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Chapter 15 - Chapter 15: Reva's Move

Reva stopped being subtle on a Tuesday.

I had been in Ironveil for three weeks and two days. I had lit seventeen candles in total at Aldric's underground training room, each one slightly more complex than the last, each lock slightly harder to unpick.

I had eaten twelve dinners in the great hall without incident. I had survived Vex's removal, Reva's silence, and Caius's gradually decreasing coldness, which was not warmth yet but was at least the absence of frost.

I had begun to make the mistake of thinking I understood the terrain. Reva reminded me, efficiently and publicly, that I did not.

It happened at the evening meal. I was at my usual seat at the lower table, Pip three places down, the hall running at its normal volume - wolves talking, metal on plates, the specific acoustics of a large stone room full of people who had opinions about everything and no particular filter.

Out of nowhere, Reva stood.

The hall went quiet within five seconds and everyone turned to look at her. That was how much authority she still carried in this room - not Alpha authority, not even Beta authority, but the particular social gravity of a woman who had been the most powerful female presence in Ironveil for six years and had not been formally displaced.

She looked directly at me. With a look meant to terrify me.

"I think," she said, in the carrying tone of a woman who had spent years perfecting it, "that it's time we addressed the question of status. An unconfirmed, unranked guest has been eating at this table, using this estate's resources, and occupying the Alpha's attention for three weeks without formal acknowledgment from the Alpha himself. I'd like to propose that the pack deserves clarity."

*Silence.*

It was, I noted, perfectly constructed.

She turned on me for no reason. Or maybe because of the fear of me taking a rank higher than hers eventually.

Nothing she had said was technically wrong. She hadn't insulted me - not directly at least, not provably. She had simply asked a reasonable administrative question in the most public possible forum at the most calculated possible moment. I'm the presence of other Alpha's and beta's.

Every eye in the room moved to me. I kept my face still and my hands flat on the table and breathed. I didn't know what to do.

Then every eye moved to the head of the table. Waiting for a response from Caius.

Caius had come to dinner tonight. He did that occasionally now. Appeared at the head

of that large empty chair and sat in it for twenty minutes, eating nothing, watching his

pack with those cold gold eyes. The pack treated it as a significant event each time, the way you treated the appearance of something rare and potentially dangerous.

He set his gaze at Reva. A cold gaze.

The quality of that look made the hair on the back of my neck stand up even from across

the room. Not rage - something colder. More precise. The look of a man who had

identified a very specific mistake and was deciding what to do about it.

"Sera Ashveil," he said dryly. His voice, at its lowest register, carried the entire hall without

effort. "Is my confirmed mate. Her status in this pack is now *Luna-designate*, effective

immediately. If there are questions about that clarity, I suggest they be directed to me

privately rather than performed publicly."

The pack members began murmuring to each other, taking peeks at me and some even having hardened expressions I would describe as hatred.

"SILENCE!" He roared. "Does any of you have a problem with what I just said?"

The hall immediately went so quiet you could hear the torches flickering and the wind howling gently.

I grinned. Out of joy I guess. That I'm now somebody.

Reva's face did not crumble. She was too controlled for that. But something behind her

eyes - the calculation, the confident assessment she had carried since my first day recalibrated into something I recognized.

It was fear. Genuine, unadorned fear.

She sat down. Clearly embarrassed but didn't say a word. She dared not.

I kept my face completely neutral and looked at my plate to resume eating but I immediately felt the burning on my neck

flare so hot I was certain everyone in the room could see it through my collar.

I winced out of pain but I kept it as low as possible so as not to draw attention.

Luna-designate. Me? A nobody?

He had confirmed me. Publicly. Without warning, without discussing it with me, without any of the formal process that wolf tradition required. Without any objections, at least not yet.

Because Reva had forced his hand. Because she had thought that his silence was weakness and pushed against it, and he had responded the only way Caius Dravhen knew how to respond to being pushed.

By removing any ambiguity.

I felt Pip beside me go completely rigid with contained excitement.

I did not look at Caius. I did not trust my face enough for that yet.

But I heard him stand and leave the hall a few minutes later, and I felt - through the mark on my neck, through whatever had connected us since that road that he was not as composed as he had appeared.

Neither was I.

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