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Betrayed by My Ex, Marked by His Alpha Emperor Brother novel Chapter 76

Chapter 76: Chapter 76

Isolde’s POV

The treehouse smelled like cedar and stolen perfume.

I uncapped the bottle of imported champagne and poured it into a chipped ceramic cup—the only drinkware available in this wretched forest outpost. The bubbles fizzed against the rough clay. Ridiculous. Champagne in a clay cup, served in a treehouse built from scavenged lumber and lashed together with rope.

And yet.

I lifted the cup and drank. The champagne was excellent. Dry, crisp, with that sharp bite of citrus that only the expensive bottles carried. I let it sit on my tongue before swallowing.

Below me, the camp sprawled across the forest floor like a living thing. Cookfires sent threads of gray smoke curling through the canopy. Wolves moved between the tents—sharpening blades, skinning game, sparring in the packed-dirt clearing near the eastern perimeter. Dozens of them. My wolves now. Well, Malak’s wolves. But they listened to me.

Weeks. That was all it had taken.

Weeks since I’d crawled into this camp on bleeding feet, stripped naked in the mud, and knelt before the Rogue King like a dog. Weeks since I’d traded my body and my secrets for the right to breathe.

Now I sat above them all. Literally.

The treehouse had been Malak’s idea—or rather, my idea that I’d made him think was his. A private quarters for his "queen," elevated above the filth and chaos of the camp floor. Large enough for a sleeping pallet, a crude table, and the growing collection of stolen goods that my wolves brought me like offerings to a shrine.

I casually filed my nails, surveying the latest haul spread across the table. A master-crafted handbag—premium leather, still wrapped in tissue paper. A strand of pearls with a broken clasp. Two bottles of champagne. A diamond bracelet that caught the dappled light filtering through the canopy and threw tiny rainbows across the hide walls.

Not bad. Not bad at all.

A heavy knock shook the platform. The trapdoor lifted, and Marcus hauled himself through the opening. His scarred face was flushed from the climb. He was massive—shoulders so wide he had to angle himself sideways to fit through the hatch—and he carried a canvas sack slung over one shoulder like it weighed nothing.

"My Lady." He dipped his head. Set the sack on the floor with a muffled clink. "From the village raid last night. Thought you’d want first pick."

I set my nail file aside and nudged the sack open with my toe. Clothing, mostly. A fine wool coat. Silk scarves. A pair of leather boots that looked close to my size. And underneath, a velvet jewelry box.

I picked up the box. Inside, a pair of sapphire earrings glinted against black satin.

"Acceptable," I said.

Marcus beamed. Actually beamed—this hulking brute who had terrorized frontier towns for years, grinning at me like a hound who’d fetched a stick.

"Anything else you need, my Lady? The boys caught a stag this morning. I can have them roast the best cut for you."

"Later. I’m dining with Malak tonight."

He nodded and retreated down the ladder with surprising grace for a man his size. The trapdoor thudded shut.

I slipped the diamond bracelet onto my wrist and examined my reflection in the small hand mirror Marcus had stolen for me. My eyes were sharper than they’d ever been. Harder. The softness that had once made me beautiful had been burned away, and what remained was something more useful.

I looked dangerous. Good.

If someone had told me months ago that I would be living in the wilderness with a tribe of Rogue wolves—eating game cooked over open fires, sleeping on animal hides, bathing in ice-cold streams—I would have laughed until I choked. Isolde de Valois, daughter of a baron, wife of a prince, reduced to a forest savage? Absurd.

But the truth was simpler than I expected.

Power was power, regardless of the setting. In the capital, it wore silk and spoke in whispers. Here, it wore scars and spoke with fists. The mechanics were identical. Find what people wanted. Offer it. Make yourself indispensable. And never, ever show weakness.

Malak had been crude with me that first night. Brutal. He’d treated me like something to be used and discarded. But I’d endured. And in the days that followed, I’d begun to feed him what he truly craved—not my body, but my mind. I knew the imperial court. I knew the patrol schedules along the border territories. I knew which noble families were weak, which trade routes were poorly defended, which outposts had been quietly abandoned.

I knew how civilized wolves thought. And Malak, for all his savagery, was smart enough to recognize the value of that knowledge.

Within days, he’d stopped treating me like a plaything. Soon, he was asking my opinion before raids. By now, I sat at his right hand during war councils, and not a single wolf in the camp dared to disrespect me.

A faint hum vibrated against my hip. I froze.

The communication stone. The small enchanted crystal Seraphine had given me before I’d fled the capital—our only link between the civilized world and this lawless forest. It pulsed with a pale blue glow, warm against my skin.

I pulled it from the fold of my belt and pressed my thumb to its surface.

"Seraphine."

The voice that came through was nothing like the composed, calculating woman I remembered. It was ragged. Wet with tears. Shaking so badly that the words came out in fractured pieces.

"Isolde—oh Goddess—Isolde, it’s over. It’s all over."

I sat down slowly. Set the champagne aside.

"What are you talking about?"

"He knows!" A sob cracked through the stone. "Kaelen—he found out. About the brooch. About everything. He knows I wasn’t the woman from that night. He knows I just found the brooch and lied about it."

Chapter 76 1

Chapter 76 2

Silence. Just the sound of her ragged breathing through the stone. 𝒇𝓻𝓮𝓮𝙬𝙚𝒃𝒏𝓸𝙫𝒆𝙡.𝓬𝓸𝒎

Chapter 76 3

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