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Reject me twice (Kira and Theron) novel Chapter 56

Chapter 56

Feb 26, 2026

[Theron’s POV]

The palace gates opened for me the way they open for anyone expected but not welcomed—efficiently, without ceremony.

Guards tracked my movements the way they’d track a weapon brought near someone they were sworn to protect.

Fair enough. I’d earned that.

Shadowpine was stable now. I’d left Elder Rowan in charge and made the journey south with a satchel of intelligence reports and no illusions about how I’d be received.

The formal audience chamber was deliberate. Not her private study, not the war room—the ceremonial space where the Silver Queen received anyone she wanted to remind of exactly where they stood in relation to her throne.

She sat in the center. Malik stood at her right, dark eyes fixed on me with the flat calm of a man who’d kill me in a heartbeat if I gave him reason. Damon occupied her left.

The vulnerable girl I’d known was gone. In her place sat a queen, and the distance between us was measured in more than the length of the chamber.

I bowed—deep, full, the kind that puts your head below your heart and your pride below your purpose. I held it until she spoke.

“Alpha Nightshade. You requested an audience regarding intelligence on the Order of the Broken Crown. You may present your findings.”

“Your Majesty, I’ve compiled intelligence from three months of surveillance within Shadowpine and surrounding regions. The Order’s network is more extensive than your analysts projected—I’ve identified active cells in six territories your reports haven’t flagged, including two bordering your northern supply routes.”

I laid out the maps and lists. “Your team identified the hub-and-spoke recruitment model correctly, but they missed the secondary layer—the Order uses trading caravans as mobile communication relays, which is why your courier intercepts have been producing diminishing returns.”

”The messages aren’t traveling by rider anymore. They’re embedded in commercial shipping manifests, coded into inventory numbers that look routine unless you know what you’re reading.”

“Show me the caravan routes,” Damon said immediately.

“Here.” I traced the lines across the map. “These three converge at a depot outside the eastern border. Every time a cell is activated in a new territory, a shipment routes through this junction within the following week. It’s their command relay.”

“We’ve been watching that depot,” Malik said, his voice carrying no emotion. “Nothing flagged.”

“Because you’re watching for wolves. The Order’s couriers aren’t wolves—they’re human traders who don’t register on your patrols’ scent checks. That’s the blind spot. They built the entire communication network around it.”

Malik’s jaw tightened—not with anger at me, but with the professional frustration of a commander recognizing a gap in his own security. “How long has this been operational?”

“At least four months, based on the shipping records I intercepted.”

“And you’re only bringing this to us now?” Damon’s tone carried an edge.

“I’m bringing it the moment I had enough evidence to be certain. Coming to the Silver Queen with speculation would have been worse than not coming at all. You needed proof, not guesses. This is proof.”

Damon held my gaze, then nodded. We spent the next hour reviewing the intelligence—connections between Order locations and trade guild memberships, recruitment patterns targeting supply chain workers.

Something shifted in her expression—not forgiveness, but perhaps its precursor.

“What I want now is simpler than what I wanted before. I want to be someone who helps instead of hurts. Someone worthy of the second chance I don’t deserve but am asking for anyway, because the alternative is going back to Shadowpine and spending the rest of my life knowing I could have done something meaningful and chose not to.”

“And if I asked you to work alongside Malik? To take orders from the man who holds the position you once thought was yours by right? Could you do that without resentment?”

“I’ll do whatever you need me to do, Your Majesty. Including taking orders from Commander Frost. He’s earned his authority, and acknowledging that isn’t resentment—it’s honesty.”

She was quiet for a moment that stretched long enough to make my chest ache.

“Then earn it.”

Two words. The full authority of a queen and the cautious hope of a woman who’d learned to give people exactly enough rope to prove what they’d do with it.

I bowed again—not as deep but more genuine, the bow of a man accepting terms he intended to honor with everything he had.

Whatever it takes.

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