Betrayed by My Ex, Marked by His Alpha Emperor Brother
Chapter 183
- Chapter 288: Epilogue 1
- Chapter 287
- Chapter 286
- Chapter 285
- Chapter 284
- Chapter 283
- Chapter 282
- Chapter 281
- Chapter 280
- Chapter 279
- Chapter 278
- Chapter 277
- Chapter 276
- Chapter 275
- Chapter 274
- Chapter 273
- Chapter 272
- Chapter 271
- Chapter 270
- Chapter 269
- Chapter 268
- Chapter 267
- Chapter 266
- Chapter 265
- Chapter 264
- Chapter 263
- Chapter 262
- Chapter 261
- Chapter 260
- Chapter 259
- Chapter 258
- Chapter 257
- Chapter 256
- Chapter 255
- Chapter 254
- Chapter 253
- Chapter 252
- Chapter 251
- Chapter 250
- Chapter 249
- Chapter 248
- Chapter 247
- Chapter 246
- Chapter 245
- Chapter 244
- Chapter 243
- Chapter 242
- Chapter 241
- Chapter 240
- Chapter 239
- Chapter 238
- Chapter 237
- Chapter 236
- Chapter 235
- Chapter 234
- Chapter 233
- Chapter 232
- Chapter 231
- Chapter 230
- Chapter 229
- Chapter 228
- Chapter 227
- Chapter 226
- Chapter 225
- Chapter 224
- Chapter 223
- Chapter 222
- Chapter 221
- Chapter 220
- Chapter 219
- Chapter 218
- Chapter 217
- Chapter 216
- Chapter 215
- Chapter 214
- Chapter 213
- Chapter 212
- Chapter 211
- Chapter 210
- Chapter 209
- Chapter 208
- Chapter 207
- Chapter 206
- Chapter 205
- Chapter 204
- Chapter 203
- Chapter 202
- Chapter 201
- Chapter 200
- Chapter 199
- Chapter 198
- Chapter 197
- Chapter 196
- Chapter 195
- Chapter 194
- Chapter 193
- Chapter 192
- Chapter 191
- Chapter 190
- Chapter 189
- Chapter 188
- Chapter 187
- Chapter 186
- Chapter 185
- Chapter 184
- Chapter 183
- Chapter 182
- Chapter 181
- Chapter 180
- Chapter 179
- Chapter 178
- Chapter 177
- Chapter 176
- Chapter 175
- Chapter 174
- Chapter 173
- Chapter 172
- Chapter 171
- Chapter 170
- Chapter 169
- Chapter 168
- Chapter 167
- Chapter 166
- Chapter 165
- Chapter 164
- Chapter 163
- Chapter 162
- Chapter 161
- Chapter 160
- Chapter 159
- Chapter 158
- Chapter 157
- Chapter 156
- Chapter 155
- Chapter 154
- Chapter 153
- Chapter 152
- Chapter 151
- Chapter 150
- Chapter 149
- Chapter 148
- Chapter 147
- Chapter 146
- Chapter 145
- Chapter 144
- Chapter 143
- Chapter 142
- Chapter 141
- Chapter 140
- Chapter 139
- Chapter 138
- Chapter 137
- Chapter 136
- Chapter 135
- Chapter 134
- Chapter 133
- Chapter 132
- Chapter 131
- Chapter 130
- Chapter 129
- Chapter 128
- Chapter 127
- Chapter 126
- Chapter 125
- Chapter 124
- Chapter 123
- Chapter 122
- Chapter 121
- Chapter 120
- Chapter 119
- Chapter 118
- Chapter 117
- Chapter 116
- Chapter 115
- Chapter 114
- Chapter 113
- Chapter 112
- Chapter 111
- Chapter 110
- Chapter 109
- Chapter 108
- Chapter 107
- Chapter 106
- Chapter 105
- Chapter 104
- Chapter 103
- Chapter 102
- Chapter 101
- Chapter 100
- Chapter 99
- Chapter 98
- Chapter 97
- Chapter 96
- Chapter 95
- Chapter 94
- Chapter 93
- Chapter 92
- Chapter 91
- Chapter 90
- Chapter 89
- Chapter 88
- Chapter 87
- Chapter 86
- Chapter 85
- Chapter 84
- Chapter 83
- Chapter 82
- Chapter 81
- Chapter 80
- Chapter 79
