Chapter 54 Doubts and Determination
POV: Mina (Age 18 - Border Village, Night)
I sit alone by the fire that night.
The Trio gives me space without being asked. It's the first time they've done that. The first time their wolves have allowed distance when I'm clearly processing something heavy.
Through the bond I feel them positioned around the camp. Not far. Never far anymore because the bond won't tolerate real distance. But not crowding either. Just there. Available if needed. Quiet if not.
The letter from my mother sits unopened in my hands. I've been holding it for hours. Turning it over. Feeling the weight of paper that's older than my conscious memories. Running my fingers over the seal without breaking it.
I'm not ready to read it. Don't know if I'll ever be ready.
But what the elderly woman said sits heavier than the unread letter.
Elara didn't want to be the Oracle. She wanted to be a mother. She died trying to keep her children away from the very role I'm now racing toward.
Rafe wanted me to complete the prophecy. Died asking me to finish what we started. His last words were instructions to take his place, find the Keystone, restore what was broken.
Two people I loved. Two completely opposite wishes for my future. And I'm caught between them, torn by obligations to the dead that contradict each other.
Through the bond I feel the Trio sensing the war inside me. Feel them recognizing that I'm struggling with something too complex for anger or determination to solve. Feel them hesitating, uncertain whether to approach or maintain distance.
Then I feel them decide. Feel them moving carefully. Approaching like you approach something fragile that might shatter if you're not gentle.
They sit nearby. Not close enough to crowd. Far enough that I have space. But near enough that their presence is felt.
No one speaks immediately. They just sit with me in the silence and the firelight and let me process without demanding anything.
It's Jax who finally breaks the quiet. His voice is careful. Measured.
"What do you actually want?" he asks. "Not Rafe's mission. Not your mother's wish. You. What does Mina want?"
The question hits somewhere I've been avoiding looking. Because the truth is I don't know. Haven't known for a long time. Maybe never knew.
"I don't know anymore," I admit. The words feel like failure. Like admitting I've been moving forward on autopilot without actually deciding anything. "I came here for revenge. I wanted the Council to pay for what they did to my mother. To Rafe. To every Oracle they've hunted. But now I don't even know what that means. What does revenge actually accomplish?"
Through the bond I feel them processing. Feel Logan's wolf confused by the idea of revenge not being straightforward. Feel Asher's calculating mind trying to find framework for purpose that's dissolving. Feel Jax's tactical assessment adjusting to accommodate a mission without clear objective.
"Then why keep going?" Logan asks. His voice is rougher than usual. "If you don't know what you want. If revenge doesn't mean anything. Why not stop? Why not just... exist somewhere safe?"
The question should be simple. Should have an easy answer.
It doesn't.
"Because if I stop, they died for nothing," I say finally. The words come slow. Careful. Like I'm discovering them as I speak. "My mother died protecting me from the Council. Rafe died trying to complete a mission to stop them. If I walk away now, if I choose safety over finishing it, then what was the point? The Council is still hunting. Someone else becomes the next victim. Some other Oracle family gets destroyed. The cycle just continues."
I look at the fire. At flames that don't care about prophecy or revenge or any of the complicated human things we're carrying.
"I keep going because stopping means their deaths were meaningless," I continue. "Because someone has to break the cycle. Because if not me, then who? If not now, then when?"
The words hang in the night air. Not angry anymore. Not driven by rage. Just tired and honest and carrying weight that's been accumulating for months.
Asher speaks next. His voice is quiet. Almost gentle.
"Then we finish it," he says. "Not because of prophecy. Not because the bond forces us. Not because your mother or Rafe or anyone else decided this for us. We finish it because we choose to. Because you're right. Someone has to break the cycle. And we're already here. Already bound to this. Already carrying it."
Through the bond I feel the truth of his words. Feel all three of them recognizing that they're in this now whether they planned to be or not. That the blood-debt and the mate bond and the weeks of traveling together have made this their mission too.
Feel them choosing it. Consciously. Not just accepting what prophecy demanded but actively deciding to see it through.
I look at them. Really look. Not at the wolves who destroyed me. Not at the guardians prophecy forced on me. Just at three people who've been scraped raw by my grief and are still here. Still offering to carry it. Still choosing to fight alongside me even though the mission is dissolving into something without clear shape.
Logan meets my eyes. His blue gaze is steady. Serious. None of the aggressive dominance he used to wear like armor. Just certainty.
"We've already hurt you enough," he says quietly. "We can't undo that. Can't make it not have happened. But we can make sure it meant something. Can make sure the pain we caused leads somewhere other than just more pain."
Through the bond I feel what he's not saying. That helping me complete this mission is the only form of atonement they can actually offer. That making my suffering mean something is better than making it meaningless.
Jax speaks last. His voice carrying that careful control that I've learned means he's thought about something extensively.
"You don't have to decide tonight what you want," he says. "Don't have to know if it's revenge or justice or prevention or something else entirely. You just have to decide if you're moving forward or stopping here. Everything else can be figured out along the way."
Through the bond I feel him offering simplicity where there is none. Feel him recognizing that I'm drowning in contradictory obligations and uncertain motivations. Feel him trying to give me a framework that allows forward movement without requiring complete clarity.
I look at all three of them. At three wolves who shouldn't matter to me but somehow do. Who are bound to me by magic and prophecy and forced empathy but who are also just here, just offering to keep going, just choosing this despite having every reason to walk away.
The bond connects us. But what's growing in that connection is something we're building. Slowly. Carefully. Without knowing exactly what it becomes.
"Okay," I say. Just that one word. Simple. Final. "We finish it. Together."
Through the bond, all three of them feel the shift.
Something has changed in how I include them. Not warmth. Not forgiveness. Not anything that erases what they did or makes us suddenly okay with each other.
But the wall I've been holding between us has a door now.
Not wide open. Not unlocked completely. But there. Present. Allowing the possibility of something beyond forced cooperation.
I feel them recognize it. Feel Logan's wolf settling in ways that suggest mate is accepting pack. Feel Asher's calculating mind adjusting frameworks to accommodate connection that's becoming voluntary. Feel Jax's careful control organizing around the understanding that we're choosing this now, not just enduring it.
The fire burns lower. The night gets darker. The village sleeps around us.
And four people bound by prophecy and trauma sit together in the quiet and accept that we're moving forward. That we're doing this together. That whatever we're building in the space between hatred and forgiveness is strong enough to carry us toward whatever waits at the Lunar Sanctum.
I still don't know what I want. Don't know if this is revenge or justice or something else. Don't know if my mother would approve or if Rafe would be proud.
But I know I'm not stopping. Know I'm not doing this alone. Know that these three wolves are coming with me whether I asked them to or not.
And for tonight, in this moment, that's enough.
Tomorrow we leave the village. Tomorrow we continue toward the Keystone and the prophecy and whatever ending waits for us.
Tonight we sit together and let the bond show us what choosing each other looks like when it's not just forced connection but something more deliberate.
The wall has a door. We're all standing on opposite sides of it. But we can see each other through it now.
And that's something. That's progress. That's enough to keep moving forward.
Together.