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Reject me twice (Kira and Theron) novel Chapter 74

Chapter 74

Feb 26, 2026

[Theron’s POV]

My bags were packed before dawn.

There wasn’t much to gather. I’d arrived at the palace with intelligence reports and the clothes on my back, and I was leaving with little more—maps marked with territorial notes from the campaign, and the quiet certainty that my time here was finished.

The Order was broken. Seraphine was dead. Kira was safe, healing, marked by the man who’d earned the right to stand beside her.

The mating mark on her shoulder—Malik’s claim, visible and permanent—told the realm everything it needed to know about who the Silver Queen had chosen.

I was okay with that. Not performed acceptance. Genuinely, finally okay. The thing I’d felt for Kira—the obsessive, consuming pull—had been a manufactured bond. Morgath’s magic, Seraphine’s manipulation.

What remained after the false bond shattered wasn’t love. It was guilt, and grief, and the slow recognition that the man I’d been during those months was someone I never wanted to be again.

Shadowpine needed its Alpha. My pack had been patient, but patience had limits, and a pack without its Alpha for too long began to fracture in ways harder to repair than the original break.

Marcus found me in the courtyard, his own horse already saddled and loaded. He moved with the quiet efficiency of a man who’d been ready to leave since before he arrived—who had come for a single purpose and, having fulfilled it, saw no reason to linger.

“Ready?” I asked.

“Since yesterday.” He tightened a strap on his saddlebag without looking up. “Palaces have never agreed with me. Too many ghosts in the corridors.”

I understood what he meant. For Marcus, this palace held echoes of a woman he’d loved and failed to save—her footsteps in hallways he’d walked, her memory in rooms he’d entered during the rescue campaign.

Staying longer than necessary meant listening to those echoes, and Marcus had spent twenty-three years learning that some kinds of listening could destroy a man.

I was cinching the last strap when Kira’s voice found us.

“Leaving without saying goodbye? After everything, I’d have thought you’d both learned that disappearing without a word causes more problems than it solves.”

She stood at the courtyard entrance, one hand resting on her stomach. She looked better—color returning, strength rebuilding, the silver light in her eyes burning steadily instead of flickering. Still thin.

Still bearing the evidence of weeks of captivity and poison. But alive, and healing, and radiating a quiet power that had nothing to do with magic.

“I wasn’t disappearing,” I said, managing something close to a smile. “I was making a tactically sound exit before morning traffic. Your palace has terrible traffic flow, Your Majesty.”

She almost laughed—caught in her throat, not quite released. The fact that I could almost make her laugh felt like a gift I hadn’t earned.

She crossed the courtyard. Malik stood at the entrance she’d come through—close enough to intervene, far enough to give her space, watching me with the steady gaze of a man who trusted his mate’s judgment. I met his eyes and nodded. He returned it. Not warmth—we’d never have that. But respect.

“I wanted to thank you both,” Kira said. “The intelligence that led us to the Order’s network, the tracking that found the estate, the assault. Your wolves were the reason Malik’s team reached me in time.”

“It was the least I owed,” I said simply. “After everything I put you through, helping bring you home barely begins to balance the ledger.”

Kira studied me with the precision of a woman who’d learned to read people the hard way. Whatever she found softened something in her.

“You don’t owe me anything anymore, Theron. The debt is paid.” She said it with the quiet authority of a queen issuing a decree. “I’m releasing you from whatever you’ve been carrying since Shadowpine. It’s done.”

“Take care of those children,” he said, his voice almost steady. “And let Malik take care of you. He’s earned it.”

“Come back,” Kira said. “Visit. You’re family, Marcus—by everything that matters more.”

He nodded once. Couldn’t speak. Turned to his horse and busied himself with a strap that didn’t need adjusting.

Kira extended her hand to me. Formal. Proper. I took it—her grip firm, stronger than weeks ago.

“Safe travels, Alpha Nightshade.”

“Long reign, Your Majesty.”

I mounted my horse. Marcus was already in his saddle, composed again, the brief crack in his armor sealed shut with practiced efficiency. We rode through the palace gates into a morning that smelled like autumn and possibility.

Neither of us looked back.

The past was behind us—every mistake, every failure, every loss we’d carry for the rest of our lives. It would always be there. But it no longer owned us.

The future was ours to shape. And for the first time, I trusted us both to shape it into something worth having.

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