lyn
etending to read a financial report. I walked up to his leat
in surprise. "Changed your mind?
voice calm and even. "But I won't be your pawn,
from his face. He looked at me with a flicker of genuine admiration. "Yo
to the henhouse," I replied. I turned and
r for another. Whatever victory
day before had been banked, replaced by a deep-seated exhaustion that etched ne
amber liquid catching the light. He sat down in an armchair across from
again today," he said
ond. I just t
taring into his glass. "It's our primary res
as gone. In its place was something I couldn
eamed of him speaking to me like this, of him seeing me as his part
r. He didn't wan
t. Despite everything, I decided to give him one last chance. Maybe if I told him the truth-why I
ting to hammer against my ribs.
"It's not that I don't want to give you an he
Several emotions flickered across his face-plea
clink. "I don't want to hear your excuses. If you can't do th
t nothing came out. The fragile hope that had flickered insi
in, a shrill, piercing r
ph
impatience vanished, replaced by sharp, sudden alarm. He was on hi
trode toward the door, not e
he barked in
r side, but I saw the bl
isper. He turned back for a second, his
on. He didn't ask what I was
he sound echoing the shattering of
ained frozen in mid-air. The silence of the empt
w, broken thing. "It didn't just leave a scar. It poisoned me. I can
illness, unanswered, unh
ened. I had given him every chance. I had bent until
m
concern... for her. I let it wash over me, and I u
, he didn'
ack. My few clothes. My books. The small, framed photo of the human woman who had raised me, my grandmother. Finally, I picked up
nightstand. It was the gala invitation Kaden had left there
mand to stand beside him and play the devoted Luna for the cameras to satisfy the Elders and the press. But as I looked at the script, a cold, sharp clarity washed
dawn. I was leaving this house behind, but I wasn't done. In three da
/1/122736/coverbig.jpg?v=94459c1e6ef72a1e259e85bf362da212&imageMogr2/format/webp)