LOGINI didn't run. I couldn't. My father’s command had rooted me to the spot, and the sheer weight of old habits—of obedience born from fear—forced my legs to move.
I walked to the table like a prisoner walking to the gallows. "Good," my father grunted, gesturing to the empty chair directly across from Tyler. I sat down, my hands gripping the napkin in my lap so tight my knuckles turned white. The air in the dining room was thick, smelling of expensive wine and my mother’s roast chicken—smells that should have been comforting but now made my stomach turn. "Well, don't be rude, Sephina," my mother chirped, her voice high and strained. She was trying so hard to pretend this was normal. "Introduce yourself." Beside Tyler sat the blonde woman. She was polished, wearing a dress that probably cost more than my car, and completely oblivious to the tension radiating off me. "Hi!" she beamed, extending a manicured hand. "I’m Skylar. Tyler’s fiancée." Fiancée? Someone was actually going to marry him? Did she know? Did she have any idea what kind of monster was sleeping beside her? I stared at her hand, ignoring it. "I’m Sephina." Skylar blinked, retracting her hand awkwardly, but her smile didn't waver. "It is so nice to finally meet you! Tyler talks about you all the time. He says you’ve been… working on yourself." I shot a look at Tyler. He was sipping his wine, eyes dancing with amusement. Working on myself. That was his code for 'getting over what I did to her.' "Sephina works at a bakery downtown," my mother added quickly, spooning potatoes onto Skylar’s plate. Skylar’s eyes lit up. "Oh, a bakery? That is just so... quaint." Dinner began. It was an agonizing performance. My parents asked about Tyler’s business, about the wedding plans, about the honeymoon in the Maldives. They acted like a happy family. Like I hadn't spent my teenage years crying myself to sleep. Like my suffering never happened. I stared at my plate, pushing a piece of carrot around, praying for the floor to open up and swallow me whole. Then, I froze. I felt something brush against my shin. At first, I thought it was an accident. But then it happened again. A firm, deliberate pressure gliding up my calf. Tyler’s foot. I stiffened, my breath hitching in my throat. I looked up, panic flaring in my chest. I scanned the table—did anyone see? My father was pouring more wine. My mother was laughing at something Skylar said. No one was looking at me. No one ever looked at me. I locked eyes with Tyler. He wasn't looking at his food. He was looking right at me, a subtle, sickening smirk playing on his lips while he nodded along to Skylar’s story about floral arrangements. He was doing it right in front of them. The audacity. The blunt disrespect. He was marking his territory. I kicked his leg—hard. Tyler didn't even flinch. He just took another sip of wine. "So, Sephina," Skylar chirped, drawing my attention back to her. She clasped her hands together, looking like a child about to ask for a pony. "Since we’re all here, I actually have a huge favor to ask." I didn't answer. I just wanted to leave. "We’ve been looking for a wedding cake," she continued, oblivious to the fact that I was shaking. "But everything is just so commercial. We want something made with love. And since you’re family—well, we will be family soon—we were wondering..." She leaned in, eyes sparkling. "Would you bake our wedding cake? As a gift, of course. It wouldn't be the same if someone else made it." The room spun. I felt bile rise in my throat. They wanted me to bake a cake for his wedding. To celebrate the union of the man who destroyed my childhood. They wanted me to labor for hours to create something sweet for a monster. "No," I said. The word hung in the air, sharp and final. Skylar’s smile faltered. "Oh... I... maybe you didn't understand. We would pay for the ingredients, of course, but—" "I said no," I said, louder this time. My voice shook with a mix of rage and terror. "I won't do it. Find another baker." Silence descended on the table. Heavy. Suffocating. Tyler set his glass down. Clink. "Excuse me?" my father growled, his face turning that familiar shade of purple. "I can't do it," I said, looking at my mother, begging her with my eyes to say something, to defend me. Please, Mom. Tell them. Tell them why. She just looked down at her plate. My father stood up so fast his chair scraped violently against the floor. "You ungrateful brat!" he roared. "Tyler is a success! He is family! And you are a waitress living under my roof!" He pointed a shaking finger at my face. "You will bake that cake. Or you can pack your bags and get out tonight." My heart hammered against my ribs. I looked at Tyler. He wasn't angry. He was delighted. He leaned forward slightly, his voice dropping to that terrifyingly low register I remembered from the dark hallways of my youth. "Come on, Sephina," he murmured. "Be a good little sister. Like you used to be." I felt like vomiting. That phrase—good little sister—brought back a flood of memories I had spent years trying to drown. I couldn't breathe. I couldn't stay here. I stood up, knocked my chair over, and ran.I woke up to a soul-splitting headache that felt like my skull was being ripped open. I couldn’t even find the words to describe the sensation; it was a rhythmic, agonizing throb that made every movement feel like a chore. The influx of morning sunlight pouring through the curtains did nothing to help. In fact, the brightness only intensified the pain, stabbing at my eyes. ‘I really hate mornings today,’ I thought, pulling the covers over my head. Usually, I would be up and about, tidying my things and minding my business, staying productive to keep my mind quiet. But today, I didn't want to get up. I just wanted to be one with my mattress, to sink into the fabric and disappear. The conversation from yesterday kept replaying in my head like a cursed record. The truth about where I came from—the Valentine blood, the Blackwood lineage, the twin brother I never got to hold. It hurt. I felt fresh tears prick at my eyes at th
