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Now reading: Chapter 61 from Betrayed by My Ex, Marked by His Alpha Emperor Brother, a Fantasy novel by Menelaus.

Elara’s POV

"I am Valerius’s father."

The words landed like a hamr on an anvil. The kitchen went silent. Even the pot on the stove seed to stop bubbling.

Finnian’s face drained of color. His lips parted, but no sound ca out. His blue eyes darted from Kaelen to , then to Valerius, then back to Kaelen. I was left entirely speechless, my whole body trembling so fiercely that I completely forgot about the pasta sauce simring on the stove. I watched the pieces fall into place behind Finnian’s gaze—the dark curls, the gold eyes, the sa stubborn jaw.

His throat worked. He took a half-step backward, not from choice but from instinct. Kaelen’s monarch aura pressed down on the room like a physical weight, invisible but suffocating. I could feel it on my own skin—a low vibration in the air, a gravitational pull that made my wolf want to bare her throat.

Finnian was human. He didn’t have a wolf. But his body understood power. His shoulders curled inward slightly, his chin dipping by a fraction. The bread knife lay forgotten on the counter.

"Daddy!" Valerius shrieked from his stool.

My heart stopped.

My son—my cautious, careful, sensitive son—launched himself off the stool with the reckless abandon of a child who had just been handed the one thing he’d been wishing for. He crashed into Kaelen’s legs, wrapping both arms around his thigh and pressing his face into the dark fabric of his trousers.

"Daddy, Daddy, Daddy," he chanted, like the word itself was magic and he needed to say it enough tis to make it real.

Sothing fractured in Kaelen’s expression. The cold, predatory mask cracked. His hand ca down—slowly, almost reverently—and settled on the back of Valerius’s head. His fingers curled into those dark curls, and for a single, unguarded breath, his gold eyes shone with sothing that looked dangerously close to breaking.

He cleared his throat. "Hey, buddy."

"Are you staying for pasta?" Valerius demanded, pulling back to look up at him. "Mommy made sauce. With love in it. That’s the secret ingredient."

The corner of Kaelen’s mouth twitched. "Is that so?"

"It’s true. She told ."

I wanted to dissolve into the floorboards.

Kaelen’s gaze lifted from Valerius and found . The softness lingered for one more heartbeat. Then his hand moved—reached across the space between us—and settled on my shoulder. Firm. Deliberate. His thumb pressed against the curve where my neck t my collarbone.

A brand. That’s what it was. Not a gesture of comfort. A brand.

"I’m Ela’s mate," he said. His tone was conversational. Almost pleasant. As though he were comnting on the weather. "I’ve been helping her deal with so dangerous family matters. Matters that required discretion."

The word "mate" hit the room like a second detonation.

Finnian’s jaw tightened. A muscle flexed beneath the skin. His gaze dropped to Kaelen’s hand on my shoulder—lingered there—then rose to et mine.

The question in his eyes was quiet but unmistakable. You didn’t tell ?

"Finnian." My voice ca out thin. I swallowed and tried again. "I was going to tell you. About Kaelen. About all of it. Every ti I tried, sothing interrupted—the journey, Valerius, the timing was never—"

"It’s fine," Finnian said.

It was not fine. His voice was careful and controlled, the way a man speaks when he is holding sothing fragile between his teeth and cannot afford to bite down.

"I understand," he added. Quieter.

And the worst part was, I think he did.

His shoulders straightened. The involuntary submission to Kaelen’s aura receded, replaced by a rigid, deliberate composure. He folded the dish towel that hung over his shoulder. Set it neatly on the counter. Took a asured breath.

"I didn’t realize," he said, directing the words sowhere between Kaelen and . "She didn’t ntion a mate."

Kaelen’s thumb pressed harder into my shoulder. "She’s cautious by nature. It’s one of the things I admire about her."

I could have scread.

Instead, I turned back to the stove. The sauce was starting to catch on the bottom of the pot. I grabbed the wooden spoon and scraped it along the iron, channeling every ounce of my screaming internal chaos into the circular motion of stirring.

Stir. Breathe. Stir.

Valerius, gloriously oblivious, had already moved on. He climbed back onto his stool and resud his salad operation with renewed enthusiasm, narrating the entire process.

