Betrayed by My Ex, Marked by His Alpha Emperor Brother

Chapter 92



Chapter 92

Elara’s POV

“Eighteen days, Your Majesty. Not a single sighting. No tracks. No scent trails. Nothing.”

Sir Cassian’s voice carried down the corridor outside our chambers. Low. Controlled. But I caught the undercurrent beneath it—the careful restraint of a man delivering news he didn’t trust.

I stood just inside the doorway, one hand braced against the stone frame. My fingers were cold. The morning light through the tall windows was pale and thin, doing nothing to warm the chill that had settled into my bones since before dawn.

“Eighteen days of absolute silence,” Cassian continued. “Every patrol route. Every border checkpoint. Every informant network. It’s as if they dissolved into the earth.”

Kaelen’s response was too quiet for me to catch. A low rumble. The kind of sound that meant he was thinking—turning the information over in that sharp, calculating mind like a blade being examined for flaws.

Three weeks had passed since the interrogation. Since the Rogue prisoner bit down on whatever poison he’d hidden in his teeth and died choking on his own blood rather than give us a name. Eighteen days of nothing since their last confirmed sighting.

And nothing, in this context, was far more terrifying than something.

My stomach lurched.

Not from the thought. From something far more immediate and far less dignified.

I made it to the washroom in quick strides. My knees hit the cold tile and everything I’d attempted to eat earlier came back with a vengeance. Violent. Merciless. My body folded in on itself, muscles clenching in waves that left me trembling and gasping between each round.

When it finally passed, I sat back on my heels. My forehead was damp with sweat. My hands shook against the tile.

“Mommy?”

I turned my head. My four-year-old son, Valerius, stood in the washroom doorway. His dark curls were sleep-tousled, sticking up at wild angles. His gold eyes—so much like his father’s it sometimes knocked the breath from my lungs—were wide with concern. He clutched a stuffed wolf to his chest. Its ear was chewed ragged.

“Mommy, you threw up again.” His brow furrowed with the gravity of a seasoned physician. “That’s three whole times.”

I managed a weak smile. “I know, sweetheart. The baby makes Mommy’s tummy a little upset sometimes.”

He considered this with visible skepticism. Then he padded forward on bare feet and crouched beside me, pressing his small warm palm against my arm.

“Maybe the baby doesn’t like what you’re eating.” He said it with absolute conviction. “Maybe the baby wants pancakes.”

A laugh escaped me—thin, breathless, but real. “You think so?”

“Pancakes make everything better. That’s just science, Mommy.”

“Is it?”

“Daddy told me.”

Before I could respond, the washroom suddenly felt smaller. Warmer. A familiar scent rolled over me—sandalwood and something deeper, masculine, indefinable. The kind of scent that my body recognized before my mind caught up.

Kaelen filled the doorway.

“Ela.” His voice was rough. Not with anger. With something worse. Worry stripped bare. He crossed the distance between us in a few strides and knelt beside me. His hands found my face—both palms cupping my jaw, tilting my head so he could study my eyes. “How bad?”

“I’m fine—”

“You’re shaking.” He wasn’t asking. His thumb swept across my cheekbone, wiping away sweat I hadn’t realized was there. His dark gold eyes tracked every detail of my face with surgical precision. “You’re pale. You haven’t kept food down lately.”

“It passes. It always passes.”

“It shouldn’t have to.”

His arms came around me. Not gently—there was nothing tentative about Kaelen. He pulled me against his chest with the same decisive authority he applied to everything. My cheek pressed against the hard plane of muscle beneath his shirt. His heartbeat was steady. Strong. An anchor in the spinning nausea that still hadn’t fully released its grip.

I breathed him in. Sandalwood. Warmth. Safety.

For a moment, the world contracted to just this. His arms. His scent. The solid, immovable wall of him holding me together when my own body seemed intent on falling apart.

“Bed,” he said against my hair. Not a suggestion. “Now.”

“I have reports to review—”

“The reports can wait.”

“Kaelen—”

“The reports,” he repeated, slower, each word weighted with imperial finality, “can wait.”

I pulled back enough to look at his face. His jaw was set. That particular angle that meant arguing would be not only futile but potentially hazardous to any nearby furniture.

Valerius tugged on Kaelen’s sleeve. “Daddy. Pancakes.”

Kaelen looked down at his son. Something in his expression shifted—the hard edges softening by fractions. “What?”

“The baby wants pancakes. I decided.”

“You decided.”

“Yes. Special pregnancy pancakes. With chocolate.” Valerius held up his stuffed wolf as if it were corroborating evidence. “Wolfie agrees.”

Kaelen stared at his son for a long beat. Then he looked at me. Something passed between us—wordless, warm, threaded with an emotion so tender it made my chest ache.

“Fine.” He rose to his feet and lifted me with him in a single fluid motion, one arm hooked beneath my knees, the other supporting my back. I made a sound of protest that he comprehensively ignored.

He carried me back to bed. Settled me against the pillows with a care that bordered on reverence. Pulled the covers up to my chin and pressed his lips to my forehead.

“Stay,” he murmured. His breath was warm against my skin. “I mean it.”

“You’re going to cook.”

“I’m going to cook.”

“You burned water last time.”

“That was a tactical miscalculation.” He straightened. Looked down at me with the deadly serious expression of a man about to lead a military campaign. “Valerius. With me.”

“Yes, Daddy!” Valerius scrambled off the bed and grabbed Kaelen’s hand. His stuffed wolf dangled from his other fist, dragging along the floor as they marched toward the door.

I watched them go—the towering emperor and his small son, hand in hand, disappearing around the corner with matching expressions of fierce determination.

