LOGINLYRA POV
My knees scraped against the concrete, and pain kept moving through my side. I tried to crawl, but my arms shook badly, and my body refused to obey me.
The shadow moved closer.
“Please,” I whispered. “I will sign it. I will sign anything.”
The figure did not respond. He raised his blade higher, and I screamed.
But the sound barely came out. Before the knife could reach me, a loud crack came from behind him. The man holding the blade flew backward and hit the wall with a heavy thud.
I stared in shock.
Another figure stepped out of the darkness.
Tall. Broad. Calm.
The second attacker rushed forward. He did not even finish raising his weapon. The stranger grabbed his wrist and twisted it until the bone snapped. The scream that followed was short.
The man dropped to the ground, shaking.
“Leave,” the stranger said quietly.
The third attacker hesitated.
“Now,” he repeated, and they ran.
I sat frozen on the ground, my chest heaving.
The stranger turned to me.
I could not see his face clearly, but I felt him. The aura around him felt dominant. He must be an Alpha.
“You are bleeding,” he said.
“I know,” I replied weakly.
“Can you stand?”
“No.”
He crouched in front of me. His eyes were silver under the light.
“They sent people after you,” he said. “You understand that, yes.”
“Darius,” I whispered.
“Yes.”
My vision began to blur again. “I did not sign the papers.”
“I know.”
“How,” I asked.
“You are not invisible,” he replied.
My head spun. “Are you here to finish it?”
“No.”
“Then why,” I asked.
He studied me for a moment. “Because I was curious.”
“Curious about what?” I whispered.
“How an omega survived what should have killed her.”
I tried to laugh. “Congratulations. I am still dying.”
He stood and lifted me easily into his arms.
I protested weakly. “Put me down.”
“You will pass out soon,” he said. “Arguing wastes time.”
“I do not know you.”
“You will.”
The world tilted, and the last thing I heard was the sound of footsteps and my own breathing fading.
---
When I woke up, I expected pain.
Instead, I felt warmth.
I opened my eyes slowly.
The room was dark but clean, and the smell around me was unfamiliar. It certainly wasn't a hospital.
I tried to move and hissed.
“You are awake,” a voice said.
I turned my head.
He sat in a chair near the wall, with his arms crossed.
“You should not move yet,” he added.
“Where am I?” I asked.
“Safe.”
“That is vague.”
“It is intentional.”
I swallowed. “Did you bring me here?”
“Yes.”
“Why?”
He stood and walked closer. “You were going to die.”
“I am still dying.”
“No,” he replied. “You are stabilizing.”
“Who are you?” I asked.
“My name is Kael.”
“Kael,” I repeated. “That means nothing to me.”
“It will.”
I tried to sit up. He placed a hand on my shoulder and pushed me back gently.
“Don’t do that,” he said. “Your stitches are still fragile.”
“You know about the surgery,” I said.
“I know everything,” he replied.
“That is not comforting.”
“It wasn't supposed to be.”
I stared at him. “Are you an Alpha?”
“Yes.”
“Which pack?”
“Shadowfang.”
My breath almost left my lungs. Everyone knew that name.
“You are lying,” I said.
“No.”
“You would have killed me already.”
“If I wanted you dead, you would not be awake.”
That shut me up.
“Why save me then?” I asked.
He looked at me closely. “Because Darius doesn't get to erase anyone he wants. He's not that powerful.”
“You hate him,” I said.
“Yes.”
“For personal reasons.”
“Yes.”
I nodded slowly. “So this is revenge.”
“Partly.”
“And the rest,” I asked.
“You interest me.”
I frowned. “I am an omega with one kidney and no pack.”
“You are an omega who survived betrayal, surgery, and an assassination attempt,” he replied.
“That is nothing.”
Silence stretched between us.
“Did you kill them?” I asked quietly.
“No.”
“You let them go.”
“I wanted Darius to know.”
“Know what?”
“That he failed.”
My fingers curled into the sheets. “He will try again.”
“Yes.”
Fear settled in my chest. “I cannot fight him.”
“You do not have to,” Kael replied. “Not alone.”
