LOGINI squared my shoulders, keeping my voice calm but firm. “I’m Dr. Kahlia Ford, your physical therapist. And she is Dr. Marga Carpio, a licensed cardiologist. So you should respect her! No one in this room deserves to be shouted at!”
Alpha Jaron’s laugh was low and bitter, dripping with mockery. “You don’t get it, do you? I’m an Alpha, the Alpha of the Steel Fang Pack. Do you really think you can dictate me?”
I held his gaze, unflinching. “Being an Alpha doesn’t give you the rights to disrespect doctors. Right now, you’re injured and you need our expertise. That’s not optional. Disrespect is!”
Marga hesitated behind me, her hand fluttering nervously at her chest. “Alpha Jaron… I...” Her voice caught in her throat. “I just… I didn’t mean anything. I didn’t expect you to wake up…”
“I… I’m sorry if I touched your face while you were sleeping, Alpha” she apologized softly.
“What?!” I turned to her, startled.
“You heard her, didn’t you?” he asked, his brows furrowing deeply.
I didn’t hesitate. “Marga, don’t give him any reason to disrespect our profession as doctors.”
“I’m sorry,”Marga apologized again.
He leaned forward slightly, the sheets rustling as he flexed his bandaged limbs. “I’ve spent my life commanding obedience. And now you…” His finger jabbed at me. “…think you can tell me what to do?”
I stepped closer,“Yes. Because this is about your recovery. You can continue to act like this and prolong your healing or you can cooperate. That choice is yours.”
Marga swallowed, eyes wide, clearly drawing strength from my presence.
Jaron’s fists clenched under the covers. “I don’t need help! I can handle this myself!” His roar filled the room, nearly shaking the walls.
I didn’t flinch. I didn’t step back. My shoulders squared, my voice steady, my gaze locked on him.
“Alpha Jaron,” I said, deliberate and firm, “I am your physical therapist. I am here to do my job.
His nostrils flared. “I told you, I don’t need help!”
“No,” I said, stepping closer. “You paid twenty million for your recovery. That alone proves you need help.”
Marga stiffened behind me. Even she seemed stunned by the number I threw at him. But I didn’t break eye contact with Alpha Jaron as I said it.
His gaze hardened, anger flickering deep in those icy blue eyes, but beneath the intimidation, something else flashed: truth. A truth he couldn’t deny.
His voice dropped into a low growl. “Fine. But not from you. Not from someone who talks to me like you’re above me. You should know your place, Doctor. You two should be the ones to respect me!”
I felt Marga’s hand tremble as she clutched her own fingers, terrified he would lash out again. I didn’t turn. I held his glare directly, grounding myself in the responsibility I carried.
"Really? Well, Respect should be earned, Alpha, not demanded.” I answered.
A muscle twitched in his cheek. He hated the truth of it.
His finger pointed at me again, sharp and accusing. “Who are you to lecture me? Do you have any idea who I am?”
“I know that you are an Alpha. You don’t need to remind me of that,” I said without blinking.
“But aside from that, you are a difficult patient with a healing window that is closing. And right now, I am the person standing between you and permanent disability.”
His brows furrowed. His breath hitched. He wasn’t expecting me to say that.
The silence that followed held weight. Thick, hot, suffocating tension wrapped around the three of us. Jaron’s hands curled into tight fists beneath the blanket, his body vibrating with stubborn pride and unspoken fear.
“Leave,” he said finally. The word snapped like a whip through the air.
Marga flinched. I did not move.
He lifted his head slowly, anger darkening his eyes. “I said leave.”
I shook my head. “No.”
Marga choked softly on her own breath behind me. “Dr. Ford… maybe we should…”
“No,” I said firmly, keeping my eyes pinned to Jaron’s. “If we leave, then you stay like this forever.”
His jaw flexed. His voice dropped into a cold, dangerous tone. “Watch your words.”
“I am,” I answered. “Very carefully. So listen to me.”
I took another step toward him, my presence unwavering even as he glared back with the sharpness of a blade.
“You keep saying you don’t need help. You keep shouting that you can handle this yourself. But let us be realistic here. Once I walk out of this room, no physical therapist will accept your case.”
He stiffened.
“Not one. Because they are scared of you. Because they cannot handle you. They refuse to come back after your outbursts!"
His fingers twitched. He did not deny it.
“But I am not scared of you,” I said, my voice lower but stronger. “And that is why I'm standing here.”
The room fell deathly still.
“Well, you have two choices, Alpha. Live the rest of your life disabled, or let me help you,” I said firmly.
Marga’s breathing was shallow. Jaron’s eyes locked on mine with an intensity that could burn. For a long moment, the only sound was the soft beeping of his monitor.
Then he inhaled. Deep. Slow. Controlled. His chest rose with a reluctant acceptance, though his pride tried to fight it.
“Fine,” he muttered.
Marga sighed in relief behind me.
But the way he said it told me it was not surrender. It was a compromise he hated.
Jaron’s gaze swept up to meet mine again. “But not here.”
I frowned, tilting my head slightly as I studied him. “What do you mean not here?”
Alpha Jaron shifted against the pillows, his gaze sharpening as it locked onto mine. “I want to go home.”
His voice dropping into a low command. “I want you to treat me there, Dr.Ford."
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 Ford's POVThe next morning, I woke up to the dull gray light filtering through my bedroom window. My body felt heavier than usual, like the weight of yesterday had lingered through the night. I forced myself out of bed, letting the water from the shower wash over me, hoping the warmth would
ALPHA JARON’S POVDaniel interrupted us while I was talking to Kahlia, but it didn’t bother me since I knew it was about my command from last night.“Alpha,” he said as he stepped inside, his spine straight, his expression unreadable. “The results are ready.”I lifted my gaze from Doctor Ford, who
The question landed softly, almost casually, but it struck something raw inside me.I opened my mouth, then closed it again.What had I thought?That he wanted me to stay because I mattered?Because my presence eased something deeper than muscle memory and balance?Because somewhere along the way,
I took a deep breath, forcing my lungs to work properly, because my blood was boiling.How are you?I almost laughed.Fuck you, Ethan.The words burned behind my teeth as I stared at my phone, sitting innocently beside my plate at the dining table. Two words. Just two. And yet they dragged years of







