Chapter 41 A Mother's War
POV: Mina (Age 18 - The Vault)
I don't stop reading.
Can't stop. My mother's words pull me forward through the journal, through pages that detail more than just her pregnancy and death. They detail everything. The history she learned. The patterns she recognized. The war she fought alone.
The Trio is silent behind me, giving me space but present through the bond. I feel their wolves settled now, accepting Oracle ground because mate is here. I feel their human minds processing what we've already discovered. I feel all of it but I don't acknowledge it because the journal demands my full attention.
My mother's earlier entries are different from the final desperate ones. These are from years before she was pregnant. From when she was young and newly awakened to her Oracle power. From when she still believed diplomacy could work.
"There have been twelve Oracles in the past three centuries," she writes. "I have read their journals, studied their lives, traced their deaths. Every single one followed the same pattern."
I turn the page, my heart already knowing what's coming but needing to see it anyway.
"They awakened to their power. The Council approached with promises of cooperation. The Oracle worked with them, advised them, used prophecy to guide pack politics toward balance. And then, when the Oracle's visions showed truths the Council didn't want to hear, when prophecy threatened their power..."
The next word is written in different ink. Darker. Pressed harder into the page.
"Execution."
Through the bond I feel the Trio's attention sharpen. Feel them reading over my shoulder, their wolves still but their human minds processing.
My mother continues. "They isolate the Oracle first. Separate her from potential allies. Frame it as protection. Then they use her. Extract prophecy after prophecy, hoarding knowledge while limiting the Oracle's ability to act on her own visions. Finally, when she becomes more liability than asset, they eliminate her and erase her from history."
Twelve Oracles. Twelve times the same pattern. Twelve deaths that could have been prevented if anyone had learned from the previous eleven.
"I will not follow the pattern," my mother writes, and I hear her voice in the words. Determined. Fierce. Certain. "I will not let them use me and then discard me. I will not be the thirteenth Oracle in the cycle."
The next several pages detail her attempts at diplomacy. Meetings with Council members. Offers of cooperation balanced with firm boundaries. Prophecies shared selectively. Everything she tried to change the pattern from the inside.
And every single attempt ending in betrayal.
I read about a Council member named Marcus who seemed sympathetic, who promised to be her ally, who then reported everything she said directly to those hunting her. About a pack Alpha who asked for prophecy to help his territory, who then used that prophecy to eliminate rivals while claiming Oracle authority. About a dozen small betrayals that built toward the final hunt that killed her.
"Diplomacy failed," she writes. "I tried. The Moon Goddess knows I tried. But you cannot negotiate with people whose power requires your silence. You cannot compromise with those who profit from your death."
The words sit heavy in my chest. My mother learned what I'm learning now. That some systems can't be reformed. That some power structures require destruction rather than adjustment.
"So I change strategies," the next entry reads. "I stop trying to work with them. I prepare for war instead."
War. My mother's war. The one she fought knowing she'd die before seeing results. The one she left to Rafe and me.
The entries that follow detail her preparations. The sealing spell designed not to stop our destiny but to delay it. The river escape planned to the smallest detail. The prophecies she recorded and hid. The allies she carefully cultivated. The Keystone's hiding place.
"I seal my children not because I don't believe in prophecy," she writes. "I seal them because prophecy requires them to survive. The Council cannot be allowed to find them before they're ready. Eighteen years. That's how long the seal will hold. Eighteen years for them to grow, to find each other, to prepare."
Eighteen years. The exact amount of time Rafe and I had. The exact duration of the seal. My mother calculated it all knowing she wouldn't be there to see it through.
I turn the page and find something that makes my breath catch.
Records. Financial records. Correspondence between Council members and the corporations that funded Oracle hunts. Names. Dates. Transaction amounts.
And at the top of the list, three family names I recognize immediately.
Blackwood. Steele. Sterling.
Through the bond I feel the Trio's shock. Feel their wolves confused by their human minds' sudden spike of distress. Feel all three of them trying to process what they're seeing.
"Blackwood Corporation," I read aloud, my voice steady despite everything. "Fifty thousand in funding to Council forces. Weapons procurement. Hunter training. Dated eighteen years ago."
The same year my mother died.
I look at Asher. At the silver-grey Alpha whose family's corporate empire funded the hunt that killed my mother.
Through the bond I feel his devastation. Feel his shields, already shattered from the mate bond, crumbling further under this. Feel him trying to find framework that makes this okay and failing completely.
"I didn't know," he says quietly. "My father never—I didn't know."
"Keep reading," Jax says, his voice tight.
I turn the page and find the next entry.
"Defense Minister Steele," I read. "Signed execution authorization for Oracle Elara. Provided military support for the hunt. Dated six months before my birth."
Logan's father. The Defense Minister who raised him. Who trained him. Who taught him everything he knows about pack hierarchy and military structure and dominance.
Who signed the order that killed my mother.
Through the bond I feel Logan's world fracturing. Feel the betrayal. Feel his wolf howling at the wrongness of pack family doing this. Feel his human mind trying desperately to reconcile the father he knows with the man who murdered innocents.
"My father wouldn't—" Logan starts, then stops. Because the evidence is right there in my mother's careful documentation. "He told me Oracles were dangerous. That they threatened pack stability. That eliminating them was necessary for—"
"For maintaining his power," I finish. "For keeping the current structure intact. For ensuring people like him stayed in control while people like my mother died."
Logan doesn't respond. Can't respond. Through the bond I feel him drowning in realization.