I looked at him. “What do you want from me?”
He did not hesitate. “Loyalty.”
“I have nothing left.”
“You have rage,” he said. “That is enough.”
“I do not want to belong to anyone again.”
He leaned closer. “You already do.”
I stiffened. “Excuse me.”
“You are in my territory,” he said calmly. “Under my protection. Nothing touches you unless I allow it.”
“That sounds like another cage.”
“Every safe place has walls.”
“I want my freedom.”
“You want to live,” he replied. “Freedom comes later.”
I stared at the ceiling. “Darius wants me dead.”
“Yes.”
“And you want him destroyed.”
“Yes.”
I turned back to him. “So I am useful.”
His eyes darkened slightly. “You are not disposable.”
“That is new.”
“You will work with me,” he continued. “You will listen. You will learn.”
“And if I refuse.”
“You leave,” he said. “And you die.”
I closed my eyes.
My life for his war.
Again.
“Do I have a choice?” I asked.
“You always have a choice,” he replied. “Some choices just end badly.”
I opened my eyes. “If I agree.”
“You live,” he said. “You get stronger. And when the time comes, you will watch Darius fall.”
My chest tightened.
I thought of the knife.
The trash bags.
The door is closing.
“I will not be weak again,” I said.
“Good,” Kael replied. “Weakness irritates me.”
I met his gaze. “I am not your property.”
“No,” he said. “But you are my responsibility now.”
“That sounds worse.”
A corner of his mouth lifted slightly. “You will get used to it.”
I exhaled slowly. “Then tell me the truth.”
“What truth.”
“Why me?”
He stared at me for a long moment. Then he said quietly, “Because whatever blood runs through you refused to let you die.”
A chill moved through me.
“You feel it too, do you not?” he added. “That pull. That pressure.”
I swallowed. “I thought it was fear.”
“No,” he said. “That is power waking up.”
My heart raced.
“You belong in my world now, Lyra,” Kael said. “And if you want revenge, you will cooperate.”
I nodded once.
“I will,” I said. “But I am not doing this for you.”
“I know,” he replied. “You are doing it for yourself.”
And for the first time since the surgery, I felt something else beneath the pain.
Not hope.
Hunger.
LYRAThe drain was the only honest thing in the room.Everything else in the cell had been built to lie. The stone walls were finished smooth in a way that wanted to read as ancient, though I doubted they were older than ten years.The ceiling height had been calculated, I was fairly sure, to feel like more space than it actually held — high enough that you didn't feel buried, low enough that you never forgot you were underground.The drain didn't perform anything. Old grate, rust at the seams, a four-inch gap into whatever ran beneath the floor.I'd found it on the first day, sitting against the wall doing nothing because there was nothing else available to do, and noticed the suppression thinned there. The way frost thins on a window in the first hour of sun — still cold, still solid, but no longer solid enough to block the shape of what was behind it.I'd been sitting over the drain for close to an hour by then, knees against my chest, palm flat on the stone beside the grate, when
KAELI checked the time again.Twelve minutes between the distraction hitting the main entrance and the first Council response reaching the sublevels. I'd run the number forty times since dawn. It still wasn't enough.The scrubland ran flat toward the Council complex, low cloud sitting on the horizon. Twenty people held position behind a stand of dead brush a half mile out — eight Shadowfang Enforcers, four from each allied pack, all of them gone quiet in the way trained people go quiet before something starts.Gideon crouched beside me with field glasses he didn't need yet."Someone's coming from the south."I followed his line of sight.Two figures crossing open ground. No cover. No hesitation in the footing despite the uneven terrain.My hand found the blade at my hip before I decided to move it there.Then I watched how the lead figure walked. Nothing wasted. The kind of certainty that didn't come from confidence — confidence still had to decide things, weigh them, choose. This ha
Darius POVLucinda was waiting when I walked in.She didn't stand.I loosened my coat and dropped into the chair opposite her. Three folders sat open on the desk. A fourth had been printed on actual paper — the kind of choice that meant digital trails were a problem.I reached for it.Most of it was blacked out. Paragraph after paragraph buried under thick redaction bars. One visible section near the bottom of the final page.A footnote.Biocontainment specifications per Statute 1.1 sublevel protocol. Two units. Indefinite term.I turned the page over.Nothing."That's it?""The contractor dissolved six months after completion," Lucinda said. "The lead engineer died eight months after that."I set the report down.Two units. Indefinite term. Twelve years old.Lyra had been taken days ago.Which meant the cells existed before her. Which meant someone — or two someones — had been occupying them for over a decade while the Council told the world the Veyrith bloodline was extinct.I filed
