Chapter 54: The Choice That Breaks Everything
Kael’s POV
By the ti I stepped into the room, whatever restraint I had been holding onto was already gone.
I didn’t need an explanation. I didn’t need anyone to tell what had happened. I had heard enough standing outside that door to know exactly what Ivy had done, and more importantly, what she had intended to do next.
My gaze went straight to Liora first. She looked worse than when I left her. Too pale. Too still. The kind of stillness that didn’t belong to soone resting, but to soone fighting to stay conscious.
Sothing inside snapped completely at the sight.
Then I looked at Ivy.
She was standing too close to the bed, her body angled toward Liora like she still had a place there, like she hadn’t just admitted to poisoning her minutes ago.
For a mont, I said nothing. I let the silence sit, heavy and deliberate, until she felt it.
Then I spoke. "What did you just say?"
My voice was low, controlled in a way that made it worse.
Ivy turned toward sharply, her expression shifting almost instantly. Whatever had been on her face before I walked in was gone, replaced with sothing softer, uncertain, carefully put together.
"Alpha... don’t get this wrong," she said quickly. "It was just—"
"How dare you."
The words cut her off cleanly.
This ti, I didn’t bother holding it back.
My wolf surged forward, anger bleeding into every part of until even standing still felt like effort. I could feel the shift pressing against my skin, claws threatening, bones tightening under the strain.
"You tried to harm my Luna," I said, each word sharper than the last. "And my unborn child."
Her eyes widened slightly, but she didn’t step back.
"Alpha... she’s my sister," she said, her voice shaking now, though I could already tell it wasn’t fear alone. "I can’t harm her—"
"You didn’t just lure her out to be killed," I cut in, taking a step closer. "You poisoned her. Under my roof. Under my watch."
"I didn’t—"
I didn’t let her finish. By the ti she realized I had moved, it was already too late.
I crossed the distance between us in a second, my hand closing around her throat as I drove her back against the wall. The impact knocked the breath out of her, her body tensing instantly under my grip.
"You think I didn’t hear you?" I said, my voice dropping into sothing darker, sothing that didn’t belong to a leader anymore. "You think I didn’t hear every word you said?"
Her hands ca up to my wrist, trying to pry my grip loose, but I didn’t loosen it.
"You’ve been working with her," I continued, tightening my hold just enough to make the point clear. "With Isolade. You knew where she was. You helped her. So tell —"
I leaned in slightly, my eyes locked on hers.
"Where is she?"
"I don’t know," Ivy choked out, her voice breaking under the pressure. "I promise—I don’t know—"
My grip tightened further.
"You expect to believe that?" I asked.
"I swear—"
"Kael... stop."
The voice was weak barely above a whisper but it cut through everything. I froze for a fraction of a second before turning my head toward the bed.
Liora was trying to sit up, she shouldn’t have been able to. Her body was too weak, her breathing still uneven, but she was forcing herself up anyway, one hand braced against the mattress as she struggled to stay upright.
"Kael... please," she said again, her voice shaking. "Stop..."
The sight of her like that hit harder than anything Ivy had said. My grip loosened without aning to.
And that was all Ivy needed. She twisted sharply, slipping out of my hold the second the pressure eased, stumbling back before I could grab her again. By the ti I turned fully toward her, she was already moving toward the door.
"Guards!" I barked, my voice carrying through the corridor. "Find her!"
Footsteps echoed almost imdiately outside as the guards reacted, but Ivy was fast. Too fast for soone who had just been choking seconds ago.
I didn’t chase her. I couldn’t because Liora swayed. For a split second, it looked like she was going to fall.
I was at her side before she hit the ground, catching her as her strength gave out completely. Her weight felt wrong in my arms, too light, too fragile, like sothing I could lose if I didn’t hold on tightly enough.
"You shouldn’t be moving," I said, my voice lower now, steadier, even though the anger was still there, sitting just under the surface.
"I’m fine," she tried to say, but the words ca out weak.
"You’re not fine."
I eased her back onto the bed carefully, adjusting the pillows behind her so she wouldn’t have to strain to breathe.
