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Chapter Four: What Bowen Knows

Author: Manuel
last update publish date: 2026-06-04 06:11:46

Elder Bowen does not rush.

This is the first thing you learn about him. He moves through the world at his own pace, deliberate and unhurried, and he has a way of occupying a room that makes you feel like the room was always waiting for him to arrive. He steps into the kitchen now and looks at Mara first, then at me, and the look he gives Mara is gentle but clear.

She picks up her mug and her toast and leaves without a word.

I have never seen Mara leave a conversation voluntarily in my life.

Bowen pulls out the chair across from me and sits down the way old men sit, carefully, with full awareness of every joint, and then he folds his hands on the table and looks at me with those quiet, assessing eyes that have always made me feel like he is reading several pages ahead.

“You look tired, child,” he says.

“I am fine.”

“You say that a great deal.” The corner of his mouth moves, almost a smile. “I have noticed.”

I wrap my hands around my mug and wait. Bowen did not come to the kitchen at half past seven to talk about how I look. He came because Mara was about to tell me something and whatever that something is, he would rather it come from him.

“You want to know why I placed you in this role,” he says.

“The thought had crossed my mind.”

He nods slowly, like I have confirmed something he already knew. Outside the kitchen window the mountains are pale and distant in the early light, the same as they always are, and I focus on them for a moment because looking at Bowen’s face right now feels like standing too close to something I am not ready for.

“When Lucian made his decision three months ago,” Bowen begins, and his voice is careful, the way you are careful around something that can still hurt, “I was the only council member who opposed it. Not loudly. I do not do things loudly. But I opposed it.”

I say nothing.

“I opposed it because I know what a mate bond is. I have lived long enough to watch what happens to people who sever one out of pride and call it strategy.” He pauses. “And I know what it does to the one who is left holding it.”

My jaw tightens. I keep my eyes on the window. “With respect, Elder, I did not need a witness to that.”

“No,” he says quietly. “You did not. I am sorry for it.”

The apology lands unexpectedly and I do not know what to do with it so I leave it sitting between us on the table.

“I placed you here because proximity matters,” he continues. “Because Lucian is a proud man who made a proud mistake and proud men do not correct themselves in the abstract. They need to be confronted with what they lost. Every day, if necessary.” A pause. “You are what he lost, Selene. I needed him to see that up close.”

I turn away from the window and look at him. “You used me.”

He does not flinch. “I gave you a position of dignity in a house that owed you one. What you do with the proximity is entirely your own business. I am not here to push you toward anything.”

“Then what are you here to tell me?”

He unfolds his hands and refolds them, a small gesture that on anyone else would mean nothing. On Bowen it means he is choosing his next words with particular care.

“Caden Voss did not come here only for the trade negotiations,” he says.

I go still.

“He came because I wrote to him.” Bowen meets my eyes steadily. “Three weeks ago. I told him about the rejection. I told him about your situation. And I told him that Ironveil has a woman within its walls who deserves to be seen by someone who will not take her for granted.”

The kitchen is very quiet.

I can hear the clock above the stove. I can hear my own breathing, which has become deliberate and careful in the way it gets when I am holding something in that would be embarrassing to let out.

“You wrote to another Alpha,” I say slowly. “About me.”

“I wrote to a good man who has been looking for his mate for four years and has not found her.” Bowen’s voice is even. “I am not arranging anything. I am not promising anything. I am simply telling you what I did and why, so that you have the full picture.”

I stand up.

I do not do it dramatically. I just need to be on my feet, need the blood moving, need something to do with the feeling that is climbing up the inside of my chest right now.

“You had no right,” I say. My voice is quiet. That is the most dangerous version of my voice and somewhere in my mind I am aware of that even now.

“No,” he agrees. “I did not. And yet I would do it again.”

I look at him for a long moment. At his old, steady face, at the complete absence of apology in his eyes even as his words give one, and I understand something about Elder Bowen that I did not fully understand before. He loves this pack the way a man loves something he has spent a lifetime building. He would bend every rule he knows to protect it and every person inside it.

That does not mean he was right.

“I need you to stay out of my life,” I say. “Whatever you set in motion, I need you to understand that I am not a piece on anyone’s board.”

“I know that,” he says. “More than most.”

I leave my half-eaten toast on the table and walk out of the kitchen.

I take the long corridor toward the east wing because I need the walk and the quiet and the familiar work of putting one foot in front of the other. I am almost at the end of it, almost to the turn that leads to the staff staircase, when a door to my left opens and Caden Voss steps out.

He looks at my face and whatever he sees there makes him go still.

“Selene,” he says carefully. “Are you alright?”

And before I can answer, before I can pull the composure back into place and tell him I am fine the way I tell everyone I am fine, I hear footsteps at the far end of the corridor.

Heavy. Deliberate.

I do not have to turn around to know whose they are.

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