Clementine:
"What do you think happened? Why did they send us back to our room so suddenly?" Troy asked Yorick as we entered our dorm room.
"I mean, it kind of took me by surprise too. I don’t understand why they would be so scared. Do you think it’s related to the monsters?" Yorick replied.
They all sat down on their beds. Zian, however, caught my attention. He looked anxious, almost as if regret weighed on his face.
He avoided my eyes and went into the bathroom.
"And someone can’t stop staring at the man who forced a mark on her," Haiden remarked, making me turn toward him with a frown.
"And someone should stop observing me. I’m a free woman. I can stare at whoever I want for as long as I want," I replied, noticing how it bothered them.
If they really thought I would sit and cry over them, they were completely wrong.
I would cry, definitely. I’d flood the mainland if my loyal mate was hurt.
But the moment I found out my mate was disloyal, my tears would dry.
"Because of her, we’re now heading north to fight the ogres," Oriana muttered, pouting.
The small wrinkles on her chin showed she was genuinely about to cry.
"You shouldn’t have started it," Troy muttered, making Oriana snap her head toward him in shock.
She got up and folded her arms over her stomach, stepping in front of him to face him.
"Okay, fine. Yeah, it was her fault," Troy quickly corrected himself when she glared at him.
I watched them with a smile. At this point, it wasn’t even sad, it was funny.
"And what are you worried about, Oriana? We’ll stick together, and we’ll be fine," Yorick called out from his bed, lying down comfortably.
"Yeah, we four will stick together," Oriana mumbled happily, flashing me a cheeky grin that reminded me of what she had said the other day about never being alone in the North again.
"Not four—I mean, our squadmates should stick together," Yorick muttered, sneaking a glance at me before quickly looking up at the ceiling.
"You mean her?" Oriana asked, pretending to be shocked as she pointed at me.
I didn’t argue. In the North, no one knows when someone might need help, and I wanted to stay professional.
If they needed me, I’d be there. Killing someone isn’t an answer.
But not accepting them, that’s my choice, and their punishment.
After a while, we were called to dinner.
Zian, surprisingly, still hadn’t left the bathroom.
They knocked on his door, telling him they needed to use it, but he didn’t come out.
It made us wonder why. At one point, we even thought he might have escaped through the window, but that didn’t happen.
When the dinner announcement was made, he finally came out.
His face was pale, and his fingers were white and wrinkled.
It was clear he had been under the shower for a long time.
His eyes looked empty as he stared at me before joining us in the hall.
But things had changed. The ringleaders were barely eating.


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