LOGINSorren answered on the second ring.Sera stood close enough to hear both sides of the call, the bond steady and warm at her back where Kael's free hand still held hers, his attention split between the conversation and her presence in a way that felt entirely natural now."Alpha Dravon," Sorren said. Dry. Direct. "I assume you're calling about the injunction.""I am.""Save your argument. I haven't approved it." A pause carrying the specific weight of a man who had already made his decision before the conversation started. "Caden's advocate filed at six this morning. I had it on my desk by seven. I denied a preliminary review by eight."Kael's grip on Sera's hand tightened, brief and certain."On what grounds," he said."On the grounds that a man who has spent six weeks losing council support through his own conduct doesn't get a procedural lifeline because the losing got faster than he expected." Sorren's voice carried something close to dry amusement. "The session proceeds as schedul
Maren left before sunrise.Sera stood at the gate and watched the vehicle disappear into the dark the same as she had watched Kael's three days earlier, the bond pulling warm and present at her back where Kael stood close without touching, letting her have the moment.When the lights were gone she turned.He was looking at her face with that thorough attention that never quite switched off."She'll be all right," he said."Yes," Sera said. "Eventually."She meant it as a truth, not a comfort, and he understood the difference because he always understood the difference. He put his hand at the small of her back and they walked inside together.Six days remained before the council session.Caden moved on day four.Sera felt it before Riven brought the news. A pressure through the bond, sharp and directional, the pack's collective awareness snapping toward something at the southern boundary in a way she had learned to read as threat rather than routine.She was already in the war room whe
Maren was packed before Sera knocked.One bag. Small and practical. Sitting at the east wing study door with the specific efficiency of someone who had spent years being mobile and had never quite stopped expecting to move at short notice.She looked up when Sera came in."Riven told me," she said. "Eastern territories. The archivist.""Yes." Sera sat across from her. "Tomorrow morning. Riven has your council documentation ready."Maren nodded. Her pale eyes were doing that reading thing they always did, moving across Sera's face with that flat systematic attention, but underneath it something else was present today. Something less armored than usual."You came to say something," Maren said."Yes.""Then say it."Sera looked at her. At the woman who had tracked seventeen bloodless line descendants and let one go. At the flat pale eyes that had been reading the world for six years through Caden's framework and were now sitting in the absence of that framework trying to understand what
The ethics filing went in on a Tuesday.Anonymous. Documented. Every financial irregularity Maren had identified cross-referenced against the council's own records so that anyone investigating would find the evidence before they finished looking. Riven handled the submission through a third party with no visible connection to the Dravon territory.They heard back in four days.Sera was in the library with Edda when Kael came in with the response document. He set it on the table between them and stood back and let her read it.Both council members had recused themselves pending investigation.Caden's two secured votes were gone.Edda set down her pen.She did not say anything. She simply folded her hands on the table and looked at the document with the expression of someone who had spent decades watching a particular kind of patient work finally arrive at its result.Sera looked at Kael.His jaw was set. Controlled. But his silver eyes carried something that was not quite satisfaction
Kael came back on the third day as promised.Sera heard the vehicle before she saw it, the bond pulling warm and directional toward the gate long before the headlights swept across the courtyard stones. She was in the study reviewing Maren's notes when it happened and she set the papers down and went downstairs without pretending she hadn't been tracking his approach for the past hour.He was already out of the vehicle when she reached the courtyard.Dark clothing. Travel-worn. His silver eyes found her immediately across the cold air between them, and something in his expression shifted the moment they did, that specific easing she had come to recognize as him finishing a calculation he had been running for three days and finding the answer he had been hoping for.She crossed to him.He pulled her in before she finished the last step.His arms around her. His chin against the top of her head. Both of them standing in the cold courtyard with the pack moving respectfully around them an
Orin arrived the next afternoon.He drove himself. No escort, no pack members, just an old man in a worn jacket who climbed out of his vehicle at the outer gate and stood looking at the castle with the expression of someone who had spent eight years building a wall around something and was now standing in front of the thing that had changed its shape.Sera met him at the courtyard entrance.He was broader than she had expected from Kael's description. Heavyset, built like someone who had been physically powerful once and still carried the frame of it even as age had settled over him. His hair was white at the temples and dark everywhere else and his eyes, when they found her, were the specific grey of a winter sky an hour before the light completely failed.He stopped when he saw her arm.The mark was visible. She had chosen deliberately not to cover it, understanding that Orin had come to see the thing that had ended the curse that took his son, and showing him something less than th
The notes were not what she remembered.Sera spread them across the desk and read with a focus she hadn't brought to them before. Before, she had been learning. Absorbing. Building a map of something vast and unfamiliar.Now she was looking for a weapon.Edda's handwriting covered page after page.
She locked the door.Then she stood in the center of her room and felt the castle change around her.It happened in layers. First the pack energy, that collective awareness she had learned to read over weeks of living inside it, pulling inward and sharpening all at once. Then the bond, already blaz
His hand was warm.That was the first thing she registered clearly. Everything else was heat and the bond blazing between their joined hands and his eyes on her face with silver bleeding through the grey, his wolf present and watching and completely still.She did not pull back.Neither did he."Se
Kael did not come back that night.Sera waited without admitting she was waiting. She sat in the library with Edda's notes open in front of her and read the same paragraph four times and retained nothing. The fire burned. The castle moved through its night rhythms around her. Riven passed her door







