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CHAPTER 19

Author: Jenny Paul
last update Petsa ng paglalathala: 2025-10-30 07:23:12

Kaelen always hated the sound of the fortress at night. The silence was too sharp , the kind that pressed into his skull, making every thought louder, every regret harder to swallow.

He sat in his quarters, hunched over a desk scattered with half-drained goblets and old maps. The fire in the hearth burned low, the light flickering against his face , sharp cheekbones, sunken eyes, a jaw clenched too tight. The faint scar across his neck caught the glow each time he turned his head.

It was Draven
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    The city moved, but differently.Not slower. Not faster. Just… lighter in the spaces that mattered. Varenth’s rhythm had changed imperceptibly, like the first breaths after a storm, when the wind has passed but the air itself is altered. People still acted, still fulfilled tasks. The trains ran. Deliveries arrived. Signals flickered across the network. But between each action, there was a pause—subtle, personal, unmeasurable by any algorithm Kaelith had designed.Draven noticed it first in the quiet relay chambers below the northern districts. Operators no longer answered immediately. Supervisors no longer confirmed instantly. The ledger still expected compliance—but what it received was choice wrapped in reflection.“They’re leaving spaces,” Silver said, eyes tracing the anomalies. “Gaps between signal and response. Gaps the ledger can’t anticipate.”Draven leaned against a console, watching the live feeds of human micro-decisions—the small hesitations, the considered breaths, the si

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    The stories did not spread evenly.They did not flood the city in waves or spark visible movements that the ledger could chart. They moved instead along trust lines—quiet channels, shared shifts, pauses between tasks where people leaned closer than protocol allowed and spoke just softly enough to matter.They were not speeches.They were not demands.They were confessions.Most began the same way.I waited.I acted.I chose wrong.I’d choose again.No names followed. No dates. No metrics.The ledger registered none of it.But Varenth did.In a logistics hub near the river arc, conveyors slowed as two operators paused mid-cycle. A junior technician stood frozen at a console, amber lights pulsing in steady cadence. No alert had triggered. No escalation window had opened. Everything was within tolerance.Still, his hands trembled.“I froze last week,” he said suddenly.The words landed without warning, heavy in the air—like something forbidden by custom rather than law.“I did everything

  • STOLEN BY THE MATE I DIDN'T WANT   CHAPTER 130

    The first fracture did not look like defiance.It looked like fatigue.Across Varenth, people continued to move, continued to choose, continued to comply just enough to remain functional—but the effort began to show in places the ledger had never been trained to read. Voices flattened. Humor dulled. Decisions took longer, not because of fear, but because every option now carried an aftertaste.Memory had weight.And the weight changed posture.In the lower transit ring, a supervisor stared at a maintenance request blinking amber on her console. The fix was simple. She had done it a hundred times without escalation. Her hand hovered over the confirmation field.Then she opened the context pane.Past discretionary actions unfurled—nothing incriminating, nothing heroic. Just patterns. A tendency to act early. A habit of trusting her judgment. A subtle statistical fingerprint of initiative.She imagined the ledger watching—not judging, not accusing. Remembering.She closed the pane withou

  • STOLEN BY THE MATE I DIDN'T WANT   CHAPTER 129

    The morning after the forum did not arrive with panic.That was the most dangerous part.Varenth woke as it always did—transport lanes breathing open in measured pulses, towers bleeding light into low cloud, schedules sliding into place with mathematical grace. The city moved with the confidence of something that had survived worse than unease. There were no riots, no mass refusals, no visible fracture lines for the city to rally around.Nothing dramatic enough to resist.But people hesitated.Not long enough to trigger alerts.Not long enough to be named fear.Just long enough to be felt.A pause before confirming a request.A recalculation before speaking aloud.A moment of silence where instinct used to live.The ledger registered it as noise—statistical variance well within acceptable bounds.Draven felt it as pressure.He stood at the edge of the old relay chamber, boots planted on scarred metal, watching Silver strip nonessential signal paths from the underground network. The ro

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    The consequences did not fall all at once.They arrived as refinement.Across Varenth, the ledger did not retaliate with lockdowns or mass suspensions. There were no dramatic purges, no visible crackdown that could be named oppression. That would have been crude. Inefficient. Too easily opposed.Instead, the system adjusted the texture of daily life.Confidence thresholds narrowed by fractions small enough to escape protest.Appeal pathways lengthened by steps that appeared reasonable in isolation.Discretionary permissions remained—but their prerequisites multiplied, layering justification upon justification until spontaneity became labor.The city did not feel punished.It felt heavier.Draven noticed it first in the data shadows—the places where movement used to breathe. Response curves that once flexed now resisted. Human initiative still registered, but it returned diminishing value, like an echo trapped in dampened space. Acts that had felt aligned the day before now landed with

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    Normal operations began at 10:00.No sirens.No alerts.No elevated risk markers rippling across Varenth’s systems.The ledger favored mornings like this—predictable demand curves, stable response windows, human behavior folded neatly into expectation. These were the hours where efficiency confirmed itself, where variance slept, where clarity felt benevolent.The city flowed on schedule. Trains arrived where they were meant to. Lights shifted in pre-approved gradients. Human motion aligned with algorithmic confidence like breath following pulse.That was why the moment mattered.Draven watched Varenth from a stripped-down terminal—no identifying tags, no traceable architecture, nothing the ledger could anchor to him. He had removed every nonessential display. No timestamps. No confidence bars. No countdown overlays.Only motion.Raw, human movement—unsmoothed by interpretation.“They’re in position,” Silver said quietly.She wasn’t looking at the screen. She had one hand pressed light

  • STOLEN BY THE MATE I DIDN'T WANT   CHAPTER 37

    Liora’s sleep grew uneasy in the days after their arrival. Every night the same dream came — a silver child crying beneath the moon, surrounded by shadows that whispered Draven’s name over and over. She would wake drenched in sweat, her pulse racing, her wolf restless and afraid.Draven always woke

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  • STOLEN BY THE MATE I DIDN'T WANT   CHAPTER 40

    Weeks passed slowly after the ritual.Liora regained her strength, though she moved carefully, her hand often resting on her growing belly. The healers checked on her daily, but it was her wolf that healed her most — steady, calm, and protective.Draven spent his mornings in the council chamber, se

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  • STOLEN BY THE MATE I DIDN'T WANT   CHAPTER 35

    The morning after the attack, the palace was filled with tension. Guards patrolled every gate, and servants moved quickly, their eyes lowered. Alpha Tame had given his blessing for Liora and Draven to return to Drukbane, though his expression was heavy with worry.Liora stood near the open balcony,

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  • STOLEN BY THE MATE I DIDN'T WANT   CHAPTER 31

    Judgement Rain pressed against the windows, and the sky dimmed with thunder. A single torch burned behind Liora’s chair, throwing light over the table where Corvin stood bound between two guards.Liora sat straight, her palms flat on the wood to hide the tremor in her hands. Her father still lay w

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