Chapter 105 – The Role He Never Chose
POV: Kael
Kael had always trusted certainty.
Not blind certainty.
Not arrogance.
The kind earned through experience.
The kind forged through responsibility.
An Alpha who hesitated too often endangered everyone around him. Leadership required confidence, even when the path ahead wasn’t entirely clear. There were tis when decisions had to be made before all the answers existed.
Kael had learned that lesson young.
He had spent years carrying the weight of lives that depended on him.
Years learning to trust his instincts.
Years learning the difference between fear and intuition.
Yet recently, certainty had beco difficult to find.
Not because the fortress faced an external threat.
Not because enemies gathered beyond their borders.
Because every answer seed to create new questions.
And almost all of those questions led back to Liora.
The change had been gradual at first.
Easy to ignore.
Easy to explain away.
The bond between mates carried emotions naturally. Every Alpha understood that. He could sense her happiness, her fear, her anger, her exhaustion.
That was normal.
Expected.
Nothing about what he was experiencing now felt normal.
The first incident happened during a council eting.
A minor disagreent had broken out between two elders over patrol rotations. Kael listened patiently while they argued, waiting for an opportunity to end the discussion before it wasted everyone’s ti.
Then an unexpected certainty appeared.
The sensation wasn’t logical.
It wasn’t based on observation.
Yet sohow he knew exactly which elder would speak next.
He knew the argunt that would follow.
He knew how the disagreent would end.
The realization arrived so suddenly that he frowned.
A mont later, events unfolded exactly as he anticipated.
Word for word.
Action for action.
The familiarity lingered long after the eting ended.
At the ti, he dismissed it.
A coincidence.
Nothing more.
Then it happened again.
And again.
And again.
Small things at first.
Minor monts that seed too insignificant to matter.
A servant turning a corner before he heard her footsteps.
A ssenger arriving monts before being announced.
A warrior requesting reassignnt before speaking the words aloud.
The incidents accumulated until coincidence beca an increasingly difficult explanation.
Kael found himself paying closer attention.
Unfortunately, attention only revealed more inconsistencies.
Several days later, he stood overlooking the training grounds while warriors completed their afternoon exercises.
Everything appeared routine.
Predictable.
Normal.
Then a strange feeling settled over him.
The sensation reminded him of standing on the edge of a mory.
Not rembering.
Almost rembering.
The distinction mattered.
His gaze shifted toward a young warrior sparring near the center of the field.
Without warning, certainty flooded his thoughts.
The warrior was about to lose his footing.
The realization felt absurd.
There was no reason to think that.
Nothing suggested a mistake.
Yet Kael knew.
Seconds later, the warrior slipped.
The training blade flew from his grasp.
Several wolves laughed.
The exercise continued.
Kael remained motionless.
A chill crawled down his spine.
Because he hadn’t predicted it.
Prediction implied calculation.
This felt different.
The knowledge simply existed before the event occurred.
As though so part of him had already seen it happen.
The thought lingered for the rest of the day.
By itself, the incident ant little.
Combined with everything else, it beca impossible to ignore.
Sothing was changing.
The realization unsettled him.
Because he couldn’t identify the source.
Until the bond intervened.
It happened late one evening.
Kael sat alone in his office reviewing reports while the fortress settled into silence around him.
The work should have occupied his attention.
Instead, his thoughts remained fixed elsewhere.
On Liora.
Again.
The bond had beco increasingly difficult to interpret.
Sotis emotions passed between them so strongly that words beca unnecessary.
Other tis, sensations surfaced that neither of them seed to understand.
The experience grew stranger with each passing week.
That night, a sudden wave of emotion surged through the connection.
The force of it nearly made him drop the docunt in his hands.
Fear.
Not ordinary fear.
Ancient fear.
The feeling struck with such intensity that Kael rose from his chair imdiately.
His heart accelerated.
The emotion wasn’t his.
He knew that instantly.
It belonged to Liora.
Yet sohow it felt older than either of them.
Older than the fortress.
Older than mory.
The sensation vanished as quickly as it arrived.
Leaving confusion behind.
Kael stared into the empty room.
Sothing wasn’t right.
The bond was changing.
Evolving.
Deepening.
Whatever word he chose, the result remained the sa.
The connection no longer behaved the way a mate bond should.
The realization followed him into the following morning.
He found Liora in one of the fortress gardens.
She sat beneath a large tree, reading.
At least, she appeared to be reading.
The distant look in her eyes suggested otherwise.
Kael approached quietly.
The mont he drew close enough, a strange sensation hit him.
Recognition.
Not of her.
Of the mont.
His pulse quickened.
For a split second, certainty settled inside his thoughts.
She was about to close the book.
She was about to look up.
She was about to ask if he had slept.
The knowledge felt ridiculous.
Then Liora closed the book.
Looked up.
And asked, "Did you sleep at all last night?"
Kael froze.
The expression on her face changed imdiately.
Concern replaced curiosity.
"What?"
He stared at her.
Not because of the question.
Because she hadn’t spoken yet when he knew it was coming.
The realization disturbed him far more than he wanted to admit.
Liora noticed.
Of course she did.
"You’ve done that twice now."
Kael blinked.
"What?"
"That look."
She studied him carefully.
"As though you’re hearing sothing nobody else can hear."
The observation landed harder than she intended.
Because it mirrored his own concerns.
For a mont, neither spoke.
Silence stretched between them.
Heavy.
Thoughtful.
Uncomfortable.
Then sothing unexpected happened.
The bond stirred.
Not emotionally.
Differently.
Layers seed to shift beneath the connection.
Like pages turning inside a book neither of them could see.
A sensation passed through Kael’s awareness.
A mory.
Or sothing resembling one.
A battlefield beneath dark skies.
The sll of blood.
The feeling of loss.
Not visual.
Emotional.
Instinctive.
Gone before he could fully grasp it.
Yet its impact remained.
Liora stiffened.
She felt it too.
The realization appeared simultaneously on both their faces.
Neither understood what had just happened.
That much was obvious.
Yet both recognized its significance.
The connection between them was no longer simple.
No longer limited.
No longer entirely theirs.
The thought unsettled Kael deeply.
Because every day brought new evidence that whatever was happening extended beyond the present.
Beyond their lives.
Beyond their understanding.
Later that night, he stood alone on one of the fortress walls watching darkness settle across the mountains.
The wind carried the scent of pine through the air.
Usually monts like this brought clarity.
Tonight they brought questions.
Too many questions.
The mories affecting Liora.
The strange certainty appearing inside his own thoughts.
The emotions that felt borrowed from lives neither of them rembered.
The growing sense of familiarity surrounding events that should have been entirely new.
None of it made sense independently.
Together, however, they ford a pattern.
A pattern Kael could no longer ignore.
Sothing connected them.
Not simply as mates.
Not simply through the bond.
Sothing older.
Sothing buried beneath generations of forgotten history.
The realization settled heavily inside his chest.
For months, he had viewed himself as an observer.
Soone watching Liora struggle through changes he couldn’t fully understand.
Now he wasn’t so sure.
Perhaps he had been part of this from the beginning.
Perhaps he always had been.
The possibility sent an uncomfortable chill through him.
Because if it was true, then the role he occupied now wasn’t new.
It was inherited.
Repeated.
Just like everything else seed to be.
Kael stared into the darkness beyond the fortress walls and finally allowed himself to acknowledge the truth.
Whatever this was...
It didn’t start with them.
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