Chapter 131
Freya’s POV
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+8 Pearls
Two days later, I boarded the ferry with Silas. The sea wind was sharp, carrying the brine of the waves and the weight of something inevitable. We were bound for the island where the Halston Dominion had organized the groundbreaking ceremony–a show of unity between packs, humans, and industries.
I should have been focused on the event itself, on the politics that would thread through every smile and every handshake. But instead, my thoughts snagged on Silas.
“You’re sure you don’t need to see a healer for… that condition?” I asked quietly, leaning closer as the ferry rocked.
I meant the way he had lost himself in the forbidden chamber, as though dragged into a nightmare he could not wake from.
“I’ve already taken my medicine,” he replied, calm as stone. “Don’t trouble yourself. It hasn’t surfaced in years. I thought it had been buried for good.”
But his jaw tightened, betraying the ghost of memory. I could sense the storm beneath his words. His wolf flared briefly, bitter and wounded. I knew, even without asking, that Jocelyn Thorne’s meddling had triggered something–digging at scars best left sealed.
His lips pressed thin, his gaze hardening with a dangerous gleam.
The ferry moored before I could press further. We disembarked, our boots striking the dock, and the salt wind carried voices ahead of us. There, waiting with smiles sharp as knives, stood Jocelyn alongside several of my clan’s elders.
Jocelyn’s smile was sweet poison. “Alpha Silas, you’ve finally arrived. We’ve been waiting such a long time.”
She said it as though he hadn’t once wrapped his hand around her throat. As if that night of fury and fear had never scarred the air between them.
Silas gave her nothing–just a fleeting glance, cold as steel, before dismissing her entirely.
But Jocelyn wasn’t deterred. Her gaze flicked to me, the curve of her lips deepening. “Oh, Freya, did you know? Your ex–mate is here today. He has something he wishes to tell you.”
A chill crept into my spine. I followed her look, and there he was–Caelum. He stood with Aurora, daughter of the Bluemoon. Pack’s Beta, her uniform crisp, her emerald ring gleaming in the sun.
Jocelyn lifted her chin, voice bright and cruel. “Caelum, Freya is here. Didn’t you say you wanted to make a clean break with her? What better time than now?”
I saw him falter. His shoulders stiffened, his jaw clenched. His eyes flicked between Jocelyn and me, caught in a vise of his own making.
Aurora leaned closer, her voice a silken lash. “You wouldn’t back down, would you, Caelum? If you refuse, I won’t force you. But understand this–if you keep wearing those rings you once shared with her, people will talk. I might not doubt you, but others will. And their whispers will drag us both into the mud.”
His gaze locked with hers, and I saw the decision settle in his bones. He straightened, mask of resolve sliding into place.
My gaze drifted past the silver scraps in his hand, settling instead on the emerald ring gleaming proudly on Aurora’s finger. The stone was radiant, its green fire impossible to miss.
“Why are you staring at Aurora’s ring, Freya?” Jocelyn’s voice lashed out, cruel satisfaction in every word. “It doesn’t matter how fine her jewels are–they’ll never be yours.”
Before I could speak, Silas’s voice cut through the air like a blade. “You talk too much.”
Jocelyn flinched as though struck, color draining from her face. I knew she felt it–the phantom memory of his grip at her throat, the pain that had once silenced her. She swallowed, her bravado faltering.
I drew a breath, forcing my voice calm. “Silas, this is my affair. Let me deal with it.“.
Then I turned to Jocelyn, my wolf rising hot within me. “And how do you know Aurora’s ring isn’t mine? That emerald was purchased during my marriage to Caelum. He bought it in secret–behind my back, while I still wore his mate’s bond. So yes, I have every right to reclaim it. That ring was bought with betrayal, and it belongs to me.”
Jocelyn froze, her mask cracking. Around us, I felt the shift–the ripple of judgment through the crowd. The elders‘ eyes darkened. The whispers began.
I held Caelum’s gaze, my wolf baring its fangs in silence.
And for the first time, he looked as though the ground beneath him might give way.
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