LOGINI don't delete the message.
That's the thing I keep coming back to as I walk home through the freezing dark. I should have deleted it. Any normal person would have deleted it. But instead I read it four times on the elevator ride down, and then I saved it to my phone like evidence. Stay away from my son, you broke little whore. Gregory Kingston knows my name. He knows my number. He looked at me for ten seconds in a hallway and now he knows enough to threaten me. I shove my phone into my coat pocket and keep walking. The sidewalk is slick with ice. My shoes are too thin for this weather, but I can't afford new ones. I can barely afford the rent I'm about to be evicted from. The Den is three blocks from campus. It's the only bar that doesn't card at the door, which means it's packed with students on a Tuesday night. Music thumps through the walls. Someone's laughing too loud by the entrance. Marcus is waiting for me. The inside of The Den smells like cheap beer and fried food. I spot Marcus immediately—he's at a booth in the back, waving at me like I'm the best thing that's happened to him all day. "Sophie! Over here!" He's already got a pitcher of something on the table. His smile is wide and easy and completely uncomplicated. No dark secrets. No fathers who threaten girls in elevators. Just a nice boy in a Vipers hoodie who remembers I exist. "You came," he says as I slide into the booth across from him. "I said I would." "Yeah, but you always say you're busy. I figured you'd cancel again." There's no accusation in his voice. Just honesty. Marcus is the kind of person who says exactly what he means, and for a second, I feel guilty. I didn't come here because I wanted to see him. I came here because I wanted to prove something to myself. "How's the tutoring going?" he asks. "Terrible." "Terrible how?" I pour myself a glass of whatever's in the pitcher. It's beer. Warm. Disgusting. I drink it anyway. "Jace Kingston is impossible," I say. "He doesn't listen. He doesn't do the work. He thinks he can charm his way through everything." Marcus laughs. "Yeah, that sounds like King." "You're friends with him?" "Teammates. There's a difference." He shrugs, easy and unbothered. "Jace is good on the ice. Off the ice, he's kind of a mess. Everyone knows that." "What kind of mess?" The question comes out too fast. Marcus notices. His eyebrows lift slightly, but he doesn't push. "Just... mess," he says. "Parties too hard. Disappears for days. Shows up to practice with bruises he won't explain." He pauses. "Why? You worried about him?" "No." "Because you asked real quick." "I'm his tutor. His performance affects my paycheck." Marcus holds up his hands in surrender. "Okay, okay. Just asking." But he's watching me now. Not suspicious, exactly. More like he's trying to figure something out. "So you don't like him," he says. "I can't stand him." "Good." "Why is that good?" Marcus grins. "Because I've been trying to get you to hang out with me for three months. If you had a thing for King, I'd be pretty disappointed." My face heats up. This is not where I expected the conversation to go. "I don't have a thing for anyone," I say. "I don't have time." "That's a cop-out." "It's the truth." "It's a cop-out wrapped in a truth." He leans forward, elbows on the table. "You work all the time. You study all the time. You never let anyone in. I've been sitting next to you in the library for two semesters, and I still don't know your favorite color." "Blue." "That's not the point." "Then what's the point?" He tilts his head, studying me with those big brown eyes. Nothing like Jace's blue ones. Nothing like the storm. "The point is that letting people in is terrifying," Marcus says. "But it's also the only way anything good ever happens." I don't have an answer for that. So I drink my warm beer and pretend I'm not thinking about Jace Kingston bleeding in his hallway. The door of The Den bangs open. Cold air rushes in. Then noise. Then a group of hockey players, loud and rowdy, spilling into the bar like they own it. And at the center of them, somehow already looking right at me, is Jace. Our eyes lock across the room. His are hard and unreadable. The bandage on his cheek is stark white against his skin. He's wearing a black Vipers hoodie, hood pulled up, jaw set like he's walking into battle. "What's he doing here?" I mutter. Marcus turns around. "Oh. Team thing, probably. We do Tuesdays here sometimes." "You didn't mention that." "Didn't think it mattered. You said you hate him." Jace is still staring at me. The other players are heading toward the bar, but he's frozen by the door like he's deciding something. Then he walks toward our booth. "Crap," I breathe. "Just be cool," Marcus says. "He's probably just saying hi." Jace doesn't say hi. He stops at the edge of our table. Towers over us. His presence sucks all the air out of the booth. He looks at Marcus first—a quick nod—then his eyes land on me and stay there. "Hart." "Kingston." "Didn't expect to see you here." "It's a free country." "You don't strike me as a bar person." "You don't know me." His jaw tightens. The muscle in his cheek jumps. "She's my study buddy," Marcus says, his voice light but pointed. "We're working on a pre-law thing together." "Pre-law thing," Jace repeats. "Right." "Is there a problem?" Jace finally looks away from me. When he meets Marcus's eyes, something passes between