Serena thought the night had peaked. She was wrong.
She came for a doctor, but left with another crisis. Drakenfell had a way of doing that.
"Where is Dexmon?"
Of all the perfectly reasonable, completely predictable questions a father might ask about his son, this was the one she had somehow not prepared an answer for during the sprint here.
"He’s in our chambers."
It wasn’t entirely a lie. She didn’t know why she said it that way. ’Our chambers’ implied things. Comfortable things. The distinction had blurred months ago, and it fell out of her mouth before she could choose a better answer.
"In your chambers."
Tiberon repeated phrases the way a judge read charges: slowly, evenly, and with the clear implication that the person on the receiving end should be very careful about what they said next.
"Yes."
"I mindlinked him twelve minutes ago. He has yet to respond."
Tiberon Drakenfell did not ask questions he already knew the answer to, and the fact he was asking this one meant he expected a very specific response.
She opened her mouth. Closed it. Opened it again, composed.
"He’s resting. I’ll go get him."
Tiberon let the silence hold for one more second before moving on. "No matter. I will fill him in."
His gaze held hers for one second longer than necessary. The kind of second that said: I know you’re hiding something and I am choosing not to make this a problem in front of witnesses.
The relief she felt was so sharp it almost registered on her face. She killed it before it landed and folded her hands in her lap beneath the table where they could tremble freely.
Tiberon picked up a document and set it in front of Gav without ceremony.
"Charges. For your mate."
Two words she never expected to hear in sequence: "your mate" directed at Gavriel about Guinevere Ashford. The woman who had clawed Serena’s neck open less than three hours ago.
Gavriel Sterling’s face was wrong. The irreverence was missing. The smirk was gone. The constant, low-voltage energy that made him feel like a live wire in every room he entered had been unplugged, and what was left was a man sitting very still in a chair, staring at a piece of paper like it had personally betrayed him.
Gav picked up the document. His jaw was tight, and his eyes were fixed on the information in front of him with the controlled blankness. The absence of a reaction was louder than any reaction would have been, and Serena was the only person in the room who noticed it.
Beneath the charges was a sealed note, already opened, the wax broken cleanly. He unfolded it, read it, refolded it, and tucked it into the inner pocket of his jacket in a single motion so fluid it looked rehearsed.
No one in room reacted to the fated mate bomb, and no one reacted to the sealed note.
Serena opened her mouth. Shut it. Then she looked up at the ceiling. It offered no answers. It rarely did.
She was guilty of praying when it was practical and ignoring the Gods when it wasn’t. But right now, she needed to look somewhere that wasn’t at Gavriel’s face, and the ceiling was the only direction that didn’t involve eye contact with anyone who might read what was happening behind her expression.
First Garrett. Now Gav. Both of them fated to women who were, by any reasonable measure, unhinged.
The worst part was sitting down at a war council and finding out that the woman who had ripped her mother’s necklace off her throat was now permanently, irrevocably tied to one of the people she cared about most.
Maybe this was a blessing in disguise. Gav would have his mate. The tension between them, the pull she pretended didn’t exist, the way his eyes tracked her in rooms, all of it would dissolve. They could go back to being friends. Real friends. The way they were supposed to be.
That was good. That was what she wanted.
Why did it feel like grief? A strange, misplaced grief that had no business existing and no justification for the space it was taking up in her chest.
The ancestors’ prophecy. That was all. The pull she felt towards him, the one Gav had talked about, was a manufactured side effect of fate stacking its deck. It was playing tricks, and she refused to let it win.
The one percent of her that disagreed was small enough to ignore. She buried it beneath logic and reason and the firm, sensible understanding that she had no right to feel anything about Gavriel Sterling’s mate except happiness for him.
She looked back down from the ceiling. Elara caught her eye from across the table, her expression carefully neutral.
Tiberon continued, voice carrying the warmth of a tax audit.
"Guinevere Ashford assaulted the Crown Princess in front of witnesses, destroyed personal property, and caused bodily harm during what was, by all accounts, a public confrontation. Under Drakenfell law, this is a criminal offense carrying formal charges, a tribunal, and potential exile."
He paused.
"Given her status as Sterling’s fated mate, this presents a political complication I have no interest in managing longer than necessary."
’I have no interest in managing’ was Tiberon for ’fix this before I fix it for you, and you will not enjoy my version.’


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