Chapter 131
Chapter 131
Zenovia
I stared at Callahan in shock, my ears ringing. Content protected by Nôv/el(D)rama.Org.
“What?”
“You should see your face. Your expression is priceless.” Callahan chuckled, but I found nothing funny
about the way he casually dropped the bomb upon me.
“Are you really sharing the truth with me? Selene…the Moon Goddess. She cursed you?”
Callahan let his back rest on the chair and looked at the ceiling. “What would I get by feeding you with
lies?”
He countered. I had opened my mouth to say something, but I closed it abruptly.
His reality was even absurder than some of the crazy theories I had heard about his curse. Some said
he was cursed by a witch for some fallacy while others said that he killed his loved ones so fate worked
against him.
But nothing I had heard so far came even remotely close to the reality he was sharing with me.
“How old are you, exactly?” I asked, my foot tapping restlessly on the floor and a slow grin appeared on
his face.
“Of all the questions I thought you would ask me, this did not make the list.”
I frowned, folding my hands over my chest. I was not sure if I was ready to ask him the other questions.
My mind was still reeling from the information dump.
So, I replied sarcastically, trying to hide my nervousness.
“That does not answer my question.”
Why was he suddenly being cheeky? Was that a way to show how unbothered he was with the secrets
he was uncovering? An attempt to hide his true grief and emotions by acting like he did not care?
Callahan let out a sigh.
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“I said I am the only one left from “The First Children’, so you have to guess how old that makes me.”
My eyes grew as wide as saucers. I did not want to calculate. My brain was trying to process a lot at
the moment.
Seeing my perplexed expressions, he added,
“I am older than most of the living creatures walking this earth. I am the unlucky one who survived while
everyone I knew died. Well, most of them. I did not exactly keep track of the new lycans that Selene
kept creating to add numbers to our army.”
Callahan said, as his hands coiled into fists.
“You are immortal?”
I asked with a disbelieving look.
“I wish you paid more attention to what I have been telling you.” He sighed again and raked a hand
through his hair, letting his long hair fall to the sides in a messy way.
I had the urge to touch the hair and rake my fingers through that silky mane, but resisted. I could not
distract him right now. Or myself. I did not know when he would open up again if I did what my heart
wanted me to do to him. With him.
Callahan’s face was pained, and every word he spoke was like a
self-inflicted wound. The more I asked, the more his cool facade seemed to be slipping away. It was
visible in his body language, though he tried to maintain a neutral tone.
“I have been living with this knowledge, this burden for years. Not many know why I am cursed or what
exactly happened all those years ago. I believe you are the first one I opened up to.”
Callahan revealed, and I looked at him with a look of pure surprise. Not that my expressions had been
any different for the past thirty minutes or so since he started speaking.
“Not even Dru? How about Matteo and Elijah?” I asked. They had been living with him for years and
were his loyal warriors and friends. Surely, I thought, he must have told them. But his answer was the
exact opposite of my assumption.
“Neither of them. They all believe the same thing, that some witch cursed
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1. And I let them.”
“But why? You told me that they keep looking for a solution and you know how dejected they feel to not
be able to help you. So why do you let them follow false leads?” I blurted out.
Callahan slammed his hand on the chair. “Because I cannot tell them. The curse forbade me to tell
anybody anything. And think about it, Zee. What should I tell them? That their precious Selene cursed
me? Should I tell them that the Goddess they pray to day and night to help them find a cure for me is
the one who put me in such peril?”
I could only stare at him in shock.
Of all the things I had learned about him, this was beyond my wildest. imagination. At this point, I was
just blabbering things that popped up in my mind.
“But…Drusilla…she gets visions. She sees flashes of things revolving around you…..why did you never
tell her? She works day and night to find a cure and you hide such a huge secret from her, from your
loyal
warriors.”
Callahan grabbed my hand and shook me, as if to pull me to my senses.
“You are not listening. I said the curse forbid me to speak of the details. Telling anyone about it would
mean their death. I could not tell them the truth and see them die. I am selfish, Zee. I have been the
reason for countless deaths, and I live with that guilt every day. I cannot bear to live with the thought of
causing them harm. I would not be able to forgive myself if anything happened to my people.”
Callahan leaned forward and placed his forehead on mine. I saw the way his face looked more and
more troubled. He got up from the chair and walked towards the side table, grabbed a bottle of whisky
and poured some for himself into a glass.
“I…I have not spoken about all this in ages…or in forever. Those were the dark days and there was
nothing but blood and massacre all around me. We would keep fighting and the pile of dead bodies
always kept increasing. Selene…she was obsessed with taking Mirabel down, but Mirabel’s witches
and wizards had something we didn’t.”
“What?” My voice was barely a whisper.
He let out a humorless chuckle. “A protector, Selene did not care about
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apter 131
those who died fighting for her. The severely injured were discarded as easily as the dead and she kept
creating more lycans than tending to those who were injured.”
He took a pause to look at me, knowing how I was an ardent believer in the Moon Goddess. Every
werewolf was. We worshiped Selene like a mother and prayed to her for our well-being. I knew
Callahan was not lying. I knew it with an unwavering certainty. His eyes spoke to me, not just his mouth
and I could see how much it was hurting him to make this admission…but to hear that the Goddess you
worshipped all your life could have been so cruel…it was jarring.
Callahan kept sharing the incidents of his past as I sat staring at him, opening my mouth several times
but closing it again when I would turn speechless.
I racked my brain but could not find the right words to console him, to find a way to calm him down.
“Days would turn into nights as the witches and wizards would try horrible magic spells on us to slow us
down, to thwart our advances. In return, Selene gave us inhuman strength, lightning fast reflexes and
turned us into monsters that could fight for hours without feeling pain.”
Callahan took a sip from his glass and looked outside the window, particularly toward the sky where the
moon was shining brightly.
We all believed Selene resided in her palace on the moon. But C story told me it was the truth, though
not as sweet and fluffy as w believed it to be.
“I saw several of my comrades die horrifying deaths. We were all bl with high resistance to pain and
could keep fighting despite severe wounds. But even then…at some point, the body would give up. I…I
sa my loyal warriors bleed to death and the life slowly seep out of their ey as I would just sit and watch.
That was all I could do.”
“Did… Selene not provide healers? Magic potions or something?” I asked, though based on his
answers so far, I knew that was not the case.
My heart was finding it hard to believe my Goddess could be like this.
Callahan kept staring at the moon as if he was accusing Selene from earth, and she was silently
hearing him.
“She did absolutely nothing but make us fight until we died. Sometimes, I
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truly wish I would have died in those battles, too.”
“Please don’t say that, Cal.” I tried to not sob at the thought of not having him around me.
He kept staring at the moon and downed the rest of the glass in one go, slamming it a little hard on the
windowsill.
Luckily, the glass didn’t break and cut his skin.
“And then I realized this madness had to end. We could not continue living like this. I could not spend
restless days and sleepless nights seeing my people die and living with the guilt of not being able to
save them.”
“But…you could not save them all. You are not a….” I began, but trailed off as he looked back at me,
his eyes shining with agony.
“I am not a God? Yeah, I know that. But if the so called Goddess abandoned us, who were my soldiers
supposed to look up to? I was the commander in chief, so I was responsible for them.”