LOGINPOV: Melina
She'd been reminding herself of that for three days straight, the way you reminded yourself of something important before you did the opposite of it anyway. The reminder wasn't a deterrent. It was a calibration tool, a way of keeping the weight of what she was doing sitting correctly in her chest so it didn't tip over into either recklessness or paralysis.
The car she'd taken dropped her at the outer gate at eight fifty-two in the morning.
She had asked to be dropped at eight fifty-two specifically. Not nine. Not eight forty-five. Eight fifty-two, because arriving eight minutes early read as eager and punctual without tipping into anxious, and because eight minutes gave her exactly enough time to get through the outer gate checkpoint, present her documentation, and arrive at the staff entrance at nine o'clock precisely, which was the time written on the confirmation email sent to Sera Daniels three days ago.
The outer gate was the first thing that recalibrated her expectations.
She had done her research. She had studied the estate's layout through every available public source, satellite image, and secondhand account in the hunter network. She thought she had a reasonable picture of the scale of it.
She did not have a reasonable picture of the scale of it.
The gate itself was iron....old iron, the kind that had weight and history to it, worked into patterns that looked decorative until you looked at them long enough to notice that the patterns weren't ornamental. They were something else. Something that made her father's training prickle at the back of her neck in the way it always did around concentrated supernatural craftsmanship. Warding work. Old and layered and very, very thorough.
Beyond the gate, the driveway stretched for what looked like a quarter mile before it reached the main building, lined on both sides with trees that were too evenly spaced and too perfectly maintained to be anything but intentional. The main building at the end of it was.....large was not the right word. Large suggested something quantifiable. The Howlington Estate's main structure was the kind of architecture that communicated power the way certain silences communicated danger, not by announcing itself but by simply existing so completely that everything around it became context.
She picked up her bag. She walked to the gatehouse.
The security officer inside was human, which surprised her for approximately two seconds before she remembered that human-facing security was always human because supernatural security was never where you could see it. He checked her documentation with professional efficiency, cross-referenced something on his screen, and handed it back without looking at her twice.
Exactly as planned, she told herself.
The gate opened.
She walked through and didn't let herself look back.
***
The staff entrance was on the east side of the building, a solid door that was significantly less grand than the main entrance and significantly more used, if the scuff marks on the stone threshold were any indication. She knocked at nine o'clock exactly.
The woman who opened the door was not what Melina had been expecting, though she couldn't have said precisely what she had been expecting. Someone administrative, she supposed. Someone with a clipboard.
The head maid of the Howlington Estate had a clipboard, technically....she was holding it at her side with the particular grip of someone who didn't actually need it but carried it as a professional formality. She was perhaps sixty, or perhaps considerably older in the way that some supernaturally-adjacent humans got older....her age sat strangely on her, more like a choice than a process. Silver hair pinned back with geometric precision. A uniform that was simple and impeccably pressed. Eyes that were a pale, assessing gray and moved over Melina in the practiced way of someone who had been evaluating new staff for a very long time.
"Sera Daniels," the woman said. Not a question.
"Yes, ma'am." The name came out easily. She had practiced.
"I'm Mrs. Voss." A pause that lasted exactly one second. "Head of household staff. You'll report to me directly for the duration of your employment." She stepped back from the door. "Come in."
Melina walked into the office.
The staff corridors were a different world from what she'd seen through the gate.
Not smaller exactly, the ceilings were still high, the stonework still detailed but functional in a way the external face of the estate was not. This was the working skeleton of the place. Supply rooms and linen closets and a staff break room she glimpsed through an open door that smelled like coffee and the particular worn comfort of a room used regularly by people who needed somewhere to sit down. Noticeboards with printed schedules. Hooks for jackets near the entrance. The textures of a place that was actually lived in rather than preserved.
Mrs. Harrow walked her through it at a pace that suggested she did not repeat herself.
"The estate operates on a structured schedule," she said, moving through the corridor without looking back to confirm Melina was keeping up. "Staff shifts run in three rotations. You've been assigned the primary day rotation, six to six, with one scheduled day off per week on a rotating basis. Overtime is compensated at the standard rate and must be approved in advance." She turned a corner. "Meals are taken in the staff dining room, breakfast at six thirty, lunch at twelve, dinner at six. First night tradition is the main dining hall. After that, staff dining."
Melina filed everything and said nothing unless asked.
They passed through a door that required a keycard, Mrs. Harrow's, not one she'd been given yet and the air changed.
It was subtle. Human-subtle, the kind of thing her body registered before her brain caught up. A shift in temperature, maybe, or pressure, or something that wasn't either of those things and didn't have a name in the vocabulary she'd grown up with. Her father had described it once as the weight of accumulated power the way certain places that had been occupied by supernatural beings for generations developed a kind of atmospheric density that humans with enough exposure could learn to sense, not clearly, not specifically, but as a feeling in the back of the throat and a particular alertness in the base of the spine.
She kept her face still. She kept walking. She did not let any of it show.
"This wing connects to the main residential corridors," Mrs. Harrow continued, as if the air hadn't changed at all, as if this were all entirely ordinary. For her, Melina supposed, it was. "You'll be responsible for the east guest corridor on a rotating basis and ...." She paused at a junction and turned, for the first time, to look directly at Melina. "You've been given an additional assignment."
Melina met her gaze. "Yes?"
"You've been assigned to the Alpha quarters."
