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KAHLIA'S POV
The hallway outside the ER was full of rushing nurses and rolling stretchers. I stood in front of the ER doors with a chart in my hands, ready to step inside, when a nurse’s voice suddenly rose above the noise.
“Patient in active labor. Camille Raine. Prepare the delivery room. We need the team now.”
My body froze.
I slowly lifted my eyes toward the entrance. A wheelchair moved through the sliding doors, and Camille Raine held her stomach as pain twisted across her face. Beside her, holding her hand with such care that it made my chest tighten, was Ethan.
My ex-husband.
He leaned close to her, whispering something to calm her, his fingers wrapped tightly around hers. His touch was gentle and warm, a softness he had never shown me, even when I tried my best to be everything he needed.
The memories rushed back before I could stop them. I remembered opening that hotel room door and seeing the truth laid bare in front of me, Ethan’s shirt tossed aside and Camille holding him as if she belonged there. I could still see the shock on his face when he realized I had caught them. That moment shattered everything I believed in.
Then came the divorce papers, the signatures that ended our marriage. After that, the news of her pregnancy cut whatever was left of me. I remembered how I cried that night until my chest ached and my breath felt tight, unable to understand how a man I gave my life to could betray me so deeply.
I felt the sting behind my eyes, but I pushed it back. I would not cry here. Not for him.
“You are too calm.”
Marga’s voice came from my right. Marga is a licensed cardiologist and my only one bestfriend. She must have noticed the way I went still. She followed my gaze and her eyes widened when she saw Ethan guiding Camille toward the maternity room.
“That is really them,” she whispered.
“Yes,” I said quietly.
Marga shook her head in disbelief. “He brought her here. He really has no shame.”
“It does not surprise me anymore,” I replied.
She stepped closer and studied my face. “Lia, are you alright?”
A small, dry laugh left my lips. I kept my posture straight even though my heart felt heavy. “I am fine. Honestly, I should thank him.”
Marga frowned. “Thank him for what?”
“For cheating,” I said. “If he had not betrayed me, I would still be at home cooking for him and cleaning after him instead of standing here as a doctor again. Losing him forced me to return to my career. It reminded me who I am.”
Marga nodded slowly. “You sound stronger now.”
“I have to be.”
She hesitated before asking, “But do you still love him?”
Her question cut deeper than I expected. I looked at Ethan again, still holding Camille’s hand with such devotion, and something inside me twisted. I opened my mouth to answer, unsure what I would even say.
I inhaled slowly, forcing my chest to rise evenly. “How can I still love the man who betrayed me?” The words felt heavy, even as I spoke them aloud, almost like admitting it gave them weight. “No. I don’t. Not anymore. I’m happy with my life now.”
Marga tilted her head, studying me like she could see inside my chest. “Even after everything, it’s just gone?”
I let out a short, humorless laugh. “Gone? I think it’s more like evaporated.
Disappeared with the last of the tears I cried over him. I gave him my heart once. That was enough. And now, I have my life back, my choices back. I’m free from him, from us, from the marriage that never belonged to me.”
Her eyes softened. “I’m amazed, Lia. Honestly. Most people would be a mess, crying, depressed, maybe even clinging to the past.”
I shrugged, letting a faint smile slip through. “Man is just a man. That’s all he is. Flawed, selfish, human. And I still have the right to control my life. I still have the right to decide who belongs in it and who doesn’t. The divorce is finalized. No reason to hold on to a marriage that’s dead.”
Marga shook her head slowly, still clearly in awe. “I hope you’ll be healed soon. Truly.”
I chuckled, a soft, self-deprecating sound. “Healed? I’m not sick to be healed, Marga."
That’s when Dr. Collins appeared, stepping around the corner with his usual brisk professionalism. “Excuse me for interrupting,” he said, his tone polite but firm, “but I wanted to discuss the VIP patient. I’ll need your expertise, Dr.Ford”
I nodded, ready to put my emotions aside. “Of course. What do you need, Dr. Collins?”
He glanced at his tablet briefly, then back at me. “Alpha Jaron. I’m referring him to you. He’s in recovery, unable to walk at the moment. I need you to give him your best as his physical therapist.”
I froze mid-breath, the name striking me like a lightning bolt. My pulse quickened involuntarily. “Alpha Jaron?” I whispered, barely loud enough for Marga to hear.
Marga’s jaw dropped, and her hand flew to her mouth. “Do you mean the Alpha Jaron? The Biker? The most feared, the handsome Alpha of Steel Fang Pack?”
I blinked, the weight of her words settling on me. The Alpha of Steel Fang Pack. The man whose very name commanded fear and respect in the supernatural and human communities alike.
I had read about him, heard rumors whispered even in hospital halls, and now, somehow, fate or Dr. Collins was throwing him into my care.
Dr. Collins raised an eyebrow at our exchange. “Yes. He’s highly regarded, but his injuries are severe. The faster he recovers, the better for him and his pack.”
Marga shook her head, her voice a whisper full of disbelief. “Oh my God. I… I can’t believe this is happening. So...You’re going to be treating him?”
