Chapter 60 The Letter
POV: Mina (Age 18 - Midnight, Three Weeks After Blackwood)
I can't sleep.
Again. The bond pulses with the steady rhythm of three wolves in various states of rest. Logan actually sleeping for once. Asher in that half-aware state between waking and dreams. Jax on watch, alert but calm.
None of them feeling what I'm feeling. The weight sitting on my chest that has nothing to do with the bond and everything to do with the letter I've been carrying for weeks.
My mother's letter. Still sealed. Still unopened. Still pressed against my heart like a talisman I'm afraid to actually use.
I've told myself I'm waiting for the right moment. Waiting until we're safe. Waiting until the mission is complete. Waiting until I'm ready.
But the truth is simpler and more cowardly. I'm afraid of what she wrote. Afraid that opening it will break something I've been holding together through sheer stubbornness.
Tonight the weight of not knowing feels heavier than the fear of finding out.
I pull the letter from where I keep it tucked against my skin. The paper is warm from being carried close. The seal is still intact. Oracle runes that I recognize from the temple Rafe and I built together.
My hands shake slightly as I break the seal.
The paper unfolds. My mother's handwriting covers both sides. Careful. Urgent. Deeply loving in ways that make my throat tight just looking at it.
I read.
My daughter,
If you're reading this, I am dead and you are alive and you have found your way to people I trusted with the truth. I am grateful for all three of those things, even though I cannot be there to see them.
I knew I was going to die. Not the when or the how, but the certainty. The prophecy showed me my ending the moment it showed me your beginning. I have made peace with this. I need you to know that. I did not die afraid or unwilling. I died protecting what mattered most.
You.
And your brother. Whichever of you survived to read this, know that I loved you both equally and completely. Know that sealing your power was not control. It was gift. It was giving you a childhood, even a broken one, instead of being hunted at eight years old. It was choosing your life over the prophecy's demands.
I want to tell you about your birth. About the blood moon that rose the night you came into the world. About holding you both for the first time and feeling joy and terror in equal measure. About knowing immediately what you were and what it would cost.
The prophecy was clear. Twin Oracles. Born under blood moon. The ones who would restore balance or destroy everything trying.
The Council knew within hours. They came for you before you were a week old. I ran. Your father bought me time with his life. I ran and I hid and I sealed your power so thoroughly that even Council seers couldn't find the Oracle signature.
I gave you the only gift I had left to give. Time. Years where you could grow without being weapons. Years where you could be children instead of prophecies.
I know it wasn't enough. I know hiding you separately meant you grew up alone and hurt and I am sorry for that. I am sorry I couldn't give you safety and each other. I could only choose one and I chose survival. I hope you forgive me.
The prophecy speaks of three guardians. I need you to understand what that means.
They are not ornamental. They are not symbolic. They are essential.
An Oracle without anchors becomes a force that cannot love. Becomes power without humanity. Becomes the tyrant the Council always claimed we were.
The three guardians are counterweights. People who've seen your worst self and stayed. People who know your power and choose you anyway. People who can call you back when the Oracle power tries to consume who you are.
The bond between you will not be easy. The prophecy doesn't promise easy. It promises necessary.
They will hurt you. You will hurt them. You will all carry scars from each other. That is the nature of forced intimacy. That is what makes it work.
Because when they choose to stay after hurting you—when they choose you despite knowing what you're capable of—that choice means something. That choice creates the anchor that keeps you human.
About your brother. About the twin I am writing to who survived.
Whichever of you is reading this, you were never meant to be whole apart. The twin bond was part of the prophecy's design. Two halves of one Oracle power. Two perspectives on one truth. Two voices speaking in harmony.
One of you will die young. I have seen this. I cannot prevent it. I can only tell the survivor: carry your twin with you. Let their memory be the first anchor before the three guardians arrive. Let their love remind you who you are when power tries to make you forget.
You were bonded from birth. Soul to soul. That bond doesn't break with death. It transforms. It becomes the foundation everything else builds on.
Trust it. Trust them. Trust yourself.
I would have chosen you over the prophecy every time. Every single time. But the prophecy found you anyway and now you must choose what to do with it.
My final gift to you is this: choose yourself first. The world can be saved by someone who is whole. It cannot be saved by someone who's been destroyed by the burden of saving it.
Be whole, my daughter. Be fierce and gentle and broken and healed. Be everything you are without apology. Let the guardians see all of it. Let yourself be loved for it.
And when the time comes to use the power I sealed—when the Keystone calls and the prophecy demands completion—remember that I didn't die for the prophecy.
I died for you.
Use the power however you choose. Save the world or don't. Fulfill the prophecy or rewrite it. I will be proud of you regardless.
Because you are mine. And that matters more than any destiny.
With all my love, Elara
I read it three times. Then a fourth. Each time finding new layers. New understanding.
My mother knew Rafe would die young. Saw it in the prophecy and couldn't prevent it. Could only hope the survivor would carry the bond forward.