I keep reading because there's one more name on the list and I need to see it.
"Sterling family," the final entry reads. "Council enforcement. Silenced witnesses. Eliminated Oracle sympathizers. Maintained information blackout. Dated throughout the hunt's duration."
Jax's family. My supposed family. The Sterlings who raised the real Rafe and never knew his sister existed. Who helped the Council erase my bloodline from history while hosting formal dinners and maintaining their noble reputation.
Through the bond I feel Jax's stillness. Feel his mind processing this with that analytical precision he applies to everything. But underneath the analysis: horror. Betrayal. Recognition that everything he was raised to value was built on genocide.
"My uncle," Jax says quietly. "Mordath. He was Council liaison during that period. If anyone in my family was involved in enforcement, it was him."
"Your uncle who ordered the hit on Rafe," I add. Because that connection needs to be made. "Your uncle who wanted the Sterling heir dead so he could take control."
Through the bond I feel Jax's recognition. Feel him seeing the pattern. Feel him understanding that the corruption goes deeper than he'd allowed himself to see.
All three of them are silent for a long moment. Processing. Dealing with the reality that their families weren't just passive participants in Council corruption. They actively funded, authorized, and enforced Oracle genocide.
My mother's words on the next page feel almost prescient.
"The three guardians will come from families steeped in my blood. This is not accident. This is prophecy's symmetry. Those whose families killed Oracles will be bound to protect one. Those who benefited from our deaths will die for our survival. Balance requires this. The Moon Goddess demands this."
I close the journal and look at them. At three Alphas whose families helped kill mine. Who are now bound to me by magic their families tried to eliminate.
Prophecy's symmetry. My mother saw it. Planned for it maybe. Or just recognized that balance requires this kind of inversion.
The Trio looks back at me with expressions I've never seen on them. Devastated. Guilty. Trapped by more than just the mate bond now. Trapped by history. By their families' choices. By prophecy that saw them coming before they were born.
I pick up the journal again and flip to a page near the end. One I noticed earlier but didn't fully process.
A list. Names and details. Future events my mother saw in prophecy.
Some have already happened. The twins separated and found. The sealing spell breaking. The mate bond forming.
Others are still ahead. The Council's fall. The restoration of balance. The choice that determines everything.
And at the very bottom, in my mother's handwriting: "Some knowledge is too dangerous to survive. Some prophecies must be destroyed rather than fulfilled. I trust my children to know which is which."
I stare at that final line for a long moment. Then I tear the page from the journal.
Through the bond I feel the Trio's immediate alarm. Feel them trying to understand what I'm doing.
I hold the page over one of the Oracle flames lighting the vault. The silver fire that responds to Oracle blood and Oracle will.
"What are you doing?" Jax asks.
"Choosing," I tell him. "My mother said some prophecies must be destroyed rather than fulfilled. She trusted me to know which."
"You don't even know what's on that page," Asher points out.
"Exactly." I let the flame catch the corner of the parchment. "Some futures shouldn't be predetermined. Some knowledge is too dangerous. My mother understood that."
The page burns quickly, silver flame consuming my mother's prophecy, the words turning to ash before any of us can read what she saw. What future she documented. What events she predicted that she decided her children shouldn't know about.
Through the bond I feel their complicated reactions. Jax's analytical mind wanting to know what was destroyed. Logan's wolf unconcerned with future prophecy, only present threats. Asher's calculating nature frustrated by lost information.
I watch the last of the page turn to ash and feel something settle in my chest.
My mother fought a war. Lost it. Died for it. But left weapons for Rafe and me to finish what she started.
The journal. The records. The evidence of Council corruption. The prophecy of three guardians whose families killed Oracles but who would die protecting one.
And the choice to determine which prophecies should be fulfilled and which should be destroyed.
I close the journal and look at the Trio.
"Your families helped kill mine," I say quietly. "That's not your fault. You didn't choose that. But you're here now. Bound to me. Part of the prophecy my mother died to set in motion. So you have a choice."
Through the bond I feel them waiting.
"You can hate being here," I continue. "Can hate me. Can hate the bond and the prophecy and everything that's trapped you. But you're still here. Still bound. Still part of this."
I hold up the journal.
"Or you can choose to fight. Not because the bond forces you. Not because prophecy said you would. But because you recognize the same patterns I do. Because you see what your families participated in and decide it needs to end."
Jax speaks first. "What exactly are you asking?"
"I'm asking if you're with me," I tell him honestly. "Not as mates. Not as guardians. As allies. As wolves who recognize that the current system is rotten and requires destruction."
"You're asking us to go to war," Logan says. Not a question. A statement.
"I'm asking you to finish what my mother started," I correct. "She fought alone. Died alone. I'm not doing that. So I'm asking: are you with me? Actually with me? Or are you just here because the bond forces you to be?"
The silence stretches.
Through the bond I feel them processing. Feel the magnitude of what I'm asking. Feel them weighing their families' legacies against the evidence in this vault. Feel them deciding.
"I'm in," Asher says finally. "My family funded this. That makes it partially my responsibility to end it."
"My father signed the orders," Logan adds, his voice rough. "I can't undo that. But I can make sure it doesn't happen again."
Jax is silent longer. Processing. Calculating. Seeing every angle the way he always does.
Then he nods once. "We're with you."
Through the bond I feel the truth of it. Feel their commitment. Feel their wolves settling into purpose that goes beyond mate bond imperative.
They're still here because of the bond. But they're fighting because they chose to.
That's enough. For now, it's enough.