Chapter 109
Freya’s POV
75%
Finished
“For now,” I said evenly. In three months, when this so–called protection duty ended, I would be free again.
But Abel Thorne clearly misunderstood my words.
“Jocelyn and Alpha Silas share a bond deeper than you imagine. I don’t want to see you cousins tearing each other apart for the same male.”
My jaw tightened. “Whatever connection Jocelyn Thorne has with Silas Whitmor, it has nothing to do with me.”
Abel’s lips pressed thin, his eyes weighing me with that patriarchal caution all Stormveil wolves seemed to carry. At last, he only managed, “Silas is not a man to take lightly. His mind runs dark and deep. Don’t let yourself fall too far to climb out.”
Once he left, I turned toward the balcony doors, intending to head back to Silas‘ side.
But before I could step past the threshold, he was already there–Caelum, cutting across the moonlit terrace with that domineering presence that once made me both safe and caged.
“Freya, we need to talk.”
I froze, then fixed him with a cold, unflinching stare.
“Alpha Caelum,” I corrected sharply. “Between us, that familiar name no longer fits. You’ll call me Freya Thorne.”
Something in my tone made his confidence falter. I saw it in the way his mouth pressed tight, the flicker of unease behind his silver eyes. Still, he steadied himself.
“I wanted to apologize,” he said, voice low, as if confessing some forbidden weakness. “I didn’t know your parents died as martyrs of the Iron Fang Recon Unit. I thought they were just ordinary logistics. If I had known, I would’ve stood beside you when their ashes were returned to Ashbourne. I would’ve stopped Aurora at the WolfPort gates that day.”
His words only carved the ice deeper in my chest.
“So that’s it?” My voice was razor–sharp. “If they hadn’t been martyrs, if they’d simply been ordinary wolves. who gave their lives–then it would’ve been fine for you to ignore me? To let Aurora humiliate me in front of half the Capital?”
His lips parted, but no answer came.
“Enough.” I moved to leave, but he blocked my path in an instant, his scent heavy with storm and steel.
“Tell me, Freya,” he demanded, his voice edged with something desperate. “At the airfield, you said those words–about dragging me from the river, about pulling me out while I was bleeding from eight wounds. What did you mean? How could you possibly know that?” His gaze locked onto mine, unyielding.
I raised my chin, meeting that piercing look without flinching.
1/3
“Caelum…” My voice dropped, sharp as a blade across the throat. “You don’t want your savior to be me, do you?”
For a heartbeat, guilt flashed in his face, quickly smothered by that Alpha’s mask of pride. “I only want the truth.”
“The truth?” My laugh was hollow. “What you mean is, you want me to take it all back. To claim I never pulled your half–dead body from the current, never bound your wounds, never watched your eyes close and prayed you’d live. That way, when our three–year bond ended in the Lunar Severance Phase, you could look at me with no guilt at all.”
His silence told me I had struck home.
“Too bad,” I whispered, stepping past him, eyes colder than the night wind. “I never wanted your guilt. Not then, not now. Your guilt is worth less than ash to me.”
Something flickered in his expression–pain, anger, confusion. His hand trembled at his side, as if he wanted to seize me, shake me, force me to take it back.
But he didn’t.
Instead, his voice broke with restrained fury.
“So that’s it? You expect me to believe you? That you were the one who dragged me from the river? Don’t delude yourself, Freya. My savior was Aurora. It has always been her.”
And with that, I realized: worse than his forgetfulness, worse than his betrayal, was this-
That even faced with truth, Caelum Grafton would choose a lie more comfortable to him.


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