She knew about the three guardians. Knew they would hurt me. Knew it was necessary anyway. Knew that forced intimacy with people who'd seen my worst would be the only thing keeping me human when Oracle power tried to consume me.
She chose me over the prophecy. Every time. Even though choosing me meant running and hiding and dying alone.
And she wanted me to choose myself too. To be whole before trying to save anyone else. To let myself be loved by people who knew everything and stayed anyway.
The letter sits in my hands and I realize I'm crying. Silent tears that I didn't give permission to fall but that come anyway, pulled from somewhere deep that I've been keeping sealed as thoroughly as my mother sealed my power.
Through the bond, I feel Jax's immediate awareness. Feel him registering my emotional state. Feel him debating whether to approach or give space.
I feel him choose approach.
He appears at the edge of my sleeping area. Doesn't speak. Doesn't cross the threshold. Just there. Present. Waiting to be invited or dismissed.
I don't dismiss him.
He sits. Behind me. Not where I can see him. Just there. A solid presence at my back. Giving witness to my grief without demanding I perform it differently.
Through the bond I feel him feeling everything. The letter's contents flooding through our connection. My mother's words. Her love. Her sacrifice. Her hope that I would find wholeness even in prophecy's demands.
He doesn't speak. Doesn't offer platitudes. Doesn't try to fix anything.
He just stays.
For the first time since Rafe died, I let someone witness my grief without running from it. Let Jax feel through the bond every tear and every shaking breath and every moment of missing my mother so badly it physically hurts.
Let him understand that I'm carrying two deaths now. Rafe's and Elara's. Twin and mother. The only two people who loved me before the bond forced connection with three wolves who are learning how.
The tears slow eventually. Not because the grief lessens but because bodies have limits on how long they can actively grieve before exhaustion takes over.
Jax is still there. Still silent. Still just present.
"She knew," I finally say. My voice is rough. "She knew about you. About all three of you. Saw it in the prophecy before you were born. Knew you'd hurt me. Knew it was necessary."
Through the bond I feel his complicated response. Guilt that he fulfilled that prophecy by hurting me. Understanding that his cruelty was somehow written into the design. Recognition that even knowing it was prophesied doesn't make it acceptable.
"She also knew you'd choose to stay," I continue. "After hurting me. That you'd see my worst and choose me anyway. That the choice is what makes it matter."
I turn slightly. Not fully facing him but enough that I can see his outline in the darkness.
"You're choosing," I tell him. "Not just staying because the bond forces you. Actually choosing this. Choosing me. Even knowing what I am. Even carrying everything the bond makes you feel."
Through the connection I feel his truth. Feel him recognizing that somewhere between the Academy and now, obligation became choice. That the mate bond still constrains but what he's building inside that constraint is voluntary.
"Yes," he says quietly. "I'm choosing this."
The words sit between us. Heavy with meaning.
I fold the letter carefully. Press it against my chest where I've been keeping it.
"She wanted me to be whole," I tell him. "Before trying to save anything. Wanted me to choose myself first."
"Are you?" Jax asks. "Whole?"
I consider the question honestly. "No. Not even close. But maybe I'm getting there. Slowly. With help I didn't ask for but apparently needed anyway."
Through the bond I feel his understanding. Feel him recognizing that he and the others are part of that wholeness whether I planned for them to be or not. That the forced anchors are becoming chosen ones.
"Thank you," I tell him. "For staying. For witnessing this. For not trying to fix it."
"You don't need fixing," Jax says. His voice carries certainty. "You need space to grieve and people who'll sit with you while you do. That's all. That's enough."
The simplicity of it breaks something loose in my chest. Something that's been locked tight since Rafe died and I decided grief was a luxury I couldn't afford.
I lean back slightly. Let my shoulders rest against his chest. Let myself take the support he's offering without overthinking what it means.
Through the bond I feel his wolf settle. Feel his human mind careful not to assume this is more than comfort. Feel him just accepting what I'm giving and asking for nothing additional.
We sit like that until dawn. Until the others wake and find us. Until Logan and Asher see me with Jax and understand through the bond that something shifted in the night.
But they don't interrupt. Don't crowd. Just give space for whatever this is to be what it needs to be.
My mother's letter rests against my heart. Her words about choosing myself first echo in my mind.
And for the first time since I can remember, I'm not carrying grief alone.
The bond ensures I can't. Forces me to share the weight with three wolves who are learning to hold it without breaking under it.
Forces me to be witnessed. To be known. To be loved imperfectly by people who hurt me first and are learning how to heal second.
My mother saw this. Knew this. Wanted this for me even knowing how much it would cost.
Choose yourself first, she wrote. Be whole before trying to save the world.
I'm trying, I tell her silently. I'm learning how. With help from three wolves who were supposed to be my worst nightmare and somehow became my unexpected anchors instead.
I'm trying to be whole. And maybe, eventually, I'll get there.