My father was executed... by his? “Look, I know you may hate me for what my father did,” Lucien started to speak, his voice desperate to bridge the widening gap between us. “But that doesn't—” “Get out.” I cut him off before he could finish another word. The air in the room felt like it had been sucked out, replaced by a cold, suffocating vacuum. He looked hurt—genuinely wounded that I would dismiss him so easily—but I didn't have any sympathy left to give. “Seraphina, I know—” he tried again, taking a step toward me. “You don’t know anything, Lucien!” I screamed at him. The sound ripped from my throat. “You can’t even begin to fathom what I feel right now!” I could feel the agitation vibrating in my limbs, the power in my blood reacting to the sheer chaos of my heart. “My entire birth family is dead, and it’s thanks to your father,” I said, my voice wobbling on the final word. “So don’t you da
Seraphina’s POV “Seraphina, we need to talk.” Those were the first words Lucien uttered to me, his voice low and vibrating with a tension that matched the storm inside my chest. What did we need to talk about? How he sent people to try to kill me? Or how he had gone to make arrangements with his people for my demise? I stared at him, my grip on the door handle so tight my knuckles were white. I felt like I was looking at a stranger wearing the face of the man I had started to trust. “We have nothing to talk about,” I said coldly. I looked directly into his eyes, checking to see if he would fluster or turn away, but he held my gaze with a haunting intensity. He looked... exhausted. “Yes, we do, Seraphina,” he said, letting out a long, heavy sigh. “Can I come in?” He asked quietly, looking down at me. Up close, he looked like a man who had carried the weight of the entire world on his back for fa
I stared at Madame Vivienne in total shock, as if she had suddenly grown two separate pairs of heads, making it three. The words coming out of her mouth were so absurd they felt like a fever dream. “What do you mean, Seraphina and I are the reincarnations of Alaric and this ‘Serene’ woman?” I asked, my voice thick with disbelief. I couldn't fathom how such a thing was even possible. My mind was racing, trying to find a logical explanation for the madness. “It is a hypothesis, Lucien. I am going on the facts provided by what Seraphina experienced,” she explained calmly. “What she saw… or more like what that woman ‘wanted’ her to know,” I countered. I wasn't ready to accept that my soul was tied to a man who had committed such atrocities. “What she wanted her to see to manipulate her against me.” “What makes you think so?” she asked, feeling another wave of bone-deep tiredness wash over me. The
“I said, stand down.” Lucien’s voice sounded like a booming crack of thunder, ceasing all movement in the yard. Instantly, all the men who had come to capture me dropped to their knees, bowing down to him. The fight drained out of them in that second. Of course they would yield. He was their King. “Speak. Who sent you?” he asked, his voice deadly calm. Why was he putting on this show for me? It was obvious they were his goons. They wouldn’t be here if he hadn’t sent them. He was the one sitting on the throne; nothing happened without his permission. “What are you doing in my house?” he asked again, his eyes narrowing as he stepped closer to the kneeling men. “Your Highness, we were sent by the Council to bring in the hybrid for punishment,” the leader answered, keeping his head firmly bowed to the grass. I saw Lucien visibly tense up at those words. His broad shoulders went completel
Hybrid?Me? The word echoed in my head, mocking me. It had to be some sick, twisted joke. I wasn't anything of the sort. I was just a normal human. A girl who baked on her free time. I belonged in a kitchen with the smell of flour and sugar, not standing on a porch facing down a hit squad. “But you were adopted,”Serene’s voice rang out,reminding me of my unknown origin. It was true. I was adopted. My breath hitched in my throat as the realization settled in like lead. What if my birth parents were… part something? Oh God, no. If I wasn't fully human, the laws of would… “They would kill you. Just like they killed me,” Serene finished for me, her voice dripping with reserved sadness. ‘Lucien would do to you what Alaric did to me.’ I felt physically sick at the thought. I wanted to scream, to deny it, but the doubt was already a poison in my veins. What if Lucien hadn't authorized this? He wouldn't do this to me.
The kitchen was my sanctuary, and the rolling pin was my weapon. I worked with a manic intensity, channeling all the fear, confusion, and adrenaline from the village into the dough. Fold. Roll. Chill. Repeat. I knew what they were now. Or at least, I suspected. The glowing eyes in the diner, the
I woke up in a bed that cost more than my entire life. The room Mrs. Higgins had given me was in the servants' quarters, but it was still nicer than anything I’d ever owned. Silk sheets, a private bathroom, and a window overlooking the dense, fog-covered forest. I remembered the rules Lucien—Mon
I turned to head up the stairs, my heart pounding in my ears. I was shaking, but for the first time in my life, I felt light. The secret was out. The poison was drained. "Wait." The voice was barely a whisper, but it stopped me cold. I turne
I woke up to sunlight streaming through the window, but the heaviness in my chest remained. My eyes drifted to the floor. The shattered remains of my phone were gone. The carpet had been cleaned. It was as if Tyler’s call—and Lucien’s terrifying display of strength—







