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Reject me twice (Kira and Theron) novel Chapter 97

Chapter 97

Feb 26, 2026

[Ciri’s POV]

I sit at my desk and work through three candles. I reconstruct every encoded report from memory, writing them beside the actual intelligence I had access to at each time.

The gaps tell a clear story: patrol schedules I knew but didn’t send, structural modifications I observed but omitted, Theron’s personal vulnerabilities absent entirely. A spy who systematically degraded her own product until it was worthless.

Then I map Cyrus’s likely assault route based on the information I didn’t provide — marking where reality diverges from his expectations, where reinforcement would turn his assumptions into traps.

I deliver everything to Theron’s study at dawn. He’s already there — dark circles beneath his eyes. Senna stands beside the window, arms folded, her expression carved from stone. The fury of a Beta who feels personally failed by missing the deception.

I set the documents on the desk.

“This is everything I can give you. Reconstructed reports, comparative intelligence analysis, projected assault routes, and defensive recommendations based on what Cyrus thinks he knows versus what’s actually true.”

“You spent the night on this?” Theron asks, his voice neutral.

“If you decide to exile me, this intelligence still protects Shadowpine. I’ve done enough damage by being here. The least I can do is arm you against what’s coming.”

Senna speaks for the first time, and her voice could freeze a river solid. “You had access to every operational briefing I conducted for the last month. You sat in my office and I treated you as a colleague.”

“Every piece of critical intelligence from those briefings stayed in my head. None of it reached Cyrus.”

“That’s supposed to be comfort? You could have sent it. The fact that you chose not to doesn’t erase the fact that you were positioned to destroy everything I’ve built in this pack.”

“I’m not asking you to forgive me, Senna. I earned your anger, every bit of it.”

Senna’s jaw tightens, but she says nothing more.

Theron opens the first document. “Walk me through it.”

The briefing takes hours. I lay out Cyrus’s forces with systematic precision — not as a trusted lieutenant, but as a shadow who’s been watching for years.

Cyrus underestimated me. He sent a blunt instrument and never considered that the invisible sister had been observing him the way she observed everything: carefully, completely, from a position no one thought to guard.

“His standing force is approximately eighty wolves,” I tell them, tracing the approach routes on the map. “Possibly a hundred if he’s recruited from the border packs, which his ego would demand — he wants the assault to feel overwhelming. The rest are conscripts and opportunists who follow Cyrus out of fear, not conviction.”

“What’s their training level?” Senna asks, professional instinct overriding personal fury.

“Ashenmoor’s military tradition is genuine — they produce disciplined fighters with good tactical fundamentals, but the conscripts are unreliable. They’ll hold formation as long as the pressure is manageable and break the moment it isn’t.”

“So the structure is brittle,” Theron says.

“Cyrus rules through fear and the promise of spoils. Show his conscripts that Shadowpine can’t be taken easily — and half his force will reconsider their commitment before the first wall is breached.”

I continue:

“His supply chain is also vulnerable. Ashenmoor territory doesn’t produce enough grain to sustain an expeditionary force for more than three weeks. If you can extend the engagement beyond that window, his wolves start going hungry, and hungry wolves don’t fight for an Alpha they already resent.”

My brother — who braided grief into a war and pointed me at the target like an arrow. And Theron — who asked me to sit down, valued my mind, told me his worst fears across a firelit desk and trusted me to hold them.

“I stand with you,” I say. No hesitation or calculation. The words leave my mouth with the certainty of something that was decided long before the question was asked.

Theron holds my gaze. Something shifts behind his eyes — not trust, not yet, but the foundation of it. The first stone laid.

He opens his mouth to speak, but the study door slams open.

A scout — young, mud-streaked, chest heaving with the particular violence of a wolf who has run beyond exhaustion — stumbles into the room.

“Alpha — Cyrus’s forces, they’ve been spotted moving through the Ashenmoor passes.” He braces against the doorframe, struggling for breath. “The column is organized for march speed, full supply train, vanguard scouts already through the lower ridges.”

Theron is on his feet. “How far?”

“Two weeks. Maybe less, depending on weather through the high passes.”

Cyrus accelerated his timeline, which means he either received my final thin report and read the emptiness for what it was, or he never intended to wait and the six-week message was designed to make me complacent.

Either way, my brother is coming. The gate he expects me to open will be the last thing he sees before Shadowpine’s defenses close around him like a jaw.

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