them. A warning, maybe. Or a question. "No problem," Jace says. "Just surprised. Sophie doesn't seem like the type to hang out with hockey players." "I'm full of surprises," I say. "Yeah." His eyes flick back to me. "I'm starting to see that." The tension is unbearable. It's a live wire stretched between us, sparking and dangerous. Marcus is watching us with growing confusion. I'm gripping my glass so hard my knuckles ache. "Thursday," I say. "Don't be late." "I won't." "Good." "Good." He doesn't move. For a long, agonizing moment, he just stands there, looking at me like he's trying to solve a puzzle I don't want solved. Then his phone buzzes. He glances at the screen. His expression darkens. "I gotta go," he says. And just like that, he's gone. Back through the crowd. Out the door. Into the cold. Marcus lets out a long breath. "Okay," he says. "What was that?" "What was what?" "That." He gestures at the door Jace just disappeared through. "The staring. The tension. The whole 'stay away from her' vibe he was giving off." "He wasn't—" "Sophie. Come on." I stare at my glass. The beer is flat now. Warm and flat and useless. "He's my tutoring assignment," I say. "That's all." "Then why did he look at me like he wanted to put me through the glass?" "Because he's a jerk." "Because he likes you." My head snaps up. "He doesn't." Marcus doesn't look angry. He looks curious. A little sad, maybe, but mostly curious. "I've known Jace for two years," he says. "I've never seen him look at anyone the way he just looked at you." "And what way is that?" "Like you're something he's afraid to want." The words land in my chest and stay there. Afraid to want. Like I'm something precious. Like I'm something dangerous. It's exactly how I felt in his hallway. Exactly how I felt when he said you deserve more than nice. "I can't," I say. "I can't do this. Any of this." "Can't do what?" "Boys. Relationships. Feelings." I push my glass away. "I have rent to pay. I have a future to build. I have a mother who died because she loved the wrong man. I can't afford to make the same mistake." Marcus is quiet for a moment. Then he reaches across the table and touches my hand. Just briefly. Just kind. "I'm not saying you should date him," he says. "Jace is a mess. We all know that. But maybe you should figure out why you're so determined to hate him." "I know why I hate him." "Do you?" I don't answer. Because I'm not sure anymore. My phone buzzes. I grab it too fast, and Marcus notices. Another message. Unknown number. My stomach drops. Unknown: I saw you at the bar. You think I'm playing? Stay away from my son or you'll regret it. The bar is too loud. Too hot. Too crowded. I shove my phone into my pocket and stand up so fast the table rattles. "I have to go," I say. "Sophie? What's wrong?" "Nothing. I just—I forgot I have a shift." "You're shaking." "I'm fine." I'm not fine. Gregory Kingston is watching me. He's here. He saw me with Jace. He saw me with Marcus. He's somewhere in this bar or outside it, and he knows exactly where I am. "Let me walk you home," Marcus says. "No. Stay here. I'm fine." "Sophie—" But I'm already moving. Through the crowd. Past the hockey players. Out the door into the freezing night. The street is empty. The snow is starting to fall. I scan the sidewalks, the parked cars, the dark spaces between buildings. Nothing. No one. But he was here. He's always here. My phone buzzes one more time. I look down. Unknown: Smart girl. Now keep walking. I don't run. Running means they win. But I walk fast, my heart in my throat, my fingers frozen around my phone. And I don't stop until my apartment door is locked behind me.The celebration roared around us, but I couldn't hear any of it. Diane's name pulsed on my phone screen like a wound that wouldn't close. She'll be seeing you soon. Jace took the phone from my hand, read the message twice, and his jaw tightened until I could see the muscle jumping in his cheek."She's bluffing." His voice was quiet, controlled, the Aegis steady behind his eyes. "The Ashford network is shattered. She's on the run. This is desperation.""You don't believe that.""No. I don't." He handed the phone back. "But the draft is over. We're alive. Marcus is recovering. The Volkovs are retreating. Whatever Diane is planning, we have time to prepare."I wanted to believe him. The locker room was full of laughter and champagne and teammates clapping Jace on the back. Ava was in the corner, already filing her follow-up story. Celeste stood guard by the door, her gold eyes scanning every face. My father was somewhere in the building. For the first time in months, we'd actually won so
The draft venue glowed like a cathedral of glass and steel, every window blazing with light against the dark winter sky. We stood at the edge of the crowd, Jace's hand wrapped around mine, the roar of ten thousand voices rumbling through the walls. Somewhere inside, scouts and cameras and three Volkov agents were waiting. Somewhere inside, my father was in the front row."You ready?" I asked."No." Jace's eyes flickered gold, but steady. Controlled. "But I'm done letting fear make my decisions."We walked through the side entrance together. The hallway stretched ahead, lined with framed jerseys and championship banners. Halfway down, Celeste emerged from the shadows. "The Volkov agents are in position. Security, media, one scout. They're watching every entrance.""Let them watch." Jace's voice was calm. "I'm not their weapon anymore."Helena met us at the tunnel entrance with a clipboard and a grim expression. "Ava's story just went live. Every major outlet is picking it up. The blood
