Page 46 of Moonlit Desires
Kael moves before anyone else can react, his warrior's reflexes translating thought to action in the space between heartbeats.
He positions himself directly between Lyra and the agitated council, hand dropping to his sword hilt with practiced precision.
The subtle metallic whisper of steel clearing leather by a mere inch carries more threat than a fully drawn blade.
His blue eyes scan the room with battlefield assessment, categorizing each person as potential ally or enemy.
"No one leaves," he commands, voice pitched to carry authority without shouting. "Not until this matter is settled."
Simultaneously, Riven slides from his casual slouch into perfect stillness, the transition so fluid it appears he's simply ceased to exist in one position and begun existing in another.
Shadows gather around his fingers, not the controlled weapons of battle but something wilder, hungrier—darkness with teeth that snaps and stretches toward the council members who appear most agitated.
His mercury eyes narrow, lips curved in a smile that promises consequences rather than amusement.
"Such interesting reactions to a simple matter of heritage," he observes, voice silky with menace. "One might almost suspect some of you already knew."
Thorne's transformation requires no thought, his body responding to perceived threat with instinctive protection.
Muscles shift beneath his formal attire, seams straining as his frame expands beyond human proportions.
His fingers lengthen into claws that score shallow grooves into the polished table.
His face remains mostly human, but his eyes burn golden, pupils contracting to vertical slits, and when he speaks, the rumbling growl beneath his words vibrates through the stone floor.
"I smell fear," he announces, nostrils flaring. "And guilt. They cling to this room like old blood."
Only Ashen remains physically unchanged, still seated at the table's far end.
Yet his stillness carries its own disturbance—his eyes have gone completely white, reflecting visions only he can see, thousands of possible futures collapsing into a narrowing tunnel of certainties with each passing second.
His trembling hands continue their automatic sketching, filling page after page with interconnected symbols that form a complex web of cause and effect, ancestry and consequence, paths taken and abandoned.
The council members freeze in the face of this coordinated display of protective power. The would-be escapee's hand falls from the door handle as if burned.
Elindra alone seems beyond intimidation, her posture that of someone who has passed through fear to the strange calm that lies beyond.
"I was approached three days after Lady Lyra's arrival," she continues, her confession gaining momentum.
"Paid handsomely to report on her activities, her weaknesses, her growing connections to the guardians. "
"By whom?" Kael demands, his sword now fully drawn, its polished surface reflecting the silver light still pulsing from Lyra's skin.
"A consortium of interests," Elindra answers, her gaze moving deliberately to several council members who suddenly find the floor fascinating. "Those who believe the Court's decline began with Queen Selene's... indiscretion. Those who fear what Lyra's human blood might mean for our future."
Lyra rises from her chair, the movement drawing all eyes despite its quietness.
The silver light beneath her skin has intensified, no longer pulsing but blazing steady, illuminating her from within like a lamp behind parchment.
When she speaks, her voice carries harmonics that make the ancient glyphs on the walls flicker in response.
"You said my mother died in childbirth," she says, each word precise despite the emotion churning beneath them. "Was that a lie as well?"
Elindra's face contracts with genuine pain. "Yes," she whispers. "A necessary fiction, we were told. Easier to accept than the truth."
"Which is?" The temperature in the chamber drops precipitously with Lyra's question, frost forming along the edges of the silver lanterns, breath becoming visible in sudden, startled clouds.
"Assassination," Elindra says, the word falling into the chilled air like a stone into still water.
"Queen Selene was murdered by those who saw her union with your father as sacrilege—a pollution of royal bloodlines that had remained pure for millennia.
They claimed it was for the Court's protection, that mixing fae and human blood would weaken our magic, accelerate our decline. "
The council chamber grows colder still, ice crystals forming intricate patterns on the surface of the map, climbing the legs of chairs, rimming the edges of the table.
Lyra's fury manifests not as heat but as its absence—a cold so profound it burns, silver light and winter chill combining into something beautiful and terrible.
