"But that narrative only works if people believe it," Marcus said, speaking for the first ti. "If people see Luna as genuinely threatening Revolutionary interests, they’ll see through his framing."
"Which is why the next few weeks are critical," Raphael said. "Eve needs to demonstrate capability quickly and publicly. Build genuine support. Show that she’s a legitimate contender for the throne rather than a naive girl making dood claims."
"The eting with Seraphine tomorrow," Eve said. "That’s the first step. If I can secure genuine Traditional faction support.....not just polite acknowledgnt but real backing.....that changes the calculation. Makes harder to dismiss as insignificant."
"And then?" Damian asked.
"And then we wait for the other factions to make contact," Raphael said. "Katerina will demand her combat trial.....probably within the week. Cassius will offer negotiations. Morgana will want to assess Eve directly." He paused. "And Malachai will continue escalating. Testing our defenses. Probing for weaknesses to see if you will break."
"He threatened her directly," Damon said, his voice carrying Rex’s growl. "Called her father weak. Said she’d be removed permanently like he was. That’s not political posturing....that’s a death threat."
"It is," Raphael agreed. "Which ans we treat it seriously. Enhanced security. No one travels alone. Eve doesn’t leave the estate without significant protection."
"I’m not hiding," Eve said imdiately.
"I’m not asking you to hide," Raphael countered. "I’m asking you to be strategic about exposure. There’s a difference between courage and recklessness."
Eve wanted to argue, but the logic was sound. And the mory of the construct’s cold voice delivering Malachai’s threat was still too fresh.
"Fine," she conceded. "Enhanced security. No unnecessary risks. But I’m not canceling the Seraphine eting or avoiding the other factions when they arrive."
"Agreed," Raphael said. "Those etings are necessary risks. But...." He looked at the brothers. "....she should have visible protection when dealing with Court representatives. Not hidden guards, but obvious presence. It sends a ssage about her resources."
"We’ll be there," Damian said imdiately. "All three of us."
"And ," Raphael added.
Marcus cleared his throat. "If I may, Alphas, the pack is ready to provide additional security as well. The warriors are trained and loyal. If Luna needs protection detail for Court etings, we have volunteers."
"Thank you, Marcus," Eve said, genuinely touched. "That ans a lot."
The older wolf inclined his head respectfully. "You’re our Luna. We protect what’s ours."
After Marcus left to coordinate security updates, the remaining group sat in heavy silence for a mont, processing everything.
"One week," Damon said finally. "Malachai gave us one week before he considers our continued claim to be formal hostility. What do we do with that week?"
"Everything," Eve said. "et with Seraphine tomorrow and secure Traditional faction support. Prepare for Katerina’s combat trial whenever it cos. Continue training. Build alliances. Demonstrate strength."
She looked at each of them. "And we do it all while knowing that Malachai is watching. Waiting for us to make a mistake he can exploit."
"No pressure," Damon said dryly.
Despite everything, Eve smiled. "When has anything about my life been low-pressure?"
"Fair point," Silas acknowledged.
Raphael moved to stand beside Eve, his hand coming to rest on her shoulder....the sa gesture he’d made at the ward line, grounding and supportive.
"Malachai made a critical error today," he said quietly.
"What error?" Eve asked.
"He showed you exactly what he thinks of you," Raphael said. "Dismissed you as insignificant. Called you weak. Assud you’d collapse under pressure." He t her eyes. "Which ans when you prove him wrong....and you will prove him wrong—it will be devastating to his position. Because he won’t have prepared for you to be competent."
"Underestimating opponents is a classic mistake," Eve said, rembering her lessons.
"Exactly. And Malachai, for all his strategic brilliance, has just made it." Raphael smiled slightly. "Use it. Let him continue thinking you’re manageable. Then show him....show everyone....exactly what the daughter of Azrael and Lilith is capable of."
Eve felt sothing settle in her chest...not quite confidence, not yet, but the foundation that confidence would build on.
"Okay," she said. "Tomorrow I et Seraphine. I show the Traditional faction that I’m worth their genuine support. And then...." She took a breath. "....then we see what the other factions do. And we handle it. Whatever cos."
"Whatever cos," Damian echoed, and the certainty in his voice was absolute.
The bond pulsed warmly, all three mates broadcasting support and fierce protectiveness.
Eve looked around the office....at her mates, at her uncle, at the evidence of careful preparation and strategic thinking...and felt ready.
Malachai wanted her to collapse under pressure.
She was going to prove him catastrophically wrong.
Outside the office windows, the morning had progressed to mid-day. The estate continued its heightened security routines. The pack moved through their various duties with the particular alertness of a group that knew threat was coming but didn’t know its exact shape.
****
And sowhere far from the Blackwood territory, in a Revolutionary faction stronghold, Lord Malachai sat in his own war room and reviewed reports from the construct’s encounter.
The girl had perford better than expected. Claid a third path with surprising strategic clarity. Demonstrated composure under threat.
Interesting.
Not concerning. Not yet. But interesting.
He made a note to accelerate certain contingency plans. To prepare for the possibility that the heir might actually require genuine effort to neutralize.
Just a possibility. Just a precaution.
She was still young. Still inexperienced. Still surrounded by protectors who would make convenient pressure points when the ti ca to apply real leverage.
One week.
Seven days to see whether she’d reconsider and choose the sensible path.
He already knew she wouldn’t.
Which was fine.
He’d been preparing for twenty-three years to finish what the coup had started.
One naive girl, no matter how well-coached, wouldn’t change that.
He returned to his work, already thinking three moves ahead.
The ga was accelerating.
And Malachai always won his gas.
Always.
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