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Now reading: Chapter 56: A son from The billionaire's omega wolf bride, a Fantasy novel by SofieVert01.

Chapter 56

Caron

I don’t know how to process this.

The only father figure I’ve ever had is dying. And it’s a strange, gutting thing—building a funeral pyre for a man who’s still breathing. Still alive. Still joking, even.

I keep my hands busy, stacking wood, branch after branch, letting the labor dull my mind. Wolves co and go from the cabin just a few ters away, filing in to say their goodbyes, and I stay out here—alone—constructing the place where his body will burn.

The final resting place.

Because apparently, that responsibility falls on the closest male relative.

And I’ll be damned if Alric touches a single log of this pyre.

He tried. Brought his own pre-cut wood on a ceremonial cart, like it was a political show. A group of wolves carried it up the path with all the grace of a funeral parade. Lenora destroyed it the second she saw it.

She kicked it over, cracked the fra, spat on the logs.

"Eamon Maen has a son," she said coldly. Then she dumped a bucket of water on the remains and walked back inside.

They didn’t argue. Maybe because they knew she was right.

Eamon Maen has a son.

And apparently... that son is .

I add another thick branch to the structure, hands numb and splintered, and I can’t stop thinking—

I’ve never been a son. Not to anyone.

What an odd way to look at death.

I keep working, arms scratched and sore, sweat clinging to my back as I wedge another branch beneath the structure. Wolf after wolf passes by—so with solemn nods, otgers openly sobbing each stepping into the cabin for their mont with Eamon, then stepping out changed. Lighter. Or heavier. It’s hard to tell.

"Because death isn’t final," a soft voice says behind . "It’s just the next stop. And for my father, it’s a much-needed relief. He gets to be with his mate again."

I turn. Lenora stands a few feet away, arms folded, gaze locked on the half-finished pyre like she can already see her father lying on it.

"How’s it going?" she asks, quiet.

"Did you just read my mind?" I mutter.

"I don’t know what you’re talking about," she replies, stepping closer to inspect my handiwork.

She tilts her head. "Interesting structure."

I groan. "You should’ve let use Alric’s."

Her grin is instant. "Please. That thing looked like it belonged at a pageant, not a farewell rite."

She squats beside the pyre, brushing her hand along the lower stack. "Besides," she adds, standing again, "yours looks like it can catch fire. And hold a body. Which is, you know, all that matters."

I brace the top beam, trying to even it out, when the entire damn thing creaks—and crumbles.

Branches tumble in a dry, splintered heap. I sigh heavily. Lenora muffles a laugh with the back of her hand.

"You’re distracting ," I grumble. "Go away before I build this thing upside down."

She steps close instead and presses a gentle kiss to my cheek. "You’re doing fine," she whispers, then turns to leave.

*

"Eamon, don’t," I say, heart leaping to my throat as he steps onto the pyre I’ve barely finished stacking.

But he doesn’t listen.

He lies down like it’s just a bed, lacing his fingers over his chest with a sigh of contentnt. The human equivalent of soone hopping into a coffin just to see how it fits. Morbid.

"You’ve actually done a good job," he says, eyes scanning the sky above him like he’s imagining the flas already.

"Yeah," I mutter, voice rough. "Now get off. Please."

He chuckles, that deep, familiar sound rumbling in his chest, and sits up with ease. Then, to my utter disbelief, he jumps down in a clean hop.

For a dying man, he moves like soone with decades left to burn.

I look at him.

And I can’t hold it in. "I’m not ready."

Eamon ets my eyes. There’s sothing in his gaze—soft, steady, knowing. He gives a small smile.

"You are," he says gently.

"I’m not." It cos out cracked, like my throat is made of glass.

"It’s ti, Caron."

"No, don’t—" My voice chokes on the rest. I blink. The sky blurs, and it takes a second to realize why.

Tears?

I Caron Anderson do not cry. Ever.

Here I am, blinking like an idiot because sothing hot and traitorous is prickling at the corners of my eyes. One second longer and they’ll fall. I’m losing the battle.

Eamon opens his arms. No words. Just an invitation.

I hesitate.

Anxious. Ungrounded. Shaken.

I don’t know how to do this. I’ve never done this.

But his voice cos again, gentle—like a nudge from the universe I didn’t ask for.

"Co, son."

And that does it.

I move.

Straight into his arms.

They wrap around imdiately—solid, warm, grounding. Everything I imagined they’d feel like. Everything I never thought I’d get.

I breathe him in.

This man, who sohow beca mine.

And it hits , all at once:

How cruel life is. So, so cruel.

Why give sothing so precious—so needed—just to take it away?

I grip his shirt tighter, holding on like that will make this mont permanent.

"This is so embarrassing," I mutter against his shoulder, voice thick.

"What, because big strong n don’t cry?" he says with a laugh, patting my back like I’m still just a boy.

He pulls away, and there’s sothing oddly steady in the way he looks at —like he’s already made peace with everything, like he’s already said his goodbyes in his heart and is just waiting for to catch up.

"Let’s go for a run," he says, like it’s nothing. "I think I have one final shift in . Why not spend it with my son? Ready for one last lesson?"

I shake my head slightly, throat tight. "I don’t know... I can’t really—"

"Let’s go. Co on." He throws an arm around my shoulders like we’ve done this a thousand tis before, guiding toward the woods as if it’s just another training session. As if he isn’t saying goodbye.

Then, without hesitation, he starts undressing.

"I like won," I mutter, because sarcasm is safer than grief.

He snorts. "Relax. You’re not my type."

His shirt hits the forest floor, then his pants, boots—he’s still a wall of muscle, full of life and strength, and I hate how death dares to touch soone so alive.

"Shift, Caron," he says, voice firm.

I hesitate—then shift. My clothes shred.

He chuckles. "That’s why I undressed."

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