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Comrade 108

Comrade 108

In the healer’s wing, silence reigned until a crashing sound echoed through the hall. Dany stormed in, fury in every step, dragging behind him a woman bound in silver cuffs. She was one of their own—Marla, a healer who had delivered dozens of pups and treated countless wounded warriors. Her hair was wild now, her face pale, but there was a strange satisfaction in her eyes.

Max, Tiana, and several guards followed, weapons ready.

Eva sat at the far end of the room, her hands folded on her lap, her expression unreadable.

Dany shoved Marla to her knees before Eva and growled, “We caught her feeding blood to a vampire scout. Behind the eastern barracks. She’s been doing it for weeks.”

Gasps echoed through the chamber. One of the younger guards stepped back, clearly shaken.

Eva didn’t move. “Are you sure?” Her voice was calm, but there was a quiet edge that made even Max glance her way with concern.

Dany nodded. “We found flasks of blood in her bag. Not just from wounded wolves—some of it was royal blood. Strong. Fresh. Possibly even yours.”

Eva’s eyes narrowed. But still, she didn’t raise her voice. “Marla,” she said softly, “why?”

The room went silent as the healer lifted her chin. Her lips were curled in a mocking smile. “Because your Queen is birthing death, not salvation,” she sneered.

Max stepped forward, but Eva raised her hand to stop him. “Let her speak.”

Marla’s eyes gleamed, her words venomous. “You think you’re saving us? You’re not. You’re carrying something unnatural. One child with a wolf’s fury, the other with a vampire’s hunger. Do you really believe they can exist together? You are the end of us, not the beginning.”

The words hit like stones. Tiana’s jaw tightened. Dany looked ready to strike.

Eva just breathed slowly, keeping her emotions buried under layers of control. “So, you chose to help the very people slaughtering our kind?”

Marla didn’t flinch. “I chose truth. And I’m not the only one.”

Whispers broke out in the room. Max’s face twisted with rage. “You’re lying.”

Marla’s smirk widened. “Am I? Look around, Alpha. Look at your people. They whisper behind her back. They wonder what she’s hiding. And they should.”

Before Max could lunge, Dany gripped his shoulder. “She’s trying to divide us. Let Eva handle this.”

Everyone looked to Eva again. She stood slowly, every movement controlled. Her hand rested on her stomach for a brief second before she stepped forward.

“I trusted you,” she said quietly. “You treated our wounded. You touched our children. You smiled while handing poison to the ones who would burn this pack to ash.”

Marla laughed softly. “I wasn’t the only one smiling while pretending, Your Majesty.”

Eva didn’t react. Her gaze was steady, her voice clear. “Then let this be my answer. Let all of Silverstone hear it.”

She turned to Dany and spoke, firm and without hesitation. “Take her. Bury her far from here. Our soil doesn’t nourish traitors.”

Dany nodded grimly, and two guards moved to drag Marla away. She didn’t scream. She didn’t beg. She laughed.

“You can bury me, but you can’t stop what’s coming,” she called out. “The true Silverstone is already rotting from within!”

The doors slammed shut behind her, leaving only silence in the room.

Max exhaled, running a hand through his hair. “We need to do a full sweep. There may be more like her.”

Tiana glanced at Eva, concern darkening her features. “Are you okay?”

Eva didn’t respond right away. She walked to the window, staring out at the mist-covered trees. Her hand returned to her belly. Two lives growing. One kick. One stillness.

“I’ve always known,” she whispered, more to herself than anyone else. “That fear would follow us. But I didn’t think it would wear the face of someone I trusted.”

Max stepped beside her, placing a hand on her shoulder. “We’ll find the others. We’ll keep the pack safe.”

Eva turned to him slowly. “We have to. There’s no other way forward.”

Then she looked at Dany, her voice regaining its steel. “Strengthen the borders. Tell the warriors to watch even the ones closest to them. From now on, trust must be earned.”

Dany bowed his head. “Yes, my Queen.”

Eva’s expression didn’t soften. Not even when Max squeezed her hand or when Tiana reached out in silent comfort.

Because something inside her had shifted again.

The betrayal hadn’t broken her—but it had carved something colder into her bones.

She watched the last of the mist disappear and whispered to no one in particular:

“Bury her far from here. Our soil doesn’t nourish traitors.”

Comrade

Comrade

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Status: Ongoing Type:
Comrade Summary & Review: Comrade

Princess Evangeline of Morwyn sat in the quiet waiting room of the royal physician’s office, her mind a whirlwind of fear and fragile hope. The grand palace, bathed in soft afternoon light, felt both like a home and a cage. She had been married to Crown Prince Sebastian of Valdris for three years, but their union was nothing more than a political arrangement—an alliance forged by their fathers to secure peace between their lands.

From the very beginning, Sebastian made it clear that his marriage to Evangeline was purely out of duty, not affection. They slept in separate chambers, exchanged only polite words in public, and maintained a cold civility that masked the emptiness beneath. Evangeline had once dreamed that time might change things, that she might earn his heart, but years of distance had buried that hope deep inside her.

