The girl’s fear hadn’t fully left her even after Seraphine spoke, her hands still trembling slightly as she clung to the hope that she would be believed and not punished, her voice coming out softer now as she asked, "Luna Sera... you’ll keep your promise, right?"
"She will," Damon answered immediately before Seraphine could respond, his tone steady and assured, and that alone seemed to calm the girl just enough for her shoulders to loosen as she nodded faintly.
"She did not know it was Alpha Ravyn’s room you were sent to. It was only after she had seen the video that she realized the mistake but it was too late to get the gigolo in," she continued after a shaky breath, forcing herself to remember clearly, "Then, I saw her go into another room with one of the men who cut my colleague’s tongue."
That single statement made everything fall into place for Seraphine, not as scattered fragments anymore but as something painfully complete, because the timing, the arrangement, and the chaos of that night suddenly aligned in a way that left no room for coincidence.
That must have been the moment Daisy got pregnant.
And since Ravyn had also slept with her before, everything that followed made sense from his perspective, because he had accepted the pregnancy without ever questioning how carefully the entire situation had been orchestrated around him.
"I don’t know why she made me spike Alpha Ravyn’s drink," the girl added quickly, her brows furrowing as if she still couldn’t understand her own role in it, "but I don’t think she wanted the two of you to end up together. It feels like she had someone else arranged for him... and maybe something went wrong."
Her voice dropped slightly as she hesitated, then added in a whisper, "Maybe... the Moon Goddess interfered."
Seraphine didn’t respond to that, because her attention had already moved beyond speculation, beyond assumptions, focusing instead on what mattered most, which was that the only person who could confirm the missing pieces now was Daisy herself, and if she wanted the full truth, she would have to drag it out of her directly.
But to do that, she needed leverage, she needed evidence, and she needed this girl alive and willing to speak when the time came.
"What’s your name?" she asked after a brief pause, her tone calmer now but still firm.
"Tallulah," the girl replied, then added quickly, "but everyone calls me Tallu."
"And your colleague?" Seraphine asked, her gaze steady. "The one whose tongue was cut."
"Bernard," Tallulah said quietly, her expression darkening as the memory settled over her.
Seraphine gave a slow nod, absorbing that before continuing, "I’ll stay at the pack for a few days, and when I’m ready to leave, I’ll come back for you. Just make sure you’re still here when I return."
Then, after a short pause, she asked more gently, "Where is he now?"
That question alone broke something in the girl’s expression as tears welled up again, slipping down her cheek before she could stop them, and her voice cracked as she answered, "He didn’t survive it... he couldn’t bear the pain after the infection set in, and he... he took his own life."
The silence that followed was heavy, stretching between them like something unspoken but deeply understood, and Seraphine didn’t interrupt it because there was nothing she could say that would soften what had already happened.
Her hands tightened slightly, not in anger alone but in something colder, sharper, more focused, because Daisy’s punishment was already forming clearly in her mind, and yet part of her still hoped fate would bring Daisy directly in front of her again, just so she could make her understand everything she had done.
"I’m sorry about your friend," Seraphine said at last, her voice quieter but steady, "but I promise I’ll come back for you."
She turned slightly toward Damon. "Do you have any cash?"
Without hesitation, Damon opened his wallet and handed Tallulah a thick stack of bills, enough to keep her stable for a while, his tone calm as he said, "Use this until we come back."
Her mind, however, refused to quiet down, because Ravyn had also been drugged that night, and that single detail refused to fit neatly into anything she had believed before, especially since she had always assumed he had simply been too drunk to remember.

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