- Chapter 78
- Chapter 77
- Chapter 76
- Chapter 75
- Chapter 74
- Chapter 73
- Chapter 72
- Chapter 71
- Chapter 70
- Chapter 69
- Chapter 68
- Chapter 67
- Chapter 66
- Chapter 65
- Chapter 64
- Chapter 63
- Chapter 62
- Chapter 61
- Chapter 60
- Chapter 59
- Chapter 58
- Chapter 57
- Chapter 56
- Chapter 55
- Chapter 54
- Chapter 53
- Chapter 52
- Chapter 51
- Chapter 50
- Chapter 49
- Chapter 48
- Chapter 47
- Chapter 46
- Chapter 45
- Chapter 44
- Chapter 43
- Chapter 42
- Chapter 41
- Chapter 40
- Chapter 39
- Chapter 38
- Chapter 37
- Chapter 36
- Chapter 35
- Chapter 34
- Chapter 33
- Chapter 32
- Chapter 31
- Chapter 30
- Chapter 29
- Chapter 28
- Chapter 27
- Chapter 26
- Chapter 25
- Chapter 24
- Chapter 23
- Chapter 22
- Chapter 21
- Chapter 20
- Chapter 19
- Chapter 18
- Chapter 17
- Chapter 16
- Chapter 15
- Chapter 14
- Chapter 13
- Chapter 12
- Chapter 11
- Chapter 10
- Chapter 9
- Chapter 8
- Chapter 7
- Chapter 6
- Chapter 5
- Chapter 4
- Chapter 3
- Chapter 2
- Chapter 1
Elara’s POV
The little girl’s arms wouldn’t leave me alone.
Not physically. She wasn’t here. She was somewhere in the capital, in a palace I’d walked away from, living a life I’d forfeited. But her arms—those chubby, sticky, impossibly soft arms—had wrapped around my neck in that street market, and they hadn’t let go since.
Mommy.
I flinched. The garlic bread under the broiler was smoking.
"Ela, honey, the bread—"
Margaret was already reaching past me, pulling the tray out with a towel. The tops were black. Curled and cracked like charcoal.
"Sorry." I stared at the ruined bread. "I got distracted."
Margaret scraped the tray into the waste bin without a word. She squeezed my shoulder once—brief, firm, lavender soap and that perfume she always wore—then set about slicing a fresh loaf.
"Sit down," she said. "I’ll handle this."
"It’s your birthday. You shouldn’t—"
"Sit. Down."
I sat.
The dining table was already set for four. Candles, cloth napkins, a vase of wildflowers from Margaret’s garden. Her reading circle friend Linda had arrived early, a bottle of wine tucked under her arm and a voice that filled every corner of the cottage. 𝘧𝓇𝑒𝑒𝑤ℯ𝑏𝓃𝘰𝑣ℯ𝘭.𝘤ℴ𝘮
Linda was still talking. She hadn’t stopped since she walked through the door.
"—and she’s doing wonderfully at the new firm, really thriving, you know how she is, always landing on her feet—"
I pressed my thumbnail into the pad of my index finger. Focused on the small bite of pain. Grounded myself.
The bread was replaced. The roast came out golden. Margaret lit the candles, and we sat down to eat.
Linda raised her glass. "To Margaret! Another year wiser, more beautiful, and still the only woman I know who can make a perfect lamb shoulder."
We clinked glasses. I managed a smile. It sat on my face like something borrowed.
"So, Ela." Linda turned her attention to me. Her eyes were bright, curious, the way people looked at exotic animals behind glass. "Margaret tells me you’re a professional fighter. An actual arena gladiator!"
