Adide’s POV
After talking with Beata, she prepared afternoon tea for <b>me</b>.
The ss container held homemade vani ice cream, its sweet scent mingled with fresh blueberries Beata <b>had </b>just picked.
Our shadows on the basalt countertop were shattered by the loud crash of iron armor.
“Adide!” Ulrik’s howl made the starlight chandelier above tremble. “How long do you n to keep up
this farce?”
“Beata,” I said, watching the melting ice cream–a three–hourbor of love from Beata–slip down the counter, “clean
ss. Ulrik and I need to talk.”
Once Beata’s footsteps faded upstairs, I looked up at the Alpha, his hackles <b>raised</b>. “<b>Want </b>to discuss Shaman Digby?”
Ulrik’s slit pupils burned crimson. “How dare you?”
up
the
I smirked, unleashing my wolf’s aura.
Why sh
I? Maybe the Tenar family should ask why the most reputable shaman, Digby, refused to treat Luna Rosemary. His contract clearly states–If the employer dishonors the healer, the contract may be voided.”
“Stop ying innocent!” Ulrik’s wolf w hovered inches from my nose.
“I know you lied to Digby to stop him from treating my mother–all to sabotage my bonding with Velda. But this petty ckmail
won’t work.”
He unleashed cedar pheromones, thick with Alpha aura. “Adide, I warned you–I won’t be threatened. You scheming she-
wolf!”
“If I’d known you were <b>this </b>maniptive and cruel, I’d never have let you be Bloodmoon’s Luna. I must’ve been <b>blind</b>.”
I lunged forward, my <b>nails </b>elongating into sharp points that pressed against his throat. The height difference forced me to look. up at him, my former mate.
But the pheromones released from my nds were <b>as </b>cold <b>as </b>ice spikes piercing his pores. “If you <b>hate </b>me so much, why won’t
you reject <b>me</b>?”
Ulrik’s Adam’s apple bobbed, a suppressed wolfish howl caught in his throat–this question seemed to have never crossed his
mind.
“What?”
I enunciated each word clearly, “I said, since you hate <b>me </b>this much, why won’t you reject me? Because you can’t. You im: Velda’s your true mate, yet you won’t sever our <b>bond</b>. The Moon Goddess forbids two mates–so why cling to me?”
+15 Bonus
Ulrik froze<b>, </b>at a loss for words.
“Name your reasons<b>,</b>” I pressed, “or I will. ‘Failure to nurture offspring‘ sounds good–or how about ‘endangering family health“? Your mother’s failing wolf spirit is tied to your poor choices.”
Ulrik’s chest heaved, cedar musk soured with sulfur–a sign his pheromones were fracturing
His fingers absently rubbed the Bloodmoon sigil on his sleeve, fresh blood seeping from palm abrasions.
“I won’t reject you,” he growled, Alpha rumbleced with exhaustion. “Ask for anything else, but leave my mother out of this.”
“Coward,” I said clearly.
“Rejecting me brings you no benefits–only risks. The Lycan King’s warriors respect my father’s legacy. You fear being branded heartless–and losing his loyalists.”
Ulrik’s face darkened.
I continued, “You want Velda to satisfy your wolf and your heart, yet demand a future too. But you can’t have it all. Frostfang may be weakened, but it stands on its own–without Bloodmoon’s charity.”
“You underestimate me and overrate yourself,” I said.
He crushed the sigil in his fist, metal edges carving deeper into his palm.
I’d struck a nerve<b>. </b>
“You don’t <b>need </b>to lecture me. Velda <b>and </b>I bond by the Lycan King’s decree. Name your price–I’ll agree.”
“No price. I want nothing from you.”
Ulrik’s frustration red. “Honestly, Adide, I thought you’d understand. Your father and brothers were warriors–I thought you’d respect Velda.”
“<b>One </b>mate per wolf is the norm. Even with lovers <b>on </b>the <b>side</b><b>, </b>no one <b>bonds </b>with <b>two </b>at once. Yet you n to mark another <b>she- </b>
wolf while our bond’s unbroken. Expect me to smile at <b>that</b>?”
Ulrik snarled, “Then don’t me me when I take this to Lycan Erasmus. Your defiance’s treason.”
“Feel free to try. You <b>can </b>also seek out Luna Rosemary,” I said coolly.
“You think I <b>dare </b>not?”
“Goodbye and good riddance.” I couldn’t care less.
“Don’t regret this!”
The door mmed so hard the wolf–head carvings shuddered, leaving <b>scorch </b>marks from his residual <b>pheromones</b>.