LOGINBIANCA
On the way home, I went over everything I would need to prepare to leave Matthew.
Divorce documents.
Pack obligations.
Hospital duties.
Everything had a process. Everything could be handled.
But when I stepped inside and saw Theo’s innocent, adorable face, my chest tightened despite myself.
Was I really going to make Theo live the rogue life I once had?
My fingers clenched tightly at my side.
Then Theo ran up to me, slipping his small hand into mine. The warmth of his touch made my grip loosen. With his other hand, he tugged at my clothes, proudly showing me his new score on his assignment.
"Mum, look, I got a 10 out of 10. I'm the only student that got it all." I was taken back by the change in Theo, he was actually noticing me.
I smiled at him as I ruffled his hair and said, "I'm so proud
of you, Theo, I knew you could do this." I said as he giggled before continuing,"Does this mean that I can ask you for anything? A gift for doing a good job? I worked extra hard on this, you know."
He said looking nervous, unsure of his request as I held his shoulders and said, “Absolutely, what do you want from me, tell me and I'll agree." I said as he searched my face to see if I was lying and then beamed when he saw that I was being serious.
"It is a wish, but I will use it later. Come on mum, come play with me, I'm building a castle all alone." He said pulling me, towards his room as I realized something.
Mia wasn't around which was why he was giving me his attention, just like before. Theo wasn't doing anything wrong, he was being influenced by Mia when she was around, and this gave me hope.
Mia didn’t look like someone who has contracted feral Lupin disease. Some of the symptoms doesn't match, with the textbook diagnosis of such disease. If I could make Matthew see that she was faking it, perhaps there was still a chance to save this marriage. But if he chose to stay with Mia anyway, then he could, but Theo was my son and I would die before giving him up easily.
Emboldened by this, I spent the next three days researching everything that I knew about Mia's case.
The first breakthrough came from the hospital archives. I had access to patient records—not Mia's specifically, since she wasn't my patient, but I had colleagues who worked in the same system as me. Nurses who owed me favors. And I had called in, every single one that I had.
"Just need to verify some test results," I told Sarah from records. "In case we missed anything before starting treatments to avoid being sued for negligence in the future. You know how it is."
She did know. Some Karen's have done this in the past, despite being at fault and hiding critical medical knowledge from us. So she didn't think twice about it. She pulled the files without question.
Mia's original blood work from thirteen months ago told a very different story than the one Matthew had been fed. The initial tests showed normal ranges across the board. Healthy.
But then there was a second set of results, dated one week later. Same tests, same patient ID number, but these showed the feral lupin phase 2 Markers. The decline was sudden and literally impossible. Feral Lupin was genetic. You were born with it or you weren't. It didn't suddenly appear in your blood work like magic or a contracted sexual disease.
Someone had doctored Mia's records.
I printed everything.
The question was why. Why would she do this? What did she gain from—
But I knew the answer before I even finished the thought. She gained Matthew. She gained my son. She gained my life, that she was enjoying living in.
She'd weaponized compassion from the two people that had everything she wanted. Mine and Matthew's both.
And it had worked perfectly.
I heard Matthew come home around midnight on the third night. I'd been sitting at the kitchen table for hours, the evidence folder in front of me, rehearsing what I would say.
He looked tired when he walked in, his tie loosened, his jacket slung over his shoulder as he looked ready to collapse and call it a night.
"You're still up," he said, surprised. Then his eyes landed on the folder. "What's that?"
"Sit down, Matthew. We need to talk."
Something in my tone made him pause. "Bianca, if this is about Mia staying—"
"It's about Mia, yes. But not about her staying." I pushed the folder across the table. "I need you to look at this. All of it. Before you say anything, before you dismiss this, I need you to actually look."
He opened the folder, and I watched his face as he scanned the first page. Then the second. His expression shifted from confusion to anger once he realized what he was looking at.
"Where did you get these?" His voice was cold.
"From the hospital records. From our own lab. These are Mia's actual test results, Matthew. The real ones. Not the ones Dr. Hartwick is using as a guide to treat Mia."
"This is a violation of patient privacy—"
"She's not sick." I leaned forward, interrupting him, my voice steady as I continued speaking.
"Look at the dates. Look at the metadata. Her original blood work was completely normal. Then suddenly, a week later, she has Feral Lupin Phase 2 markers? That's not how genetic diseases work. They don't appear overnight. Someone altered her records. Someone created this diagnosis."
