WOLFLESS: Accidentally Marked By The Devil's Son-Chapter 48: Clearing.
Chapter 48
The silence snapped. Lucian straightened slowly, the pressure in his chest sharpening into something colder. It wasn’t pain. It wasn’t fear. It was an alarm.
The hall chamber felt suddenly too small, the air stale and heavy, like a tomb sealed too long. The Council members were still staring at him, frozen in the wake of his outburst, but they no longer mattered.
Their voices—their very existences—faded into white noise. This wasn’t impatience. This wasn’t irritation. This was the same instinct that had dragged him out of battlefields seconds before an ambush sprang.
The same warning that had saved him from blades dipped in holy poison. It was a predator’s sense, honed over centuries.
And it was screaming.
Lucian reached inward again—not gently this time. He forced his awareness against the bond with brutal precision, tearing at the muted veil that had settled over it. 𝑓𝘳𝘦𝑒𝑤𝑒𝘣𝘯ℴ𝘷𝘦𝓁.𝑐𝑜𝑚
Nothing. No flicker of annoyance. No stubborn spark of defiance. No sadness. Not even exhaustion. Just... an absence.
His jaw tightened. Marco felt the sudden drop in temperature, the way the shadows along the walls began to lean inward toward the King.
"Sire..." Marco began, his voice uneasy.
Lucian didn’t answer. His hand slid off the table, his fingers curling slowly as his control locked back into place.
Cyrus swallowed hard, his throat clicking in the silence. "M-My Lord, if the gala does not suit—"
"The gala will hold." The words fell into the chamber like a blade dropped into still water. No one moved. Seven elders stared at Lucian as if he had spoken in a dead language.
Cyrus’s mouth remained half-open, whatever argument he had been preparing dying on his tongue.
A ripple of disbelief passed through the table—quick glances were exchanged, hunger flaring where caution should have lived.
Lucian felt it all and dismissed it just as quickly. Agreement cost him nothing. Time, however, was bleeding out.
He straightened fully now, every inch of him once more the King they feared—cold, composed, unreadable.
The pressure in his chest did not ease, but he locked it behind his ribs with brutal discipline. If the Council sensed urgency, they would cling to it.
If they smelled weakness, they would follow him like carrion birds. He would not have them in his house when he left.
The elders began to stir, relief curdling into poorly hidden excitement. A gala meant access. Visibility. Opportunity.
Lucian had refused them since his wake; his sudden compliance sent calculations racing behind ancient eyes.
None of them noticed that his gaze had already moved past them. "The preparations will proceed under my authority," Lucian added, his voice a flat, dangerous evenness.
A reminder of who owned the night. "You will receive formal notice." No questions were invited.
Marco was already at his side, stiff with confusion but sharp enough to obey. Lucian didn’t look at him when he spoke again.
"See them out."
Marco bowed instantly. "Yes, Sire."
Only then did the Council react properly—rising too fast, chairs scraping, heads dipping in hurried deference.
Cyrus managed a stiff bow, his earlier confidence replaced with something wary. This had been too easy. Victories that came without blood always were.
One by one, they were ushered toward the doors, their murmurs low and contained, their curiosity burning hotter with every step away from the King.
Lucian felt their eyes linger on him, felt the itch of their intent. Let them plan. Let them wait.
The doors closed behind them with a heavy, final thud.
The instant the chamber was empty, the mask slipped. Not outwardly—not enough for any servant or spy to mark—but inside, the stillness shattered.
Lucian turned sharply toward the tall windows lining the hall. His senses stretched outward, already calculating distance, speed, and time lost.
The bond remained silent—an absence so complete it felt carved out of him. He didn’t just feel like she was gone. He felt like the space she occupied had been erased from the map of the living.
Lucian didn’t wait for the echoes of the heavy doors to die before he moved.
To a human eye, it would have looked like the air itself had caught fire and vanished. To Marco, who had just returned, standing by the door, it was a sudden crack of displaced oxygen that nearly knocked him off his feet.
The King was gone before the curtains even finished fluttering in his wake. He didn’t use the stairs. He didn’t use the gates.
Lucian blurred through the mansion, clearing the perimeter walls in a single, gravity-defying leap.
He hit the pavement of the city outskirts, his boots barely whispering before he was a mile away.
The city lights became long, smeared lines of gold and neon. He tore through the urban sprawl with a focus that made the very atmosphere scream around him.
Every second Isabella was out of his reach felt like a drop of his own blood hitting the dirt. The bond was cold.
He hit the treeline of the eastern woods without slowing. The transition from the concrete city to the ancient, damp forest was instant.
He moved through the dense undergrowth like a ghost, trees becoming nothing more than a white-black blur.
The air grew thicker as he ascended, the temperature plummeting as the infamous mist of the east began to roll in.
He knew exactly where he had left her. He could navigate the path in his sleep, the scent of the witch’s cabin and Isabella’s distinct, human warmth burned into his mind.
Almost there. Lucian skidded to a halt, his heels digging deep into the soft, needle-strewn earth.
The momentum of his speed sent a spray of dirt into the air, but he didn’t notice. His dead heart stuttered.
He was standing in the clearing. But there was no cabin.
There was no porch where she had stood with her sharp tongue and defiant eyes. There were no stone steps, no smell of Clara’s herbs, no light flickering through the window.
Instead, there was a perfectly circular patch of bare, scorched earth where the house should have been.
Lucian stepped into the center of the empty space, his hand reaching out to touch the air where the front door had been.
His fingers met nothing but cold mist.







