Marcus’s POV
The restless energy of my wolf churns just beneath the surface, responding to the emotional turbulence that flows through our pack bonds like an electric current. Even without direct contact, truth has a way of spreading through these connections, carrying weight that settles deep in your bones.
The laptop screen still glows in front of when Asher steps back into the office, his jaw set in that particular way that tells he has been fielding difficult conversations all day.
"The council wants answers," he states without preamble.
"About what specifically," I ask, though the knot in my stomach already knows.
"About why your na keeps surfacing in their discussions. About why people are circumventing established channels to reach you directly. About whether you are orchestrating this intentionally."
"What was your response."
"I told them to bring their questions directly to you."
Relief and apprehension war in my chest as I exhale slowly. "They will not appreciate that approach."
"No answer would satisfy them right now," he replies with a slight shrug. "At least this one does not compromise your position."
By mid-afternoon, the individual ssages begin to lose their distinct edges, lding into sothing far more significant than isolated incidents.
A pattern erges that becos impossible to ignore once I recognize its shape. Nas appear across multiple pack territories, tilines align in ways that suggest deliberate coordination rather than random occurrence, and phrasing repeats itself with disturbing consistency across supposedly independent accounts.
This was never contained to single locations.
Soone had systematically replicated these situations.
Each incident carefully calibrated to remain plausibly deniable, strategically limited to avoid detection, precisely controlled to prevent anyone from grasping the true scope until this mont.
Cold understanding settles in my gut, sharper than the earlier nausea.
Soone orchestrated this.
As shadows lengthen across the compound, I force myself to open a ssage I have been avoiding all day. Not because it appears different from the others, but because the sender’s na has been hovering at the edge of my vision like a warning, familiar in ways that make my wolf pace with unease.
I ground myself in physical sensations before reading, focusing on the solid weight of the device in my hands, the leather chair supporting my back, the quiet hum of the air conditioning, because whatever this contains requires my full attention and clearest judgnt.
The ssage itself is brief.
Painfully brief.
I hesitated to reach out to you.
I convinced myself that what I experienced was not significant enough until I learned you were actually listening.
Please inform if this contact is inappropriate.
I scroll down to the signature.
And freeze completely.
The na belongs not to so distant figure removed from current politics, not to soone safely tucked away in pack history, but to soone who still wields considerable influence, soone whose voice carries weight in council discussions about stability and unity.
Soone I had trusted implicitly.
My wolf goes completely still, the abrupt cessation like slamming into a concrete barrier at full sprint, and my chest constricts as the implications crash through my consciousness faster than I can process them systematically.
Asher looks up imdiately from his own work. "What is it."
I cannot find words.
Instead, I rotate the laptop screen toward him.
He reads through the ssage once, then repeats the process more slowly, and when his eyes et mine again his expression has transford into sothing grimly analytical, the look he adopts when he grasps not just the imdiate problem, but its inevitable consequences.
"This fundantally alters our situation," he says.
"Yes," I respond quietly. "It does."
"Are you certain about the implications."
"Certain enough to act," I say, because uncertainty feels like a privilege I can no longer afford.
We remain silent for several monts as the compound transitions into evening around us, security lights activating in sequence, normal routines continuing without interruption, and I am struck by how surreal this normalcy feels when sothing this fundantal is cracking apart beneath the surface.
"More ssages will arrive," Asher observes eventually.
"Without question," I agree. "This is only the beginning."
"And when the council realizes this extends beyond random complaints."
"They already suspect."
"And their response will be."
I close my eyes briefly, then force them open again, because avoidance will not make this smaller or more manageable.
"They will attempt to control the narrative," I say. "Limit the scope. Contain the damage."
Asher studies my face carefully. "Will you allow that containnt."
The question hangs in the air with unavoidable weight, because I understand exactly what their version of containnt looks like, and I know precisely what it costs the people who get swept up in it.
I look back at the screen, at the expanding list of nas waiting for acknowledgnt, at the one signature that transford this from rely difficult into genuinely dangerous.
"No," I say with finality.
The single word settles into the room like a boundary being established.
And sowhere beneath the exhaustion and responsibility and fear, sothing hardens into resolve, because whatever unfolds next will not happen quietly, will not be controlled from above, and will not sacrifice those who believed silence ant protection.
The barriers have fallen.
And there is no rebuilding them.
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