Matthew was staring at the papers now, his jaw tight. Then he suddenly looked up, his eyes narrowing at me. “Why did you suddenly need to look into this?”
I straightened in my chair, giving a sad little smile. “For Theo, for our marriage.” I took a deep breath, continued, “I heard everything—you and Dr. Hartwick.”
He pushed the folder back across the table, standing abruptly from the chair shaking his head. "So you fabricated this to avoid responsibility?”
“No! I'm showing you proof.” I couldn’t believe Matthew would think this of me. What had Mia done to him?
“This isn’t evidence, Bianca. This is you trying to discredit a dying woman because you’re jealous. You’re avoiding your responsibility as a healer!”
I stared at my husband in disbelief. Hearing his words, I looked at the man who was so desperate to save his first love that he couldn’t see the truth literally printed in front of him.
I shook my head, bitterly. This is the man you’ve loved for so many years, Bianca.
I spoke again, my tone calmer than before. “I’ll say it one more time. She doesn’t have any disease. She’s not dying.”
Matthew's face was red now, his hands clenched into fists at his sides. "Bullshit! You're too selfish to help her."
"I'm not selfish for refusing to die for a lie!"
"You're a healer! You took an oath! And you're my Luna—you have a responsibility to this pack, to use your abilities to save lives when you can!" Matthew slammed his hand down on the table. He had never been like this before.
"My responsibility is to my son first. To be alive for him. To not leave him motherless because his father asked me to sacrifice myself for a woman who isn't even sick!"
"Enough!" The Alpha command in his voice made the windows rattle. "You will undergo the treatment. Dr. Hartwick will begin preparations next week. Bianca. Mia is running out of time..."
"She has years! Even if Feral Lupin Phase 2 were real, Dr. Hartwick said she has years with proper management. This cure isn't urgent, Matthew. But you're so desperate to give her everything that you're willing to risk my life for her comfort."
"I'm willing to help someone in need, yes. I'm willing to use the resources available to us—including your abilities—to cure someone rather than force them to live with a disease. Why is that so wrong?"
"Because you didn't ask me!" My voice broke. "Because you're treating me like a tool instead of a person. You just decided, and now you're ordering me to comply."
"I'm asking you to do what's right."
"No." I wrapped my arms around myself, suddenly cold. "You're asking me to prove my worth by nearly killing myself. You're asking me to earn my place in this family by sacrificing everything for the woman you actually love. And I can't—I won't—do that anymore."
Matthew's expression tightened, impatience flashing across his eyes.
"Bianca, you're being dramatic—""I want a divorce."
Matthew stared at me like I'd struck him. "What?"
"I want a divorce," I repeated, my voice steady now. Clear. "I'm done, Matthew. I'm done risking everything for a man who will never value me the way he values her. I want out.”
Chapter 276BIANCAThe summit hall in Ashford territory was the kind of room built for exactly this purpose — high ceilings, long tables, enough space between clusters of people that conversations could happen without overlapping into each other. Five months had passed since the breach. Five months of slow rebuilding, careful work, learning how to live inside a life I'd chosen on purpose rather than one I'd fallen into by accident.Rivera had his hand at the small of my back as we came through the entrance, steady, the kind of touch that had become ordinary between us rather than something either of us was still proving to the other. Louis walked just ahead of us, taller than he'd been in the spring, color back in his face the way it had been since his treatment started actually working instead of secretly being undone by someone pretending to love him."You don't have to come tonight," Rivera had said to me that morning, more than once over the past week, actually. "I know who's like
Chapter 275MATTHEWI waited until that night, after Cal's bag had been moved back upstairs and Theo had eaten something close to a full dinner for the first time since the rescue, before I brought it up. I'd been turning the conversation over since the hallway, trying to find the right shape for it, the kind of shape that wouldn't undo whatever fragile steadiness he'd built back since the corridor and the bird and everything else he'd carried through that night without telling anyone.I found him in his room, sitting cross-legged on the floor with the dinosaurs arranged in some new configuration I didn't have the vocabulary to interpret, the bird's small empty shoebox nest sitting empty in the corner now that it had been well enough, days ago, to be released back into the garden."Hey, bud," I said, sitting down on the floor across from him, which still felt strange in my joints but had become a habit I didn't want to break."Hey," he said, not looking up from the Triceratops he was
