Summary of Chapter 869 – A pivotal chapter in Defy The Alpha(s) by Glimmy
The chapter Chapter 869 is one of the most intense moments in Defy The Alpha(s), written by Glimmy. With signature elements of the Romance genre, this part of the story reveals deep conflicts, shocking revelations, and decisive character changes. A must-read for anyone following the narrative.
The hour before midnight, the palace was already filled to the brim.
Having learned her lesson, Seraphira ensured the palace was crawling with guards even though it was a little too late for such caution. The damage had already been done.
In uncertain times like this, the overwhelming presence of the soldiers only made the common Fae uneasy. Yet none of them wanted to leave. They needed to see the execution with their own eyes.
The entire kingdom had been thrown into shock when the news broke that Baron had staged a rebellion. Not that the conflict itself was surprising. Baron and Seraphira had always been at each other’s throats. It had only been a matter of time before one of them fell.
Most had assumed it would be the queen.
She was the one dependent on Baron’s life force. What truly shocked them was that Seraphira survived, and the retaliation that followed.
The news of her killing the Fae females and children had spread across the realm, leaving the people shaken. This was not the queen they remembered. She had been kind, gentle, accommodating, not cold and ruthless.
So some came out of fear, unwilling to risk being mistaken as Baron’s sympathizers and facing the same fate. Others out of curiosity, eager to see with their own eyes that Baron had truly been reduced to nothing—and that their queen still lived.
"Things are about to change in the Free Fae realm," Violet muttered solemnly, her gaze fixed on the sea of people gathered below.
She sat on the roof of the palace, the night wind brushing against her skin. As always, Asher and Alaric stayed close, unwilling to leave her side, especially now she was pregnant.
She had been the one to fly them up there, but not without argument. Asher had insisted it was reckless, that carrying both of them could strain her, and affect the baby.
Violet had argued back just as fiercely. Being pregnant did not make her fragile. If she was powerful, then her child would be too. A simple task like that wouldn’t harm either of them.
In the end, she compromised by carrying them one after the other. She was still annoyed about it. If this was how things were going to be now, she could already tell there would be endless arguments over what she could and couldn’t do.
Violet let out a quiet sigh.
"I can’t help but feel guilty," she admitted, her voice calm now. "Leaving at a time like this. My mother... she needs someone strong enough to pull her back from whatever she’s becoming."
"The Free Fae was never your responsibility in the first place, baby girl," Asher said, seated beside her as he absently played with strands of her hair.
"I agree with him," Alaric supported. "If you remember, we weren’t brought here because they wanted to help you grow into a princess. They brought you here to confirm your identity."
Asher’s expression hardened. "She left you alone for eighteen years. You don’t owe her the burden of fixing what she chose to ignore."
Violet didn’t respond immediately. Asher reached for her chin, turning her face so she was looking at him.
"And..." he added quietly, his voice lowering, "I don’t do long distance. Especially not when we’re about to become parents."
The meaning was clear. He had a pack to lead and Violet was not meant to stay behind and face this alone.
Violet breathed out. "No, you’re right. Not to mention, we can’t leave Roman and Griffin behind. We have our own mess in the human realm. The Free Fae will have to handle this one on their own."
Even as she said it, they could tell she wasn’t at ease with that decision.
"The queen isn’t alone," Alaric reminded her. "She has Lila and Lord Taryn. He’s a good Fae. If the two of them aren’t enough to pull her back from whatever this is..." he paused, then said it anyway, "then maybe this is who she was always meant to be."
"Are you sure there were no side effects to the soul transfer?" Violet asked, her voice tighter now. "When you read about it?"
Alaric, scratched the back of his head. "I don’t remember reading anything like that. But then, I didn’t finish everything. The translating magic was giving me a terrible headache. Next time we come back here, I’ll just have to learn their language properly."
Violet stilled at that. She still hadn’t decided if there would even be a return to the Fae realm, not with how things stood between her and her mother. And especially not with the interest her mother had already shown in her unborn child.
She wouldn’t stop her children from embracing their Fae roots, but it would be their choice if any of them wanted to carry the heavy weight of ruling that kingdom.
It would not be forced on them.
Seeing the shift in her, Alaric quickly changed the subject.
"Zuru did mention something," he said. "The reason knowledge of soul transfer was hidden was to stop rulers from chasing immortality. Think about it, if someone like Seraphira decided she didn’t want to die, all she’d have to do is keep switching bodies. She could rule forever."
"What if..." she started slowly, her voice slipping into the bond despite the fact they were alone. In the Fae realm, even the walls could listen. "What if it’s not just betrayal she’s feeling?"
Asher’s voice came immediately. "Where are you going with this?"
"What if she’s lonely?"
"In the stories, it said Seraphira’s soul suffered when she rejected the mate bond with Angus. She lost her mate and child and had no will to live, thus why she was tied to Baron’s life force to sustain her."
Her gaze drifted, unfocused. "But now that she has a new body. A reset. What if she misses her mate?"
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