The chambers went quiet.

I lay back against the pillows and pressed my palm flat against my stomach. Still flat. Still nothing visible. But I could feel it—that flutter, delicate as a moth’s wing, that reminded me with every beat that something extraordinary was growing inside me.

Twenty minutes passed.

Then, from somewhere deep in the residential wing, I heard the first crash.

A muffled exclamation—Kaelen’s voice, sharp with surprise. Then Valerius’s delighted shriek of laughter. More clattering. The distinct sound of something metallic hitting a stone floor and rolling.

Then the smoke alarm runes went off.

A high, piercing whine filled the corridor before it was abruptly silenced—manually, judging by the aggressive thud that followed. As if someone had simply ripped the enchanted ward from the wall.

More crashing. Valerius’s voice, high and bright: “Daddy, it’s on fire!”

“It’s not on fire. It’s browning.”

“It’s BLACK, Daddy.”

“That’s... intentional.”

I pressed my hand over my mouth. Laughter built in my chest—real laughter, the kind that started deep and bubbled up like something uncorked.

The sounds from the kitchen shifted from chaotic to merely catastrophic. Eventually, footsteps approached. Heavy ones accompanied by small pattering ones.

Kaelen appeared in the doorway.

He was covered in flour. It dusted his dark hair, streaked across his jaw, and coated the front of his dark shirt in uneven white patches. A smear of chocolate ran from his wrist to his elbow. He held a wooden tray with the rigid posture of a man presenting a battle strategy to his war council.

On the tray sat a plate of pancakes.

They were... misshapen. Some were round. Others appeared to have ambitions toward being triangular. Their edges were crispy—aggressively so—while their centers sagged with pools of melted chocolate. They were golden in some places and distinctly charred in others.

They were the most beautiful pancakes I had ever seen.

Valerius burst past Kaelen’s legs and launched himself onto the bed.

“MOMMY! We made pregnancy pancakes!”

He was absolutely destroyed. Flour in his dark curls. Syrup smeared across both cheeks. Some kind of spice—cinnamon, maybe—dusted his nose. And across his forehead, a streak of vanilla extract that he wore like war paint.

He was beaming. Incandescent with pride.

“I put the chocolate in,” he announced. “Daddy did the boring parts.”

Kaelen set the tray across my lap. “The boring parts being the actual cooking.”

“Yeah. The boring parts.” Valerius nodded sagely.

I looked down at the plate. Then up at Kaelen. His flour-covered face was carefully neutral, but I caught the hint of uncertainty beneath it. The emperor who commanded armies and bent nations to his will, standing in his own bedroom covered in baking debris, waiting for his pregnant mate to approve his pancakes.

I picked one up. Bit into it.

Warm. Sweet. The chocolate was slightly bitter—dark chocolate, not milk—and the edges had that particular crunch that only comes from being slightly too intimate with a hot pan. But the center was soft. Almost creamy. And underneath everything, there was something else. Something that tasted like home and effort and clumsy, overwhelming love.

My stomach held.

For the first time in days, my stomach held.

“They’re perfect,” I whispered.

Valerius scrambled closer. He placed both small hands on my belly and leaned down until his face was inches from my navel.

“Hi, baby,” he whispered loudly. “Can you hear me in there? It’s me. Your big brother.” He paused, as if listening. “I made you pancakes. Daddy helped a little. When you come out, I’ll teach you all the important stuff. Like how to climb things. And which guards will give you extra dessert if you say please twice.”

My throat tightened. I looked up at Kaelen. He was watching Valerius with an expression I’d never seen on his face in any throne room or war council. Unguarded. Stripped of every layer of authority and control. Just... raw. A father watching his son talk to his unborn sibling.

He sat on the edge of the bed. Then, slowly—as if the gesture cost him some internal negotiation with his own dignity—he lay down beside me. His large frame barely fit. He curled around me, one arm across my waist, his hand finding mine over my stomach.

Valerius wedged himself into the remaining space with the boneless efficiency of a small child, his head tucked beneath my chin, his hand resting on top of both of ours.

And just like that, the three of us lay tangled together in a bed too small for an emperor, covered in flour and chocolate and syrup, with a plate of ruined pancakes balanced precariously on the nightstand.

Tears slipped down my temples and into my hair.

Not from sadness. Not from pain.

Five years ago, I had carried Valerius alone. In a cramped room above a tailor’s shop. No partner. No help. Nights spent curled on my side, one hand on my belly, whispering promises to an unborn child about a future I couldn’t guarantee. Mornings spent retching into a basin with no one to hold my hair back.

And now. This. These two flour-covered, chocolate-smeared, impossibly wonderful people. This warmth. This fullness. This feeling of being so thoroughly, completely loved that it spilled out of me in salt water and shaking breaths.

Kaelen’s lips pressed against my temple. “Ela,” he murmured. Barely audible.

“I’m okay,” I managed. “I’m more than okay.”

His arm tightened around me. Valerius’s breathing slowed against my chest, his small body growing heavy with the particular gravity of a child drifting toward sleep.

I closed my eyes. Let myself exist in this single, golden moment.

Then Kaelen’s communication stone buzzed against the nightstand with an incoming transmission from Sir Cassian.

The sound was sharp. Insistent. It vibrated against the wood with an urgency that cut through the warmth like a blade through silk.

Kaelen’s body changed beneath my hand. Instantaneous. The softness vanished. Every muscle locked. His arm around me didn’t move, but it transformed—no longer an embrace but a shield. His eyes opened, and his expression immediately shifted from relaxed bliss to the alert, guarded focus of a monarch who had never truly laid down his duties.


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