Reva Soldaine was excised from Ironveil at the first bleed of dawn.
There was no formal ceremony of expulsion, no gathered crowd to witness the stripping of her rank. Caius possessed the ancestral authority to remove any member who threatened the pack's marrow, and he exercised it with the cold, surgical efficiency of a man cutting out an infection before it reached the heart.
She had been given until the sun cleared the trees. She was gone long before the first bird sang.
I stood at the north wing window, the stone sill leaching cold into my palms, and watched the heavy iron gates groan shut behind her.
A lone, sharp silhouette in the morning mist, a single bag slung over her shoulder, she walked away from the only life she'd known for six years. She didn't look back. I didn't look away.
"Are you okay?"
Pip's voice was a soft intrusion. I hadn't heard his boots on the rug, but suddenly he was there, leaning his elbows on the sill beside me.
"No," I said, the word feeling heavy in my throat. "But it's done. The air feels... thinner."
"She really did it, then? Handed over the patrol window like a gift-wrapped invitation?"
"Yes. She traded four hundred lives for a chance to get rid of me."
Pip was quiet for a long moment, his young face unusually somber as he watched the empty road where Reva had vanished.
"I think I always knew she'd snap eventually," he mused. "Not that specific way, not the treason part but something. You could see her running out of road. She was backed into a corner of her own making and she knew the walls were closing in."
I turned to look at him, struck by the gravity in his tone. "You're seventeen, Pip. You shouldn't have to be this good at reading the wreckage of people's lives."
"Stable hands see everything, Sera," he said, repeating his mantra with a weary sort of pride.
I made a silent vow then: when the dust finally settled on this war, I would ensure Pip was moved somewhere his sharp mind and sharper eyes were actually rewarded. He was too bright for the hayloft.
The pack meeting that morning didn't just feel different; it felt re-aligned.
I had attended enough of these gatherings to understand the unspoken language of the room... the way the hierarchy dictated who stood in the light and who hovered in the shadows.
But today, the tectonic plates had shifted. The four wolves who had originally co-signed Reva's petition stood with their gazes fixed firmly on the floor. It wasn't because someone was actively hovering over them; it was simply that guilt has a way of making you feel like the tallest, most exposed person in a crowded hall.
Caius stood at the dais, his presence filling the room like a gathering storm. He didn't offer any diplomatic padding or softening of the blow. He spoke with the jagged edge of a commander.
"Reva Soldaine has been expelled for the betrayal of this pack to an external enemy," he announced, his voice vibrating through the stone floor. "She used a position of trust to leak tactical information to a man who used it to take children hostage. She is gone. The petition she chaired regarding the pack council dies with her departure. If anyone in this hall has further questions about where this pack stands regarding our Luna designate, I suggest you ask them now, openly rather than whispering them into letters for other territories."
The silence was absolute. You could hear the pop of the tallow in the sconces.
Caius let his gaze travel slowly across the room. He lingered on each of the four petitioning wolves for exactly one heartbeat, not a threat, but a clinical recording of their faces. A reminder that he saw them.
"Good," he said, the word final as a hammer strike. "Dismissed."
As the hall began to empty, one of the four, a wolf named Danna, broke away from the group and stopped beside me. She was a woman in her mid-forties, a mid-ranked member I had always viewed as a passenger in Reva's wake rather than an architect of her malice.
She wouldn't look me in the eye, her attention focused on the scuff marks on her boots.
"I didn't know about the village," she whispered, her voice trembling. "What she was doing with Zoran... I had no idea. The petition was presented to me as a matter of pack law, an administrative concern. I didn't know blood was involved."
I studied her. The scent of genuine, stomach-turning horror rolled off her in waves. She hadn't been a traitor; she'd been a tool, polished and used by someone who knew exactly how to manipulate her sense of duty.
"I believe you, Danna," I said.
She finally lifted her head, her eyes rimmed with red. "The signature... my name on that paper. I want it struck. I want it formally withdrawn from the record."
"Talk to Kael," I told her, nodding toward the shadow near the dais. "He keeps the ledgers. He'll handle the formalities."
She nodded frantically and hurried away.
Kael appeared at my elbow a second later, seemingly stepping out of the very air. "Four for four," he murmured. "Every single one of them has come to me this morning to pull their names."
"Is it fear?" I asked, watching the last of the pack filter out.
"For some of them, yes. For Danna, it's genuine revulsion. For the others, they've simply realized which way the wind is blowing, and they don't want to be caught in the gale." He paused, his dark eyes reflecting the torchlight. "In the end, the 'why' matters less than the result. The pack is finally consolidating. They're finding their center."
I looked around the emptying hall. The tables were cleared, the air was settling, and for the first time, Ironveil felt like a fortress instead of a tomb. We were becoming something unified; a weapon with a single edge.
"She won every battle until the last one," I whispered, the ghost of Kael's words from the night before echoing in my mind.
Kael turned to me, his expression unreadable.
"There is no 'last one' coming for us," I said, my voice hardening into something cold and crystalline. "I'm going to make sure of it. I'm going to make sure the story ends differently this time."
He held my gaze for a long, heavy beat. The weight of his silence was more supportive than any shout of agreement could have been.
"Very well," he said.
Two words. From a man who never wasted a single one.
It was the only validation I needed to step out of the shadows of the past and into the fire of what was coming next...
