ce
hung in the air
again, but a single, thunderous look from Elder Alistair silenced her. The
reluctance. "By the authority vested in me as Elde
happen now, in the small, stone chapel on the manor grounds. A quick,
heelchair, my new dress-a simple one provided by a grim-faced maid-feeling like a costume
yard, Constantine spoke, his voic
anor was so desperat
ed. "I thought... it wa
t was part of it. But not the most pressing reason." He paused, ga
he world seemed to t
ith bitter irony. "Celeste Sinclair. From the Sinclair Alpha line. T
ce of trash to be disposed of to make way for a more valuable acquisition. The cold, calculated cruelty of it
ee," he said softly, "our bonding today... it is more than a n
is wasn't just me being rescued
ge, born of desperation and gratitude, was now tinged with some
e and beeswax. Alistair stood before the altar, his face grim. Eleanor and
on, "Do you take this woman to be your mate, to cherish and protect in sickness and in health, for a
esonating with a certainty t
blood seeping through the back of his fresh shirt. I thought of Celeste Sincl
no hesit
, my voice str
o the final part of the cere
lvet box. Inside, nestled on a bed of white silk, was a ring. It was a simpl
cool against my skin. He slid the rin
e. I had nothing. Nothin
uched his lips. "It's alright," he murmured
skipped
bonding. As my pen scratched across the paper, a strange sense of liberation washed over me. My life was
k into the cool evening air
all pretense of civility gone. She
ess cripple and a useless Omega. A match made
satisfaction of an argument. He simply
leanor," he said, his
leading me away from the chapel, away from my pa
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