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Reject me twice (Kira and Theron) novel Chapter 108

Chapter 108

Feb 26, 2026

The last cell falls.

Magnus’s wolves locate the Broken Crown’s final operation in the western territories — a fortified compound disguised as a trading post. Their leader, Voss, is captured alive. Malik interrogates her personally, and I watch from the observation corridor.

“The Order is dead,” Voss says, her voice flat. “The funding, the ideology, the recruitment — all flowed through Seraphine. When she fell, the machine stopped.”

“And the remaining sympathizers?”

“Scattered individuals. Angry people with a dead woman’s name on their lips. They’ll fade or be found. The Broken Crown as an organization — the thing that planned operations and threatened the Silver Throne — that’s finished.”

“How did your cell survive this long?”

“We kept running on it for a while, but momentum isn’t a strategy. The supply lines dried up, the recruitment stopped, and the wolves who stayed did so out of stubbornness rather than conviction. When your forces hit us, half my people surrendered before the first wall fell.”

“You’re certain the organization can’t regenerate?”

“Without Seraphine’s mind holding it together? Impossible. She was the only one who understood how all the pieces connected. The rest of us were components in her machine — useless without the architect.”

Malik exits the interrogation and finds me in the corridor.

“She’s telling the truth,” he says. “Her account matches everything our independent intelligence confirms. The Broken Crown is done.”

“How do you feel?”

“Like I’ve been holding my breath for fourteen months and someone just told me I can exhale,” the ghost of a smile touches his mouth. “I don’t trust it yet. Relief takes longer to believe than fear.”

“For what it’s worth, I think you can believe this one.”

“Ask me again in a week. I’ll need that long to stop checking shadows,” he pauses. “The interrogation also confirmed something useful: Voss had no knowledge of any successor structure. Seraphine didn’t build redundancy into the organization because she never imagined losing control of it. Her arrogance was the Crown’s greatest vulnerability.”

“And our greatest advantage. If she’d planned for her own removal, we’d still be fighting.”

“Instead, we’re standing in a corridor discussing it in the past tense.” He shakes his head, and the disbelief in the gesture is the most human thing I’ve seen from Malik in months. “It’s actually over, Kira.”

Something loosens in my chest, the slow release of a knot I’ve carried since before the twins were born.

The enemy that haunted my pregnancy, carved symbols beneath my children’s window, murdered Malik’s contacts — dismantled. The existential threat has passed.

Through the twin bond, I feel what I haven’t sensed from Damon in months — lightness. Not joy exactly, but the absence of dread.

He and Elara are settling into their marriage with a warmth that transforms the corridors. I catch them laughing in the library, find Elara reading with her feet in Damon’s lap, watch my brother become someone I never thought he’d be allowed to be: simply, unguardedly happy.

“You’re staring,” Damon says when he catches me watching from the doorway.

“I’m admiring.”

“She’s going to think you’re keeping tabs on us.”

“It’s called being a sister,” I lean against the frame. “You look good, Damon, both of you. It suits you — happiness. Wear it more.”

“I’m trying. It’s a strange fit after everything, but Elara makes it easier. She makes most things easier.”

“You’ve earned both,” I study his face — the warmth still in place but thinner, the seams showing the cost. “How long has it been since you’ve rested?”

“I stopped counting months ago. Rest is something I keep planning for and never reaching.”

“I know that feeling. The duty sustains you through the crisis, and when the crisis passes, the exhaustion arrives like it’s been waiting for permission.”

“That’s exactly it. I kept telling myself — after the next cell, after Shadowpine, after the formal alliance. And now it’s after, and I’m standing in a corridor realizing I can’t remember the last morning I woke without a strategic problem already assembling in my mind.”

“Stay as long as you need, Magnus. The palace is yours for as long as you want it.”

His expression shifts: surprise, gratitude, the relief of a man who braced for dismissal and received permanence instead.

“Thank you, Kira,” he says. My first name, not my title. The intimacy lands softly.

I mean it. Standing in the afternoon light, with the Broken Crown dead and the alliance sealed and my brother laughing somewhere in the library with his wife, I mean every word.

Magnus Ironridge has bled for us, grieved for us, woven himself into our lives with a consistency that defies suspicion. He has been, across every crisis and every test, exactly what he claimed to be.

And if the voice in the back of my mind whispers that the most dangerous traps are the ones you walk into willingly, I push it down. I’ve pushed it down before, and I’m getting practiced at it.

That’s the part that worries me most.

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