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Reject me twice (Kira and Theron) novel Chapter 100

Chapter 100

Feb 26, 2026

[Theron’s POV]

Cyrus brought three hundred wolves — far more than Ciri estimated. Malik’s reinforcements arrived: fifty crown fighters, led by the Commander himself.

“Your eastern positions are solid,” Malik told me during his inspection. “The ridge archer placements are better than solid — whoever designed those understood elevation angles.”

“Ciri designed them.”

“The defector,” his expression didn’t change.

“She is the woman who spent weeks sending her brother degraded intelligence and then handed me his entire war plan.”

“I’ll reserve judgment until after the battle,” he turned to the map. “Position Ironridge’s thirty on the eastern flank, and I’ll take the western with my fifty. You hold the center, and keep your defector close — if her intelligence is accurate, she’s your best tactical asset. If it isn’t, you’ll want her where you can see her.”

“And if it is accurate?”

“Then I’ll owe her an apology I have no intention of delivering gracefully.”

Magnus’s thirty mountain fighters hold the eastern flank — lean, disciplined, bred for altitude and hardship.

Ciri stands beside me at the center wall. She hasn’t slept, and neither have I.

“Three hundred,” she says, watching the torches. “He doubled his force since I left Ashenmoor. The mercenaries will be the weak point — they’ll hold formation until the cost exceeds the pay, and then they’ll vanish.”

“How long before that threshold?”

“Mercenaries fight for profit, but the moment this stops looking profitable, they reassess.”

Cyrus sends a herald before dawn — a lone wolf under torchlight carrying terms on Ashenmoor parchment.

“He doesn’t want surprise,” Ciri says. “He wants fear. The terms are theater — he’s performing for his own wolves, giving them the narrative that he offered mercy and you refused.”

I step to the wall’s edge. “Tell Cyrus of Ashenmoor that Shadowpine doesn’t surrender its Alpha to men who confuse vengeance with justice. If he wants me, he can come through these walls himself.”

The herald retreats, and then the assault begins.

They hit the southern wall like a wave breaking against stone. Ladders slam against ramparts. The first Ashenmoor wolf crests the wall and Senna opens his throat before his feet touch our side.

I shift, bones reshaping, muscle expanding, the world narrowing to scent and sound. Silver-grey and massive, I launch into the chaos.

An evil fighter lunges for my flank. I pivot, jaws closing on his shoulder, the crunch of bone vibrating through my skull as I hurl him into two more climbing the ladder behind him. They tumble backward, screaming.

Senna fights at my right, her wolf form lean and brutal. She hamstrings a mercenary mid-swing, spins, catches another by the throat. We move like we’ve trained for this our whole lives — because we have.

The southern gate splinters.

Cyrus’s vanguard floods the courtyard, academy-trained fighters moving in coordinated pairs. I hit the breach head-on, claws raking across the first wolf’s chest, momentum carrying me into the second. Blood sprays hot across my muzzle.

A blade catches my shoulder — deep, burning. I twist, snap the attacker’s arm at the elbow, keep moving. Pain is a teacher. I learned that lesson long ago.

Ciri fights like she’s exorcising every year of being invisible. She moves through the chaos with the efficiency of someone who knows exactly how these opponents were trained, because she trained beside them.

A wolf charges her; she sidesteps, uses his momentum to send him sprawling, drives her blade into his thigh — incapacitating, not killing.

“Behind you!” she shouts.

The Commander stops three feet from Cyrus, close enough that his shadow falls across the kneeling Alpha.

“Your sister made choices that put innocent lives at risk. So don’t stand there and speak of what she deserved.”

“She was given every chance to surrender,” I say, supporting Malik. “I gave her more mercy than she gave Kira.”

The silence that follows is absolute.

Then Cyrus laughs — ugly, broken, carrying an edge that makes the hair on my arms rise. When it fades, his eyes are different: lit with the brightness of a man holding a final card.

“You think this is over?” He leans forward against the wolves restraining him. “It isn’t, not even close.”

The courtyard goes still.

“What are you talking about?” Malik steps forward, his voice carrying the cold precision of a man who has interrogated enough prisoners to know when one is performing versus when one is confessing.

Cyrus’s gaze shifts from Ciri to me, and the smile on his bloody face holds the satisfied certainty of a man who has lost the battle but knows the war isn’t what anyone thinks.

“Who sent you the intelligence about the Broken Crown?” he asks, and the question lands in the silence like a stone dropped into still water.

The blood drains from my face. I turn toward the eastern flank, where Magnus Ironridge’s wolves still hold their positions: disciplined, well-armed, integrated into Shadowpine’s defenses with an access that three hundred frontal attackers never achieved.

Magnus catches my gaze across the courtyard. His expression doesn’t change, and the calm on his face suddenly looks less like composure and more like a man who has already gotten everything he came for.

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