Home / Werewolf / My mate chose my sister / Chapter Five: Glass Girl

Share

Chapter Five: Glass Girl

Author: Kim castro
last update publish date: 2026-03-26 14:29:13

Alpha Victor Blackwood had a way of making rooms feel smaller than they were. Not through size, he wasn’t a physically imposing man, but through the specific quality of his attention. He looked at you the way a surveyor looks at land he is already planning to develop. Assessing. Deciding. The decision made before you even opened your mouth.

I had been summoned to his study at ten in the morning, four days after the gathering, with a note slipped under my bedroom door that said simply: Please attend at your earliest convenience. Which in pack language meant: Come now. Bring nothing. Say less.

I dressed carefully. That was the only act of defiance available to me, so I made it count.

The study smelled like leather and old wood and the faint mineral cold of the stone walls beneath the paneling. Victor sat behind his desk with a folder open in front of him that he didn’t look at once during the entire meeting. Alexander sat to his father’s left, in the chair that meant second-in-command, in the posture that meant he had been told to be present and had decided to perform compliance so thoroughly it became its own kind of resistance.

He didn’t look at me when I walked in.

I sat in the chair across from Victor without being invited to and folded my hands in my lap.

“Serena.” Victor’s voice was the same temperature it always was. Not cold, exactly. Just the absence of warmth. “Thank you for coming.”

“Of course.”

He opened the folder. Closed it again. “I’ll be direct. The gathering has created some instability within the pack’s social structure. Certain perceptions have formed that, whether accurate or not, require management.” He paused. “For the good of the pack.”

For the good of the pack. Four words that had been used to justify every cruelty this family had ever committed.

“I understand,” I said.

“Effective immediately, you’ll be relocated to the lower residential quarter. The east block.” He said it the way people say things they have already decided cannot be argued with, smoothly and without inflection. “Your training privileges are suspended until after the mating ceremony. Pack activities, communal meals, and social gatherings are at your own discretion but I’d encourage you to exercise judgment.”

I translated that last part without difficulty. Stay invisible. Stay quiet. Do not exist in any space where you might remind people that you exist.

“For how long,” I said.

“Until things settle.”

“And when will that be?”

The pause was very short. “After the ceremony.”

Meaning: after Alexander is fully, publicly, permanently bound to my sister. After there is no version of events in which the mate bond between us becomes anyone’s problem. After I have been so thoroughly reassigned to the background of this story that even I start to believe I was never meant to be in the foreground.

I nodded once. “Is that all?”

Victor looked at me with something that was almost curiosity. Like he had expected this to take longer. Like he had prepared for tears or argument or the kind of scene that would give him something to work with, and I had not given him anything.

“That’s all,” he said.

I stood. I smoothed the front of my jacket. I turned toward the door.

I heard it before I reached the handle.

A sound. Sharp and quiet and specific. The sound of wood splintering under pressure.

I turned back without thinking.

Alexander’s hand was on the armrest of his chair. Or what remained of the armrest. His fingers had closed around the carved oak with enough force that a section of it had cracked clean off, and he was holding the broken piece without appearing to notice it, his knuckles white, his jaw set, his eyes fixed on a point on the wall three feet to my left.

Not looking at me.

Refusing to look at me with the specific, strenuous effort of a man who understood that if he looked at me right now he would not be able to stop himself from saying something he couldn’t take back.

The bond hummed between us. That low, insistent frequency that had been living in my chest since the gathering, the one I was learning to breathe around the way you learn to breathe around a bruised rib. Present with every inhale. Impossible to ignore. Impossible to fix.

Victor noticed none of it. Or he noticed and chose not to. With Victor, those two things were functionally the same.

I looked at Alexander for three full seconds. He didn’t move. Didn’t breathe, as far as I could tell. Just held that broken piece of armrest and stared at his fixed point on the wall and did absolutely nothing.

His silence was its own kind of violence. I had been thinking that since the gathering and it kept being true.

I turned back to the door.

“Serena,” he said.

I stopped. My hand on the door frame.

“I’m sorry.” So low I almost missed it. So stripped of everything that usually lived in his voice that it didn’t sound like him at all.

I stood in the doorway for a moment. The map was still folded inside my shirt. E. Nightfang’s slanted handwriting was still somewhere in the back of my mind. The silver light had been in my hands again this morning, longer than ever, and my wolf had watched it with an attention that felt less like fear and more like recognition.

“I know you are,” I said.

I walked out and I didn’t look back and I counted my steps all the way to the end of the corridor because it gave my mind something to hold onto that wasn’t the sound of wood cracking under a man who couldn’t bring himself to do the one thing that would have mattered.

Some apologies arrive too late to be anything except proof of what someone already knew they were doing wrong.

And the worst part, the part that sat in my chest the rest of the day like a stone I couldn’t cough up, was that I believed him.

