LOGINI turn the corner onto our street, and that's when I see them.
Huge men in suits. Three of them. Standing outside my apartment door like they own the place. Their shoulders fill the narrow hallway, blocking the light from the bare bulb overhead. One of them is an Alpha—I can tell by the way the other two angle toward him, the deference in their silence, the way the air itself seems to bend around his presence.
My heart stops.
Not metaphorically. It actually stops. A full second of nothing, of silence in my chest, and then it starts again too fast, hammering against my ribs like a trapped bird.
I approach slowly. My bag is clutched against my chest like a shield. My mouth is dry. My palms are sweating.
"Excuse me?" My voice comes out steadier than I feel. "Can I help you?"
The Alpha turns. His eyes are pale gray, cold as January ice. He looks at me the way a butcher looks at a cut of meat—assessing, calculating, pricing.
"You live here?" His voice is gravel. Low. Unfriendly.
"I live here." I don't flinch. I don't look away. "What's the problem?"
"No problem." He smiles, and it's the kind of smile that makes you want to back away slowly. "We're looking for Marek Vale. He around?"
Marek. My father. I haven't seen him in four days. He left for cigarettes and never came back, which is not unusual. He disappears. He reappears. He breaks promises like they're twigs under his feet. The last time I saw him, he was sitting at the small table by the window, staring at nothing, his hands trembling from whatever had finally worn off.
"I don't know where he is." I keep my voice flat. Empty. "We haven't seen him."
The Alpha glances at his companions. Something passes between them—a silent communication that makes my stomach clench.
"That's unfortunate." He reaches into his jacket. My whole body tenses, bracing for something I don't have words for—but what he pulls out is paper. A thick envelope, creased at the edges, official-looking. "Your father took out a loan with our employer six months ago. Substantial amount. He made payments for the first two months. Then he stopped." The Alpha's voice is calm, almost pleasant. It's the calm that frightens me. "We've been very patient. But patience has limits."
He holds out the envelope. I take it. My fingers feel numb.
"How much?"
"Forty thousand. Plus interest. Plus collection fees. You're looking at about sixty now."
The number doesn't make sense. It's too big. Too impossible. I make minimum wage at the café. I make pocket change running errands. Sixty thousand dollars might as well be sixty million.
"I don't have anything to do with his loans. I'm not responsible for his debts."
"No," the Alpha agrees. "But you're his daughter. His next of kin. And our employer doesn't like loose ends." He pauses, letting the words sink in. "The paperwork's all there. Amount owed. Interest accrued. Payment options. We expect the debt to be settled within forty-eight hours."
"Forty-eight hours?" The laugh that escapes me is jagged, broken. "I can't get that kind of money in forty-eight hours. I can't get that kind of money ever."
"Then we'll have to discuss alternative arrangements." His eyes flick toward the apartment door. "There's a kid, right? A little girl?"
The world narrows. The hallway tilts. I can't breathe.
"Don't." The word tears out of me, raw and desperate. "Don't talk about her."
The Alpha holds up his hands, a gesture of false surrender. "I'm just informing you of the situation. The debt has to be settled. If your father can't pay, and you can't pay, then the syndicate will collect what it's owed in other ways. Collateral. Assets." He lets the words hang in the air. "You understand what I'm saying?"
I understand. I understand perfectly. Omegas can be claimed as property if their legal guardian defaults. Emery is six years old. She hasn't presented yet. But the syndicate doesn't care about age. An Omega is an Omega. A body is a body. And my father has sold us both without ever lifting a finger.
"Get out," I say.
"Excuse me?"
"Get out of my building. Now."
The Alpha studies me for a moment. His expression is unreadable. Then he shrugs, a massive roll of his shoulders, and gestures to his companions.
"Forty-eight hours," he says. "We'll be back."
They walk away. Their footsteps echo down the hallway, heavy and final. I stand there, clutching the envelope, my heart pounding so hard I can feel it in my teeth.
Then I open the door and go inside.
The apartment is empty. Emery is still with Mrs. Delgado. I'm grateful. I don't want her to see me like this.
I sit at the small table by the window and open the envelope. The documents inside are typed, dense, full of legal language I have to read three times to understand. But I understand enough. The loan was for forty thousand dollars. With interest, penalties, and collection fees, the total is now over sixty. The repayment deadline was last month. The lender is listed as a subsidiary of Draven Biotech.
Draven Biotech. The name burns in my throat like bile. I know that name. Every Omega in the shelter district knows that name. They manufacture the safe, legal suppressants—the ones that cost a fortune, the ones prescribed by private physicians to wealthy Omegas with bonded Alphas who can afford to keep them chemically stable. And they also run, if rumors are true, the underground pipeline that supplies the cheap, dangerous blockers I buy from shadows.
They profit from both sides. They profit from our suffering and our safety.
And my father borrowed money from them. My father, who sold information about unregistered Omegas to wealthy families for cash. My father, who gambled and drank and snorted his way through every dollar he ever touched.
I read the final page. The settlement clause. If the debtor cannot pay, assets will be seized. Assets. The word is clinical. Sanitized. What it means is: Omegas can be claimed as property. What it means is: I am an asset. Emery is an asset. We are not people on this paper. We are line items.
The documents slip from my hands and scatter across the table. I press my palms against my eyes until I see stars. I don't cry. Crying is a luxury for people with options.
