Chapter 19
Chapter 19
Ignatius-
When I ha
first set out on that frosty garden path with Dorothy, I had no intention of pilling my deepest burdens in
the dark. I had merely an inkling of an idea. I recalled a mall clearing in the forest nearby that I had
discovered on one of many quiet walks hrough the slow mornings.
thought it would be perfect for someone who had undergone so much tragedy and haos over just two
days. The cool air and stillness of the clearing had always calmed ne. I hoped it would do the same for
her.
The sudden music was a perfect touch that I, unfortunately, could take no credit for. That was all thanks
to Mrs. Weatherdowne, the owner of the blue villa itself. She lived just down the road and had chosen
that specific moment to crank up the old record. player and bless us with Tchaikovsky.
Waltzing in the woods with Dorothy in my arms, I felt something inside of me – something that had lay
dead for a long time suddenly spark back to life. It was a small flame and it was a weak one. But it was
there.
Tor sensed the magnitude of the situation, the importance of the scene playing out, and graced me with
his respectful silence as we danced.
I don’t know why I broke down in the dark afterward, with Dorothy still perched on my back. It felt as if,
along with the new life that was blooming inside my chest, came a tidal wave of emotions that I had
never fully put to rest. Carrying her then, shivering in my arms, I realized that I wanted to.
I wanted to be better, to do better. Both for her and my entire future pack. I would never truly forgive
myself for what I did to Claire. Her death would weigh heavy on my chest for the rest of my life.
But the least I could do was use that grief to fuel me. To push me to be a better leader, better lover, and
better friend. No amount of atonement would ever bring her back. But Dorothy was here. She was alive
and breathing. I vowed to never again sacrifice another life for the sake of my own personal growth. I
would not make the same mistake twice.
It was this vow, this promise to myself that allowed me to keep my cool when waiting in the kitchen.
Dorothy had opened her mind to me and I could hear the conversation between her and Johan with
perfect clarity.
I wanted to rage, to lurch at him with all of my strength, and knock him to the floor. A part of me thought
him weak, the kind of weak that begged for sympathy. But I didn’t feel sympathetic. Johan had chosen
his fate when he rejected Dorothy. To go back on
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his word now, after causing so much pain, was pathetic.
Then again, I thought to myself as I cleared my head and breathed deeply, how could we have
expected anything else? Mavis had a hold over Johan before the two of us had even become friends.
When you have spent so much of your short life living around someone else, are you even your own
person anymore? Are you anyone at all without the partner you’ve molded yourself around?
I had seen the hollow space in his eyes, the empty cavity in his chest that Mavis used to occupy.
Without her. Johan was lost, listless. And I couldn’t blame him for that. Mavis had possessed him, b*dy,
mind, and soul.
And now she had abandoned her husk of a partner for someone else. Someone who wanted her
because of the intense pull of the mating call. Johan had wanted her even without that instinctual drive.
With this understanding in mind, I continued to listen to them speak, still fearing slightly for Dorothy’s
safety in the presence of a man who had lost everything. The kettle sat, long since abandoned on the
kitchen counter. The water was slowly turning cold once more.
I had settled myself.
the breakfast nook in the corner when I heard Johan’s tone change. He was pleading with Dorothy,
begging like a madman. He was all over the place, coming undone before her eyes and I could feel it. I
stood up and put my hand on the doorknob, pausing when Dorothy asked me to wait.
I wanted to trust that she could handle this. I ‘did’ trust her. It was Johan I was skeptical of at that
moment. People are capable of anything when they think they have nothing left to lose. It was only
when his voice rose that I probed Dorothy’s mind again, insisting that I intervene. Johan was shouting
at her, at the world.
His final comment had pushed too far. I men tally apologized to Dorothy for not being able to take it any
longer and kicked open the door, fully ready to knock Johan off his feet. I wasn’t prepared, however, for
the sudden appearance of Mavis at exactly the same time.
I saw her eyes scan the room, switching from Johan, to me, to Dorothy in the blink of an eye. Her
expression soured when her eyes fell on Dorothy and I thought that maybe I’d have tw
rogue werewolves on my hands by the time this was over.
Mavis was the first to speak, breaking the sudden silence that had descended upon our little
unintentional gathering.
“You ba st ard.”
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1:25 THÙ, Là làn
Her scathing words were directed at Johan, who stared at her like a deer caught in headlights. “You
came running straight back to her. I knew you wanted her. You disgust
me.”
She swiveled her head to look at Dorothy, poised like a cobra waiting to strike. “And you. You just can’t
help yourself. Picking at my scraps because you can’t get anyone else.”
Dorothy stepped away from Johan and towards me. “What are you doing here, Mavis? And who’s your
friend?”
I cast my eyes to the tall man who had entered behind Mavis. His hair was wilder than mine and
Johan’s combined, and he was looking around the room in bewilderment.
“Plato,” he said, unsure of what exactly the situation was that he’d found himself in. “I’m Mavis’s ma-”
“He’s my mate,” Mavis interrupted him. I could see that she took pleasure in how the words made
Johan wince. “As I was so kindly explaining to Johan before he bolted off my porch like a wounded
animal.”
She glared at Johan. “I knew you’d come here. Even after Ignatius has stolen your darling little Dorothy,
you still come running for your friend.”
Johan seemed frozen on the spot, his claws still sharped and ready to tear.
“Mavis,” Dorothy warned her, edging away from Johan and slipping her hand in mine. “Leave him
alone.”
Mavis continued like she hadn’t heard Dorothy, approaching Johan like a parent scolding a child, “I was
going to choose you. But you just had to run away, didn’t you? Back to Dorothy. Because all this time
you wanted her instead of me. You blew chance, Johan. This is all your fault.”
