Current location: Novel nest Bride of the Black Wolf King Chapter 41 The Pack That Chose Wrong

"Bride of the Black Wolf King" Chapter 41 The Pack That Chose Wrong

Chapter 41

The Pack That Chose Wrong

The Vale delegation arrived at the eastern capital under heavy guard three days later.

Not honored guests.

Political liabilities.

News traveled faster than armies now.

By the time Lyra stepped into the eastern council hall, half the kingdom already knew about the silver wolf beneath the prison ruins.

The other half had invented worse versions.

The massive council chamber buzzed with low conversation beneath towering moonstone pillars and silver-lit chandeliers. Eastern nobles filled the upper galleries while northern commanders lined the outer walls beside Blackfang wolves watching everything with quiet hostility.

Nobody relaxed anymore when Lyra entered rooms.

Instinct refused.

And today—

for the first time in her life—

the Vale pack looked afraid of her.

Alpha Rowan stood near the southern envoy tables wearing formal pack attire that suddenly looked much smaller than Lyra remembered.

Age had reached him harder over the last few years.

Or maybe power reversal simply changed perspective.

The moment Lyra entered beside Kael, the entire chamber shifted.

Not metaphorically.

Physically.

Several wolves lowered their heads instinctively.

Eastern guards straightened.

And Rowan—

the man who spent years looking through her like she barely existed—

actually stepped backward.

Kael noticed immediately.

The satisfaction moving quietly through the bond embarrassed Lyra slightly.

Not enough to stop feeling it too.

“She shouldn’t be here,” one southern councilman hissed near the front rows.

Another answered quietly:

“She burned an eastern prison down.”

Excellent reputation development.

Lyra crossed the marble council floor slowly while silver markings glowed faintly beneath the high collar of her dark winter dress.

The room watched every step.

Not because she demanded attention.

Because nobody could stop tracking her anymore.

Kael remained half a pace behind her.

Not leading.

Guarding.

The distinction mattered.

Elder Thorne took position beside the eastern throne dais while Cassian leaned casually against one of the carved silver pillars nearby looking exhausted enough to suggest diplomatic disasters had started interrupting his sleep schedule personally.

Fair.

The southern councils began speaking first.

Naturally.

“This situation has escalated beyond territorial authority,” one elder declared stiffly. “The girl carries unstable ancient blood capable of threatening all modern Alpha kingdoms.”

The girl.

Interesting choice.

Kael’s irritation brushed sharply through the bond.

Lyra ignored it.

Mostly.

Another southern envoy stepped forward.

“The Vale pack acted in accordance with regional security concerns.”

At that—

Lyra finally looked directly at her father.

Rowan couldn’t hold her gaze long.

That hurt more than hatred would have.

“You sold me twice.”

The chamber fell silent instantly.

Lyra’s voice hadn’t risen.

It didn’t need to.

Rowan swallowed hard before answering.

“You don’t understand what’s happening.”

“No,” Lyra replied softly. “I understand perfectly now.”

The words echoed quietly through the council hall.

For years she imagined this moment differently.

Angrier.

Sharper.

She thought revenge would feel satisfying.

Instead—

looking at the pack that discarded her over and over again simply felt exhausting.

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“You called me cursed when I was a child.”

Several Vale wolves lowered their eyes immediately.

Lyra noticed.

“You let your people whisper about me like I was something diseased.”

Rowan’s jaw tightened painfully.

“We were trying to protect the territory.”

“You were trying to survive politically.”

The correction landed cleanly.

True enough that nobody interrupted.

Lyra crossed another step closer.

Silver firelight from the council braziers reflected faintly in transformed eyes now too pale to fully belong to ordinary wolves anymore.

“When Blackfang demanded a bride, you chose me because you thought I was expendable.”

A muscle shifted sharply in Rowan’s throat.

Still silent.

“And when kingdoms became afraid of what I might be…” Lyra’s voice lowered slightly. “You sold me again before anyone else could.”

The grief underneath the words spread quietly through the room.

Not dramatic.

Worse because it wasn’t.

Kael felt it through the bond immediately.

His rage stirred hard beneath her ribs.

Protective.

Violent.

Lyra touched his hand lightly before it fully surfaced.

Instant calm followed.

The council noticed that too.

Every single person in the room noticed.

The power dynamic shifted visibly afterward.

Not just between Lyra and Kael.

Between Lyra and everyone.

One eastern noble whispered softly:

“She calms him.”

Another answered:

“No. He obeys her.”

Interesting distinction.

Rowan finally spoke again.

“We didn’t know what you were.”

And somehow—

that became the cruelest part of all.

Lyra laughed softly beneath her breath.

Not humor.

Disbelief.

“You never even tried to know me.”

The silence afterward stretched painfully through the council chamber.

Because no one there could argue with it.

Not really.

Lyra remembered all at once then—

childhood winters sitting alone during moon festivals because the other pack children avoided her.

The servants crossing themselves when strange things happened nearby.

Her father never touching her shoulder.

Never hugging her.

Never once looking proud when she entered a room.

All those years spent believing she simply failed at being lovable enough.

When really—

they feared her before she even awakened.

The realization settled strangely calm inside her now.

Not rage anymore.

Clarity.

Through the bond, Kael felt it happen.

The quiet emotional severing.

The moment Lyra stopped needing approval from people who never intended to give it.

Rowan looked older suddenly.

Smaller too.

Like he finally understood the scale of what he’d thrown away.

“We thought sacrificing one life might save the pack.”

Lyra looked at him steadily.

“And did it?”

No answer came.

Because the Vale territory already stood politically ruined.

The southern kingdoms distrusted them for losing control of the Moon-Born bloodline.

The north hated them for the betrayal.

And now—

the daughter they discarded stood in the center of an international council powerful enough to reshape kingdoms.

One of the Vale wolves lowered himself first.

Not fully.

Partially.

Instinctively.

Then another.

Then another.

The room watched in stunned silence as members of Lyra’s old pack gradually bowed their heads one by one beneath the crushing force of ancient bloodline recognition flooding the chamber.

Not commanded.

Instinct.

And finally—

Rowan himself slowly lowered to one knee before her.

The movement looked painful.

Not physically.

Emotionally.

Like pride breaking apart piece by piece beneath unbearable regret.

Lyra stared down at her father quietly while the council hall held its breath around them.

The man who once offered her away like livestock now knelt beneath silver firelight because instinct finally recognized what he failed to value when she was only a lonely girl desperate to be loved.

And somehow—

that victory felt unbearably sad.

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