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Reject me twice (Kira and Theron) novel Chapter 55

Chapter 55

Feb 26, 2026

[Damon’s POV]

I didn’t expect her to fight.

The council session had devolved into its third hour of attacks on Kira’s pregnancy when Lady Marguerite Ashford launched into a rehearsed speech about the sacred duty of royal bloodlines.

She cited three historical precedents where common-born consorts had weakened magical lineages, referenced Kira’s unstable power as evidence, and wrapped the argument in such genuine-sounding concern that several lords on the fence began nodding along.

I was preparing my response when Elara spoke.

“Lady Ashford’s historical citations are compelling but incomplete. The three precedents she mentions—the Hargrove union, the Ashenmoor marriage, and the Valdris alliance—all resulted in bloodline complications.” She continued.

“What Lady Ashford neglected to mention is that all three also involved unions where the common-born partner was coerced rather than chosen, where the match was politically engineered rather than genuinely desired,”

She continued without breakage. “—and where the resulting instability had less to do with blood purity and more to do with the magical consequences of forcing bonds that the parties’ wolves rejected.”

She didn’t stop there, she kept speaking until she could see their heads drift lower to the floor.

“The scholarly consensus is quite clear—magical lineage responds to the authenticity of the bond, not the social rank of the participants. If Lady Ashford would like, I can provide the specific citations from the Royal Archives, as I reviewed them last evening in anticipation of precisely this argument.”

Lady Ashford’s composure cracked. “The Archives are subject to interpretation—”

“They are,” Elara agreed pleasantly. “Which is why I cross-referenced three independent sources. Would you like me to name them, or shall we save time and acknowledge that the argument against Commander Frost has no scholarly foundation?”

Lord Mercer attempted a redirect, and Elara dismantled that too, citing instances where public perception had been shaped rather than obeyed by monarchs who understood that leadership meant guiding opinion rather than surrendering to it.

She exposed the political motivations behind each lord’s concerns with surgical precision, methodically removing the scaffolding of their arguments until the structure collapsed.

I watched my unwanted fiancée accomplish in fifteen minutes what I’d been failing to achieve in weeks.

Afterward, Lord Hale leaned toward me. “Lady Thornwood seems quite loyal to your sister, Your Majesty. Interesting, given that normalizing political matches over love matches would significantly strengthen her own position as your consort. One wonders what motivates a woman to argue against her own advantage.”

I wondered the same thing. And the wondering drove me to the gardens that evening, where I found Elara on the stone bench beneath the old oak.

“You didn’t have to defend Kira today. The arguments you made, the research you did—none of that was expected of you. No one would have faulted you for staying silent.”

“Why would I do the opposite? Why would I sit in that chamber and watch lords tear apart your sister’s happiness when I had the ability to challenge their reasoning? Silence in the face of injustice is just complicity wearing a more comfortable dress, and I’ve never found comfort a compelling enough reason to abandon my principles.”

“You made Lady Ashford look like a student who hadn’t finished her reading.”

“She was a student who hadn’t finished her reading. She’d have known that if she’d spent less time rehearsing her delivery and more time examining her sources.”

“Thank you,” I said, and the words carried more weight than two syllables should have been able to hold.

She smiled—small, warm, real—and reached for her book. Our fingers brushed.

It should have been nothing. It should have registered and faded in the same breath.

It didn’t fade. The touch lingered—a beat too long, then two—and neither of us pulled away.

Our gazes met, and my heart beat louder, and I could hear hers too—or imagined I could—quickening in the quiet between us.

I was feeling something. Something that every survival instinct I possessed was screaming at me to lock away before it could take root.

But this was different. This warmth didn’t carry the calculated sweetness of Seraphine’s manufactured tenderness.

This was steady, patient, honest—as honest as the woman beside me, who defended people she barely knew because it was right, who argued against her own advantage because integrity mattered more than power.

This was safe. And somewhere beneath the fear and the walls and the wreckage, in a place I’d thought she’d destroyed beyond recovery, I could feel that this was true.

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