LOGINRiley's POV
I don’t even remember storming out of the building. One moment I was staring at Ethan like I didn’t know him, like I’d never known him. The next, my feet were carrying me through the lobby, past the glass doors, out into the cold outside without a single glance at anyone. I didn’t care if the important investors were waiting. I didn't care what rumors would spread. Let them talk. Let them say “Riley Grayson lost her mind.” They’d be right. I got into my car, slammed the door shut, and drove. I didn’t check where. I didn’t plan. I just kept my foot on the gas and my hand clenched around the wheel, my vision swimming with the weight of betrayal. My baby… My beautiful boy. Gone. And Ethan… God. Ethan did this? “You’re boring, Riley.” Those words wouldn’t stop ringing in my head. The same man who took my virginity. Who I married at twenty when I thought love was enough to build a future on. Three years I gave him. Three years of my youth, my body, my time, my soul and now he stood in a glass office, buried in my best friend, telling me I was boring. I didn’t even realize I’d been crying again until a hot tear dropped onto my wrist. The glowing lights ahead snapped me out of my spiral. A low building pulsed at the end of the street with music spilling out through dark glass and neon signs flickering above the entrance. I blinked. It's the clubhouse. Downtown in Crescent Hollow. It was not just any club, though. Not the type you can walk into unless you have a reason. This place wasn’t built for humans like me. It was owned, run, and ruled by shifters, mostly werewolves of high rank like the Betas and Gammas. Pack elites that are Dangerous. Powerful and untouchable. But right now? I didn’t care. Let them throw me out. Let them tear me apart if they wanted. I needed air. I needed noise. I needed to forget. I pulled the car into a side lot, got out, slammed the door behind me, and walked straight for the entrance with no hesitation. My black dress clung to me, wrinkled from hours of wear, tear-stained at the collar, but I held my head high as I stepped inside. The scent of thick musk hit me first , mixed with sweat, leather, alcohol, sex. The thrum of music pounded through my bones. The place was alive with movement. Dancers grinding against each other. The low ranking wolves—omegas in seductive forms with flashing smiles as they laughed, flirted, fought. No one noticed me at first. Maybe no one expected a human to walk in alone. Definitely not a grieving one. I made a beeline walk towards the bar. The bartender, a tall shifter with silver rings in both ears and tattoos crawling up his neck, blinked at me like I was a hallucination. “Tequila,” I said. He raised a brow but said nothing and poured a shot for me. I downed it in one go. He blinked in confusion and poured another. I downed. Third, Fourth. Fifth. I didn’t stop. I couldn’t stop. Ethan’s voice was still echoing in my skull like a curse I couldn’t shake. After everything… after every night I held that man’s business together… after every moment I managed to take care of our boy while he “couldn’t be bothered.” Seven shots in, I slammed the empty glass on the counter and opened my mouth to ask for another but the bartender hesitated. “I’m sorry, miss,” he said, glancing at me with narrowed eyes. “I can’t give you more. You’re wasted.” “What?” I frowned. “Are you the one who’s going to tell me how much I want to drink? Do you even know how I’m feeling right now?” I wasn’t yelling. But my voice was loud, thanks to the music pounding through the club. The lights felt like they were spinning. My pulse buzzed in my ears. “Pour me another.” “I’m serious,” he said. “I’ll get in trouble if I give you one more. I won’t leave this place in one piece.” I snorted bitterly. “Says who?” His eyes darted past me over my shoulder. “Says them.” I turned slowly and my eyes landed on them. Three men. Three impossibly large, devastatingly handsome men sitting at the far corner of the club in a booth no one else dared to come near. I hadn’t noticed them when I came in — how could I have missed them? It was like the aura shifted around them. Like the room moved differently in their presence. Their eyes were on me now. Watching intently. All three of them. One with a jaw carved from stone and hair pulled into a loose knot at his nape. Another leaned back lazily, fingers tapping against his glass, his eyes molten gold even from this distance. The third seemed darker — danger seemed to curl around him like smoke, his unreadable expression fixed right on me. They looked familiar somehow. Too familiar. I squinted, rubbing my eyes. The tequila had definitely caught up to me, but something told me I’d seen them before. Somewhere. Somehow. I turned back to the bartender, my voice wobbling. “I want more drinks, mister.” He shook his head. “If I do, they’ll make sure I regret it. Please ma'am, I love my life even if you might hate yours right now” I glanced back again. This time, none of them looked away. They were still staring and all of a sudden, heat prickled hot across my skin. What the hell did they want? Why were they looking at me like that? And what kind of a sick twisted joke is that I can't have more drinks? Do they own this club or what? I slammed my palms on the counter, making the bar guy jerk in shock as I straightened up, wobbling slightly on my feet. "They'll have to tell me who they're to tell me not to have more drinks " I said as I clenched my palms and walked up to them.CANE'S POVThe crash from the room hits like a gunshot. Power surges through the air, making the hair on my arms stand up. I don’t wait. I bolt for the door with Caden right behind me. Summer scrambles off the bed and runs after us, her small feet slapping the floor.“Stay close,” I tell her without slowing down. My heart slams against my ribs. Riley was unconscious when we left her. We burst outside into the pack courtyard. The place is pure chaos. Pack members shout and shove with angry faces. Someone yells crazily. Another screams about the burial. The whole pack feels like it’s ready to tear itself apart.That's when I see what’s going on—Laden.A group of warriors has him on the ground. They drag him by the arms. His face is swollen and bloody. One eye is already shut. Blood runs from his mouth. They must have beaten him bad before they dragged him here. He coughs and spits red onto the dirt.I stop for half a second. Part of me wants to keep walking. Laden somehow contributed t
