Aria POV:
I walked into the grand marble foyer of the Silver Moon estate. The silence of the vast, echoing space was a stark contrast to the noise and chaos of the auction. The household staff, polishing silver or dusting furniture, averted their eyes as I passed. I could feel their pity and fear radiating off them in waves. The news had already spread. I was the fallen queen.
Kaelen was waiting for me. He was leaning against one of the massive marble pillars, arms crossed over his chest, a look of impatient arrogance on his face. He wasn't remorseful. He was annoyed.
"Aria, we need to talk," he began, his tone suggesting I was the one who had created a problem.
I didn't stop. I continued walking toward the grand staircase as if he hadn't spoken, forcing him to push off the pillar and follow me. "There's nothing to talk about," I said, my voice as cold and hard as the floor beneath my feet.
He grabbed my arm, his fingers digging into my flesh, forcing me to turn and face him. His grip was tight, proprietary. It was his signature move. Kaelen had always used his Alpha strength to end arguments he couldn't win with logic.
I looked down at his hand on my arm, then slowly lifted my gaze to his face. I let him see the pure, undiluted disgust in my eyes. I didn't struggle. I simply waited.
"I'm sorry about tonight," he said, the words sounding rehearsed and completely insincere. "But you shouldn't have bid against Silas. You put me in a difficult position."
He was blaming me. The sheer audacity of it was breathtaking. The old Aria would have cried, would have screamed at the injustice. The new Aria felt a chilling sense of clarity. The love I'd felt for him, the desperate, painful love, was well and truly dead. All I felt now was a faint, clinical pity for this arrogant fool.
Slowly, deliberately, I reached over with my free hand and pried his fingers off my arm. I let his hand drop away.
"Let's be clear, Kaelen," I said, my voice perfectly level. "You put yourself in that position. My bidding was to acquire a strategic asset for this pack. Your actions were... personal."
He was taken aback. He was used to my passion, my tears, my fire. This cold, detached stranger was someone he didn't know how to fight. It was unsettling for him, and the sight of his confusion gave me a grim satisfaction.
"Don't be dramatic," he scoffed, trying to regain control of the situation, of me. "I'll make it up to you."
"No, you won't," I stated, a simple fact. "But you will rectify a different matter. You used your future Alpha authority to freeze my personal trust accounts. That authority is not yet yours to wield."
His jaw tightened. He never thought I'd dare to challenge him on a technicality, on pack law. "It was a necessary measure," he grits out.
"It was an overreach," I countered smoothly. "An abuse of power. I'll require a full written report on your desk tomorrow morning, detailing the legal justification for this action."
I was no longer speaking to him as his fiancée. I was a board member questioning a rogue executive who had endangered the company.
"You want a *report*?" he asked, his voice a mixture of incredulity and fury.
"In triplicate," I replied without blinking. "One for me, one for my father, and one for the pack's legal counsel."
The threat was clear, hanging in the air between us. I was prepared to escalate this. Officially. I was prepared to go to war.
Kaelen was speechless. He had no legal standing for what he did. It was a purely emotional, controlling act to punish me, and we both knew it. He had been caught, and he had no defense.
For the first time in our entire relationship, I saw a flicker of genuine fear in his eyes. It was the fear of losing control. Over me. Over everything. It was a terrifying sensation for him, and a strangely liberating one for me.
I turned my back on him and started up the stairs. My posture was straight, my steps were even. I radiated a power he had never seen in me before, because I had never allowed myself to wield it.
"Aria, wait!" he called out, a raw edge of desperation in his voice.
I paused at the fifth step but didn't turn around.
"What is this? What are you doing?" he demanded, his voice echoing in the silent foyer.
I finally looked back at him over my shoulder, my eyes as cold and unforgiving as chips of ice.
"I am defining our new relationship," I said coolly. "From today on, we only discuss business."





