เข้าสู่ระบบChapter 66:
Winter's POV I hate that my mother knows me so well. Not because it is comforting. Because it is inconvenient. There is something deeply unfair about being twenty-three years old, surviving political disasters, magical attacks, and being dragged into situations that could affect the entire supernatural world—only to be completely exposed by one raised eyebrow from your mother. She watches me carefully. Not accusing. Not angry. Just knowing. And somehow that is worse. "You're defending him." I immediately look away. "I am not." "You are." "I'm explaining." "Winter." I sigh. Because unfortunately, she is right. Again. I hate when people are right. Especially my mother. "I am not saying he handled everything perfectly," I say carefully. "I'm saying I understand why he did what he did." Mother studies me. "That is usually where people start making excuses for someone." I open my mouth. Then close it. Because that was annoyingly accurate. She softens slightly when she sees my expression. Not enough to let me escape. Just enough to remind me that this is my mother and not a council member interrogating me. "Tell me about him." The request surprises me. Not the Alpha. Not the attacks. Him. Keon. I swallow. Because that is somehow a much harder question. "What do you want to know?" "The truth." I almost laugh. "That is a dangerous thing to ask." "Why?" Because the truth about Keon is complicated. Because he is complicated. Because for every moment where I want to call him impossible, there is another where I remember the way he looked at me when he thought I wasn't awake. The way he stayed beside me. The way he protected me even when he was angry. The way he looked terrified when he thought he might lose me. I don't say any of that. Instead, I say the simplest thing. "He is not what I expected." Mother waits. I continue. "When I first came here, I thought he hated me." A small smile touches her lips. "Understandable." "Mother." "What? From everything you've told me, he does sound unpleasant." I laugh despite myself. "He was." The memory almost feels funny now. Almost. "And then?" "And then the lightning strike happened." The room quiets. Because that moment changed everything. "He carried me out of the chapel." I look down at my hands. "I don't even remember much after that. But when I woke up, everything was different." Mother listens quietly. "He was still angry. Still difficult. But he was there." My voice lowers. "When everyone else saw a political problem, he saw me." The words leave before I can stop them. And immediately, I know. Because Mother's expression changes. Not dramatically. Just enough. Enough to tell me she heard the part I didn't mean to say. I clear my throat. "Anyway." A smile slowly forms on her face. I hate that smile. "Anyway?" "Yes." "Interesting choice of word." "Don't start." "I didn't say anything." "You were thinking it." "I was." I roll my eyes. The moment passes. Thankfully. Mostly. Because then my mind goes back to everything else. Derrick. The letters. The kindness. The ease of being around him. And somehow that makes everything worse. Mother notices the shift. "Then there is Derrick." I tense slightly. She catches it immediately. Of course she does. "You do care about him." It isn't a question. I look away. "I do." The honesty surprises even me. Mother doesn't react badly. She simply nods. "Tell me." So I do. I tell her about the way Derrick talks to me. The way he listens. The way he never makes me feel like a burden. The way being around him feels peaceful. Safe. Different. "He makes everything feel easier," I admit. Mother's expression becomes thoughtful. "And Keon?" My answer doesn't come immediately. That scares me. Because Derrick is easy. Derrick makes sense. Keon does not. Keon is anger and comfort and frustration and protection all mixed together. "He makes everything feel important." The room becomes quiet. Because that answer scares me too. Mother looks at me for a long moment. Then she says softly, "Winter. A bond can explain why you are drawn to someone, Winter. It does not remove your choice.”" I know that tone. I hate that tone. "What?" "Do you know what your problem is?" I narrow my eyes. "That sounds like an insult." "It is not." "Good." "Your problem is that you keep trying to solve your feelings like they are a political issue." I blink. "What?" "You keep looking for the logical answer." She gestures slightly. "The alliance. The bond. The treaty. The consequences." Her eyes soften. "But feelings do not care about any of that." I stay quiet. Because I know she is right. And I hate it. "I don't know what to do." The confession is quieter than I expect. Mother's expression immediately softens. "I know." "I don't want to hurt Derrick." "I know." "I don't want to hurt Keon either." "I know." "And I don't want this to become another political disaster because of me." Her face changes slightly. Sadness. Not pity. Never pity. "You always do that." "What?" "Take responsibility for everyone's pain before anyone asks you to." I don't have an answer. Because maybe she is right. Again. She reaches over and takes my hand. "Winter, your father spent years believing that sacrifice was the only way to protect people." I look at her. She holds my gaze. "Do not make the same mistake." The words settle deeper than I expect. Before I can respond, she studies me carefully again. Then her expression shifts. Oh no. Not that look. "Mother." "Who do you love?" The question hits harder than any accusation could. I freeze. Completely. Because that is the question I have been avoiding. Not who is my mate. Not who is my alliance. Not who makes sense. Who do I love? My mouth opens. Nothing comes out. And that terrifies me more than anything. Because I can answer almost every question in my life. I can explain politics. Magic. History. Strategy. But that one? No. I don't know. Mother watches my silence carefully. Not pushing. Not forcing. Just waiting. And somehow that makes it worse. Because she knows. She knows there is an answer somewhere inside me. An answer I have been too afraid to look at. My fingers close around the necklace resting against my chest. The same necklace tied to dreams. To my family. To things waking up that should have stayed forgotten. Maybe that is the problem. Maybe I have spent so long looking for signs about everyone else. About the relics. About the future. About what I am supposed to do. That I never stopped to ask what I actually wanted. My mother squeezes my hand gently. "Winter." I look up. Her voice is softer now. "If there was no treaty, no bond, no duty, no expectations… if you woke up tomorrow and both of them were simply two men standing in front of you… who would you choose?"Chapter 66: Winter's POV I hate that my mother knows me so well. Not because it is comforting. Because it is inconvenient. There is something deeply unfair about being twenty-three years old, surviving political disasters, magical attacks, and being dragged into situations that could affect the entire supernatural world—only to be completely exposed by one raised eyebrow from your mother. She watches me carefully. Not accusing. Not angry. Just knowing. And somehow that is worse. "You're defending him." I immediately look away. "I am not." "You are." "I'm explaining." "Winter." I sigh. Because unfortunately, she is right. Again. I hate when people are right. Especially my mother. "I am not saying he handled everything perfectly," I say carefully. "I'm saying I understand why he did what he did." Mother studies me. "That is usually where people start making excuses for someone." I open my mouth. Then close it. Because that was annoyingly accurate. She softens
Chapter 25:Winter's POV: "Derrick." I narrow my eyes. "Don't do that." "Do what?" "The thing where you pretend not to be curious." Mother's smile grows. "I think I might like Derrick." "Everyone likes Derrick." "Exactly." I roll my eyes. "Anyway, he arrived." "And?" "And everything became significantly worse." The smile disappears. "Worse?" I nod. "You know those situations where two people insist they're perfectly civil while actively trying to murder each other with eye contact?" Mother blinks. "No." "Well, that's basically been my life." I think back to the breakfast with Derrick. The training grounds. The night with Derrick. The endless tension. The countless awkward conversations. The looks. Gods, the looks. "There was one morning I had breakfast with Derrick and while he was talking on the other side of the garden Keon destroyed a punching bag." Mother stares. "A punching bag." "Yes." "While Derrick was talking."
