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Chapter 75

Author: Melanin
last update publish date: 2026-05-06 13:35:09

Lana’s POV

Lord Marek’s holdings sprawled across a gentle plain, hedges clipped like the teeth of a measured saw, and slate roofs that caught the sun in metallic flashes. From a distance, the manor was tasteful and prosperous. Up close, there was a sense of curated life: servants polished surfaces, guards stood in formal lines. Anything that wished to be hidden wore a veneer of civility here.

We came with Iva’s careful note and a plan that balanced stealth and guile. Dren’s quick hands and Mara
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  • I Married My Mate's Enemy    Chapter 133

    Lana’s POVI learned something uncomfortable the morning the petitions arrived.Progress did not soften opposition—it reorganized it.The first packet was delivered just after dawn, its seal unremarkable, its language meticulously respectful. By midmorning, there were five more. Different origins. Different concerns. All carefully framed. None of them accidental. Each petition asked for review, reconsideration, or exemption, citing tradition, precedent, or potential instability. Not one accused me directly of overreach.That was how I knew they were coordinated.I spread the documents across my desk and read them slowly, resisting the instinct to group them by theme. Patterns revealed themselves more clearly when you allowed each piece to stand on its own first. Each petition appealed to reason. Each warned—politely—of consequences. And each, beneath the surface, pressed on a different pressure point.Kael arrived halfway through the stack, carrying a mug he set beside my elbow withou

  • I Married My Mate's Enemy    Chapter 132

    Lana’s POVI learned very quickly that once people accepted change was real, they stopped arguing about whether it should happen and started negotiating how much of it they could survive.That shift was subtle but unmistakable. Resistance no longer took the form of denial or obstruction. It arrived dressed as cooperation, polite concern, and strategic caution. People nodded more often now. They agreed faster. They offered help before it was requested. And beneath all of it lay the same unspoken question: How close does this come to me?I recognized it because I’d begun asking it myself—only in reverse.How far could I push before something essential broke?The council chamber was fuller than usual that morning, the semicircle of seats occupied by faces carefully arranged into neutrality. No one looked relaxed, but no one looked hostile either. It was the expression of people who had decided that observation was safer than opposition, at least for now.I took my seat without ceremony.

  • I Married My Mate's Enemy    Chapter 131

    Lana’s POVPower did not announce itself when it shifted.It settled.That truth stayed with me in the days that followed the stalled memorandum, not as a revelation but as a steady presence I could no longer ignore. The citadel had grown quieter, though not calmer, and the distinction mattered. Calm suggested resolution. Quiet suggested vigilance. It was the silence of people listening more carefully than they spoke, measuring each word against consequences they had not previously been required to consider.Silence, I was learning, was not the absence of resistance.It was its refinement.I felt it everywhere—in the pauses before replies arrived, in the way doors were opened with exaggerated courtesy, in the careful neutrality that had replaced defensiveness. Conversations ended a moment too early now, as though everyone were acutely aware that anything said could later be examined. The citadel had not become transparent overnight, but it had become aware of itself, and awareness was

  • I Married My Mate's Enemy    CHAPTER 130

    Lana’s POVThe response came quietly, which was how I knew it mattered.No announcements. No objections raised in open session. Just a subtle adjustment in language that arrived folded into a routine memorandum, as though it were nothing more than an administrative refinement. I read it once, then again, letting the intent settle beneath the polish.They weren’t resisting the process anymore.They were trying to redefine it.The document reframed jurisdiction—not overtly, not aggressively, but with enough precision to narrow my reach without ever mentioning my name. Authority was not being challenged. It was being rerouted, siphoned through older channels that hadn’t been used in decades but still existed on paper, quietly waiting for moments like this.I almost admired the restraint.Almost.Kael was standing by the window when I finished reading, arms crossed loosely as he watched the courtyard below. “That look

  • I Married My Mate's Enemy    CHAPTER 129

    Lana’s POVBy the time the day of the forum arrived, the citadel had already decided it did not like the idea.That displeasure showed itself in small, precise ways—rooms reassigned without notice, seating charts revised twice, a delay in distributing the agenda that felt accidental only if one was determined to believe it. None of it was overt enough to challenge directly, and that, I suspected, was the point. They wanted discomfort without culpability, pressure without fingerprints.It was almost impressive.Kael walked beside me through the outer hall, his pace unhurried, his posture relaxed in a way that suggested confidence rather than ease. He had learned, as I had, that appearing unbothered unsettled people more effectively than confrontation ever could.“They’ve moved the session again,” he said quietly. “Smaller chamber.”“Yes,” I replied. “They want containment.”“And you?”“I want witnesses.”He smiled faintly. “Of course you do.”The chamber was already half full when we e

  • I Married My Mate's Enemy    Chapter 128

    Lana’s POVThe first thing I noticed was not that the resistance had weakened.It was that it had grown tired.Not exhausted, not broken—just worn thin in a way that made even its confidence feel brittle. There was a difference, and it mattered more than anyone wanted to admit. Tired systems made small mistakes and then spent far too long explaining why those mistakes weren’t mistakes at all. Tired people overcorrected, padded their language, and reached for formality like a shield. Tired authority clung to tradition not because it believed in it, but because tradition required less thought than adaptation.The citadel still stood. It still functioned. It still smiled politely at itself in the polished reflection of its own permanence. But beneath that surface, something essential had shifted, and I could feel it in the way doors opened a second too slowly and answers arrived a fraction too carefully.The question was no longer if I would stop.It was when.Kael and I walked the inner

  • I Married My Mate's Enemy    Chapter 39

    Lana’s POVThe horse stumbled twice before it stopped.Steam poured from its flanks; blood streaked its left hind leg.There was no rider.I reached it first. “Easy,” I murmured, catching the reins. The animal shook, eyes rolling white. I knew the saddle by touch—Warren’s. Same cut, same worn strap

  • I Married My Mate's Enemy    Chapter 38

    Lana’s POVThe watch bell hadn’t finished its first ring when I heard shouting from the yard.Grayson burst into the hall, half-dressed, raincoat thrown over his shoulders. “Rider from the north gate,” he said. “Alive, barely.”I was already moving.The scout lay on the stones, pale and shaking, a

  • I Married My Mate's Enemy    Chapter 36

    Lana’s POVThe council room smelled of ink and damp parchment.Maps covered the table; cups of untouched tea cooled beside them.Warren stood at the head, the strip of charcoal in his hand tapping the edge of the northern pass. “The Remnant isn’t an army,” he said. “Not yet. They’re scattered cells

  • I Married My Mate's Enemy    Chapter 37

    Lana’s POVThe bell over the north gate rang once—short, sharp, wrong.Not the call for patrol change. Not alarm. Something in between.I was halfway down the stair before the guards finished opening the door

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