Six hours before the draft, Marcus stopped breathing.I was in the safe house hallway when the machines screamed. Doctors burst through the doors, shouting words I didn't understand, and I pressed myself against the wall as they wheeled him past—his face pale, his silver eyes closed, the binding agent's poison still burning through his veins. Jace caught my arm before my knees gave out."He's not going to die," he said, but his voice was rough, uncertain. "The Valcourt doctors know what they're doing.""He took that syringe for you.""I know.""Why would he do that? After everything he did—all the lies, all the manipulation—why would he sacrifice himself?"Jace was quiet for a moment. The same question had been eating at him since the arena. "Because he meant what he said. Everything he did, he did because he loved you. Even the betrayal. Even the lies." He met my eyes. "Love makes people do terrible things. It also makes them do brave ones."I stared at the closed doors of the medica
The first Volkov agent crashed through the glass before anyone could move. Shards exploded across the ice like frozen rain, and then they were everywhere—pouring through the shattered doors, their silver eyes cutting through the dark arena like cold fire. Twelve of them. Maybe more. I grabbed Marcus by the front of his bloodied jacket and dragged him behind the boards as a wave of pressure slammed into the spot where he'd been standing."They sent a kill squad," he gasped, pressing a hand to the gash on his forehead. "Not a recruitment team. The voided contract triggered a full termination order. They're here to eliminate everyone."Jace was already moving. His eyes flared gold, and the air around him shimmered with heat. "Celeste, protect Sophie. Helena, get Margot to the Valcourt safe house. Marcus—""I'm fighting." Marcus pushed himself upright, his silver eyes steady despite the blood streaming down his face. "I burned my life for this. Let me finish it."Jace didn't argue. He jus
Nine days before the draft, Jace's power nearly killed him.I was in the stands at dawn, watching him run drills alone on the empty ice. Helena had given the team a rest day, but Jace never rested. He skated in brutal circles, slapshots echoing through the rafters like gunfire, his breath coming in harsh white bursts. Then he stopped. His stick clattered to the ice. His body went rigid, and a sound escaped him—half growl, half scream—as gold light bled from his eyes and poured down his cheeks like liquid fire.I was on the ice before I knew I'd moved, my sneakers slipping on the frozen surface. "Jace!"He didn't answer. He couldn't. His whole body was shaking, muscles locked, the veins in his neck standing out like cords. The air pressure dropped. The lights flickered. Somewhere in the tunnel, I heard Celeste shout a warning—she'd been watching from the shadows, always watching—but I didn't stop. I grabbed his arm, and the heat of his skin burned through my gloves."Look at me. Whatev
Marcus's silver eyes reflected the warehouse lights like mirrors, and in them, I saw every moment he'd been there—every study session, every coffee, every time he'd told me Jace was dangerous and I should walk away. He wasn't protecting me. He was isolating me. The same way Gregory had isolated Jace. The same way Diane had isolated Margot. All of them, working different angles of the same terrible plan."Say something," Marcus said. His voice was calm, but his hands were shaking at his sides. "Scream at me. Tell me I'm a monster. I deserve it.""You're Volkov." The words scraped out of my throat. "The whole time. From the very beginning.""From before the beginning. I was assigned to watch the Kingston heir when I was sixteen. The Volkovs knew Gregory was trying to activate the Aegis. They wanted to see if he'd succeed before they made their move." He took a step closer, and Jace moved to block him. "I never wanted to hurt you, Sophie. That part was real. Everything I felt for you—""
The list was wrong. It had to be. Seven names stared back at me from my notebook—Sophie, Jace, Celeste, Margot, Helena, Marcus, Ava—and every single one felt impossible. I'd spent the past three days watching each of them like a hawk, cataloguing conversations, tracking movements, searching for th
The Valcourt compound was dark when we pulled up, every window black as a dead eye. No guards at the gate. No security lights. Just the iron fence glinting under a sliver of moon and the hum of something wrong in the air. Diane's message was still glowing on my phone: Come alone. Or Margot dies. Bu
The list of five suspects burned in my pocket, but it was the name not on the list that kept me awake. Margot Valcourt. The woman who'd offered us an alliance. The woman who'd revealed my father was alive. The woman who'd sworn her family were archivists, not hunters. And all along, the Ashfords ha
The man who ruined my life was standing ten feet away with tears in his eyes, and I couldn't decide if I wanted to slap him or collapse. Seven years. Seven years since he'd drained our savings and vanished. Seven years since I'd watched my mother waste away in a hospital bed while the bills piled u