Recently, however, her body had begun to change. She felt nauseated in the mornings, dizzy, and uncommonly tired. These signs, though subtle, stirred a small flame of longing within her—a desperate wish that she might finally be carrying his child. Perhaps, she thought, a baby could soften Sebastian’s heart and give meaning to their lifeless marriage.

When the physician, Master Aldrich, appeared at the doorway, his kind smile gave her both comfort and dread. He led her into his study, a cozy room filled with the scent of herbs, the warmth of a crackling fire, and shelves of ancient medical texts. Evangeline sat nervously as the old man took a sealed parchment from his desk.

With a gentle voice, Master Aldrich delivered the news that would change everything: “Your Highness, I’m delighted to tell you that you are indeed expecting.”

Evangeline’s breath caught in her throat. Her trembling hands broke the royal seal and scanned the words written neatly across the parchment. Pregnant. She was truly with child. Before she could even absorb the shock, Master Aldrich continued, beaming with joy—she was not carrying just one baby, but twins.

The revelation sent a rush of emotion through her—relief, disbelief, joy. Twins! Two heirs for the royal family. The weight of that realization made her dizzy, but it also filled her with warmth and purpose. For the first time in years, she smiled with genuine happiness. Perhaps this was the miracle she needed to mend what had long been broken.

In that moment, she imagined Sebastian’s face lighting up with pride and excitement. She pictured him embracing her, maybe even thanking her. The thought filled her with renewed courage. She thanked Master Aldrich graciously and insisted that she would tell Sebastian the news herself. This moment, she decided, must belong to them alone.

Walking through the grand marble corridors of the palace, Evangeline’s heart felt light for the first time in years. Servants bowed as she passed, but she hardly noticed them—her mind was focused only on Sebastian and the life growing inside her. She wanted to see him, to share the joy, to believe that maybe, just maybe, love could still bloom between them.

As she approached the door of Sebastian’s private study, her steps quickened. She called out softly, “Sebastian! My lord, I have the most wonderful news to—”

But her voice faltered.

Through the half-open door, Evangeline froze at the sight before her. Her husband stood with Lady Cordelia Ashworth, daughter of the Duke of Greymont, wrapped in his arms. The woman’s fiery red hair cascaded over Sebastian’s shoulders as he held her close. Evangeline’s heart stopped when she saw him tilt Cordelia’s chin upward and press his lips to hers—a tender, passionate kiss filled with the warmth and love she had begged the heavens for all these years.

It was everything she had ever wanted—and it wasn’t hers.

For a long, unbearable second, Evangeline could only stare. The parchment with her pregnancy confirmation still trembled in her hand. Then, in a broken whisper, she said his name: “Sebastian…”

The Crown Prince turned sharply, surprise flashing across his features before being quickly masked by his usual calm. Cordelia paled and stepped back, though Sebastian’s arm lingered protectively around her waist.

“Evangeline,” he said evenly, as though she were a stranger interrupting him, “what brings you here?”

Her throat tightened. She forced herself to stand tall, even as tears burned behind her eyes. “I… I live here,” she managed, her voice quivering. “I’m your wife.”

Sebastian’s cold gaze didn’t soften. “Is there something you need?” he asked, the same way he might address a court official.

Something inside Evangeline broke. Just minutes ago, she had been radiant with hope, ready to tell him that she carried his children—the future of his line. But now, staring at the indifference in his eyes and the woman in his arms, she realized the truth she had avoided for too long.

He would never love her. Not even their unborn children could change that.

A calmness settled over her—a cold, regal resolve that masked the chaos in her chest. Straightening her shoulders, Evangeline met his gaze with all the dignity her title demanded.

“Yes, my lord,” she said clearly. “There is something I need.”

Sebastian raised a brow, perhaps expecting her to plead, to cry, to beg for an explanation. Instead, she spoke words that shattered the silence of the study.

“I want an annulment.”

Both Sebastian and Cordelia froze. The shock in their eyes was almost satisfying. Cordelia gasped aloud, pressing a hand to her mouth, while Sebastian’s expression turned dark and unreadable.

“What did you say?” he asked in a dangerously quiet voice.

Evangeline’s chin lifted higher. Her hands no longer trembled. “You heard me perfectly,” she said. “I want our marriage annulled.”

In that instant, the timid princess who had once waited for scraps of affection was gone. What remained was a woman who had found her strength—not through her husband’s love, but through the pain he had caused.

Inside, she knew she carried the next heirs of the throne—his heirs—but she would not allow that to bind her to a man who treated her like a political pawn. She would raise her children with dignity, even if she had to walk away from the palace to do it.

The silence that followed was heavy, filled with the crackle of the fireplace and the unspoken consequences of her declaration. But Evangeline didn’t wait for a reply. Gathering her skirts, she turned toward the door, her heart broken yet unburdened.

Her steps echoed through the marble halls as she walked away from the man who had never seen her—and toward the freedom she was finally claiming for herself.

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