Chapter 452
3rd Person’s POV
Lylah felt it.
Faint.
So painfully faint that it was almost impossible to sense.
Hidden somewhere deep within Abba’s spirit was the fragile outline of her wolf curled beneath layers off exhaustion and grief. Its presence flickered weakly, dim as moonlight buried beneath storm clouds.
Not gone.
But starving.
Lylah’s brows slowly furrowed.
This was far beyond ordinary illness.
A coma alone could not weaken her wolf to this extent. Something deeper had severed the connection between Abba and the beast within her. Something older. Lonelier.
Something no textbook inside Lunar Grace could fully explain.
Lylah looked up gently. “Do you have a mate?”
Abba’s expression dimmed at once.
“He died,” the old she-wolf murmured. “A very long time ago.”
The answer settled heavily inside the room.
Lylah lowered her gaze thoughtfully.
No mate and no family nearby.
The threads tethering her wolf’s spirit to the world had slowly withered one by one until almost nothing remained.
And from Abba’s scent alone, Lylah already understood the truth her lips did not say aloud.
Her family had left for Lunaris years ago.
And they rarely-if ever-returned.
A wolf abandoned long enough would eventually begin to forget the sound of her own soul.
Just then,
The hut door burst open.
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15:14 Wed, Jun 10
Chapter 452
Cold valley wind swept inside alongside the scent of frost and herbs.
“Lady Tessalonika!”
Seraphina shot upright immediately from where she had been reclining half-asleep against the old couch cushions.
Tessalonika stepped inside, brushing fog from her dark cloak before frowning sharply at the crowded room,
“It’s nearly dusk,” the elder healer said flatly. “And you still haven’t treated a single patient? What exactly have all of you been doing?”
“There was a complication,” Seraphina answered quickly, stepping forward before anyone else could speak. “Actually, I identified the problem almost immediately after examining the patient. We were preparing to proceed with treatment earlier, but Lylah delayed it.”
Lylah calmly stepped forward.
“Please hear Abba’s symptoms first,” she said evenly. “And examine her yourself before deciding anything. We waited because we needed your judgment.”
Tessalonika exhaled a tired sigh, though she said nothing further.
Instead, she approached Abba.
The elder healer crouched beside the firepit, her experienced eyes studying the old she-wolf carefully. More than ten years had passed since Tessalonika graduated from the Lunar Grace Healing department, yet even now, the moment her senses brushed against Abba’s aura, faint confusion crossed her face.
Because something about this case felt wrong.
Not entirely physical.
“The young Lady already examined me earlier,” Abba said quietly.
Tessalonika glanced up. “Which one?”
Abba pointed toward Lylah.
Seraphina’s expression darkened immediately.
“I was examining her as well,” she interjected quickly. “And I’m the one who made the diagnosis.”
Tessalonika ignored the tension and continued her assessment.
Patiently, she asked Abba to recount everything once more-the coma, the failed shifting, the years since losing her wolf. Then Tessalonika pressed two fingers lightly against the old she-wolf’s pulse.
Silence filled the hut.
The fire crackled softly.
Slowly, Tessalonika’s brows knit together.
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Chapter 452
Even she could not identify the cause with certainty.
This was not a condition she had ever encountered before.
At last, the elder healer straightened and turned toward the students gathered behind her.
“I’d like to hear your conclusions first.”
“Of course.” Seraphina stepped forward immediately, confidence returning to her posture. “Lady Tessalonika, this is clearly a case of skeletal deterioration.” Her voice rang crisply through the hut, polished from years inside elite healing halls. “It’s extremely common among elderly wolves, especially those born from weaker bloodlines lacking strong Alpha or Beta inheritance.”
She folded her arms neatly.
“That is why I proposed a transplant procedure earlier. Bone replacement remains the standard treatment for advanced degeneration cases. We’ve studied situations like this repeatedly during modern healing lectures.” Pride sharpened her tone. “Transplantation has always been the most effective solution.”
Tessalonika gave a slow nod, neither agreeing nor disagreeing.
Instead, her gaze shifted toward Lylah.
“And you?” she asked quietly. “What is your diagnosis, Lylah?”
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