CANE~ I pace the room back and forth, my boots hitting the hardwood floor with every step. The space feels too small for all this tension. Caden leans against the wall behind me, arms crossed, watching me like he’s waiting for me to snap. Our mother Amelia sits in the chair by the window, her face tight with worry. And then there’s little Summer, curled up on the bed with her knees pulled to her chest. She looks so small and lost it twists something deep in my gut. Amelia breaks the silence first. “The Satyre really said that?” Her voice comes out sharp. “Then what happens to Gunnar? We don’t even know where he is. Riley just made his body disappear during the burial. Does she mean he’s alive somewhere but in a different world or something? That sounds crazy.” “Or true,” Caden finishes. He pushes off the wall and stands straighter, his shoulders tense. “We saw what Riley did. That silver fire. The way everything went white. You can’t fake power like that.” I stop pacing and rub a
Third person POV The room had no walls, at least none that the eye could find. Darkness stretched in every direction, not quite black and not empty, but endless and ancient. Strange symbols glowed beneath the floor in intricate circles of silver and gold, and the letters moved across the ground as if they were alive. At the center of it all lay a body—still and silent. It belonged to a young woman, with silver flames drifting gently around her skin before fading into nothing. Beside her knelt another woman, her face hidden behind a long veil that covered her eyes completely. Yet somehow she saw everything. Her fingers moved slowly over the unconscious woman’s forehead as her lips whispered words no human language should ever know. The sounds were soft, ancient, and incredibly powerful, and the air itself seemed to listen. Wind began to swirl through the endless space, slow at first and then growing stronger. The symbols on the floor brightened in response. The body on the ground rem
Riley's POV “Do you want to say something?” Every face turned toward me. I froze, unsure if I could or even should. But then I looked at Gunnar, and suddenly I knew I had to. My legs shook as I walked forward. The closer I got, the harder it became to breathe. Finally I stood beside him. For a long moment I simply stared, then reached down and touched his hand—cold, still, and so terribly wrong. I laughed weakly. “You know, you’re a real jerk.” Several people blinked, and I heard Summer sniffle behind me. “I thought you hated me more because of my ignorance but you didn't.” A few smiles appeared. “You annoyed me.” More smiles broke through. “But every single thing you say is always true.” Cane muttered, “Facts,” and I pointed at him. “See? Even your brother agrees.” A tiny ripple of laughter moved through the crowd. Then my smile faded. “I didn't even feel safe with you. I didn't even get to see you smile for a second.” My voice started to shake. “You always showed me your ind
RILEY'S POVI didn’t remember walking to the burial grounds. One moment I was standing in Gunnar’s room, staring at the dark shirt folded neatly over the chair, and the next I found myself outside with the entire pack gathered around me. The sun hung low in the sky, far too low, casting long shadows that reminded me time was slipping away. It meant they were really going to put him in the ground, and the weight of that truth pressed down on me until I could hardly breathe.Summer gripped my hand so tightly that my fingers ached, but I didn’t ask her to loosen her hold. I needed the pain. I needed something real to anchor me and remind me this wasn’t just a nightmare I could wake up from. People parted silently as we approached, their eyes heavy with sorrow, but no one spoke. What could they possibly say? Sorry your mate died? Sorry you accidentally killed the man who loved you? Sorry life is so cruel? None of it would help. None of it mattered.My eyes found him immediately. Gunnar
Riley's POV"What do you mean he is fading?" I asked Cane. My voice sounded scared even to me. I looked at the beast with the iron bar still in its back. Right before my eyes, Gunnar started to change. His big beast body got smaller. Fur went away and skin came back. In a few seconds he was back in his human form on the ground. He coughed hard and blood came out of his mouth. The iron bar was still buried deep inside his back. That was when it hit me. He was dying.No no no. This is not happening. Cane and Caden had just told me about the prophecy. I could not believe it happened so fast because of my stubbornness. I stood there looking at him. My legs felt weak.I did not know when tears started sliding down my cheeks. Gunnar looked up at me and smiled even though he was hurt. He raised his hand slow and wiped my tears with his fingers. His hand felt cold."Thank you, Silly girl" he said soft. "Take care of my brothers for me, Riley. You would right?"He coughed again. Blood came out