Aelindra’s POVI reached the neutral boundary before dawn, when the world still looked undecided about what it wanted to be.South of me, the Council complex sat in its usual disguise. Grey buildings, flat lines, nothing that asked to be remembered. From a distance it looked administrative, harmless almost. The kind of place you could walk past a hundred times and never think to look twice at.I had looked twice.Fifteen years ago when they built it, I stood on the same line of scrubland and watched them pour new concrete over old stone. I remember thinking they were efficient. Clean. Confident in their right to erase what came before.They were wrong about that last part.There are things you don’t erase. You just bury them deeper.I felt the first pulse from underneath the structure the day they sealed the lower levels. It wasn’t loud. It wasn’t even meant to be heard. It was instinct bleeding through stone. Something alive down there trying to orient itself in the dark.Did they re
Lyra's POVI had spent enough time in the cell that the suppression no longer felt like an attack.At first it had been unbearable. Every instinct in my body had pushed against it. Every part of me had wanted to fight it, test it, break it.That urge faded eventually.Not because I accepted it.Because there was no point wasting energy on a wall that refused to move.The suppression became part of the environment instead. Like the cold stone beneath my feet or the stale air trapped inside the room. Something I noticed without constantly thinking about.I sat cross-legged near the drain in the corner.The stone beneath me was older there.That much I was certain of now.The rest of the floor had been cut from smooth grey blocks. The stone surrounding the drain was rougher, darker, worn by age in a way the surrounding floor wasn't. It looked like it belonged to an older structure that had existed before this facility was built.More importantly, the suppression felt different there.Not
Kael's POV"They're here."I looked up from the map.The Enforcer standing in the doorway didn't need to explain who he meant.The three Alphas had finally arrived.I pushed away from the table and headed for the underground war room.My boots echoed against the concrete floor.The compound was quiet this early. Most of the pack was still asleep.Or pretending to be.Nobody slept much these days.Not after Lyra.Not after the Council.Not after the silence where the bond used to be.I shoved that thought away before it could settle. There were more important things to deal with.The war room door stood open.Voices drifted out into the hallway.I stepped inside, three men looked up and the room fell quiet.For a second, nobody spoke.Then one of them snorted."Damn."I recognized the voice immediately.Gideon Hart, Alpha of Ironvale. He leaned back in his chair and shook his head."You look like shit."I dropped into the empty seat at the head of the table."Good morning to you too."
~LYRA~The adrenaline crash was brutal.My legs finally gave out when we got back to the penthouse. Kael didn't say a word. He just scooped me up, carried me past the dark living room, and set me down on the guest bed."Don't move," he said."I can't," I whispered.He left the room and came back wi
~ LYRA ~Ten minutes.That was all the time I had to pack my life into a bag. Not that I had much of a life left to pack.I threw the few clothes Kael had bought me into a duffel bag—jeans, t-shirts, a thick sweater. I grabbed the toiletries from the bathroom counter. My hands were shaking so bad I
CHAPTER SIX~ KAEL ~I watched her sleep.It wasn't something I usually did. I didn't linger, I didn't hesitate. I moved, I struck, and I left.But Lyra Hale was different.She was curled up on the guest bed, buried under the grey duvet. Her breathing was even now, but her hands were still clenched
~ LYRA ~Breakfast was a quiet affair.I sat across from Kael in the dining hall. The table was long enough to seat fifty people, but it was just the two of us. The high ceilings and stone walls amplified every sound—the scrape of cutlery, the clink of glasses."You did well today," Kael said, not







