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WOLFLESS: Accidentally Marked By The Devil's Son-Chapter 82: Caleb
Chapter 82
Caleb didn’t move. He sat in the dirt of the execution square, the world around him fading into a dull, grey blur.
He cradled Bella’s cooling body against his chest, his head bowed over hers. The blood from her throat was still warm, soaking through his tunic and staining his skin, but he didn’t flinch.
"Bella," he whispered, his voice cracking like dry earth. "Bella, please. I’m here. I made it back." He rocked her gently, his tears mixing with the crimson on her pale cheeks.
He was the Prince of Death, a man who had led armies through the bloodiest campaigns in history, yet he looked like a terrified child.
He pressed his forehead against hers, begging for a heartbeat, a breath, a flutter of an eyelid.
"Why?" he choked out, a sob racking his entire frame. "I told you I’d come back. Why didn’t you wait for me?"
He didn’t know about Lucian’s lies. He didn’t know she died thinking he was already rotting in a ditch. He didn’t know about how her dignity had been stripped. He only knew the crushing weight of his own failure.
Isabella stood a few feet away, her hands over her mouth, her own tears blurring the scene. She watched as the royal procession descended from the high dais.
The visiting King, Selena, and Lucian walked toward Caleb with the slow, measured pace of those who believed they were still in control.
The King, Caleb’s father, stopped just a few feet away. His face wasn’t filled with pity; it was twisted with an ugly, self-righteous rage
He looked at his heir—the future of his bloodline—sobbing over a "half-breed" servant in front of the entire court.
"Enough of this display, Caleb!" the King barked, his voice echoing off the stone walls. "Stand up. You are a Prince of this realm, and you are making a spectacle of yourself over a common traitor. She chose this end to spite us."
Caleb didn’t look up. He didn’t even acknowledge that his father had spoken. He just kept stroking Bella’s matted hair, his shoulders shaking with silent, violent grief
"Did you hear me?" the King roared, stepping closer. Beside him, Selena watched with a sneer of disgust, and Lucian stood with his arms crossed, his eyes gleaming with a dark, satisfied victory.
"She was a plague upon this house," the King continued, his voice growing more vitriolic as he looked at Bella’s limp form. "A mistake that should have been erased years ago. You will leave this filth in the dirt where it belongs and prepare for your wedding."
The King reached out, his hand moving to grip Caleb’s shoulder to force him upward. "Stand up, boy, and—"
The movement was so fast Isabella’s eyes almost missed it.
Caleb didn’t stand. He didn’t turn. But in one fluid, blurring motion, his hand went to the hilt of the sword at his hip.
There was a sharp shing—a flash of steel in the afternoon light. The King’s scream followed a heartbeat later.
Isabella gasped, her eyes widening in horror. The King stumbled back, clutching the stump of his arm where his right hand had been just a second before.
His hand—the hand that had tried to touch Caleb—lay in the dirt, still twitching, severed clean at the wrist.
Caleb stood up then. He rose slowly, still holding Bella’s body in one arm, his other hand gripping his sword. The blade was dripping with his father’s blood, adding a new layer of crimson to his already stained form.
He turned to face them, and for the first time, Isabella saw his eyes. They weren’t the eyes of the man who had loved Bella in the cedar-scented room.
They were cold, hollow, and filled with a darkness that felt older than the world itself. "Do not," Caleb rasped, his voice a low, lethal growl that made the guards freeze in their tracks, "touch us again."
The silence in the courtyard was absolute. The King was on the ground, gasping in shock and pain, and the lords were paralyzed.
The Prince had just maimed the Sovereign.
Caleb looked at Lucian and Selena, his gaze a promise of a slow, agonizing death. Then, without a word, he turned away from the throne, away from his family, and began to walk toward the palace gates, carrying Bella’s body toward the horizon.
Isabella felt the vision begin to tear. The vision tore at the seams, the screams of the courtyard fading into a heavy, oppressive silence.
The grey stone of the palace was swallowed by the deep, emerald shadows of an ancient forest.
Isabella found herself standing in a secluded grove where the trees grew so tall they seemed to hold up the stars.
In the center, Caleb knelt by a freshly dug grave. He was a shell of a man, his armor discarded, his tunic stiff with dried blood.
He cradled Bella’s body one last time, his voice a whisper that broke the stillness of the woods.
"I will burn them all, Bella," he promised, his eyes vacant and dark.