The silver eye opened.And the world screamed.Not with sound.With existence itself.Every living thing across the kingdom dropped to its knees.The refugees.The soldiers.The beasts hiding within distant forests.Even the Grave Legions staggered as though an invisible mountain had suddenly been placed upon their backs.I hit the ground hard.Pain exploded through my knees.My lungs refused to draw breath.The pressure wasn't physical.It was something deeper.Something ancient.Something that reached into the soul and reminded it how small it truly was.Above us, the silver eye stared silently across the world.Watching.Judging.Remembering.The figure remained seated upon the Throne of Stars.Silver chains wrapped around its arms.Its chest.Its neck.Its entire body.Thousands of chains.No.Millions.Each one glowing with runes that hurt to look at.The prisoner hadn't moved.Hadn't spoken.Hadn't even fully awakened.Yet the smiling creature's influence across the heavens had
BOOM.The heartbeat echoed again.Not through the air.Through reality itself.The sound rolled across the kingdom like an invisible wave.Mountains cracked.Lakes trembled.Ancient forests swayed despite the absence of wind.Every living creature felt it.Every bird.Every beast.Every human.Even the dead.The Grave Legions halted.Thousands of blue eyes turned toward the northern mountains.Toward the hidden Throne.Toward the place buried beneath centuries of forgotten history.The second heartbeat followed.BOOM.This time several survivors collapsed.Blood poured from their noses.One soldier screamed and clutched his ears.Another fell unconscious instantly.Whatever was awakening beneath the First Chain wasn't merely powerful.Its existence alone was affecting the world.And it wasn't even awake yet.I struggled to stay on my feet.The vision still haunted me.The child.The silver key.The throne.My face.My memories insisted such a thing was impossible.Yet the image felt r
The dead moved.Not slowly.Not like shambling corpses from children's stories.They marched.Perfectly.Thousands upon thousands of blue eyes advanced through the darkness in flawless formation.The forest shook beneath their footsteps.Trees snapped.Branches shattered.The earth itself seemed to tremble beneath their approach.Nobody spoke.Nobody breathed.The survivors simply stared.Frozen.Unable to comprehend what they were seeing.I couldn't blame them.Because I couldn't comprehend it either.The infected army had already been enough to destroy kingdoms.Now another army had appeared.An army that should not exist.An army that had apparently been sleeping beneath the earth for ages beyond counting.The blue lights grew brighter.Closer.Hundreds became thousands.Thousands became tens of thousands.Then lightning flashed across the sky.For a brief second, the darkness vanished.And we saw them.Every survivor gasped.Some screamed.Others dropped to their knees.The dead w
Nobody slept that night.Not that sleep would have come even if we had tried.The kingdom was ending.And we were watching it happen.The survivors huddled together atop the rocky ridge while darkness consumed the horizon.Below us, countless fires burned across the valleys.Villages.Farms.Watchtowers.Entire settlements swallowed by chaos.The infected moved everywhere.Thousands.Maybe hundreds of thousands.Their torches looked like rivers of orange light flowing through the night.Every road was occupied.Every escape route was closing.And above it all—The golden eyes watched.Massive.Motionless.Impossible.Hanging high in the darkness beyond the clouds.Nobody dared look at them for long.The few who did quickly turned away, trembling.One soldier vomited after staring for only three seconds.Another began crying uncontrollably.Whatever those eyes truly were, the human mind wasn't meant to understand them.I sat beside a small fire.My sword rested across my knees.The ste
The smile remained.Impossible.Unnatural.World-ending.For one frozen heartbeat, nobody moved.Nobody breathed.The darkness swallowing the underground city continued to spread behind us, devouring towers, streets, and monuments that had survived for thousands of years.The jailer was gone.The last silver light had vanished.And the creature was free.Not completely.Not yet.But free enough.Far above us, somewhere beyond the mountain, distant screams echoed through the stone.The infection had awakened.Every infected person.Every smiling victim.Every hidden servant of the darkness.All at once.Renn grabbed my shoulder.Hard.Pain shot through my arm."Move!"The word snapped me back into reality.The surviving soldiers stumbled forward immediately.The silver pathway still existed.Barely.Its glow flickered weakly beneath our feet like a dying heartbeat.Whatever power remained was fading.Fast.The tunnel ahead twisted upward through the mountain.A path toward the surface.
The light blinded us.Not because it was bright.Because it was wrong.Silver fire poured across the underground city in endless waves, flooding every street and tower. The ancient symbols carved into the stone erupted with matching light, creating rivers of glowing lines that stretched across the city like veins.For a heartbeat, everything stood frozen.The jailer remained atop the black tower.The survivors trembled around us.Even the air itself felt motionless.Then the mountain screamed.The sound wasn't a roar.It wasn't an earthquake.It was something far worse.The sound of reality tearing apart.A crack split the city.Not a crack in stone.A crack in space.It opened directly beneath the black tower.Darkness erupted upward.Pure darkness.Not the absence of light.Something alive.Something that consumed light.The silver glow vanished wherever it touched.The jailer raised its hand.Thousands of silver chains exploded from the ground.They wrapped around the darkness inst
Kahlia laughed softly, but there was no humor in it. “Because if you were him, I’d know how this ends. I’d know how to brace myself. I’d know which parts of me to lock away.”She pressed a h
I smiled at her and said, “Have a nice day.”Then the engines roared to life, and the racing began.The sound swallowed everything, thought, doubt, memory. It thundered through my chest and rattled my bones as I swung onto the bike, fingers curling around the grips like they belonged there. The tra
Alpha Jaron didn’t answer right away.He stayed crouched in front of me, forearms resting on his knees, eyes fixed on the slow rise and fall of my mother’s chest. For the first time since I’d known him, there was no sharp edge to his posture, no Alpha dominance radiating outward. Just a man weighin
The next morning, the sunlight filtering through the hospital blinds was harsh, sharp, almost accusing. I sat beside my mother, holding her hand, counting her breaths, watching her sleep. The steady beep of her heart monitor was reassuring, but it also reminded me that time was slipping away, that







