Chapter 114
Chapter 114
Telling the boys that Ophelia was gone to the life beyond and not with them anymore was difficult. They
wanted to know why she left, even though she had promised she wouldn’t leave. Fiona told them she
didn’t leave for another community; rather, she was killed by the bad man who attacked them two days
ago.
June asked why she didn’t bring her back, and she had to tell them that though she could heal, she
couldn’t raise the dead. Ophelia wasn’t dead when she came home, but she died while she was
protecting her sons, but they didn’t need to know that. She told thèm instead that their nanny was in a Content © NôvelDrama.Org.
better place and that they would get to see her one day.
Ophelia wasn’t the only casualty of that day’s attack; they also found the bodies of the three beta
guards Julian had placed on her. Uryi had killed them before going inside to attack Ophelia. Fiona
would have sensed it and probably helped, but she had given all her abilities except her healing to
Julian and was still getting it back. There was little she could do.
They held rites of passage of the guards yesterday, and Julian was in attendance after placing Kenneth
to watch over her and the boys.
“Is that why we are wearing black?” Jashin asked.
“It is proper to wear black during the rite of passage.” Julian answered while he finished knotting their
ties.
He had taken over the responsibility of the house and also left the tower after his return from Pillot.
They were his first priority.
“Is today the day we will go and see Ophelia?” Jashin asked, already excited.
He shook his head. “No, but today is the day we will say our farewells to her. We will still see her
someday when we are really old.”
“Like a hundred years?”
He nodded. “Yes, maybe a hundred to two hundred years to come if we are lucky, but years to come if
we are lucky, but we will see her someday.”
They arrived at the passage at Langfield, where Ophelia was born, and to Fiona’s surprise, she saw so
many in attendance. Some of those present were the nine alphas whom Julian had returned to their
former state of mind. They all stood around, paying their last respects to Ophelia.
When they and the boys arrived, they received warm reverence from them, and they followed Julian’s
lead to pay their last respect to her.
After Julian spoke, it was Fiona’s turn. She didn’t want to speak; she didn’t think goodbye would be so
soon, but these things had to be said.
She moved to the spot where Ophelia’s body lay, and her eyes immediately blurred up. “You were the
one thing that felt like a mother and home to me. You never made me feel like an outsider, even though
you could have.”
Her lips trembled, and her eyes grew glassy as she spoke. “When you found out I was pregnant, you
treated me with much more understanding and compassion than my parents did. Coming back into my
life was a breath of fresh air, and, oh, how excited I was to see you were alive. Even when you were
about to die, your focus remained on June and Jashin. You wanted them safe and protected.”
Tears rolled down her face, and she wiped them off. “Your loss comes harder to me than you will ever
know. My sons will no longer hear your old wives’ tales, and you won’t be here when they finally find
their true mates. A part of me wishes you never came back into my life, but I am glad for the times you
spent with us and the memories we made. I will not forget you, Ophelia, and I will make sure the boys
know your name. Goodbye, for now, meet again.”,
until w
She returned to stand beside Julian, and he took her hand into his for a gentle squeeze.
Alpha Cooper came to meet them as they set out to leave, and the eight other subjected alphas
stepped up towards him. “My king and Luna, I would like to extend my condolences to you and your
family in this hard time. I and the alphas behind me want you to know we owe the both of you the return
of our minds. You will never know the length of his hold on us or how much it ate us up from the inside.
The only thing that stayed on our minds was doing the bidding of the dark masters, and now we are
freer than ever, and we owe it to you. Whatever you will need in the coming war, we will be here to
make it happen. We will remain loyal to your commands, now and forever.” He said, and they all bowed
their heads to them in respect.
Following the burial, he also withdrew them from school and kept them home, where he would always
have eyes on them.
The week that followed, they dedicated themselves to appointing new elders to the counsel of truth. It
had been a month since their gruesome deaths, and this was the time to do it.
Julian, as always, had to take the lead in this. He needed all the information he could
get to carry this out. The death of all the elders of the counsel of truth had never happened before.
They had been among the oldest in the werewolf world, and even when there was a loss, the elders
knew how to replace their own.
Now that they were all gone, that responsibility fell on him.
Julian devoted himself to more reading, and Fiona helped out in the best way she
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could.
Working side by side with him kept her mind from wandering or thinking too much about what was
ahead. Thinking about anything would not save them from what was coming.
The report of the to-be elected elders came up to them, and they read through it. The Council of Truth
came with a lot of responsibilities. They had to be men of integrity and virtue, men who would uphold
the truth above everything and everyone else, including the Lycan king. Since they would also check
and balance the Lycan king’s doings and affairs, this needed to be so. They had to be honest, strong-
willed, and loving, and they had to be able to balance all these qualities. They also had to love their
Luna and children because how could they check and call to question the doings of the king if they
couldn’t check their families? Last, they had to have had studies under the former elders and
knowledge of the council of truth, how it operated, and how the balance of power flowed.
Julian and Fiona dedicated their attention to finding them, and after a week of thorough research, they
found the eight best suited for this responsibility.
“What do you think of our selections?” Julian asked her, as if she wasn’t involved in the decision-
making. “Any last suggestions?”
Her attention moved from the mirror, where she stood staring at her dress, over to him. “I have none,
do you?”
He looked conflicted, unsure, and every other synonym close to it. “I do; how do I trust that I have
made the right decision?”
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She walked over to him and placed her hands on his shoulders for reassurance. “We don’t, but we
know the men we have chosen to wield this power, and we know their record and what their families
report says about them. We can trust all that and not ourselves.” She answered.
“I love you. I don’t know if I have told you that today, but I do.” He rambled off. “Believe me.”
She smiled and said, “I do. I love you too.”