He nods and steps back, giving me space. He gestures to the couch. "Sit. I'll make tea."I sit. He makes tea. The heat burns inside me, but for the first time in days, I don't feel like I'm drowning.Maybe that's the scariest part. Not the burning. Not the ache between my legs or the way my skin feels like it's been stretched too tight over my bones. The scariest part is that when he's near me, the drowning stops. The screaming in my head goes quiet. The bond stops feeling like a chain and starts feeling like a lifeline.I don't want a lifeline. I've never needed one before.The kitchen is silent except for the soft clink of porcelain and the whistle of the kettle. I w
That night, I dream of drowning.Not in water. In tide. A great, dark tide that pulls me under and spins me around and drags me toward something I cannot see. The current is too strong to fight. I kick and claw and scream, but the tide does not care. It pulls me down, down, down, and just when I think I will never breathe again, I feel hands on my body. Strong hands. Familiar hands. The hands of the Alpha who marked me.I wake with a gasp, my body on fire, my sheets soaked with sweat.The clock on the nightstand says three in the morning. The penthouse is silent. Emery is asleep. Mrs. Hartley is off-duty. And somewhere in this building, Kael Draven is sleeping—or not sleeping—and I can feel him through the bond like a presence in the dark
The penthouse is nothing like I expected.I thought it would be cold. Sterile. A concrete box with expensive furniture and no soul. But it is worse than that. It is beautiful.The elevator opens directly into the main living space—a vast, open room with floor-to-ceiling windows that show the entire city sprawled below like a glittering carpet. The floors are dark wood. The furniture is sleek and modern, all clean lines and neutral tones. A staircase curves up to a second level. The kitchen gleams with marble and chrome. Everything is spotless. Everything is perfect. Everything smells like him.I step out of the elevator, and the scent hits me like a wave. Cedar and steel and that electric charge, the one that makes the hair
I think about the apartment. The mattress on the floor. The hot plate balanced on the crate. The landlord's notes slipped under the door. The life I am leaving behind. It is not much of a life. It has never been much of a life. But it is mine. The only thing I have ever had that belonged to me alone."No," I say. "No problem."He studies me for a moment longer, and I feel his gaze like a weight on my skin. Then he stands, buttoning his jacket, his movements precise and unhurried."My driver will take you back to collect your things. Pack only what you need. Everything else will be provided for you at the penthouse." He pauses at the door, his hand on the frame. "And Arielle? The suppressants. You'll stop taking them."My blood goes cold. "What?""You heard me." He does not turn around. "You've been abusing black-market blockers for years. Your scent glands are damaged. Your cycle is unstable. The estate physician will need to assess you, but the first step is stopping the poison you'v
That night, I cannot sleep.The bed is too soft. The room is too quiet. The penthouse hums with a silence that is louder than any noise, and every time I close my eyes, I feel the bond pulsing in my chest like a second heartbeat. Somewhere in this building—maybe in the room at the end of the hall, the one Mrs. Hartley did not show me—Kael Draven is sleeping. Or not sleeping. I cannot tell which.I get out of bed and walk to the window. The city glitters below, indifferent and eternal. I press my palm against the cold glass and think about the last time I was alone in the dark like this. The night before the river. The night before the bite. The night when I thought the only way out was down.I have not taken my suppressants since this morning.The thought creeps in, unwanted. It has been almost twenty-four hours since my last dose. Already, I can feel the difference. My skin is warmer. My senses are sharper. The scent of cedar and steel that permeates the penthouse is stronger now, mo
The car ride back to the apartment is silent. Emery sleeps against my chest. The Beta doesn't speak. I stare out the window at the gray city and try to process everything that's happened in the past twelve hours. The bar. The stranger. The bite. The river. The rescue. The contract. The marriage I just agreed to. The apartment feels smaller when I walk back in. Smaller and darker and more pathetic than it ever has before. Maybe because I'm seeing it through different eyes now. The eyes of someone who knows she's leaving it behind. I lay Emery on her mattress and tuck the blankets around her. She murmurs something in her sleep—something about ice cream, about blue tongues—and my heart cracks open all over again. "I'm sorry," I whisper, brushing a curl from her forehead. "I'm so sorry, baby. For everything. For the river. For tonight. For all of it." She doesn't stir. I sit beside her mattress for a long time, watching her breathe. The sun is fully up now, pale light filtering thro
ArielleLife has never been easy or good to me.That's not me feeling sorry for myself. That's just the truth. Some people are born into warmth—into mothers who smell like vanilla and fathers who lift them onto their shoulders and houses where the floors don't creak and the windows let in sunlight.
I remember the door opening. I remember lights. A bed. Then his mouth was on mine and nothing else mattered.He kissed like he was trying to crawl inside me.There was no softness. No asking. His tongue pushed past my lips and he swallowed my moan like he owned it. His hands were everywhere—in my h
The room was spinning.Not the slow, gentle spin of a few drinks. This was the kind of spin that told me I'd made a mistake three glasses ago and kept going anyway. My back pressed against something solid—a wall? A door? I couldn't tell. Everything was warm and blurry and wrong.But then I smelled
I wait.The hours crawl past. Mrs. Delgado brings Emery home. I tell her I'm tired from work. I make dinner—macaroni and cheese, the powder clumping because I forgot to stir it. Emery eats hers with enthusiasm. I push mine around the bowl and pretend to take bites when she looks at me."Riri?" She







