Betrayed by My Ex, Marked by His Alpha Emperor Brother

Chapter 94



Chapter 94

Elara’s POV

“Good morning, my beautiful.”

I whispered it to myself, practicing the words Kaelen had murmured through our bond just an hour ago. Sitting behind his enormous mahogany desk, I pressed my palms flat against the polished wood and let the faint echo of his warmth linger in my mind.

Two days since he’d left. Two days of running this empire from his chair, wearing his authority like a borrowed coat that was finally starting to fit.

I reached through the bond. Tentative. Deliberate. No vomiting this morning. The baby and I kept breakfast down. Thought you should know.

The response came almost instantly—a pulse of warmth, relief, amusement braided together in that way only a mate bond could carry. His voice threaded through my consciousness like smoke through silk.

That’s my beautiful. Both of you behaving for once.

I smiled. Pressed my hand against my still-flat stomach. Don’t get cocky. It’s early yet.

I’m always cocky. You married me anyway.

A knock at the study door severed the moment.

“Enter.”

The door swung open, and Sir Marcus stepped through. He moved with the careful deliberation of a man whose body had been shaped by thirty years of service—weathered face carved with deep lines, voice like gravel dragged across stone. His armor bore the scuffs and dents of countless campaigns, and his silver-streaked hair was cropped close to his skull.

He stopped before the desk. Straightened. Then dipped his head with a respect that wasn’t performed.

“Your Majesty. The morning patrol report.”

Your Majesty. Not “my lady.” Not “the Emperor’s mate.” The full title, delivered without hesitation.

He placed a leather-bound folder on the desk. I opened it and scanned the contents—patrol routes, sighting logs, supply tallies. Everything organized with military precision.

“The new rotation schedule,” Marcus said, watching me read. “Six-hour shifts instead of twelve. Your idea, Your Majesty.”

I looked up. “And?”

His weathered face shifted. Not quite a smile—Marcus didn’t seem built for smiling—but something close. Something that lived in the deepening of the lines around his eyes.

“Morale is up. The men are sharper. Less fatigue, fewer gaps in coverage. We caught territorial incursions that would have slipped through under the old system.” He paused. Let the weight of it settle. “A veteran’s opinion, for what it’s worth—it was a sound strategic call. The kind that saves lives.”

Heat crept up my neck. Not embarrassment. Something fiercer. Pride.

“Thank you, Marcus. That means more than you know.”

He inclined his head again and turned to leave. At the door, he paused.

“The Emperor chose well.” Quiet. Matter-of-fact. Then he was gone, the door clicking shut behind him.

I sat still for a moment. Let the words sink beneath my skin.

Then I reached through the bond again. Marcus just told me the six-hour rotations are working. Incursions caught that would’ve been missed.

Kaelen’s response carried a distinct flavor of smugness that wasn’t entirely his own. Told you. My mate doesn’t do anything halfway.

How’s the terrain?

A brief pause. When his thoughts returned, they were more measured. Careful. Mountains are worse than the maps suggested. Steep ravines. Dense tree cover. Perfect ambush territory.

My fingers tightened around the edge of the desk. Any signs of them?

Nothing so far. No tracks, no scent markers. If they’re here, they’re buried deep. Another pause. Longer this time. Ela. There’s a stretch of the mountain range ahead—narrow passes, heavy rock formations. Communication stones don’t work well through that kind of terrain. There may be gaps. Dead zones where you won’t hear from me.

My chest constricted. How long?

Could be a few hours. Maybe more. Don’t panic if it goes quiet. It’s just the mountains.

I don’t panic.

Warmth flooded the bond. Tender. Knowing. You absolutely do. And I love you for it. But I need you to trust me. I’ll come through the other side and reach you again.

You promised me you’d come home.

And I will. Now go be empress. I hear you’re very good at it.

The bond settled into its usual background hum—a low, constant warmth, like embers banked in a hearth. Present. Steady.

I spent the rest of the day buried in logistics. Supply requests from the outposts. Disputes between minor houses over grain storage rights. Correspondence from border commanders, each more urgent than the last.

By evening, Valerius had commandeered the rug beside the fireplace with an arsenal of colored wax sticks and a sheet of parchment the size of his torso.

“Mommy, look.” He held it up proudly. “It’s a dinosaur. With a crown.”