I knew she was lying. I could smell her scent all over
your
said; Mavis had already made her choice. This was her revenge, her coverup. She was
her b*dy. It was like Johan has
pinning it on Johan to case her own guilt..
bod behind her. I could smell his scent ravaged all ward-looking stranger who
Dorothy caught this too. “Get out Mavis, If you’re done with Johan you have no reason to stay any
longer.”
The stranger placed a tentative hand on Mavis’s shoulder. “Maybe we should leave…”
I could see this only riled Johan up more. It was one thing knowing that your partner had chosen
another, it was another thing to see the exchange in person.
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The stranger – Plato – could sense the tension in the air. He wasn’t oblivious to Johan’s eyes fixed on
him the source, Johan seemed to think, of all his problems.
Mavis wrenched herself away from the gentle hand and stepped close to Johan, grabbing his shirt.
“Say something. Say something, you pathetic waste of potential.”
“Enough, Mavis!” My voice boomed around the tiny living room. Dorothy started beside me and moved
her hand to grip my arm. I bared my teeth at Mavis. “I think it’s time for you two to leave.”
Plato seemed like he didn’t want any trouble. He threw an apologetic glance in my direction as he
tugged at Mavis, coaxing her away from Johan. “Mavis, love. Come on, let’s go.”
But Mavis would not go. She was angry and determined to squeeze every ounce of life out of Johan
before she left. She didn’t want him. But she wanted him completely incapacitated without her.
Johan was a statue, a stone wall. He wasn’t defending himself. This was an opportunity Mavis could
not allow herself to miss.
Suddenly, Mavis’s earlier remarks seemed to register in Plato’s mind. He kept his grip on her arm. “You
were going to choose him?”
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Mavis paused and turned to look at him and then swept her gaze back to Johan. “What? No, I just – ”
She knew she’d been caught out. To admit that she’d been lying would be to let Johan off the h ook, to
deny it would mean she’d lied to her so-called true mate. For the first time ever, I watched Mavis with
her sharp tongue and quick wit, falter.
Plato stepped back, looking at her as if he was seeing her for the first time. “Back there, you told me
that you wanted me. That you’d been waiting for me. You said you and Johan were over for good.”
“I – Plato, I just-”
“You lied.”
Plato rubbed his eyes like he was struggling to make sense of it. “You lied. Why? To get me to sleep
with you? You said you’d ended things with this guy.”
He gestured to Johan before taking a few more steps back towards the door.
I knew I should intervene. Dorothy was pric king at my mind, urging me to step in before another
altercation broke out. But I was watching the downfall of Mavis. The fall from grace that had been a
long time coming.
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I knew Dorothy, despite her need to put a stop to things, was just as curious to watch the implosion
going down before our eyes. I peeped into her mind. She was enjoying it.
Mavis was looking back and forth between her lovers like a caged animal. She needed a vice,
someone to lay the blame on. Anyone but herself. Her eyes settled on Dorothy.
“Everything was fine until you stepped into the picture,” she seethed, her shoulders. hunched forwards
like she was going to shift. “You ruined everything.”
Dorothy shook her head. “No, Mavis I don’t think I did. I shouldn’t have stopped Johan from rejecting
me. That was wrong and for that I am sorry.”
She directed those last words at Johan before continuing. “But Johan did what you asked him to Mavis.
He rejected me for you. You are the one who failed him. You were unfaithful. This is on you.”
I watched the hackles rise on Mavis’s shoulders as her face contorted into a vicious snarl. “Lana was
right. Right from the beginning. I should have just let them kill you when they had the chance.”
Without realizing it, Mavis had revealed her true nature to her mate, and Plato, who had been so
passive until then, was appalled.
“Who are you?” he asked her, but from the tone of his voice, he already had his answer. He saw the
snare trap he had begun to enter and chose to escape before it was too late. Before he ended up just
like Johan.
“I don’t think I want this, Mavis.”
She turned to him, still in the limbo between forms – neither wolf nor girl.
“What did
you say?”
I put my arms around Dorothy at the deep, ferocious tone of Mavis’s scratchy voice. Plato took another
step back. He seemed nervous and out of his depth but his voice was firm. “I don’t want this, Mavis. I
don’t want you.”
He looked me dead in the eye and a glimmer of understanding and mutual respect passed between us.
“I’m sorry,” he said directly to me and then looked at Johan. “I’m so sorry.”
He understood Johan’s pain, his anger. His apology ran deeper than just making up for what he’d done
with Mavis. He was apologizing for the wreckage that his true mate had
left in her wake.
With that, he cast one last look of remorse at Mavis and left.
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Mavis followed after him without another word to any of us. She was clearly shaken at Plato’s sudden
change of heart. I don’t think it had ever occurred to her that she could find herself at the receiving end
of a devastating rejection.
She left the door wide open behind her and the cold winter air chilled us all. Johan seemed to awake
from his hypnosis and took one lumbering step forward and then another.
“Mavis…” I had never heard his voice so small, so broken. “Mavis, come back.”
I left Dorothy’s side and put a hand to his chest. “She’s gone, Johan. You have to let her go. I think
“The sigh that escaped me was one of remorse and sympathy for my old friend. “I think this is for the
best.”
Johan looked past me, towards Dorothy.
“There’s nothing left. I have nothing.”
He pushed past me and walked out of the door. His final words, spoken over his shoulder made me
understand that this may be the last time I would ever see my dear friend. It made me realize that
Johan was no longer my friend at all.
“You won.”
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-Ignatius-
Both Dorothy and I stood motionless, r