CIAN
Gabriel’s hands stayed gripped on the back of my shirt for a moment longer. Then he pulled back slowly and looked up at me.
His eyes were wet.
"I have waited years for this," he said. His voice was rough. "It was hard. But I had to keep myself alive because I knew... I hoped that a day like this would come when I would be able to get revenge. I did imagine a more violent interaction. But the court will do. It is the same thing at this point. I’ve waited years to stand in front of that circle and expose him for what he really is."
I nodded.
"Then you will get your chance."
"Now," he said. "I want to testify now. He has allies. I am sure, and my presence here would be dangerous to them."
I glanced toward the window. The light was still good. The hour had not passed yet. But it was close.
"It is safe here, and the trial will resume soon," I said. "When it does, you will be called. But I assure you, your life is not in danger. Valentine was the one who figured out you were imprisoned and saved you. He has a need for you to be alive. As well. He will do anything to protect you."
"Good."
Gabriel stepped back and wiped at his face with the back of his hand. The motion left a streak of dirt across his cheek.
I looked at him more carefully now. At the state of his clothes. The grime under his nails. The way his hair hung in tangled strands around his face.
"You should clean up first," I said. "Get dressed properly. We can have someone bring you fresh clothes. Something that fits."
Gabriel shook his head immediately.
"No."
I frowned.
"Uncle—"
"No," he repeated. His voice was firmer this time. "They need to see this. They need to see what was done to me."
I opened my mouth to argue, but he kept going.
"If I walk in there clean and composed, they will question whether I was truly imprisoned. They will wonder if this is theater. If this is some scheme Valentine cooked up to discredit Aldric." He gestured down at himself. At the dirt and the exhaustion written into every line of his body. "But if they see me like this, they will know. They will know it is real."
I stared at him.
He was right.
Aldric had spent years building a reputation. Polished. Controlled. The kind of man who never let anyone see him sweat. Who always looked like he had everything under control.
Gabriel walking into that hall looking broken would be the clearest evidence that Aldric’s cool headed nature and his empathy had always been a lie. Some wolves did have a hard time believing a witch. But they would have to listen to the voice of a wolf.
Gabriel would be able to change the mind of even the most stubborn blind believer.
"Alright," I said quietly. "If that is what you want."
"It is."
I nodded once.
Gabriel looked at me for a long moment. Then he reached out and gripped my shoulder.
"There are things I need to tell you," he said. "Things about Aldric. Things he has done. Deals he has made. People he has manipulated. Just in case... Just in case anything happens."
My chest tightened.
"What kind of things?"
"Everything." His voice dropped lower. "I know about the arrangements he made with members of the elder’s circle. I know who he has in his pocket. I know what he promised them in exchange for their loyalty."
He paused.
"I know about Elder Saoirse. The secret he has been holding over her head for years. The one that’ll probably keep her voting whichever way benefits him most."
I felt my pulse quicken.
"What secret?"
Gabriel didn’t answer immediately. His grip on my shoulder tightened instead.
"If I tell you now," he said quietly, "you will react."
I frowned. "Of course I will—"
"And someone will notice," he cut in. "A guard. A servant. One of his people. It doesn’t take much. A look. A word in the wrong place."
I stilled.
"He’s spent years building eyes and ears in this place," Gabriel went on. "If that secret reaches him before I speak it in that room, he won’t wait for the trial."
A cold weight settled in my stomach.
"What does that mean?"
"It means Saoirse disappears," he said flatly. "Or worse, she walks into that chamber already prepared with a version of the truth that buries mine before I open my mouth."
Silence stretched between us.
"And if that happens," he added, quieter now, "I become a bitter man grasping at lies to save himself. The Circle won’t hear me. They’ll dismiss me before I finish the first sentence."
I clenched my jaw.
"So you’re saying—"
"I’m saying timing is the only thing that makes this matter," Gabriel said. "In that chamber, in front of witnesses, with no room to maneuver... he can’t control it. Not completely."
His eyes held mine.
"That is the only moment Saoirse is forced to answer honestly."
The urge to push didn’t fade. It sat there, sharp and insistent.
But I understood now.
This wasn’t just information.
It was leverage.
And used too early, it wouldn’t just lose its power.
It would be erased.
Even Valentine was able to maneuver the pact we had. Who knew who was in the walls listening?
"What else?" I asked.
Gabriel’s expression darkened.
"Elder Pryce. He is not just an ally. He is Aldric’s creature. Has been for over a decade. Every vote Pryce has cast in that circle has been at Aldric’s direction. Every decision he has influenced has served Aldric’s interests."
My jaw tightened.
I had suspected Pryce was compromised. But hearing it confirmed made something cold settle in my stomach.
"And there is more," Gabriel continued. His voice had gone quieter now. "Things that go even deeper than politics. Crimes that were never investigated because Aldric made sure the right people looked the other way."
He stopped.
His eyes searched mine.
"There are deaths on his hands, Cian. Deaths that were ruled accidents. Deaths that were never questioned because the people who should have been asking questions were already working for him. Intentionally or unintentionally."
My breath caught.
"Whose deaths?"
Gabriel’s face twisted into something that looked like grief.
"People you knew. People you loved."
The words hit me like a fist to the chest.
I stared at him. Something in me already suspected.
"Who?" I asked, even though I suspected he would not answer.
I did tend to be reactive when it got too much.
He shook his head slowly.
I felt my hands curl into fists at my sides.
"Uncle—"


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