Chapter 8

Chapter Eight

“There is no shortage of evil in the world. It’s around every corner waiting for the unsuspecting, or for those willing to invite it with open arms. Many times, that evil is closer to you than you realize.” ~ Lyric

Lyric stood alone in the antechamber just outside the throne room, her hands clasped behind her back, fingers twisting in the folds of her silk robe.

Four days. Four days since Roan’s text. Four days since he and the human—Maddie—had vanished somewhere between where they’d left from and the Kingdom of Silk.

She’d spoken to Taras, Prime of Claws, and told him the truth—or at least a version of it.

She hadn’t seen Roan. She hadn’t seen Maddie.

What she hadn’t said was that Roan had sent her a message, and what she didn’t dare admit—at least not yet—was that she was starting to think something dark had taken root in the heart of her own kingdom.

Lyric had learned long ago that to survive in Silk was to move with patience.

Though Aurelius and Athena were good rulers, they were old and had lived through the wars in Damaria.

They were protective of their kingdom, of their members.

It was a tight rope that she walked on when having to address issues in the Kingdom of Silk.

She’d learned to untangle a web–you started at the edge, not the center.

She’d spent days weaving quiet questions through her most trusted contacts.

No one knew anything, or if they did, they were too afraid to say.

She’d paced the corridors of the estate, watched the servants, and listened to the subtle shift in the hush of the halls—waiting for something to feel right, or at least familiar.

Nothing did.

Now, standing before the heavy doors that separated her from the king and queen, Lyric drew a steadying breath. If there was magic hiding Roan and Maddie, only Athena could see through it. Lyric needed the Queen’s help. She braced herself for the storm she was about to walk into.

The doors swung open with a whoosh, and Lyric stepped inside.

The throne room was all cool shadows and filtered sunlight, gleaming, black marble floors, and a ceiling webbed with actual silver spun silk that she knew was strong enough to hold even a large male.

King Aurelius sat straight-backed on his carved throne, a vision of cold elegance and old power.

Beside him, Queen Athena was the epitome of regal poise, her dark hair braided with strands of silver, eyes sharp as the edge of a blade.

Lyric bowed, every inch the respectful shaman, a diplomat and representative of Visata.

She was powerful, like all shamans, and her job ultimately was to make sure the Kingdom of Silk was operating within the boundaries their Creator had laid out.

Regardless of those truths, her stomach twisted.

She had to play the game, moving the chess pieces carefully.

“Your Majesties. Thank you for seeing me.”

Athena inclined her head, her smile thin as a thread. “You said it was urgent, Shaman Lyric.”

“It is.” Lyric squared her shoulders. “Four days ago, I was contacted by Roan, shaman of the Kingdom of Claws. He told me he was coming here, bringing a human named Maddie. They never arrived. I have reason to believe they landed and even made it to the estate.”

Aurelius’s lips pressed into a hard line. “And you believe they are still here?”

Lyric hesitated, choosing her words with care. “I believe something is keeping them hidden. There is a darkness in the magic of our halls, a sense of . . . wrongness. If there is a spell, or a ward, only Queen Athena could unravel it.”

The silence that followed was brittle, the tension in the room stretching tighter with every second.

Athena’s eyes flashed, her voice sharp. “You think I would allow anyone—anyone—to capture a shaman from another kingdom under my roof? That someone in Silk would dare to take a guest, let alone one from KOC, who has a friend mated to the Prime’s son?

I am no fool. It was bad enough when they’d come here with ideas that we were in bed with Azure and his awful schemes. But, now this?”

Lyric didn’t flinch, but she felt heat rise in her cheeks.

“Considering what happened with Azure and other kingdoms that might have been involved in his plan, there is unrest within some of the Damarians. I don’t know the reason behind it.

Azure was driven by a desire for his males to be mated, not for the right reasons, but because they can’t shift otherwise.

But, I know there are males, even in the Kingdom of Silk, who are desperate for mates for the right reasons, because they want to love and to be loved and to feel whole, with a sense of purpose.

Desperation can lead people to do things they wouldn’t normally do.