Continue to read this book for free
Scan code to download App

Latest chapter

  • My mate chose my sister    Chapter 130: A Son's Question

    The council update arrived on a Friday, tucked between a border resource report and a formal acknowledgment from the Greywood pack confirming their alliance terms.It was standard format, the kind of document that moved through the Alpha network weekly, census updates, pack health reports, leadership changes, birth and death records filed as neutrally as weather observations. I read through them as part of my morning council work, a habit I had built deliberately because the details that mattered most often hid inside the ones that seemed routine.I almost missed it.Gabriel Blackwood. Born. Healthy. Three months old.I set the document down on the table.Three months. Which meant he had been alive in the world for three months already, growing and breathing and learning the specific weight of his own hands, and I was only reading about it now in a council update sandwiched between administrative correspondence.I sat with that for a moment.Not with grief. Not with the old familiar p

  • My mate chose my sister    Chapter 129: Marcus Finds His Place

    Marcus Vane did not ask for much.That was the thing I had come to understand about him in the months since he had arrived in Silverborne, quietly and without ceremony, carrying nothing but a single bag and the particular expression of a man who had spent years being someone else's extension and had finally, at considerable personal cost, stopped.He had proved himself the hard way, the only way that meant anything in a pack like this one. Early mornings on the training ground when half the warriors were still sleeping. Border patrols taken without complaint in the worst weather the northern mountains could produce. Council meetings where he sat at the back and said nothing unless he was asked, and when he was asked, said exactly the right thing in exactly the right number of words.The Northern Fang wolves had been cautious with him at first. A Beta who had publicly broken with his Alpha pack was either a wolf of exceptional integrity or a liability dressed up as one, and Ethan's pac

  • My mate chose my sister    Chapter 128: The Council's Voice

    The formal invitation arrived on a Wednesday, and by Thursday morning every senior wolf in the Silverborne council knew about it.Not because anyone gossiped. Because in a pack this attuned to its Luna, news that concerned me had a way of moving through the estate the way weather moved through the mountains, quietly and completely, until everyone was standing in the same rain without quite knowing when it had started.I read the official document twice at the council table with Ethan beside me and three senior council members arranged across from us, their expressions careful in the way expressions get careful when something unprecedented is sitting in the middle of the table.The Alpha council was inviting me to join as a full voting member.Not as Ethan's representative. Not as the Silverborne Luna attending in a support capacity. In my own right, as a silver wolf, the first the council had seen in living memory. The language of the invitation was formal and precise and left no room

  • My mate chose my sister    Chapter 127: Sophia's Exile

    The courier's message was not about Sophia.It was a routine alliance confirmation from the Greywood pack, Torrin's formal written request arriving exactly as Ethan had predicted, neat and grateful and entirely unurgent. I read it over Ethan's shoulder in the front hallway and felt slightly foolish for the way my hand had tightened around my cup at the window.Old habits. Old instincts built in a place where every approaching footstep meant something was about to go wrong.I was still working on those.I set the letter on the council table and went back to my morning, and three days passed without incident, and on the fourth day Sophia's letter arrived.I almost didn't recognize the handwriting at first. The Sophia I had grown up with wrote in the large, confident script of someone who assumed whatever she put on paper would be worth reading. This handwriting was smaller. More careful. Like someone who had learned to take up less space, not because they were told to, but because they

  • My mate chose my sister    Chapter 126: The Mark on Her Soul

    It happened on a Tuesday.Not during a council session, not during training, not in any moment that felt significant enough to deserve it. I was standing in the kitchen of the main estate, watching the kettle, when I realized I had not thought about Alexander Blackwood as a wound in weeks.I stood very still with that realization.The kettle started to whistle and I didn't move for a moment, just let it sit there, turning the thought over carefully the way you turn over something you found on the ground, checking it from every angle before you decide what it is.He existed in my memory, clearly. The gathering hall, the champagne glass raised, Sophia's cold smile across the crowd. The hallway where the lightbulb shattered. His hand gripping the armrest until it splintered, his silence louder than anything he could have said. All of it was still there, every detail sharp and permanent, the way scars are sharp and permanent, the raised line of tissue that tells you exactly where the dama

  • My mate chose my sister    Chapter 125: The First Test

    The message arrived before dawn, and by the time Ethan brought it to me I was already awake.I had been sitting at the window in our room, watching the northern sky go from black to the kind of dark blue that comes right before the light decides to try again. I did that sometimes, in the quiet before the pack stirred. Not because I couldn't sleep, but because the mornings here still felt like something I needed to verify. Like if I sat still enough, the mountains would confirm they were real.Ethan set the letter on the table beside me without a word, and the look on his face was the one he wore when something required careful handling.I read it twice.The Greywood Pack, one of the three who had formally requested alliance talks in the weeks following our claiming, had fractured along a fault line that had apparently been building for years. Two senior Beta families, the Aldreds and the Vaskas, were contesting the right of succession after Greywood's aging Alpha had announced his int

  • My mate chose my sister    Chapter One Hundred and Thirteen- Recognition

    The news moved through the Alpha network in three days.I had not expected it to move that fast. Inter-pack diplomatic outcomes traveled through the network at the pace of formal communications, which was not slow but was not three days. What traveled in three days was not the formal record of the

  • My mate chose my sister    Chapter One Hundred and Twelve- A Luna's Diplomacy

    The formal claiming ceremony happened on a Thursday.in the place where it fits chronologically rather than where I am tempted to put it because of the specific, enormous quality of what it was. For now it is sufficient to say that it happened, that the pack was present, that the elders were presen

  • My mate chose my sister    Chapter One Hundred and Eleven- Threat from the East

    The eastern coalition's demands arrived in writing on a Monday morning.Not a formal council communication and not a personal overture. A written statement, signed by the senior representatives of four smaller packs who had apparently been discussing the matter among themselves for some time and ha

  • My mate chose my sister    Chapter One Hundred and Ten- Ethan's Past

    He told me about Kael on a Tuesday evening.Not all of it. Not in the way of someone delivering a prepared account of a significant period of their life. In fragments, the way he had told me everything that mattered, across many evenings, in the sitting room and the kitchen and the cliff path and t

More Chapters
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status