Chapter 209: Only Roman Was Left
Defy The Alpha(s)
For a moment, raw hurt flashed in Romanâs eyes as he asked her, "Are you that ashamed of me?"
Elsie stiffened. The question caught her off guard, as if she hadnât realized the full extent of her words until now. Perhaps she had pushed too far. And that was warning enough for her to be careful.
Roman was the only one left. Out of all the Cardinal Alphas, he was the one who had never truly turned against her. The one who still followed her lead, respected her, and defended her. If she lost him too, sheâd have nothing.
So, with perfectly measured grace, she softened.
"Of course not, Roman," Elsie said, her voice dipping into something gentler. "Iâm only concerned about you making a fool of yourself in front of my parents. My people."
She touched his face, her fingers light, coaxing him. But the doubt in Romanâs eyes didnât fade.
So she tried again.
"Youâve known me for years."Her voice dropped into something more intimate, weaving through the space between them. "I was the one who took care of you during your..." She hesitated, choosing her words carefully, "unexpected shifts."
Her grip on his face tightened slightly as she pushed on. "All those times your father wouldâ"
But she didnât get to finish because Romanâs sharp glare cut her off immediately, his eyes flashing a silent but absolute warning.
Elsie swallowed hard. Fine. She wouldnât mention it.
Instead, she exhaled slowly, lowering her gaze as she murmured, "Iâm sorry. I shouldnât have said those things."
Then, she leaned closer, her forehead pressing lightly against his, her breath warm against his skin.
"Youâre the only one I have left." Her voice wavered, tinged with something raw and desperate. "Donât leave me like the others."
Roman closed his eyes for a brief second. The vulnerability in her words wrapped around him like a chain, pulling him in despite himself. She needed him. And just like that, he made up his mind.
"Donât worry," he promised, his voice filled with quiet devotion. "Iâm not like the others. Iâm not leaving your side."
No matter how tempting Violet Purple might be. Roman didnât say the last part out loud, but he knew it. Violet was nothing but trouble and distraction, he wouldnât fall into her trap.
Then, as he stared into Elsieâs piercing blue eyes, and something in him shifted.
Roman couldnât help himself. Slowly, he leaned in. His fingers moved up, brushing against her jaw with an almost reverent touch, his breath mingling with hers. He was close, so close to kissing her only for Elsie to turn away at the last minute. Romanâs lips landed on her cheek.
His jaw locked.
"Remember the rules," she reminded him smoothly, her voice cool and detached, as if he hadnât just been a breath away from kissing her.
Roman pulled back slowly, his face twisting into something bitter.
"Yes. The fucking rules."
Alpha King Elijah had made his decree clear. The Cardinal Alphas could fight for Elsie. They could court her, compete for her, claim her. But there would be no kissing. No sex. No physical intimacy of any kind until one of them won the Alpha King title and made her his mate.
She was to remain untouched. A temptation, a prize. A queen waiting for her king.
And she had been.
Until Violet Purple showed up.
Violet, the one with no rank, no standing, no rightful place among them, had stolen what should have belonged to Elsie. She had captured the attention of the alphas. Attention that wasnât hers to take.
At once, Elsie drew back, the vulnerability in her eyes vanishing as though it had never existed. Her expression hardened, and she turned the conversation back to Violet.
"We need to find a way to break Violet once and for all," she declared, voice cool with determination. "The girl is too stubborn for her own good, and we canât have her stirring up a revolt. Imagine how itâd look if the humans decided they no longer want to ally with us wolves. Thereâd be no one to keep them in line."
"Youâre right," Roman agreed. "Sheâs too stubborn for her own good." He said it with a layered tone, one that Elsie didnât pick up on.
"Violet and her roommates are rogues," Elsie continued, "condemned, ours to do with as we please."
"Sheâs human, though," Roman pointed out softly, only for Elsie to glare at him so fiercely he lifted his hands in surrender.
"Iâm only saying, letâs not take it too far. Theyâre human, after all, and if something unfortunate happened, itâd be terrible publicity for Lunaris Academy, especially if people found out the details."
Elsieâs lips twisted in discontent. "Then weâll go easy on them," she said, though her voice hinted at a very different plan.
"Hmmm, I guess," Roman echoed, lacking any real enthusiasm.
Elsie ignored his disinterest and pressed on. "We still canât break Violet as long as Asher keeps getting in the way. Heâs always done whatever he pleases, and maybe you couldâve talked sense into him if the two of you werenât at each otherâs throats." She said it as though the fallout between Asher and Roman wasnât entirely to her advantage.
The light in Romanâs eyes died. He and Asher had once been inseparable, but then Violet came along and it goes down the drain. Despite the pang in his chest, he shoved the feelings down.
Elsie continued, "I went to find Asher, to talk some sense into him. He canât just throw away years of tradition for that whore. And guess what?"
"What is it?"
"Heâs not on campus."
"What?" Romanâs head snapped up. "Where did he go?"
"Jeremiah wouldnât tell me." Elsieâs eyes narrowed in annoyance. "Actually, he almost bit my head off, claiming I was responsible for what happened at the dining hall. Said Iâd better control my girls, and if anything else happens to Violet, Iâll answer for it." She gave Roman an exasperated look. "So whatâs the point of branding them rogues if we canât treat them like rogues?"
But Romanâs mind was elsewhere, turning over Asherâs sudden absence. Back in the day, Asher wouldâve confided in him. Now, heâd vanished without a word. Roman could only guess it had something to do with Violet; maybe Asher knew something about her the rest of them didnât. Roman was all too familiar with how Asherâs head worked.
"Are you even listening to me?" Elsie demanded, snapping him back to the present.
"Of course, Elsie," he said, rising to his feet. "Youâre the queen of this academy, and no matter what cheap moves Violet tries to pull, she canât dethrone you." He paused. "Now, if youâll excuse me."
He left before Elsie could say another word.