"I will storm your father’s kingdom and level my own. I will not rest until the soil is soaked in the blood of everyone who touched you. I’ll give you your revenge, even if I have to become a monster to do it."
A soft, sudden rustle of leaves made Caleb stiffen. A light, pure and blindingly white, began to bloom from between two ancient oaks.
It wasn’t the harsh flare of a torch; it was a celestial glow that made the shadows retreat. "Who’s there?" Caleb roared, his hand flying to his sword, shielding Bella’s body with his own.
"Do not be unsettled, my child," a voice resounded. It was calm, smoothing over the jagged edges of the air like silk over a wound. "For I am here for you."
A figure stepped from the light—a woman whose form seemed made of starlight and mist. Isabella watched, breathless, as the entity approached.
"I have watched your thread tangle with hers," the voice continued, filled with a profound, ageless sorrow.
"It is a tragedy that a love so pure was met with such cruelty. The heavens weep for what was stolen from you this day."
Caleb fell to his knees, his defiance crumbling. "If you are a goddess, then show mercy. Can you bring her back? Can you fix this?"
"I can," the entity whispered, "but a balance must be struck. To call a soul back from the veil, you would have to lose—"
"Anything," Caleb interrupted, his voice desperate and raw. "Take my title, my lands, my breath. I would gladly lose my life, my very soul, if it meant she could breathe again."
"It is not your life I require, but your humanity," the voice warned. "To wait for her, you must become something else—a guardian of the shadows, a creature neither living nor dead. And you must wait. Her soul is in deep, deep pain; she cannot return to this world as she was. It may take years... centuries... for her to heal enough to find her way back to the light."
"I will wait a thousand years," Caleb vowed, his grip tightening on Bella’s cold hand. "Just let me see her again."
The white light intensified, becoming so bright that Isabella had to shield her eyes. The forest, the grave, and the mourning Prince dissolved into a searing, brilliant void.
Isabella’s eyes snapped open. The scent of damp pine and ancient blood vanished, replaced by the familiar, sharp musk of cedar and the cold night air.
She was back. The visions still clung to her like cobwebs. The grief, the blood, the centuries of waiting — they were still inside her chest, heavy and suffocating, as if they belonged to her.
She was standing on the forest floor, her fingers clutching the fabric of a shirt—Lucian’s shirt.
She looked up, her breath hitching in her throat. The smoky figure stood before her again. The same shifting shadow. The same presence that had called to her through dreams, through memories, through something deeper than thought.
But now... it was changing.
The dark mist began to still. The swirling shadows slowed, collapsing inward instead of drifting apart.
The smoke no longer twisted wildly; it settled, folding in on itself like something taking shape for the first time. Isabella’s breath hitched. Her heart began to pound.
The outline of a body formed first — broad shoulders, tall frame, solid and real. Then the shadows thinned, peeling away like burned paper carried off by the wind.
A jawline emerged. Pale skin. Dark hair. And then.... Eyes.
Blue.
Not the empty blue of the sky. Not the cold blue of ice. These were eyes that carried weight. Age. Loss. Waiting. Eyes that had watched a grave close. Eyes that had waited in darkness.
Isabella took a step back, her hands trembling at her sides. "No..." she whispered, her voice barely air.
Her mind raced, trying to reject it, trying to make sense of it. The visions were memories. Another life. Another girl.
Bella.
Not her. It couldn’t be. But her chest tightened. Because something inside her recognized him before her mind did.
A pull. The same pull she had felt in the dreams. The same warmth beneath the grief. The same feeling of home buried under centuries of sorrow.
The man took a step toward her and Isabella’s breath shook. Her vision blurred, and only then did she realize tears were gathering in her eyes.
Her heart clenched painfully. Her lips parted. And this time, the name rose from somewhere deeper than memory — deeper than thought.
"Caleb..." The word broke as it left her mouth, soft and fragile, like a prayer she didn’t know she still believed in.
A single tear slipped down her cheek. The last of the smoke dissolved. He stood there fully now — solid, real, no longer a shadow or a memory.
His face was sharper than the one she had seen in the vision, older somehow, marked by time and loneliness.
But his eyes....His eyes were the same. They locked onto her with an intensity that carried the weight of centuries.
The Prince of Death was no longer a ghost of the past; he was standing right in front of her, the man who had waited through the darkness of ages just to hear her speak his name.
"Bella," he rasped, his voice the same low rumble that had promised to burn the world for her.







