Chapter 157
Nobody moved after the Alpha said it.
The silence inside the house turned heavy so quickly that Ariana could hear her own heartbeat. Her hand still rested lightly against Kael’s arm, and she felt the difference in him imdiately. The pressure surrounding the room had steadied the second she touched him. It had not disappeared completely, but it had settled enough that every wolf standing outside the house noticed it.
Ariana saw the realization spread across their faces one by one.
Not relief.
Understanding.
The oldest Alpha looked between her and Kael slowly before speaking again.
"That," he said quietly, "is why the Lycan refuses the bond."
Kael’s expression darkened imdiately. "You don’t know what you’re talking about."
"No," the Alpha replied calmly. "I think we finally do."
Ariana frowned and looked between them. "What exactly does that an?"
The younger Alpha answered this ti, his attention fixed entirely on Kael.
"The Lycan was supposed to stabilize through the pack’s chosen bond," he said carefully. "But if it already anchored itself sowhere else, then the bond becos unnecessary."
The words settled heavily into the room.
Kael went completely still beside her.
"That’s impossible," he said flatly.
The Alpha held his gaze. "Then explain what just happened."
Nobody answered because nobody could.
Ariana could still feel the warmth beneath her palm where she touched Kael’s arm, and she knew the wolves felt it too. The tension that had nearly broken through monts ago had steadied because of her presence alone.
The oldest Alpha exhaled slowly before looking toward Ariana again.
"The Fifth Blood stabilizing the Lycan changes everything."
Kael stepped fully in front of her imdiately, blocking the wolves’ view of her without even seeming aware he had done it.
"Stop talking about her like she’s part of so experint," he said quietly.
The Alpha’s expression hardened slightly. "This stopped being personal the mont the Lycan responded to her instead of the bond."
Ariana saw the exact mont those words hit Kael.
Not anger.
Fear.
Real fear.
And sohow that unsettled her more than the pressure earlier.
"Kael," she said quietly.
But he did not look away from the Alphas standing outside the door.
"You don’t get to decide what this ans," he said.
"No," the Alpha agreed. "But the council will."
The atmosphere inside the house tightened imdiately after that.
Ariana stepped around Kael before he could stop her. "Then maybe the council should stop treating him like sothing they failed to control."
The wolves outside fell silent again.
The older Alpha studied her carefully now, and the caution in his expression beca impossible to miss.
"You really don’t understand what you’ve beco to this territory," he said.
Ariana crossed her arms tightly. "Then explain it."
"You survived Vaelor."
"I know."
"You stood against Augustus."
"I know that too."
"But this," the Alpha continued carefully, "is the first ti anyone has seen the Lycan settle for soone outside the bond."
The words landed harder than anything else had.
Ariana looked toward Kael automatically.
His expression had changed again. The anger was still there, but sothing else had appeared beneath it now. Conflict. Hesitation. Understanding.
And suddenly Ariana understood why this frightened the wolves so much.
This was no longer just about the bond.
If the Lycan could stabilize through her instead of the pack’s chosen mate, then everything the wolves believed about the Alpha line could change overnight.
Mira’s place beside Kael would be questioned.
The council’s authority would weaken.
And Ariana herself would beco far more dangerous than an outsider.
She would beco necessary.
The realization hit hard enough that she unconsciously stepped back half a pace.
Kael noticed imdiately.
His attention shifted toward her at once, instinct overriding everything else around him.
"Ariana."
The way he said her na changed the atmosphere again.
Every wolf outside noticed it.
The oldest Alpha’s expression darkened slightly. "There it is again."
Kael’s jaw tightened. "Enough."
"No," the Alpha replied calmly. "You need to hear this before the council does."
Nobody interrupted him.
"If the Lycan truly anchored itself to the Fifth Blood," he said carefully, "then the bond no longer matters."
The room went completely silent.
Ariana forgot how to breathe for a second.
Even the wolves outside the house stopped moving.
Because everyone understood what those words ant.
Mira.
The bond.
The laws of the pack.
Everything the wolves built around the Alpha line suddenly beca uncertain if the Lycan had chosen differently on its own.
Kael stared at the Alpha like he wanted to deny it.
But he couldn’t.
Because sowhere deep down, Ariana knew he had already felt it too.
The older Alpha drew another slow breath before continuing.
"The council will not see this as romance," he said quietly. "They’ll see it as a threat to the order of the territory."
Ariana’s chest tightened painfully.
"And what happens then?" she asked.
The Alpha looked directly at her.
"They stop asking for permission."
The answer settled heavily into the room.
Then Kael moved.
The shift happened so quickly that Ariana barely processed it before he stepped completely in front of her, shielding her from the wolves outside without hesitation.
The pressure inside the house changed instantly.
Not unstable.
Protective.
Every wolf standing beyond the doorway reacted to it at once.
Kael’s eyes darkened as the Lycan pushed closer beneath his control, not because he was losing himself, but because instinct had taken over the mont the wolves turned their attention fully toward her.
And when he finally spoke, his voice sounded lower and rougher than before.
"They can try."
Nobody answered imdiately after that.
Even the Alphas standing at the doorway seed to understand they had crossed into dangerous territory now. Ariana could feel the shift in the atmosphere clearly. This was no longer a political discussion about the bond or the stability of the territory.
This had beco personal.
The older Alpha studied Kael carefully, and for the first ti since arriving, real concern appeared behind his calm expression.
"You hear yourself right now?" he asked quietly.
Kael did not move. "Perfectly."
"The Lycan is surfacing every ti she’s threatened."
"No," Kael replied evenly. "It surfaces every ti soone treats her like she belongs to the council."
The words hit hard enough that silence followed again.
Ariana felt her chest tighten at the way he said it, imdiate and certain, without hesitation or doubt.
The younger Alpha glanced toward the wolves outside before lowering his voice slightly.
"You’re proving the council’s fears correct."
Kael laughed once under his breath, but there was nothing amused about the sound. "No. I’m proving the council lost control of sothing they thought they owned."
The atmosphere sharpened instantly after that.
Ariana saw the older Alpha’s expression harden because Kael had said the one thing none of them wanted spoken aloud.
The wolves had never truly cared about destiny.
They cared about control.
The bond gave them certainty. It gave them a predictable Alpha, a structure the council understood, and a future they could manipulate.
But Ariana changed that.
The Fifth Blood changed that.
And now the Lycan itself was rejecting the rules the wolves built their entire hierarchy around.
The realization unsettled every wolf standing outside the house.
Ariana could feel it.
Fear.
Not fear of her alone.
Fear of what ca after her.
The older Alpha finally spoke again, quieter this ti.
"If the council decides the bond is broken beyond repair, they will act quickly."
Kael’s expression remained cold. "Let them."
"And if they move against her?"
The question landed heavily.
Ariana felt the shift in Kael before he answered. His body went completely still, and the pressure surrounding him deepened sharply enough that several wolves outside instinctively stepped back.
When he finally spoke, his voice sounded calm.
Too calm.
"Then they’ll learn why the Lycan existed before the council ever did."
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