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My Sister Stole My Mate And I Let Her (Seraphina) novel Chapter 485

Chapter 485: Chapter 485 CATHERINE’S ISLAND

SERAPHINA’S POV

The Maldives looked too beautiful to belong to Catherine.

That was the first thought that crossed my mind when the islands appeared beneath us, scattered across the ocean like pieces of green glass set into endless blue.

Sunlight spread over the water in dazzling sheets, turning the surface silver where the waves shifted and gold where the morning light caught them.

From above, it was almost impossible to imagine that anything monstrous could exist beneath so much beauty.

Then the mark connected to Jack pulsed.

The warmth of the ocean vanished from my awareness, replaced by the cold, familiar pressure of darkness waiting beneath it.

My fingers tightened around the armrest.

Kieran noticed immediately.

He sat across from me, dressed for battle, his dark hair swept back from his face, and his expression sharpened into the controlled calm that came before violence.

His eyes met mine as he reached across the narrow space between us and took my hand.

“What is it?” he asked.

I looked through the small oval window again, past the brilliant water and the ring of islands clustered ahead.

“She knew we would come eventually. She prepared this place to receive an assault a long time ago.”

Corin’s expression tightened. “So much for the element of surprise.”

I closed my eyes. The silver markings along my spine warmed beneath my clothes, and I breathed the way Mother had taught me in the dream—inward first, then outward.

I didn’t reach for Catherine’s island like a hand grasping in the dark. I let the connection settle inside me until the mark on Jack became a pulse beneath distant water, and beyond it, I felt the barrier.

Dark magic had been stitched into the air above the water—a nauseating cocktail of witchcraft, blood offerings, psychic residue, and something metallic that tasted faintly of wolfsbane at the back of my throat.

It didn’t simply block entry. It watched. It breathed. It recognized intrusion the way a sleeping predator recognized footsteps near its den.

When I opened my eyes, the aircraft was unnervingly still.

“It’s been there a long time,” I said. “Long enough that parts of it have settled into the island.”

Maxwell swore softly under his breath.

Brett’s jaw tightened, and beside him, Maris looked toward the window with the cold, focused expression I had seen on her face when she saved me at Seabreeze’s border.

Kieran’s thumb moved once over my knuckles.

“Can you break it?”

I wanted to say yes instantly.

I wanted to give him certainty because he gave it so freely to Daniel, to me, to everyone who looked to him and needed strength.

I opted for the truth.

“I can open a way through,” I said. “I don’t know if I can bring the whole thing down without alerting everything beneath it or collapsing whatever wards are tied to the facility.”

Alois nodded slowly, his gaze already turning inward as he calculated possibilities.

“That would be unwise. If the barrier is tied into the physical structure, destroying it carelessly could trigger defensive measures, containment failures, or execution of hostages.”

Kieran’s grip on my hand tightened.

“If Sera purifies a narrow passage,” Alois continued, “I can stabilize the edges with layered counter-wards. Corin can reinforce the psychic side and prevent the barrier from closing around the breach.”

“Yay,” Corin drawled. “I’d love to play door keep instead of being in the middle of the action.”

Despite the lightness in his tone, the cabin was quiet for a moment, full of all the things we didn’t say.

No one wanted to split.

No one wanted to choose who stepped into Catherine’s lair and who stayed at the mouth of it, holding open a path, waiting to see who made it out.

Too soon, the aircraft began descending, and the island grew closer.

From above, Catherine’s domain looked like a private paradise, surrounded by reefs and white sand, with dense green foliage covering most of the land.

A sleek estate sat near the western ridge, all pale stone and glass, elegant enough to belong in a travel magazine.

Beyond it, hidden among the trees, I saw service buildings, a narrow dock, and what appeared to be a helipad partially concealed by palms.

But beneath all of it, the darkness waited, pressing against my senses oppressively.

The aircraft could not land directly on the island, so we approached by water from a nearby uninhabited atoll.

By the time our feet touched sand, the sun was high in the sky, spilling heat across the beach. The air was filled with salt, damp foliage, and the distant cry of seabirds.

Our elite force moved quickly and quietly, unloading equipment from the boats and forming ranks behind Kieran.

I stood beside Kieran at the edge of the water, facing Catherine’s island across the channel.

The distance was not wide, but the barrier made it feel endless.

I could see the shimmer now. The air above the water bent strangely around the island, too smooth in places and too dense in others, as if reality itself had been coated in dark glass.

Alois stepped forward and extended one hand.

The air snapped.

Several warriors flinched as a ripple crossed the channel, invisible to human sight but sharp enough that every wolf present felt it brush against their instincts.

Alois’s mouth flattened. “Interesting.”

Corin moved to my other side.

“That’s your professional assessment?”

“My professional assessment contains several words I am choosing not to say in front of armed warriors who are already nervous.”

Despite everything, a few strained smiles moved through the nearest ranks.

Then the barrier pulsed again, and the humor died.

I stepped toward the water.

Kieran immediately moved with me.

“No,” I murmured, touching his arm before he could follow. “Not yet.”

His eyes darkened. “Sera.”

“I need to feel where it will give.”

“It may strike back.”

“I know.”

That was the problem.

Catherine did not leave doors unguarded. She left invitations disguised as weaknesses and waited for someone naive enough to mistake them for opportunity.

I inhaled slowly, then let my power turn inward first.

My awareness sank through my own breath, my bones, my blood, and the completed markings along my back warmed like moonlight beneath skin.

I did not throw myself at the barrier or try to overpower it. Instead, I listened for the places where Catherine’s magic had been forced to bend around something it could not fully digest.

Ocean.

Chapter 485 CATHERINE’S ISLAND 1

Chapter 485 CATHERINE’S ISLAND 2

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