I’m not accusing, Your Majesty. I’m asking for your help before this becomes a war. ”

Athena rose, her black gown pooling around her like dark water. “You come into my throne room and suggest my people are traitors because they aren’t willing to wait for—”

Aurelius lifted a hand, his voice calm but steel-edged. “Athena. Let her finish.”

Lyric dipped her chin in gratitude, forcing her voice to remain steady. “If word gets out, Prime Taras and Alpha Nox will descend on us. Maddie is the best friend of the Dire wolf’s mate, so we will incur his wrath as well. I need your help to find the truth before that happens.”

Athena’s jaw was clenched so tightly Lyric worried she’d snap a tooth. “I will consider your request. You may go.”

Lyric bowed again and backed from the room, her heart pounding in her chest. The doors closed behind her with a finality she felt in her bones.

Something was wrong. Everything inside her screamed that Azure was the tip of the iceberg when it came to unrest in the Damarian race.

Perhaps not all the rulers were involved, but Lyric would bet there were at least a few members in every kingdom that were willing to do surprising things in order to find their mates.

They’d had peace for so long. Had they been foolish to think that it would last forever?

The doors had barely clicked shut before Athena let out a low, frustrated hiss. She turned away from Aurelius, pacing the marble floor, her skirt whispering like a warning.

“She dares,” Athena seethed, “to suggest that one of ours would betray the trust of the kingdoms. That we would allow it under our watch?”

Aurelius watched her with those calm, cool eyes that never missed much. “Lyric is careful, she’s smart, and she cares not only for our kingdom, but for the Damarian race. She’s not accusing—she’s worried. And you know as well as I do, something has been off in this place.”

Athena paused, her lips pressed thin. “There are threads I cannot see. A heaviness in the air. I thought it was only the tension from the council’s accusations, the rumors about Azure, the animi, the human women . . . but now?”

He stood, crossing to her, placing both hands on her shoulders. “You are the Queen of Silk. Your power runs through every web, every thread. If there is darkness here, it is time to unmask it.”

She looked up at him, her pride and anger warring with the icy chill of fear. “If Roan and the human are here, if anyone in Silk has hidden them, it will bring chaos to our doorstep. Claws and Fangs will not wait for answers. They will come for vengeance.”

Aurelius’s voice was soft but unyielding. “Then we must find them first. Reach out to the arachnids. Even the wild ones, every loyal web-spinner. See what they have seen.”

Athena nodded, her resolve hardening. “It will take time. The wild ones are not easy to reach. But I will do it. We will not have war in our halls.”

He pressed a kiss to her brow, a silent promise of partnership. “We will face what comes together.”

Lyric lingered just outside the throne room, pressed into the shadow of a tapestry, the voices within carrying clearly through the old stone. She listened to Athena’s outrage, Aurelius’s calm, and heard the undercurrent of fear in their words.

The royals had felt it, too—something wrong, a shadow in the web.

Lyric exhaled, her mind already racing ahead. She needed to move quickly, reach out to someone who would listen and act, but not overreact. Someone reckless enough to be useful and sane enough not to start a war by accident.

Nico.

She pulled out her phone, thumbs flying. Need to talk. Urgent. Roan and Maddie may be hidden in Silk. Something’s wrong here. Tell no one else. Someone may hear if we speak over the phone. Meet?

She hit send, her heart pounding, and slipped away into the warren of corridors, determined to find the truth—before this could turn into a bigger disaster.

Raphael had always thought he’d be prepared for anything—he was, after all, a demon who’d survived the worst the realms could throw at him.

But nothing in his centuries of experience had prepared him for the four days spent holed up in a safehouse with three newly marked potential mates and the inexorable, gnawing realization that his own mate was among them.

The ink on their skin wasn’t the kind that faded. It was the kind that bled truth.

He sat in the corner of the cramped living room, elbows on his knees, watching Morgan, Akira, and Miryam as they traced the new tattoos on their arms. Verion, the tattoo artist, had made himself at home at the rickety dining table, rolling and unrolling his kit with the absentminded focus of a man who knew he’d just upended half a dozen lives.

Raphael’s mind kept looping back to four days earlier, when Verion’s needle had first bitten into human skin and the world had quietly, irrevocably changed.

Four days ago . . .

If ads affect your reading experience, click here to remove ads on this page.