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Chapter three

Author: Mimi
last update publish date: 2026-05-10 00:48:42

Kane POV

"You called him."

I did not look up from the desk.

"Within the hour," Damon said. "The ink wasn't dry."

"The partnership requires follow-up. That's standard."

"Kane." He set the folder down. "I've been your Beta for sixty years. Don't do that."

I looked up then.

Damon was standing across the desk with his arms at his sides and the particular expression he reserved for moments when he had decided that being careful was less important than being honest. He had worn it three times in sixty years. I remembered each one.

"What do you want me to say?" I asked.

"I want you to say what actually happened in that room. Not the version you'll give the elders. Not the version that makes it a business decision." 

He pulled out the chair across from me and sat down without being invited, which told me everything about how seriously he was taking this.

 "The witch, Kane. What happened?"

The bond sat in my chest exactly where it had been since the signing. Quiet. Immovable. The most inconvenient certainty I had encountered in three hundred years.

"She's my mate," I said.

The word sat between us like something solid.

Damon did not move. Did not speak. His expression shifted once something crossed it too quickly to name and then he folded his hands and looked at me with the particular attention of a man recalibrating everything he thought he understood about the next several months.

"The witch," he said. Not a question.

"Isabella Nyxara."

"Daughter of the man we just signed a seven-figure partnership with."

"Yes."

"Who told you, in the corridor, in front of my own ears, that it won't work."

"She thinks I arranged it."

"Did you?"

The question landed flat and direct, without apology, the way Damon's questions always landed when he had decided the answer mattered more than my comfort.

"No," I said. "I did not know she would attend. Her father gave no indication."

"But you called him anyway. Within the hour."

"To establish contact."

"Kane."

"To establish contact," I said again. And even I heard what lived underneath it.

Damon exhaled slowly. He reached for the folder, straightened it, set it back down. The gesture of a man buying himself a moment to decide how far to push.

"She's a witch," he said finally. "Her coven will not accept this. Her family will not accept this. The pack elders —"

"I know what the elders will say."

"Then you know this is not simple."

"Nothing worth having is simple. You've had sixty years to learn that."

He was quiet for a long moment. Outside the study window, the pack grounds stretched dark and still. I had stood at that window for a hundred and forty years. It had never required this much effort to look away from.

"She walked away from you," Damon said.

"She did."

"And you let her."

"For now."

Another silence. Then something shifted in Damon's face, the argument leaving it, the Beta settling back into place beneath the man. 

He had done this before. Every time, it looked like a choice he made deliberately rather than one that came naturally, which was why I trusted it.

"What do you need from me?" he asked.

"Information. The Nyxara family. Their coven laws on outside bonds. Any precedent for a witch mated beyond her bloodline and what happened when the family moved against it."

Damon nodded and stood.

 "I'll have it by morning."

"Tonight."

He paused at the door. Did not turn around.

"Kane. The last time you wanted something this much —" He stopped. Started again. 

"I just want you to be certain. Before this goes further. That you're doing this because it's right. Not because you've spent three centuries telling yourself you don't need anyone and she's the first thing that's made that feel like a lie."

He left before I could answer.

I stood in the silence he left behind.

Three centuries. 

That was how long I had managed it — the discipline of not wanting, the clean and functional life of a man who had learned that need was just loss waiting for a timeline. Eleanor had taught me that. Not deliberately. 

She had simply loved me for forty years and then died, the way chosen mates died when they were human and you were not, and I had stood at her grave in the winter of 1847 and made a decision that had held until this afternoon.

I did not intend to unmake it for manipulation or loneliness or the convenient appearance of a bond at a business signing.

But this was none of those things.

I knew the difference. Three hundred years of surviving had taught me, above everything else, the difference between what I wanted and what was true. The bond in my chest was not wanted. 

It was recognition. It was the Moon Goddess setting something down in front of me that had my name on it and asking, finally, whether I was going to pick it up.

Isabella thought I had arranged it.

She was wrong. But I understood why. A woman like that  sharp, contained, legacy running through her like iron through bone  would look at a convenient bond and see a convenient man behind it. She had been assessed and categorized her entire life. 

She had simply learned to do it first.

What she had not accounted for was that I was not a man who needed her family's business.

I had been building empires since before her grandmother was born.

Damon returned at half past eleven.

 I knew from the way he opened the door  not the measured efficiency of a Beta delivering routine information, but the careful entry of a man carrying something he would rather not be carrying.

"Tell me," I said.

He set a single page on the desk. I read it once. Then I set it down and looked at the wall and gave myself exactly ten seconds.

"When," I said.

"This evening. Hours after the signing." Damon's voice was measured. Deliberate.

 "Her mother filed the warding request with the coven council before dinner. The spell sets at dawn. Any werewolf who crosses the Nyxara estate boundary will be turned back. Permanently."

"And Isabella."

"Restricted to the estate until the council rules on the bond." He paused. The pause told me the worst of it was still coming.

 "They're calling it a contamination, Kane. Their formal language. The council intends to dissolve the bond before it fully sets."

The bond in my chest contracted. A single sharp pull, like a rope drawn suddenly taut, and I understood in that moment that it was not only mine,that somewhere across the city, behind walls that were already being built against me, Isabella had felt that same pull and probably hated herself for it.

I picked up the page. Read it again. Set it down.

"How long," I said, "before the ward is permanent."

"Dawn. Four hours."

"And after dawn?"

Damon looked at me steadily. 

"After dawn, the only way through a Nyxara ward is with explicit permission from the bloodline that cast it. Which means her mother. Or Isabella herself."

I stood.

"Get the car."

"Kane, if you go to that estate —"

"I'm not going to the estate." I reached for my coat. 

"The ward covers the boundary. It says nothing about where I'm permitted to stand."

"That is the same thing."

"No." I looked at him. "It isn't. She is behind that wall because her family put her there. Not because she chose it. 

There is a difference, Damon, between a woman who has walked away and a woman who has been locked in. I will not confuse the two."

Damon held my gaze for a long moment.

Then he reached for his keys.

We drove in silence. The city thinned at the edges the way it always did past midnight, lights pulling back, roads widening, the particular quiet of land that remembered being forest before anything was built on it. 

The Nyxara estate sat at the end of a private road behind iron gates and old trees, and I felt the ward before we reached the turn.

Damon stopped the car at the boundary line.

I got out.

The ward pressed against the air in front of me like a held breath. I stood at the edge of it and looked up at the house — dark at this hour, most windows unlit, one light burning on the second floor.

I knew which room it was.

The bond told me, the way it had been telling me things since this afternoon without my permission,  her direction, her distance, the faint pulse of her that lived in my chest now alongside my own heartbeat.

She was awake.

I stood at the boundary of everything her family had built to keep me out, and I looked at the light in her window, and I made the same decision I had been making since the moment her fingers caught the back of my hand.

Then my phone rang.

I did not recognize the number. I answered anyway.

The voice on the other end was not one I had heard in twenty-three years. Older now. Quieter. But unmistakable.

"Hello, Kane," said my brother. I recognized the voice immediately "I heard you found your mate."

I went very still.

"Rave," I said.

"I'm back," he said simply.

 "And we need to talk about Isabella Nyxara. Tonight. Before you do something at that boundary that neither of us can undo.”

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