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LYRA POV
I should have been walking into a honeymoon suite, not being dragged through hospital doors.
My wedding dress brushed against the white floor; the hem was already becoming very dirty, as the smell of antiseptic filled my nose.
I tried holding the dress up a bit, and while doing that, my veil slipped off my shoulders. This night could not be more frustrating. And the more forward we moved, the faster my heart beat, so it felt like it wanted to escape my chest.
Darius held my hand in a tight grip, but I did not pull away. His voice was filled with desperation as he spoke to the doctor in the hallway.
“Doctor, please, hurry. Do not let her die. Please do not let my sister die.” He begged.
Sister.
The word felt surreal in my head. His sister. On our wedding night, my husband was begging for another woman’s life.
I swallowed slowly. “Darius—uhm, what exactly is wrong with her?”
He turned around and moved closer to me; from this view, his eyes were red, and his face was soaked with tears.
“Lyra, just stay calm. The doctor will explain.”
The doctor slowed down and looked at me. He looked tired. “Mrs. Venn, your husband’s sister is in critical condition. Her kidneys are failing. We have been searching for a compatible donor for months—you.” He glanced at the file, then at me.
“You are a perfect match.”
The words began to dance around my head.
Perfect match.
Donor.
Surgery.
Tonight.
Nothing made sense to me anymore. How? I shook my head slowly. “Me? But I just got married—we were supposed to—how is this even?”
Darius squeezed my hand harder. “Lyra, listen to me. She will not survive the night without this. Please. She is my sister.”
He knelt down in front of me. Crying! “I cannot lose her. Not after everything.”
I looked at him for what seemed like a few minutes. The man I married today. The man who promised me forever. He now looked like he was about to fall apart.
I thought about my vows. I thought about standing beside him in sickness and in health. Better or for worse.
“What kind of wife would I be if I turned away now?” I whispered more to myself than to him.
“But Darius,” I said aloud in a rather shaky voice, “A kidney transplant is not small.”
“I know,” he said, standing up to his feet and pressing his forehead against mine.
“But I swear, I will make this up to you for the rest of my life. You are saving her. You are saving me. Please, Lyra.”
I looked at him again, looking for a reason to back out of this. But I could not find any; I would just be betraying him if I did not. But this was insane. I was scared. How did I go from wedding bells to hospital bed?
My heart began to race again as I thought of all the possibilities of what could go wrong and how this was all too much for me to bear. But instead of protesting, I nodded in agreement. A decision I would later come to regret.
“I will do it.”
He let out a sound that was somewhere between half sob and half relief. He kissed my forehead again and again. And I wondered if that was what cleared me of all my sense of reasoning.
“Thank you. Thank you. God bless you.”
Two nurses came by quickly with a wheelchair, and I looked at Darius again before sitting on it.
“I guess this is it,” I whispered to myself as the nurse wheeled me away. My dress got caught on the metal frame slightly, but the second nurse lifted it gently.
“You are very brave,” she said.
But her eyes did not agree with her words. They took me to a new room, which I perceived to be the changing room. In there, I got out of my wedding dress and wore my surgery clothes.
Inside the operating room, the lights were really bright, blinding almost. I squinted my eyes quickly, and at the same time, goosebumps began to form on my skin; the air in here was cold.
A nurse leaned close. “Are you sure you want to do this? You do not have to. There are risks.”
“I want to,” I said quickly. “She is my family now. I will do it.”
She studied my face, then nodded. But I noticed the hesitation in her movement.
The surgeon looked at the machines. “We are ready.”
The church bells were still echoing in my ears when I looked down at my hands, as my fingers wrapped around Darius’s. The ring was heavy, but it was proof of my beautiful reality.
“You are mine now, Lyra,” he whispered as we walked down the aisle.
“Forever,” I said.
“Forever,” he repeated.
People clapped. Cameras flashed. My mother cried. His family smiled widely. Everything felt unreal, like I was inside a dream that refused to end.
At the reception, Darius stayed close. He fed me cake. He raised his glass for toasts. His arm stayed around my waist. He never let me go.
“You are the best thing that has ever happened to me,” he whispered.
I laughed. “And you—you are stuck with me now.”
He kissed me slowly while everyone cheered. And I was loving every second of it.
Then his phone vibrated.
Once.
Twice.
Three times.
His smile faded quickly. “Excuse me,” he said and walked away.
I watched him from across the room. His face changed. And when he came back, his skin looked pale.
“What is it?” I asked.
“It is my sister,” he said quietly.
“She is dying. The doctors say she might not last the night.”
The room fell silent.
“Then let us go,” I said.
Minutes later, I was in the back of a car, still in my wedding dress as the city lights passed by. Darius shouted into his phone, while I held his hand and said nothing.
I blinked, and the memory faded.
I looked through the glass wall separating me from the hallway. Darius stood there with his hands pressed against the glass. His eyes found mine, and for a moment, I felt calm.
At least he was here with me.
Then someone stepped beside him.
A woman.
And suddenly I couldn't breathe.
It was his sister!
She was nothing close to a dying woman. In fact, she was the total opposite of dying. Her skin glowed. Her hair was neat. Her clothes looked expensive. And she was smiling.
She was alive! And healthy.
Confusion flooded me. Why was she here? Why was she standing? Why was she smiling?
Darius wrapped an arm around her shoulders. She leaned into him and kissed him. His sister kissed him!
The mask lowered toward my face before I could even put myself together and get out there.
“She is fine?” I mumbled in shock.
I searched Darius’s face. But he wasn't looking back.
The truth hit me all at once. My marriage. My sacrifice. All of it was a lie.
Darkness pulled me under.
The last thing I saw was Darius pulling her closer to himself.
And then there was nothing.
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 ~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
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~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







