Chapter 531: THE REVEAL
Cherry was in utter disbelief.
Absolutely nothing happened.
For several suffocating moments, the sacred basin lay still and lifeless. The runes carved into its rim glimmered only faintly before fading altogether. The thick silver liquid remained dull, flat, like dead water. The chamber held its breath.
A ripple of whispers surged through the crowd. Nobles shifted on their feet, eyes narrowing, lips twitching as they muttered to one another. Some servants gasped. A few even smirked, smug that their suspicion of the "new red-haired girl" was already proven right.
Cherry began to panic.
Her eyes darted to Roland, who stood at the dais like a storm, arms folded, gaze sharp as steel. His jaw clenched tighter by the second. If he declared the test void, if he ordered Auburn seized... everything would crumble.
Cherry’s breath caught. She turned to look at Auburn.
The girl’s face was stricken white, her lips parted as if she’d forgotten how to breathe.
❧
Auburn’s heart absolutely stopped. A deafening silence roared in her ears. Her lungs squeezed shut as though invisible hands were crushing them. Sweat prickled at the nape of her neck, sliding down her spine.
This was it. This was the end.
She turned to Cherry, desperate, eyes wide as a cornered animal. But Cherry’s hand shot up and squeezed her face harshly, her nails digging into Auburn’s skin.
Auburn froze.
She knew that look. That silent command in Cherry’s eyes.
It meant she was alone in this.
If she was going to die, then she was going to die alone. Cherry wouldn’t save her. Cherry would let her burn.
A hollow pit opened in Auburn’s chest. Her body felt weightless, already half a corpse. She thought of the guards dragging her out, of the cold steel of an executioner’s blade, of her head rolling as the people jeered "imposter."
No.
Her lips trembled, but her mind hardened.
If she was going to go down, she wouldn’t go down quietly. She would not die as nothing. If she perished, then she would drag Cherry with her.
Maybe they wouldn’t believe her. Maybe they would call her lies a desperate attempt. But at least she would plant the seed of doubt. At least Rose and Roland would suspect the snake they called family.
Her heart thudded like a drumbeat of doom. Auburn closed her eyes, waiting for the judgment to fall, for the guards to seize her arms and rip her away.
And then—
The runes around the basin flickered.
At first, faint. Barely visible. Like dying embers gasping for life. Then, slowly, they pulsed brighter. A soft hum filled the air, vibrating in the bones. The silver liquid shivered, rippling as if something unseen stirred beneath it.
The glow spread, a pale red bloom blossoming across the surface until the entire basin shimmered with crimson light.
Gasps erupted through the hall.
Rose fell to her knees, her hands pressed to her lips. Tears spilled down her cheeks in an unstoppable stream.
"It’s true," she whispered, then louder, breaking into a sob. "It’s true. She is mine. She is Scarlett’s!"
The chamber exploded in noise—shock, awe, disbelief. Some nobles fell to their knees, others clutched their chests. Servants pressed forward to see better, mouths open in astonishment.
Cherry’s voice rang sharp and victorious above the chaos.
"There!" she cried, her lips twisting into a triumphant smile. "The proof you demanded, Roland. Do you still doubt your own blood?"
The king’s expression was unreadable. The room held its breath as he remained stone-still, only his eyes burning as they fixed on the glowing basin.
Hildegard, standing at Rose’s side, was frozen. Her face twisted with unease, her eyes darting between the faint glow and Cherry’s victorious grin. She said nothing, though Auburn could see the disbelief in her gaze.
But Rose—Rose was beyond reason.
She scrambled forward, reaching for Auburn with trembling hands. She gathered the girl into her arms, her sobs shaking her thin frame.
"It’s okay," Rose wept, pressing her wrinkled cheek to Auburn’s. Her hands stroked Auburn’s face with desperate tenderness, wiping away her tears. "It’s okay, my child. You’re home. You’re welcome home."
Auburn’s chest cracked open. Relief flooded her veins, hot and dizzying. Her knees nearly buckled. Thank the goddess. Thank the goddess the spell had worked.
If Cherry’s magic had failed, she would have been branded an imposter. Executed publicly, her body strung up as a warning. But the runes glowed, the basin shimmered, and the queen embraced her as her own.
Auburn’s eyes stung as she buried her face into Rose’s shoulder. She let herself breathe. For the first time since this nightmare began, she truly breathed.
King Roland slowly descended the dais. His boots echoed against the marble floor, each step measured, heavy. Rose released Auburn and looked up at him with pleading eyes.