"Pit fighter," I corrected. "It’s less glamorous than it sounds."
"Oh, don’t be modest! I saw one of those underground matches once—well, from the balcony seats, you know, the safe ones—and those women were incredible. All that muscle and intensity. You must have men falling at your feet."
I cut a piece of lamb. Put it in my mouth. Chewed.
"It’s a living," I said.
Linda didn’t take the hint. She leaned forward, wine sloshing gently in her glass.
"You know, my daughter—she’s about your age, actually, just turned twenty-six—she’s doing something very modern. Preserving her eggs with stasis magic." Linda said this with the particular pride of a mother who had memorized the healer’s scrolls. "Her healer says it’s becoming quite common among young professional women. Using crystals to preserve options, you know? In case the right partner doesn’t come along in time. She says she wants children eventually, just not yet." Linda laughed. "I told her, ’Darling, your body has its own schedule whether you like it or not.’ But you young women today, you have choices we never—"
The chair scraped back. I was standing before I registered the decision to move.
"Excuse me."
I walked to the washroom. Closed the door. Locked it.
My reflection stared back from the small mirror above the basin. Ice-blue eyes. Hollow. Silver-white hair pulled into a braid that had started to unravel hours ago.
Twenty-six.
Stasis magic.
Preserving options.
I pressed my back against the door and slid down until I was sitting on the cold tile floor.
I already had children. Two of them. A boy with dark curls and gold eyes who probably hated me by now. And a girl I’d given birth to in a border-town clinic, whose face I’d barely memorized before I—
Mommy.
That wasn’t Lyra’s voice. That was the street market. A random child. A little girl with sticky cheeks who’d mistaken me for someone else.
But my body didn’t care about accuracy. My body heard Mommy and cracked open like an egg.
I pressed my fist against my mouth. Breathed through my nose. Counted.
A soft knock.
"Ela?" Margaret’s voice. Low. Careful. "Take your time. Linda’s having more wine. She won’t notice."
I almost laughed. It came out closer to a sob.
I stayed on that floor for a long time.
---
Margaret wouldn’t let me drive home.
"Hours in a carriage when you can barely keep your eyes open? Absolutely not." She steered me toward the guest room with the floral quilt and the lavender sachet on the pillow. "You’ll leave in the morning."
I didn’t argue. I didn’t have the energy.
I lay in the dark and stared at the ceiling. The little girl’s arms were still around my neck. The weight of them. The warmth. The absolute trust of a child reaching for someone they believed would hold them.
I hadn’t held either of my children in so long that my arms ached with the phantom weight of them.
Sleep didn’t come. Not really. I drifted in and out of something gray and formless, and by the time Saturday morning rolled around, I was already dressed.
Margaret was in the kitchen. Blueberry muffins. My favorite. She pushed a plate toward me without speaking.
I managed a few bites. Tasted nothing.
"I need to get to the training grounds," I said. "Monday’s match."
"I know." She studied me. Those sharp eyes missed nothing. "Drive carefully."
---
The navigation crystal mounted on my carriage’s front panel hummed as I pulled onto the main road. Blue light pulsed softly, mapping the route south. The training grounds were a straightforward journey. I’d driven it dozens of times.
Sometime later, the road slowed. Then stopped.
Carriages ahead. A long, motionless line of them stretching around the bend. I craned my neck. Somewhere up ahead, flickering amber warning flares marked the scene of an accident.
The navigation crystal chimed. Its blue light flickered, recalculating.
Route blocked. Estimated delay: several hours. Rerouting through city center.
My stomach dropped.
City center.
His city.
The capital’s inner ring. The district where the palace quarter bled into high-end restaurants and embassy rows. Where he lived. Where he breathed. Where he existed in a life that no longer included me.
I gripped the reins. Considered turning back. Considered pulling off the road entirely and just sitting until the accident cleared.
Several hours.
I couldn’t lose that much time. Monday’s match had a purse I needed. The training grounds closed at sundown.