Her hand found my arm, her grip weak but deliberate.
"Don’t kill her," she said quietly.
I looked at her.
After everything Ivy had done, after everything she had just admitted, Liora was still asking not to kill her.
"She tried to kill you," I said, not harshly, but firmly.
"I know," she replied, her gaze steady despite the exhaustion. "But not like this."
I didn’t answer her imdiately because part of didn’t agree. Part of wanted to end it right there, to make sure Ivy never got the chance to try again.
But Liora was still looking at , waiting.
And in that mont, she mattered more than my anger.
"I’ll handle it," I said finally.
It wasn’t a promise she could argue with.
—
By the ti they brought Ivy back, the entire fortress already knew sothing had happened.
Word spread fast when guards were running through the halls and orders were being shouted without explanation. By the ti I reached the interrogation room, the tension had already settled into sothing heavy, sothing waiting to break.
Ivy was inside when I entered.
Her hands were bound, her posture tense, but her expression had changed again. The fear from earlier had been replaced with sothing more controlled, more careful. She had already started thinking of a way out.
I stepped forward, the door closing behind with a dull thud. For a mont, we just looked at each other.
Then I spoke.
"You’re going to tell everything."
She opened her mouth to respond—
But the door opened again before she could. I turned sharply, irritation already rising, but it died the second I saw who walked in.
Lord Valerius.
Seraphina.
Elder Maris.
And two others behind them.
They didn’t look surprised to be here instead they looked like they had expected this. Of course they did.
Seraphina’s gaze moved between and Ivy, her expression unreadable.
"This has gone far enough," she said calmly.
I let out a quiet breath, my patience thinning. "You don’t get to decide that," I replied.
Lord Valerius stepped forward, his presence heavy, his tone sharper.
"You’ve already overstepped," he said. "First my daughter, now this?"
"This?" I echoed, my voice dropping. "Your ’this’ just poisoned my Luna."
"She is her sister," Elder Maris cut in. "And a woman of standing. You cannot treat her like a criminal without proof."
I laughed, but there was no humor in it.
"Proof?" I repeated. "You want proof? I heard her confess."
"Words said under pressure an nothing," Seraphina said smoothly.
"She wasn’t under pressure when she said it," I shot back.
The room shifted. They were here to control the outco.
"Even if what you say is true," one of the elders added, "Ivy is not just anyone. She is of Ebonvale blood. A future Luna. Possibly a future leader. You cannot execute her on accusation alone."
"She tried to kill my mate," I said, my voice hardening. "That is not an accusation. That is treason."
"And yet," Lord Valerius replied, his tone colder now, "you seem far more concerned with her than with maintaining order in your own pack."
I held his gaze. "You’re testing ," I said quietly.
"No," he replied. "We are reminding you of your place."
Sothing in my chest snapped again, but this ti it wasn’t just anger. It was clarity.
"You think this is about control," I said. "You think this is about power. It’s not."
"Then what is it about?" Seraphina asked.
I didn’t hesitate.
"It’s about the fact that soone tried to kill my Luna," I said. "And all of you are standing here trying to protect the person who did it."
Silence followed that.
Then one of the elders spoke again, his tone sharper now.
"This is exactly the problem," he said. "You’re no longer thinking like an Alpha. You’re thinking like a man controlled by a woman."
The words landed exactly where they were ant to. I didn’t react imdiately, I let them settle.
Then I stepped forward slowly, my gaze sweeping across all of them.
"If protecting my mate makes unfit," I said, my voice steady now, controlled in a way that made it more dangerous, "then you don’t understand what an Alpha is."
"You are losing perspective," Elder Maris said.
"No," I replied. "You already lost yours."
The tension in the room tightened, thick enough to choke on.
They expected to back down, to choose the pack over Liora. They didn’t understand that there was no choice anymore.
I looked at each of them, one by one, making sure they heard clearly.
"Then I will step down as Alpha," I said.
That got their attention.
"And we’ll see," I continued, my voice dropping slightly, "who protects you when the real enemy cos."
This ti, the silence that followed wasn’t controlled.
It was shaken.
Because for the first ti, they realized I ant it.
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