"And my father?" she asks, frost forming on her eyelashes, glittering like tiny diamonds when she blinks.
"Escaped with you," Elindra says. "Selene used the last of her power to open a pathway for you both, to hide you in the human world where her enemies couldn't follow. She died ensuring your survival."
Riven's shadows stretch longer, forming a protective circle around Lyra that pulses in counterpoint to her silver light. "These enemies," he says, voice casual in a way that promises violence. "I assume some are present in this very room?"
Two council members rise in unified alarm, their movements betraying guilt more effectively than any confession.
Thorne shifts fully then, clothing tearing as his form expands into the massive wolf-like creature that had torn through the Thorn Queen's forces days before.
His roar rattles the silver lanterns on their chains, sending several council members cowering beneath the table.
"Enough!" Lyra commands, her voice carrying power that stops even Thorne mid-lunge.
The silver light radiating from her skin contracts suddenly, condensing into a blinding corona that forces everyone to shield their eyes.
When they can see again, she stands transformed—not physically, but in presence, in the set of her shoulders, in the quiet certainty that has replaced confusion.
"I want names," she says, the frost retreating from the room as her focus narrows. "Every person involved in my mother's murder. Every conspirator who thought to use me against the Court I was born to protect."
Elindra straightens, something like hope flickering across her features.
"That's why I broke my silence," she says.
"I've watched you since your arrival—your genuine desire to heal the Court, your willingness to sacrifice for its restoration.
I saw in you what they fear most—your mother's strength combined with your father's adaptability.
The very mixing of bloodlines they dreaded has created exactly what the Court needs to survive. "
The elder fae who had exchanged glances earlier now stare at Lyra with undisguised calculation. One begins to speak, perhaps to justify or deny, but Ashen's voice cuts through the tension, startling everyone with its clarity and volume—so unlike his usual whispered communications.
"They will lie," he says, eyes still reflecting visions but voices firmly anchored in the present. "They have practiced these lies for twenty-five years. But truth leaves marks even time cannot erase."
He rises, crossing to Lyra with uncharacteristic directness.
With trembling fingers, he offers her the pages he's been sketching—not random symbols as she'd thought, but a detailed genealogy that traces her mother's lineage through centuries of Moon Court history, culminating in the union with her human father and Lyra's own birth.
"Your blood," Ashen says softly, for her ears alone, "is not diluted magic. Magic evolved."
Lyra takes the pages, her fury momentarily tempered by this concrete connection to her past, to the mother she never knew. The silver light surrounding her stabilizes, no longer flaring with emotional volatility but burning with steady purpose.
"This council is dismissed," she announces, each word carrying the weight of royal command rather than suggestion. "Except for you—" she points to the elders who had exchanged knowing glances, "—and you." Her finger moves to Elindra. "And my guardians, of course."
The other council members scramble toward the door, relief evident in their haste to escape both Lyra's focused attention and the guardians' protective menace.
As they flee, the temperature in the room gradually returns to normal, though frost still glitters on the lanterns—a reminder of power barely contained.
"Now," Lyra says once only her chosen audience remains, "you will tell me everything about my parents. Everything."
____________
The private chamber feels both too large and too small—its sparse furnishings leaving too much empty space for emotions this size, yet its walls pressing close as if to contain truths that have spent decades straining for release.
A table dominates the center, its surface inlaid with a map of Moon Court territories in silver and midnight blue.
Chairs carved from silver wood stand in precise arrangement, their high backs etched with the same ancient glyphs that appear throughout the Court.
Moonstone sconces cast cool, unforgiving light that leaves nowhere to hide, no shadows in which to bury unwelcome facts.
Lyra stands before the table, one hand resting on its polished surface, fingers tracing the border between Court lands and the territories claimed by the Thorn Queen.
The mark between her shoulder blades pulses with steady rhythm, no longer flaring with uncontrolled emotion but maintaining a constant, watchful presence—like a creature newly awakened and assessing its surroundings.