I followed the crystal’s reroute.
The city center swallowed me slowly. Cobblestone streets narrowed. Traffic thickened. Buildings grew taller, more elegant. Wrought-iron balconies heavy with flowers. Shop windows displaying things I couldn’t afford.
Every block deeper felt like walking into a room where I didn’t belong.
The carriage crawled. Stop. Inch forward. Stop again. The sun climbed higher, burning through the canopy overhead. I’d been in this traffic for what felt like an eternity.
Then the magical traffic crystal ahead turned red, and my carriage rolled to a halt beside an outdoor restaurant.
White tables. Yellow umbrellas. The kind of place where people lingered over wine and pretended the world was gentle.
I looked—the way you look at a wound you know you shouldn’t touch.
Corner table. Partially shaded by one of those yellow umbrellas.
Kaelen.
He was laughing. Actually laughing. Head tilted back slightly, that deep sound I used to feel in my chest before I heard it with my ears. He hadn’t spoken, nor did he even glance toward the congested street, completely unaware of me watching him. His dark hair caught the sunlight. He looked relaxed. Easy. Like a man without ghosts.
And beside him—
A woman. Brown hair falling past her shoulders. She was leaning toward him, her hand resting on his forearm. Casual. Familiar. The kind of touch that said I belong here.
The air left my lungs.
All of it. At once.
My vision tunneled. The sounds of the street—hooves, voices, a vendor shouting about fresh flowers—collapsed into a high-pitched ringing. My hands went numb on the reins.
He moved on.
He’s fine.
He’s laughing and she’s touching him and he’s fine and you’re—
A horn blared behind me. The traffic crystal had turned green. Someone shouted.
I snapped the reins. The carriage lurched forward.
I made it a few blocks. The buildings blurred. Everything blurred.
I yanked the reins hard, pulling the carriage into a side street. The wheels scraped the curb. The horse snorted, confused.
The moment the carriage stopped, my hands started shaking so badly I couldn’t hold the reins anymore. I pressed my palms over my eyes, trying to physically stop the tears, but they poured through my fingers anyway.
- Chapter 288: Epilogue 1
- Chapter 287
- Chapter 286
- Chapter 285
- Chapter 284
- Chapter 283
- Chapter 282
- Chapter 281
- Chapter 280
- Chapter 279
- Chapter 278
- Chapter 277
- Chapter 276
- Chapter 275
- Chapter 274
- Chapter 273
- Chapter 272
- Chapter 271
- Chapter 270
- Chapter 269
- Chapter 268
- Chapter 267
- Chapter 266
- Chapter 265
- Chapter 264
- Chapter 263
- Chapter 262
- Chapter 261
- Chapter 260
- Chapter 259
- Chapter 258
- Chapter 257
- Chapter 256
- Chapter 255
- Chapter 254
- Chapter 253
- Chapter 252
- Chapter 251
- Chapter 250
- Chapter 249
- Chapter 248
- Chapter 247
- Chapter 246
- Chapter 245
- Chapter 244
- Chapter 243
- Chapter 242
- Chapter 241
- Chapter 240
- Chapter 239
- Chapter 238
- Chapter 237
- Chapter 236
- Chapter 235
- Chapter 234
- Chapter 233
- Chapter 232
- Chapter 231
- Chapter 230
- Chapter 229
- Chapter 228
- Chapter 227
