Chapter 131: Chapter 131 – The Moon Goddess will bring her to us
Corvine’s eyes moved slowly across the space, taking everything in with that sa sharp awareness he always carried, but this ti there was a faint crease forming between his brows, like sothing wasn’t quite sitting right with him. "What’s the problem?" he asked, his voice steady but laced with curiosity as he turned back to Seraphine.
From an outsider’s perspective, everything looked more than perfect. The massive office had already been divided into a structured workstation layout, clean and intentional, with only the managers and the IT departnt getting private offices while the rest of the space remained open, efficient, and ready for movent and collaboration.
But Seraphine didn’t look impressed.
Her gaze drifted again, slower this ti, more critical, like she was searching for sothing specific and coming up empty. "I haven’t seen any space that fits my office," she said, her tone thoughtful, almost distracted, like her mind was already running ahead of the mont.
Corvine blinked once, then a small smile spread across his face, like he had been waiting for her to bring that up. "That’s because the biggest office is reserved for the CEO," he explained, his voice carrying a hint of pride. "I was planning to have it set up in your favorite colors, with everything you’d need. Even a really comfortable sofa, especially for those days when you need to rest... you know, that ti of the month."
That last part caught her off guard in a way she hadn’t expected.
For a split second, the conversation around business, offices, and responsibilities faded into the background as sothing much more personal pushed its way forward.
That ti of the month. The pain, the discomfort, the way everything always felt heavier during those days.
And beneath that... sothing deeper.
Her wolf.
A quiet ache spread through her chest, subtle but persistent, like a missing piece she couldn’t reach no matter how hard she tried. She was starting to realize just how difficult it really was to live away from the pack, away from that part of herself that made her whole.
No shifting, no connection, no silent conversations with her wolf that used to ground her when everything else felt like too much.
It made her wonder, not for the first ti, how others managed it. How they survived this distance without feeling like sothing inside them was slowly fading.
She pulled herself back to the present with a soft exhale.
"Thanks," she said, her voice calm again, though the weight of those thoughts hadn’t completely left her, "but I’m not planning on being the CEO. That role cos with responsibilities I don’t have ti for right now."
The effect of her words on Corvine was imdiate.
He stared at her, clearly caught off guard, like the idea hadn’t even crossed his mind. "If not you... then who?" he asked, confusion slipping into his tone.
Seraphine turned toward him fully this ti, and the smile that curved her lips carried sothing deeper than humor, sothing rooted in trust, in familiarity, in everything they had been through together.
"Who else but the one person I trust the most?" she said softly. "You."
Corvine didn’t move.
For a mont, he just stood there, frozen in place, her words settling over him in a way that felt heavier than he expected. It wasn’t just a title she was offering him. It was trust. Responsibility. A piece of everything she was building.
And that ant sothing.
A lot.
But even with that, there was hesitation flickering behind his eyes, sothing unresolved, sothing pulling him in a different direction.
"Don’t get
wrong, Sera," he said finally, his voice quieter now, more careful, "I’m honored. Really. But I need flexibility... especially if I’m going to keep looking for your daughter."
That na, that reality, hit her instantly.
Seraphine turned to him, and the emotion in her eyes was impossible to miss this ti, a faint gloss forming like she was holding sothing back, sothing fragile.
"I’ve thought about it," she admitted, her voice softer than before, almost hesitant, "but we can’t find her."
Corvine’s brows drew together imdiately. "What do you an?" he asked, confusion clear in his expression.
She shook her head slightly, like she needed to correct herself before he misunderstood. "I don’t an we’ll never find her," she clarified, her tone gaining a quiet steadiness. "I an... it’s not sothing we can force. The Moon Goddess will bring her to us when the ti is right. We just have to trust that."
Her gaze dropped for a second before she continued, her voice carrying a layer of reality that neither of them could ignore.
"How do we even begin to search for soone without a na? We don’t know what she looks like, we don’t know where she is, we don’t have anything to go on."
Corvine listened closely, nodding slowly as her words sank in, because deep down, he knew she was right. There was truth in what she was saying, even if it wasn’t easy to accept.
"You’re right," he admitted after a mont, his voice low, thoughtful. "But that doesn’t an we stop trying."
"No," Seraphine cut in gently but firmly, lifting her head again. "And that’s exactly why I took the job at the hospital. I check every child between six and seven, especially the ones who are about to turn seven."
There was a brief silence after that, the weight of her effort, her quiet determination, settling into the space between them.
Corvine’s mind clearly started working through sothing, his expression turning more serious as a new thought ford.
"What if she’s in one of the packs?" he asked slowly. "The woman I gave her to... she was near our pack’s border at the ti. She was a she-wolf."
He paused, choosing his words carefully, like he didn’t want to push too hard but couldn’t ignore the possibility either.
"Sera, your child could be anywhere across the packs. Maybe I should start checking there instead."
The mont those words left his mouth, sothing in Seraphine stilled.
Her body went slightly rigid, like the idea had struck deeper than she expected, pulling her into a brief, quiet trance where too many possibilities started stacking on top of each other.
"But don’t forget," she said after a mont, her voice slower now, more grounded, "most pack mbers are already in the city chasing better opportunities."
Corvine nodded once, acknowledging that point, though it didn’t completely erase the thought he had just voiced.
"Which brings
to the last thing," he added, his tone shifting slightly, like he had been saving this part for the end.
Seraphine raised a brow, a hint of curiosity breaking through everything else she had been processing. "There’s more?" she asked.
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