Caroline inhaled slowly, deliberately, forcing the chaos inside her into silence. She straightened, her expression smoothing into something calm too calm.
Detached.
Cold.
“So,” she said, her voice eerily steady, “what is it you want from me, Alpha?”
The shift in her tone sent a ripple of unease through the room. This wasn't Caroline they knew the girl who laughed easily, who carried light wherever she went. So was easily shamed and invisible.
That girl was gone.
Magnus cleared his throat, visibly unsettled, though he tried to mask it with authority.
“Klaus and Bonnie will have their mating ceremony next month,” he announced. “The pack already knows you are his fated mate. Your presence is necessary. You must attend and show your support. The unity of the pack depends on it.”
For a moment, Caroline said nothing.
Then a faint, humorless smile touched her lips.
“You want me to stand there,” she said softly, though her voice carried a sharp edge, “watch my mate bind himself to my sister and pretend I’m happy about it?”
“That’s not what I—”
“It doesn’t matter,” she cut in, her tone suddenly firm, unyielding. “You’ve already decided. All of you.”
A bitter laugh escaped her, hollow and devoid of warmth.
“I don’t matter here anyway.”
“Actually you don’t,” Bonnie said
“I see…” Caroline’s eyes flickered with something dark, something broken. “Because from where I’m standing, it feels very true.”
The distance between them felt wider than any ocean.
“I need time,” Caroline said, her voice final, leaving no room for argument. “And I need it away from all of you.”
Without waiting for a response, she turned and walked toward the door.
Voices followed her calling her name, pleading, apologizing but they blurred into meaningless noise. None of it reached her. None of it mattered.
She stepped out and shut the door behind her with a quiet but decisive force.
And when their voices tried to chase her further when they reached for her through the mind-link she had once cherished
Caroline severed it.
One by one.
Until there was nothing left.
No voices.
No warmth.
No connection.
For the first time in her life…
Caroline was completely, utterly alone.
Caroline ran as though the air itself had turned against her, thick and suffocating, as though the very walls of her life were closing in, determined to crush her.
She didn’t care where her feet led her, didn’t register the sharp branches that clawed at her skin or the uneven ground beneath her.
All she knew all she needed was distance. Distance from their voices, from their hollow explanations, from the betrayal that had torn her world apart in a single, merciless moment.
Her lungs screamed in protest, her breath coming in ragged, uneven bursts, her heart pounding so violently it felt as though it might shatter her ribs.
Still, she didn’t slow. She couldn’t. Not until the distant, familiar roar of cascading water reached her ears.
Her sanctuary.
The waterfall loomed ahead, wild and unyielding near the edge of the territory, its relentless rush swallowing every other sound.
It had always been her refuge the one place untouched by expectations, untouched by judgment. No one came here. No one followed. No one demanded anything of her.
And right now, that was exactly what she needed.
Her steps faltered as she reached it, her strength finally abandoning her. Her knees buckled, and she collapsed onto the damp earth, the coolness of it seeping into her skin. Her fingers clawed into the soil as though she could anchor herself to anything while her entire body trembled uncontrollably.
Then it came.
A scream tore from her throat raw, jagged, filled with a pain so deep it felt as though it would split her open. It echoed against the rocks, swallowed and carried by the thunder of the falls.
She screamed again, louder this time, until her voice cracked under the strain, until even the act of making sound felt like it might destroy her completely.
And then the tears came.
The ones she had fought so hard to hold back in that suffocating room now spilled freely, uncontrollably, streaming down her face in an endless cascade that mirrored the waterfall before her.
The rushing water became her only witness, its ceaseless motion reflecting the unrelenting ache tearing through her chest.
She cried for everything.
For her family the very people who had once been her foundation. Her father, who had always stood like an unshakable shield, promised her safety. Her mother, whose embrace had once been her greatest comfort. Her sister, Bonnie...
Or at least, she had been.
That bond was gone now cut clean, without hesitation, without mercy.
In its place, there was nothing but cold duty, quiet acceptance, and the crushing realization that they had chosen the pack over her.
Klaus.
Her mate.
The one person who was meant to be hers in every sense of the word. The one chosen for her by fate itself, by the Goddess who was supposed to guide and protect their kind.
He had been her forever her partner, her equal, the other half of her soul.
Or so she had believed.
She mourned the future she had once imagined so vividly. The quiet moments. The shared laughter. The warmth of belonging. The life they were supposed to build together the family they were meant to have.
All of it is gone.
Snatched away before it had the chance to truly exist.
The following morning, as dawn unfurled its pale gold light across the pack lands, Caroline made her way back toward the pack house.
Each step felt unnaturally heavy, as though the ground itself resisted her return as though the very land knew she was walking back into the arms of those who had shattered her.
The path that had once felt like home now felt foreign, hostile, wrong.
But her mind?
Her mind was no longer clouded by emotion.
It was steady. Decided.
She had made her choice.