Chapter 61 – The Hunt Begins Again
Seraphina did not believe in coincidence.
Not after everything she had seen, everything she had built, and everything she had buried when it no longer served its purpose. Patterns existed for a reason, and when sothing shifted without warning, it was never accidental. It ant sothing had moved where it was not supposed to, or worse, sothing had woken up when it should have remained still.
She felt it before she could explain it.
It ca as a subtle disruption at first, not strong enough to draw attention from anyone else, but distinct enough that she could not ignore it. It wasn’t tied to the fortress itself, nor to the wolves within it. It felt older than that. Deeper. Like sothing that had been sealed away had shifted just enough to remind her it still existed.
She stood still in her chamber for a mont, her expression unreadable as she let that sensation settle fully.
Then she turned and left without calling for anyone.
The corridors parted easily for her as she walked, guards stepping aside instinctively, none of them daring to question where she was going or why. They didn’t need to know. Most of them wouldn’t understand even if she told them.
The hidden chamber was not a place she visited often anymore.
Not because it had lost its importance, but because she had already done what needed to be done there. The seal had held for years without disruption, without weakness, exactly as her great grandma designed it to. There had been no reason to return.
Until now.
She reached the concealed entrance without hesitation, her hand moving to the chanism with practiced familiarity. The door slid open smoothly, just as it always had, revealing the space beyond.
The air inside felt different imdiately.
Warr.
Not in temperature, but in presence.
Seraphina stepped inside slowly, her gaze sweeping across the room with sharp precision. Nothing appeared out of place at first glance. The structure remained intact. The restraints were still in position. The markings along the walls had not been physically altered.
But she didn’t rely on what could be seen.
She stepped further in, her senses extending beyond the surface, searching for sothing more subtle.
And then she found it.
The seal. It hadn’t been broken but it had been disturbed.
The difference was slight enough that anyone else might have missed it entirely. The energy woven into it still held, still functioned, still maintained its purpose.
But it was no longer untouched.
Sothing had interacted with it.
Sothing from the inside.
Seraphina’s expression didn’t change, but her focus sharpened completely.
"That’s not possible," she said quietly, more to confirm the thought than to question it.
Nothing inside the chamber should have had the strength to affect the seal. It had been designed specifically to prevent that, to suppress anything that might try to rise against it.
And yet, the disturbance was there, She stepped closer, her hand lifting slightly as she tested the boundary.
The response was imdiate. For the first ti since she had been going there, the chamber did not allow her full access.
Her hand stopped just short of where it should have passed through freely, the invisible barrier holding firm against her presence. That was when her expression shifted, not into surprise, but into sothing more focused.
Understanding.
So it had begun. She lowered her hand slowly, her gaze moving deeper into the chamber, toward the figure that remained bound within.
The woman hadn’t moved.
She still appeared exactly as she always had, restrained, weakened, contained. But Seraphina knew better than to trust appearances.
"You felt it too," she said quietly.
There was no verbal response. But that didn’t an there was nothing there.
Seraphina stood there for a mont longer, piecing it together with the precision she had relied on for years.
The poison.
The way Liora had survived longer than expected. The way events had begun to shift around her instead of against her. It aligned too cleanly to ignore.
"The timing fits," she murmured.
She had spent years narrowing down the variables, eliminating failures, refining the process through trial and consequence. Each attempt had brought her closer to the result she needed, even if it ant discarding those who didn’t et the requirents.
Nine wives.
Nine failures.
Not because they were weak, but because they weren’t the right one.
Liora was different.
She had known it from the beginning, even if she hadn’t confird it imdiately. There had been signs, small inconsistencies that didn’t align with the others. Resistance where there should have been none. Endurance that didn’t match her supposed limitations.
And now—
This.
Seraphina exhaled slowly, the conclusion settling into place with complete clarity.
"The White Wolf is no longer dormant."
The words weren’t spoken with fear but were spoken with certainty, and that changed everything.
Because a dormant force could be studied, controlled and repared for. But an awakening one?
That could not be left to develop unchecked.
She turned without another glance at the chamber, her decision already made before she reached the door. By the ti she stepped back into the corridor, her expression had returned to its usual calm, composed state, but the intent beneath it had sharpened into sothing far more decisive. She sent for the ones who understood how to move without drawing attention.
The ones who didn’t need explanations to follow orders.
They gathered quickly, each of them aware enough to recognize that this was not a routine summons.
Seraphina stood before them, her gaze moving across their faces one by one, asuring, assessing.
"You will begin a search," she said.
No one interrupted.
"For what purpose?" one of them asked carefully.
Her eyes settled on him. "Not for a person," she replied.
A brief pause followed, just enough to make the distinction clear.
"For a presence."
That was all the clarification they needed.
"You will not act openly," she continued. "You will not engage unless I give the order. You will observe, report, and wait."
"And if we find it?" another asked.
Seraphina’s expression didn’t change.
"You won’t approach it alone," she said. "You will inform first."
There was a brief mont of silence before they all nodded in understanding. This was not a hunt ant to be seen. It was not ant to be known. It was ant to contain sothing before it reached a point where it could no longer be controlled.
As they began to disperse, carrying out her orders without hesitation, Seraphina remained where she was, her gaze shifting slightly toward the direction of the inner fortress.
Toward Liora.
Everything had aligned faster than expected.Faster than she had planned for.
Which ant there was no longer room for delay.
She lowered her voice, just enough that only she could hear it, the final decision settling fully into place.
"Find her before she awakens," she said quietly.
Her eyes hardened slightly, the calm in them now edged with sothing far more dangerous.
"Or we all lose control of what cos next."
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