Chapter 274THEOCal had his bag packed by the front door.I saw it before anyone told me anything, the way I usually saw things before people decided I was ready to know them. It was sitting by the door the way bags sit when someone is leaving, not the way bags sit when someone is going somewhere for a few days and coming back. I knew the difference. I'd watched enough bags get packed in my life to know which kind this was.I went and found Dad in the kitchen."Cal's bag is by the door," I said.Dad looked up from whatever he was doing at the counter, and I saw the specific expression on his face that meant he'd been hoping to have this conversation later, on his own terms, instead of right now because I'd noticed a bag."His contract was for protection during the active threat," Dad said carefully. "Voss is gone. Thorne's in custody. The immediate danger has passed, buddy. That's the job he was hired to do, and he did it. A really, really good job.""So he's just leaving.""He's not
Chapter 273BIANCARivera told me on the fourth day, in the quiet of his study, the way you tell someone something you've been holding carefully because you weren't sure yet how much weight it would land with."She didn't survive the breach," he said. "The construct started unraveling the moment Voss's control over the facility broke down. Whatever was holding her together wasn't separate from Voss. It needed her."I sat with that for a while before I said anything. He waited, patient, the way he'd learned to be patient with me over the past several days, never rushing past a silence before I was ready to come out of it."I want to ask you something," I said eventually, "and I want you to answer honestly, even if it's hard to hear.""Always.""Did she suffer. At the end."He shook his head slowly. "From what we understand, no. It wasn't violent. It was more like — the structure just stopped being held up. Roy described it as closer to a candle going out than anything else. I don't thi
Chapter 272RIVERAThorne arrived under guard two hours after Matthew's people picked him up at the territory line, delivered to us because he belonged to our jurisdiction in the end — his crimes had started here, in my city, inside my own office, long before they'd reached out to touch Matthew's life at all. Matthew hadn't argued the handoff. He'd simply said, when his man brought him in, that I deserved to be the one to close the book on the person who'd lived inside my staff for years pretending to serve me.I watched him processed through the formal channels myself. I'd told Klaus's people, back at the breach site, that I wanted this clean enough nobody could ever argue the conviction afterward, and I meant it more now, standing in the holding facility watching Thorne sit in a chair with his hands restrained, calm in the specific way of a man who'd run out of moves and had decided composure was the only thing left he could still choose for himself.I didn't go in to question him m
Chapter 271THORNEI knew it was over before the first radio call came through. I'd built my whole career on knowing things before they were confirmed, and the silence from the facility two hours after the breach started told me everything the silence was designed to tell me.I left the office without taking anything that mattered. That was the first rule, the one I'd kept ready in my head for years without ever expecting to need it. Don't pack. Packing takes time and time is the only currency that matters once something like this goes wrong. I took my car, the older one, registered under a name that didn't connect to anything, and I drove toward the territory line with the radio off and my hands steady on the wheel, telling myself the whole way that steady hands were a habit, not a lie I was telling my own body.I'd planned this exit for years. Not because I'd expected Voss to fail — I hadn't, not really, not until the last few months when the timeline started compressing and her pat
Chapter 91MATTHEWIt looked exactly like Bianca. Same height, same build, same way of moving—The woman disappeared around a corner before I could see her face clearly.My hands were shaking. My chest felt tight.That couldn't have been her. Bianca was dead. I'd seen her death certificate, watched
Chapter 84 RIVERA I stood in my home office at eleven PM, staring at surveillance reports that told me nothing new about Thorne Lockwood, when my phone buzzed with a text from Klaus. *Drinks. Tomorrow night. 8 PM. The usual place. No excuses.* I typed back: *Can't. Louis has school the next
Chapter 85RIVERA"We have a betting pool going," Mikael added. "Klaus thinks you'll propose within six months. I'm betting a year. Elijah thinks you're too emotionally constipated to ever actually commit, and Roy is withholding judgment until he completes his research on your relationship patterns
Chapter 82BIANCAEach case was different, challenging, requiring the full range of skills I'd spent years developing. And each successful treatment felt like proof that I belonged here, that I was genuinely good at this work. And this was something that I was starting to believe in.By noon, I was