“That’s a very handsome dinosaur.”

“He’s the king of all dinosaurs. Nobody messes with him because he has sharp teeth AND a crown. That’s double power.”

“Smart dinosaur.”

He returned to his coloring with the focused intensity of a battlefield strategist, tongue poking out between his lips.

I signed the last supply authorization and leaned back in Kaelen’s chair. Stretched my neck. Let my eyes close for just a moment.

The bond hummed. Warm. Constant.

I slept.

The third morning arrived gray and heavy. Rain streaked the windows in diagonal slashes, and the fire in the study had burned low overnight, leaving the air cool and slightly damp.

Riley arrived promptly for our morning meeting. She carried a ledger thick with notes, her expression calm and methodical.

“Ela, the medical supply inventory.” She set the ledger before me and opened it to a marked page. “We’re running low on wound salves and fever remedies. I’ve drafted a requisition order for the palace apothecary, but it needs your seal.”

I reviewed the numbers. Nodded. Pressed the imperial seal into the warm wax at the bottom of the page.

“Have it sent before midday,” I said. “And double the fever remedy order. If there’s fighting at the border, we’ll need reserves.”

“Already anticipated that.” Riley offered a small, approving nod. “I added a secondary request for surgical supplies as well. Just in case.”

“Good thinking.”

We discussed storage logistics for another few minutes—rotation schedules for perishable herbs, emergency supply caches for the residential wing. Riley was thorough, efficient, and blessedly direct. No wasted words.

After she left, I settled back into the chair and reached through the bond.

Nothing.

Not silence. Silence implied the absence of sound against a backdrop of potential sound. This was different. This was a void. A hollow space where warmth used to be.

I reached again. Pushed harder. Kaelen?

No pulse. No warmth. No faint murmur of his consciousness brushing against mine.

Just... emptiness.

My hands went cold. I set them flat against the desk—pressed down hard until the wood bit into my palms. Drew a slow breath. Then another.

He warned you. Dead zones. Mountain passes. Communication stones don’t penetrate heavy rock.

Logic. Calm, rational logic. I repeated it to myself like a prayer.

It’s just the terrain. He told you this would happen.

But the hours crawled. Morning became afternoon. Afternoon stretched into evening. The rain intensified outside, hammering the windows with a relentless fury that matched the growing storm inside my chest.

I tried the bond every few minutes. Then every few seconds. Each attempt was the same—reaching into that familiar space where his presence lived and finding only cold, yawning nothing.

An hour passed. Then two. Then three.

By the time the evening candles were lit and the shadows had swallowed the corners of the study, the silence had stretched to something unbearable.

I stood. Sat down. Stood again. Walked to the window. Pressed my forehead against the cold glass and stared at the rain-blurred darkness beyond.

Nearly eight hours without a single flicker through the bond.

“Mommy.”

I turned. Valerius sat on the rug beside the fireplace, his colored wax sticks scattered around him. His crowned dinosaur drawing lay half-finished on the floor. His dark gold eyes were fixed on my face with that unnerving perceptiveness he’d inherited from his father.

“You’re doing the worry face,” he said.

I forced a smile. It felt brittle on my lips. “I’m not worried, sweetheart.”

“Yes, you are. Your eyebrows go like this—” He scrunched his brow into a dramatic furrow. “And you keep looking at the window like it’s going to tell you something.”

I crossed to him and sank down on the rug. Pulled him into my lap. He came willingly, folding against me with the boneless ease of a child who trusted completely.

“I just haven’t heard from Daddy in a while,” I said quietly. “That’s all.”

Valerius considered this with the grave solemnity he applied to all problems.

“Maybe his communication stone ran out of magic,” he offered. “Or maybe he’s hiding. Like when he plays the hunting game with me and he hides behind the curtains and I can’t find him for ages and then he jumps out and I scream.”

A wet laugh escaped me. “Maybe.”

“He always comes back from hiding, Mommy.” Valerius picked up a blue wax stick and returned to his dinosaur with casual certainty. “Always.”

I pressed my lips to the top of his head. Breathed in the scent of wax and soap and little boy.

Then I closed my eyes and reached through the bond one last time, trying to send my thoughts to him.

Kaelen. Please. Answer me.

But no response came back. The silence remained absolute, and a second later, even the faint background warmth of our connection vanished completely.


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