- Chapter 226
- Chapter 225
- Chapter 224
- Chapter 223
- Chapter 222
- Chapter 221
- Chapter 220
- Chapter 219
- Chapter 218
- Chapter 217
- Chapter 216
- Chapter 215
- Chapter 214
- Chapter 213
- Chapter 212
- Chapter 211
- Chapter 210
- Chapter 209
- Chapter 208
- Chapter 207
- Chapter 206
- Chapter 205
- Chapter 204
- Chapter 203
- Chapter 202
- Chapter 201
- Chapter 200
- Chapter 199
- Chapter 198
- Chapter 197
- Chapter 196
- Chapter 195
- Chapter 194
- Chapter 193
- Chapter 192
- Chapter 191
- Chapter 190
- Chapter 189
- Chapter 188
- Chapter 187
- Chapter 186
- Chapter 185
- Chapter 184
- Chapter 183
- Chapter 182
- Chapter 181
- Chapter 180
- Chapter 179
- Chapter 178
- Chapter 177
- Chapter 176
- Chapter 175
- Chapter 174
- Chapter 173
- Chapter 172
- Chapter 171
- Chapter 170
- Chapter 169
- Chapter 168
- Chapter 167
- Chapter 166
- Chapter 165
- Chapter 164
- Chapter 163
- Chapter 162
- Chapter 161
- Chapter 160
- Chapter 159
- Chapter 158
- Chapter 157
- Chapter 156
- Chapter 155
- Chapter 154
- Chapter 153
- Chapter 152
- Chapter 151
- Chapter 150
- Chapter 149
- Chapter 148
- Chapter 147
- Chapter 146
- Chapter 145
- Chapter 144
- Chapter 143
- Chapter 142
- Chapter 141
- Chapter 140
- Chapter 139
- Chapter 138
- Chapter 137
- Chapter 136
- Chapter 135
- Chapter 134
- Chapter 133
- Chapter 132
- Chapter 131
- Chapter 130
- Chapter 129
- Chapter 128
- Chapter 127
- Chapter 126
- Chapter 125
- Chapter 124
- Chapter 123
- Chapter 122
- Chapter 121
- Chapter 120
- Chapter 119
- Chapter 118
- Chapter 117
- Chapter 116
- Chapter 115
- Chapter 114
- Chapter 113
- Chapter 112
- Chapter 111
- Chapter 110
- Chapter 109
- Chapter 108
- Chapter 107
- Chapter 106
- Chapter 105
- Chapter 104
- Chapter 103
- Chapter 102
- Chapter 101
- Chapter 100
- Chapter 99
- Chapter 98
- Chapter 97
- Chapter 96
- Chapter 95
- Chapter 94
- Chapter 93
- Chapter 92
- Chapter 91
- Chapter 90
- Chapter 89
- Chapter 88
- Chapter 87
- Chapter 86
- Chapter 85
- Chapter 84
- Chapter 83
- Chapter 82
- Chapter 81
- Chapter 80
- Chapter 79
- Chapter 78
- Chapter 77
- Chapter 76
- Chapter 75
- Chapter 74
- Chapter 73
- Chapter 72
- Chapter 71
- Chapter 70
- Chapter 69
- Chapter 68
- Chapter 67
- Chapter 66
- Chapter 65
- Chapter 64
- Chapter 63
- Chapter 62
- Chapter 61
- Chapter 60
- Chapter 59
- Chapter 58
- Chapter 57
- Chapter 56
- Chapter 55
- Chapter 54
- Chapter 53
- Chapter 52
- Chapter 51
- Chapter 50
- Chapter 49
- Chapter 48
- Chapter 47
- Chapter 46
- Chapter 45
- Chapter 44
- Chapter 43
- Chapter 42
- Chapter 41
- Chapter 40
- Chapter 39
- Chapter 38
- Chapter 37
- Chapter 36
- Chapter 35
- Chapter 34
- Chapter 33
- Chapter 32
- Chapter 31
- Chapter 30
- Chapter 29
- Chapter 28
- Chapter 27
- Chapter 26
- Chapter 25
- Chapter 24
- Chapter 23
- Chapter 22
- Chapter 21
- Chapter 20
- Chapter 19
- Chapter 18
- Chapter 17
- Chapter 16
- Chapter 15
- Chapter 14
- Chapter 13
- Chapter 12
- Chapter 11
- Chapter 10
- Chapter 9
- Chapter 8
- Chapter 7
- Chapter 6
- Chapter 5
- Chapter 4
- Chapter 3
- Chapter 2
- Chapter 1
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