. “Convene the full council. Demand answers. Let Vask see you flailing while we—”

“No.”

The word came out sharper than Sylas intended. He watched his brother’s hackles rise, watched the challenge form in Ryxin’s posture before training and necessity forced it down.

“A public response—any public response—tells Vask exactly what he wants to know. That I’m reacting.

That I’m compromised. That he’s succeeded in destabilizing the throne.

” Sylas turned from the map, letting his attention sweep across the assembled males.

“The moment I demand anything from the council, challengers will circle. The political factions that have been waiting for weakness will see their opportunity. And whoever is feeding Vask information from my inner circle will know exactly how we’re moving. ”

Silence followed. The four Sabers exchanged glances—not uncertainty, but the shared recognition of soldiers who understood they’d just stepped into something larger than a simple rescue mission.

“You want us to operate without official sanction.” Vor’s statement held no judgment. Just calculation.

“I want you to operate without existence.” Sylas moved to the center of the room, positioning himself where each male could see him clearly.

“No records. No communication through standard channels. No movement that can be traced back to the crown. As far as the court knows, you’re assigned to routine patrol duties while the King deliberates on a measured response to this. ..incident.”

“And while the King deliberates?” Keth’s voice rumbled low, a hint of dark amusement despite the gravity.

“While the King deliberates, he hunts.”

The words settled into the chamber like a blade finding its sheath.

Sylas let them sit, let the assembled males understand exactly what he was asking of them.

This wasn’t a sanctioned military operation.

This was predator work—the kind that happened in shadows, without witnesses, without the civilized veneer that separated modern Yzefrxyl governance from the blood-soaked chaos of their ancestors.

Hask adjusted his satchel, the medical supplies within shifting with a muted rattle. “The religious faction controls significant portions of the under-fortress. Maintenance corridors that haven’t been officially used in generations, but—”

“But are still accessible to those with the right permissions.” Sylas nodded. “Vask’s people have been moving through those passages for months. Maybe longer. Building infrastructure we didn’t know existed because we weren’t looking for it.”

“Then we take those passages.” Dren straightened, a hunter’s eagerness sharpening his features. “Cut off their routes before they know we’re coming.”

“We don’t know all their routes. Not yet.” Sylas traced a claw along the ancient map, following the branching corridors that led deeper beneath the fortress. “We move too fast, we miss something. We miss something, they disappear with the females before we can reach them. This requires patience.”

The word tasted like ash. Patience, when every instinct screamed to tear through the fortress until he found her.

Patience, when the bond lay silent and cold and wrong in his chest. Patience, when he didn’t know if Elsa was hurt, frightened, being used as a tool in political games she’d never asked to play.

Ryxin moved to his side—not quite shoulder to shoulder, the old rivalry still present even in alliance, but close enough to be heard without the others catching the words.

“You’re asking me to wait.” Not a question. An accusation wrapped in forced calm. “While Ari—”

“I’m asking you to trust that I want them back as badly as you do.” Sylas kept his voice low, pitched for his brother’s ears alone. “We do this wrong, we lose them. We do this right, we get them back and we destroy whoever thought they could take what’s ours.”

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