*The Eastern Access Point*Team Two breached the eastern maintenance tunnel at exactly the same moment Team One hit the north entrance.This entrance was smaller than the primary access. More confined. Less defended.But no less important.The warriors moved through the tunnel. Their weapons were ready but held low, they were trying to apprehend, not slaughter. Alaric's orders had been clear. Capture when possible. Kill only when necessary.They encountered guards stationed at the interior checkpoint almost immediately.Three operatives in full tactical gear, positioned behind reinforced barriers designed to stop an assault.The first operative opened fire without hesitation.The bullets came fast, spraying across the tunnel entrance. But the warriors had the advantage of supernatural speed and durability. They moved through the gunfire, advancing rather than retreating, taking cover behind the tunnel structure rather than trying to dodge.One warrior took a bullet to the shoulder. An
Alaric's POVThe mountain air was cold and sharp, cutting through the darkness like a blade.Alaric stood on the ridge overlooking the facility, his silver eyes tracking every entrance, every guard position, every defensive measure the Vigil had constructed. The warriors were positioned across the mountainous terrain.Through his earpiece, he could hear the soft communications of the tactical teams confirming their positions. Each team was in place. Each warrior was ready. Each one understood that Melina was somewhere beneath this mountain, and they were going to get her out.Alaric looked at his brothers standing beside him.Aiden was monitoring the tactical display on a portable screen, his dark eyes analyzing every variable, every potential complication, every contingency. His analytical mind had been working non-stop since they'd confirmed the facility location. He'd memorized every corridor. Every entrance. Every path through the underground structure.Archer was standing complet
Melina's POV She woke to the sound of the door opening.Her body immediately tensed.She knew what this meant. Knew what time it was. Knew that the extraction team was arriving.Day three.Third bleed.Twenty-seven more to go.Melina had stopped counting the hours. Had stopped tracking time in any meaningful way. The days had blurred together into a cycle of extraction and sedation and brief moments of consciousness where she was allowed to exist before being drained again.Dr. Wells entered with her two medical assistants."Good morning, Melina," Wells said cheerfully. Like she was greeting a friend rather than a captive. "How are we feeling today?"Melina didn't answer.She'd learned that speaking was pointless. That begging didn't work. That pleading had no effect on people who saw her as a resource rather than a person.So she just stared at the ceiling and waited for the needle."Your vitals look excellent," Wells said, checking the monitoring equipment. "Heart rate is strong. B
He fell to his knees.Edmund moved to him. Put a hand on his shoulder."I know," Edmund said quietly. "I know how much this hurts. I know how desperate it feels. But Archer, listen to me. In six hours, the reconnaissance team is going to confirm the location. In six hours, we're going to know exactly where she is. In six hours, we move.""Six hours," Archer repeated. "That's another extraction. That's another session of her lying on that medical bed while they drain her. That's another...""I know," Edmund interrupted gently. "But six hours of waiting beats a month of searching blind. Six hours of waiting beats her being moved to a different facility. Six hours of waiting beats us losing her forever."He helped Archer to his feet."Go clean yourself up," Edmund said. "Go rest. When you wake up, we'll have confirmation. And then we go to war."***He showered in scalding water.Watched his blood wash down the drain. Watched the injuries on his knuckles begin to heal as his supernatural
Archer's POV - The Training Room The training room was empty.Good.Archer didn't want witnesses. Didn't want anyone seeing what was about to happen. Didn't want anyone watching as the youngest Alpha King lost his mind completely.He stood in the center of the sparring ring, his entire body vibrating with power barely contained.His black eyes were completely feral now. Completely devoid of human rationality. Just pure predatory rage looking for an outlet.He could feel her.Through the bond, he could feel Melina lying in a dark room somewhere in eastern Oregon. Could feel her consciousness drifting in and out of sedation. Could feel the Strain responding inside her as her body tried to compensate for the blood loss.Could feel her terror.And he was powerless to help her.Archer roared.The sound tore from his throat with such intensity that it shook the walls of the training room. Made the windows rattle. Made the entire foundation of the estate vibrate with the force of his rage.
He didn't wait for an answer."They're extracting her blood," Archer continued, his voice breaking slightly. "Daily extractions. She told us about the test with Father. One drop made him scream. Three drops would kill him. And they're extracting milliliters. That's approximately infinity drops of her blood. Per session. Per day till she dies."He was pacing now. Moving like a caged predator. Like a man on the very edge of sanity."She's terrified," Archer said. His voice was barely a whisper now. "I can feel it through the bond. She's lying in the dark in some facility and she's terrified and she's thinking about us and she's wondering if we're coming and we're just...we're just looking at maps."Aiden stood up."Archer," he said, his voice cutting through the rage. "I understand what you're feeling. I feel it too. But losing control doesn't help her. Rushing doesn't help her. The only thing that helps her is us being clear-headed enough to plan an extraction that actually works.""Ho
Melina's POVShe couldn't stop shaking.The adrenaline was wearing off. The reality was setting in. The fear that had kept her alert through the night was transforming into something else. Something colder. Something that made her body vibrate with tension.She was in her suite. Alone. The brothers
Silas Crane watched the monitors in horror.The attack was failing.Worse than failing. The Howlingtons weren't even defending. They were attacking, they were eliminating every Vigil operative on the estate.And then the intercepted message came through:"EXTRACTION TEAM NEUTRALIZED. INFILTRATOR CA
Day 14The night was perfect.Dark. Moonless. Cloud cover blocking starlight. Exactly what they needed for an assault.Director Silas Crane sat in the command vehicle three miles from the estate. Banks of monitors showed real-time feeds from operatives in the field. Thermal imaging. Night vision. C
"There's one problem," Aiden said quietly. "Melina doesn't know about this. When Silly signals the Vigil. When the assault comes. Melina's going to panic. She's going to be terrified.""Which is why we brief her carefully," Alaric said. "We tell her about Silly. We explain the plan. We make sure sh