Winter's POV "Explain." I stare at my mother. She stares right back. The problem isn't that I don't know what she's asking. The problem is that I know exactly what she's asking. The room feels entirely too warm all of a sudden. I look toward the window. The window offers no assistance. I look at the fireplace. The fireplace is equally useless. When I glance back, Mother is still waiting. Patiently. Terrifyingly. "That's a very broad request." "It isn't." "It is." "It really isn't." I sigh dramatically. She remains unmoved. I survived two assassination attempts and somehow this conversation is still the one I'm afraid of. Mother folds her hands neatly in her lap. "Winter." I groan. "Fine." The word comes out reluctantly. Painfully. Like I'm being forced to confess a crime. Which, considering the circumstances, might not be entirely inaccurate. I shift against the pillows and try to figure out where to begin. Unfortunately, t
Chapter 63: Winter's POV The room is silent after her last words. If the Eye of The Witcher, the single most important ancient symbol of protection and favor to Witchkind that hasn't been reported to make a single appearance since the Wolf-Witch War, wasn't what scared her, I don't know if I want to know what does. "Those dreams you said you had. They're different from the type your grandma and all the women in our family used to have." I feel like pulling my hair out. I chuckle under my breath. Just how different am I huh? She continues, probably sensing my distress. "I don't mean to scare you Winter." She sighs. "It's just that, when we dream, it's majorly distorted flashes and glimpses that make no sense until later down the line. Now you're reporting full on episodes with vivid details and..." I turn to her when she doesn't say anything. "And what?" "It just scares me, that's all. When your grandmother dreamt of the flood, all she saw were muddied floors and a dr
Winter's POV For a long moment after my mother's words, neither of us speaks. The room is quiet except for the occasional crackle from the fireplace and the distant sounds of the palace beyond the walls. I should be thinking about the relics. Or the attacks. Or the eye from my dreams. Instead, I can't stop thinking about one sentence. "We weren't always... like this." It keeps circling through my mind. Because if there is one thing I have always been certain about, it is that my parents were never happy. I grew up watching them occupy the same spaces while somehow feeling miles apart. Every conversation was measured. Every interaction polite. Cold. Like two rulers sharing a kingdom instead of a husband and wife sharing a life. I never questioned it. It simply was. The idea that there might have been something else before that feels impossible. My mother studies me quietly. "You don't believe me." I blink. "I don't know what to believe." A sma
Winter's POVThe silence after my mother's words feels heavier than anything that came before them."If he is right, Winter... then the attacks against you are not random anymore."The sentence hangs in the air between us long after she finishes speaking.I stare at her.She stares back.For the first time since she entered the room, neither of us seems to know what to say next.Outside the window, the palace continues moving as though nothing has changed. Guards patrol the grounds. Servants cross the courtyard carrying baskets and crates. Somewhere in the distance, I can hear wolves training.Normal sounds.Normal life.Meanwhile, my mother has just told me that someone may be targeting me for reasons that go far beyond politics.I suddenly feel very tired.My gaze drops to my hands.They look steady.I don't feel steady."What aren't you telling me?"My voice comes out quieter than I intend.Mother doesn't answer immediately.That alone tells me enough.A knot forms in my stomach."
Keon's POV:I shouldn't care.I really shouldn't.That's the first thought in my head as I close the door behind me, leaving my brother and his mate alone in the room.Infact, I don't care.Winter isn't mine, she is my brother's mate. The relic of Blood-Fan
Keon's POV: Every laugh she lets out is like a blade to my chest. Even though I'm well over twenty steps away from where they eat, I can still clearly see the way he leans into her side and the way she laughs, so carefree, so genuine.
Winter’s POV: I wake up with my heart racing. I didn't dream, not this time, but it feels like there's something beating inside me. It's warm and steady, like the feeling of someone's hand on your chest. It spreads throughout my entire body. The weird thing about it is, it isn't
Keon's POV: The halls are way too quiet for my liking. It's nearly 2am, so most of the pack is asleep by now. The torches on the stone walls light up the halls as I walk to meet with Derrick. I had shifted this for as long as I could. If I didn't come by soon he'd just co