"Do you believe me now?" she asked him, her voice trembling but fierce. "Do you now believe this is your granddaughter? Your flesh?"
Rose seized Auburn’s hand, her grip firm, and led her forward. Auburn’s pulse rattled in her throat.
She had feared Roland from the start. His cold pronouncements, his promise of execution should she be an imposter—those words had carved terror deep into her bones. Would he accept her now? Or would suspicion linger in his heart?
The king stopped before her, his towering form shadowing her small frame. For a brief, unbearable moment, he only stared.
And then, without warning, he stepped forward and pulled her into his arms.
Auburn gasped. Her body stiffened against him, her mind reeling. But then—slowly, cautiously—she allowed herself to relax into his embrace.
He held her tightly, as though anchoring himself against the tide of grief. His broad hands gripped her shoulders firmly before he drew back, his eyes boring into hers.
"I never expected..." His voice faltered. He shut his eyes briefly, drawing a shuddering breath. "I never expected to see this day." His lips quivered. "I’m sorry I doubted you. I just—" He stopped again, swallowing hard. "It’s been so hard. You’re really our blood?"
Auburn’s throat tightened. She nodded gently. "It’s okay."
Her trembling hand rose, brushing against his cheek. His skin was rough, weathered, yet warm. He didn’t flinch away. Instead, his eyes fluttered shut and, to Auburn’s astonishment, tears welled at their corners.
The king—Roland, the iron-fisted ruler of wolves—wept like a child before her.
Rose’s hands reached for him. She wrapped her arms around his waist and pressed her forehead to his shoulder. "She’s ours," she whispered, her voice cracking. "She’s really ours."
Roland’s strong arms pulled both Rose and Auburn together. The three of them clung to one another in a fragile, trembling knot of family.
Auburn could scarcely believe it. Just moments ago, she had been certain of her death. And now—now she had the king and queen of the wolf kingdom weeping into her shoulders.
She had them.
She truly had them.
In that instant, Auburn understood the depth of Cherry’s obsession. She understood why Cherry had clawed through the shadows for years in search of an imposter.
Because this power—the power of being the miracle child returned—could bend even the strongest rulers. It could make the iron king cry. It could make the queen abandon reason and embrace a stranger.
This power was intoxicating.
And now it belonged to her.
❧
The king and queen finally released her. Rose held Roland’s hand on one side and Auburn’s on the other. She straightened her back and lifted her chin, her tear-stained face glowing with solemn pride.
"You have been gathered here to witness," she declared, her voice echoing through the vaulted chamber. The crowd fell into reverent silence.
"My daughter Scarlett, whom I searched for endlessly all these years, is no longer with us. Now I know this for certain. But she did not leave me empty-handed. She left me a gift. A gift that has found its way back home. A gift that has proven itself to be true."
Her eyes softened as they rested on Auburn.
"My granddaughter. Princess Auburn."
The words thundered across the chamber like the strike of a bell.
Auburn’s chest swelled. For the first time in her life, she was being treated as someone important. Not a servant. Not a nobody. Not a girl destined for brothels. But a princess.
She almost laughed aloud in disbelief. Yesterday she had been scrubbing floors, preparing to be sold as the finest whore in her village. Today she was raised high and named heir to the throne.
The nobles reacted as though struck by lightning. As one, they bent the knee. The sound of rustling fabrics filled the air as every servant, every elder, every warrior lowered themselves in acknowledgment.
They bowed to her.
They acknowledged her as their princess.
Her spirit soared. This was beyond a dream. This was power, honor, everything she had never dared imagine.
But as her gaze swept across the kneeling hall, her euphoria faltered.
Because not everyone’s eyes held warmth.
At the edge of the crowd, Coral approached with Cherry at her side. And with them came another red-haired girl Auburn had glimpsed earlier—a girl her own age.
The girl’s eyes glared at Auburn with cold disdain.
"Welcome to the family," Cherry purred, sliding an arm through Auburn’s and drawing her in.
The girl—Belle—embraced her stiffly, her smile brittle and false.
"Belle, this is Auburn," Rose said warmly. "She is your cousin."
And then Auburn understood.
She was not simply being accepted into the royal family. She was also stepping into a battlefield.
Belle, Coral’s daughter, had been raised as next in line. But Auburn’s sudden appearance as the "true" heir of Scarlett shifted the order.
Now Auburn was first in line. Belle second.
No wonder Belle’s eyes burned with loathing.
Auburn had gained a crown, but she had also gained an enemy.