Chapter 355: Chapter 355 Shadow Takes Form
Marcus’s POV
They pushed too far this time.
And left evidence behind.
In the interrogation room, I face Remy across a metal table while Zora positions herself by the entrance and Kian observes from the corner.
"You overstepped," I state flatly.
His head dips in acknowledgment.
"Under whose orders."
The silence that follows carries weight.
"You lack the skills for independent reconnaissance," I press, keeping my tone controlled. "Your movements suggest someone fed you detailed instructions."
His muscles tense.
"They claimed you were breaking apart," he suddenly admits. "They insisted the alliance was tearing you down."
The confession drops into the room like a stone.
"They convinced you of this," I respond.
Another nod, his breathing irregular.
"They promised that enough pressure would make you turn against each other."
Heavy quiet settles between us.
Trust breaks before anything else.
There lies the truth.
External manipulation confirmed.
"Identify them," Kian demands from his corner.
Remy shakes his head rapidly.
"The Alpha remains unknown to me," he explains. "I only met the Beta."
"Give me the name."
He hesitates before answering.
"Vane."
The name strikes no immediate recognition, but Zora’s posture shifts.
"Former Ridge line enforcer," she explains quietly. "Vanished two winters back."
Not a natural rogue.
Systematic.
"Their location," I continue questioning Remy.
He swallows hard.
"Northwest valley territory. Mobile camp. They relocate every few days."
Strategic.
Fluid.
Watching.
The bond between Kian and me pulses with sharp awareness.
"They instructed you to probe boundaries and retreat," I conclude.
"Correct."
"Tonight’s mission."
"They demanded escalation to trigger visible breakdown."
They anticipated either pursuit or obvious internal collapse.
Instead, they abandoned him.
Or he disappointed them.
"Why did they leave you behind," I ask with deliberate gentleness.
His gaze drops to the table.
"I moved too slowly."
No rescue mission attempted.
Expendable.
The room grows thick with tension.
I rise from my chair gradually.
"They are accelerating their timeline," I inform Kian.
"Agreed."
"They shifted from simple testing to psychological warfare through prisoner manipulation."
"And miscalculated our response," he adds.
Possibly.
Or this represents another strategic layer.
I face Remy again.
"You will remain here under guard," I announce clearly. "No harm will come to you."
Surprise flickers across his features.
"They warned us you executed captured rogues," he admits.
I maintain steady eye contact.
"They fed you numerous lies."
That defines their approach.
Plant suspicion.
Strengthen it through fabricated stories.
When we exit the holding area, the hallway feels oppressive.
"They anticipated brutal treatment," Zora observes quietly.
"Precisely."
"If we had complied."
"Validation."
The bond resonates with shared understanding.
We enter the main hall where senior leadership has already assembled, news traveling swiftly.
"He verified organized command structure," I announce to the group. "Leader named Vane. Northwest valley base."
Concerned murmurs ripple through the gathering.
"That exceeds our direct territorial boundaries," one captain notes.
"True."
"They positioned themselves beyond official claim territory," Kian explains.
Providing tactical flexibility.
"They assume we are vulnerable," Zora states.
"They accept planted fiction," I clarify.
Northwood Ridge’s Alpha advances.
"We cannot permit that fiction to take root," he declares.
"Agreed," I respond. "But reckless action serves no purpose."
If they desire us charging into valley terrain unprepared, that creates another weakness.
"We strengthen border rotations," I continue. "Publicly, normal training proceeds."
"Dual approach," Kian confirms.
Exactly.
We project unified strength while privately developing countermeasures.
As the meeting breaks into operational assignments, I draw Northwood Ridge’s Alpha aside.
"You now possess proof that your presence is being weaponized," I say quietly.
"Yes."
"Does this alter your stance."
He meets my gaze directly.
"No."
The response rings with conviction.
"They miscalculated several factors," he adds.
Perhaps they did.
Or perhaps calculations continue.
Later that evening, as the packhouse settles under enhanced security protocols, I return to the window overlooking the forest where northwest valley lies hidden beyond the visible treeline.
Vane.
Former enforcer.
Disciplined.
Tactical.
Bold enough to challenge coordinated packs.
"They wanted obvious breakdown," Kian says from behind me.
"They received captured intelligence instead," I reply.
The bond hums with aligned purpose.
But this exceeds mere border harassment now.
This has identity.
A name.
A base.
"They cannot maintain mobility indefinitely," I murmur.
"No."
Because identification limits options.
The next action will not involve subtle boundary testing.
It will demand direct confrontation.
And this time, perception alone will not suffice.
Territory will be at stake.
I place my palm against the cool window, feeling the barrier between us and the wilderness beyond.
"They expected trust to crumble first," I say softly.
"They underestimated our foundation," he responds.
True.
But solid foundations must take action when threatened.
Soon, we will choose between maintaining defensive positions or advancing into the valley to control the next phase ourselves.
The bond strengthens, not from uncertainty but from preparation.
The shadow now has substance.
And everything shifts because of it.
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