"And then the tomato goes here, and the cucumber goes there, and Daddy, do you like olives? I don’t like olives. Finnian doesn’t like olives either. We agreed."

"I eat olives," Kaelen said.

"That’s okay," Valerius said generously. "Nobody’s perfect."

The kitchen was too small for four people. It had been cozy with three. With four, it was a trap.

I stood at the stove. Kaelen moved to the counter beside —close beside —and picked up a knife. He began slicing tomatoes. His movents were precise and unhurried, as though he’d always been here, as though this kitchen belonged to him.

"Salt," he said.

I passed it without looking at him. Our fingers brushed. Heat shot up my arm.

Finnian stood at the sink on the other side of the kitchen, washing dishes. His sleeves were still rolled to his elbows. The water ran hard. He scrubbed a pot that was already clean.

"Towel," he said.

I handed him one. Our eyes t briefly. He gave a small, tight nod that said nothing and everything.

I was being pulled in two directions. Stretched thin between two gravitational forces. Kaelen on my left, radiating warmth and dominance and that intoxicating cedar-and-smoke scent that made my wolf purr against my will. Finnian on my right, steady and solid and hurt in a way he would never say out loud.

The kitchen pressed in. The walls seed closer. The ceiling lower. Steam from the pot blurred the edges of the room.

Valerius decided this was the perfect mont to practice what he called "warrior dancing."

He hopped off his stool and wedged himself into the tiny three-square-foot space between the refrigerator and the counter. He humd tunelessly, performing an acrobatic, improvised dance that involved one leg in the air, both arms windmilling, and a dramatic lunge that nearly took out the olive oil bottle.

Kaelen stepped left to avoid his son’s flailing elbow. Finnian stepped right at the sa mont, reaching for a drying rack.

They collided.

Shoulder against shoulder. Kaelen’s dark gold eyes t Finnian’s blue ones at a dangerously close distance.

A beat of absolute silence.

"Sorry," Kaelen said.

"Sorry," Finnian said. At the exact sa ti.

They stepped apart. Both turned in opposite directions. Neither acknowledged what had happened.

I gripped the wooden spoon so hard my knuckles went white.

I was going to lose my mind. Right here, in this kitchen, surrounded by pasta sauce and masculine tension and my little son’s acrobatic, improvised dance. This was how it ended. Not in so dramatic battle or heartbreaking betrayal, but in a kitchen the size of a closet with two impossibly stubborn n who couldn’t occupy the sa square foot without the air catching fire.

In what felt like the last thirty seconds before my absolute collapse, the front door banged open, and I was saved.

"Ela! I’m back! You will not believe the price of bread in this city—absolute robbery—and also I need every single detail about the north because your ssage was criminally vague and I have been dying, literally dying, for—"

Brenna appeared in the kitchen doorway. Her dark hair was wind-tousled, her cheeks flushed from the cold. She carried a cloth bag overflowing with bread loaves in one arm and was gesturing wildly with the other.

She stopped mid-sentence.

Her eyes swept the room. Kaelen at the counter with a knife. Finnian at the sink with a towel. at the stove, gripping a spoon like a lifeline. Valerius mid-lunge between the refrigerator and the cabinet.

Her eyebrows rose. Slowly.

"Well," she said. "This is cozy."

"Brenna," I breathed. Relief flooded through so hard my knees almost buckled. "This is Finnian. Finnian Morrison. He’s—he helped in the north. He drove back."

Brenna set the bread down. She looked at Finnian—really looked at him. The broad shoulders. The flour-dusted shirt. The golden-brown hair. The steady blue eyes.

A slow, appreciative smile spread across her face.

She crossed the kitchen in three strides and extended her hand. Finnian took it. His grip was firm, automatic—but when he t her gaze, sothing in his expression shifted. The rigid tension in his jaw softened. The first genuine smile I’d seen from him since Kaelen arrived touched the corners of his mouth.

"Nice to et you," he said.

"Really?" Brenna held his hand, a playful gleam in her eyes, the handshake lasting one beat longer than courtesy required. "I was starting to think she kept all the handso ones hidden away for herself."

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