When science meets the supernatural, reality unravels. Dr. Evangeline Cross is a brilliant neurosurgeon—rational, skeptical, and grounded in logic. But when the estranged quadruplet siblings who once saved her life are accused of assassinating a top-level spy, her world is upended. Cassius, Lucien, Selene, and Xander are no ordinary suspects—they possess golden eyes that gleam in the dark, an uncanny sensitivity to silver, and a secret that defies biology: they are not simply werewolves, but vessels of an ancient and volatile power. Haunted by cryptic visions and pursued by The Veil—a secretive cult that bends world events through demonic manipulation—Evangeline is forced to confront the impossible. The deeper she digs, the stranger the truth becomes. Clues buried within a forgotten opera and encoded in melodies only Xander can sing begin to unravel a sorcerous legacy long thought lost. With Elias Vaughn, a ruthless prosecutor driven by a dark vendetta, closing in, Evangeline must race against time to decode an ancient musical cipher, expose a murderer cloaked in living shadow, and shatter the lies that have held history hostage. To save the siblings, she must abandon everything she believes—and embrace a reality where magic, music, and monsters intertwine.
View MoreThe city was soaked in neon and stormlight the night everything changed.
Evangeline Cross had just left St. Mercia’s Neurological Institute, her final shift as a resident finally behind her. The weight of the title, Doctor Cross, still felt foreign on her shoulders, like a coat she hadn’t broken in yet. It should’ve felt victorious; but at the moment, all she felt was exhaustion.
She walked with long, purposeful strides, black slacks clinging to her legs in the damp breeze, her gray button-down still tucked in with surgical precision. Her chin-length bob, jet-black and razor-straight, clung to the sides of her face. Moonlight caught on her mahogany skin, and her sharp gray eyes flicked upward as thunder rumbled in the distance.
At twenty-seven, she was tall, poised, and unapologetically serious - a woman sculpted by science, sleepless nights, and ambition. There was an intensity in her posture, the kind that made people move out of her way without knowing why.
She had just brought out her phone to order a cab when she saw the crash.
It was impossible to miss as sparks scattered from the twisted black car hugging a telephone pole at an unnatural angle. Flames licked at the hood, while shattered glass painted the pavement like glittering confetti from some macabre celebration. Without hesitation, adhering to the doctors' code, she sprinted toward it.
The front passenger door was crushed inward, smoke curling from the dashboard, as she pain strikingly found the door , the scent of burning oil thick in her nose. Inside, the passenger sat slumped, barely conscious as she broke his window.
“Hey!” she shouted, yanking open the rear door. “Can you move?”
He turned his head slowly, as if underwater but when their eyes met, she froze.
They were gold... not hazel nor amber, but pure gold; his irises shimmering like metal under the glow of the flames.
“I’ve got to get you out,” she said, reaching for him.
His hand clamped around her wrist with surprising strength.
“Don’t… take me to a hospital.” he wheezed.
“What? You’re bleeding. You need emergency care...”
“No hospitals.” His voice was low, almost melodic, laced with an urgency that tugged at something primitive in her.
She hesitated because the blood staining his shirt was real; but so was the strange calm in his expression, the intensity in his gaze, and then there was the rest of him.
He looked like he’d stepped out of some forgotten myth, tall and lean with sculpted features that bordered on unreal. High cheekbones, a blade-straight nose, and lips that looked more carved than grown. Long white-blond hair framed his face, tangled and damp from sweat and blood. He was beautiful, but not in any earthly way, yet unnervingly beautiful.
“Please,” he whispered again, eyes never leaving hers. “Help me. Just… not the hospital.”
Something in her cracked, and against all reason, against everything she believed, she nodded.
Soon, she reached her apartment which smelled like antiseptic and lavender - the way she preferred it, clean and controlled.
The strange man lay on her gray leather couch, his shirt peeled away to reveal a chest marred by cuts and dark bruises. She worked in silence, pressing gauze against a gash across his ribs. She had expected blood to pour but she watched in awe as the wound shrank, the skin around it knitting itself back together.
“This… isn’t possible.” She leaned closer, stunned.
He didn’t respond, his breathing had evened out now, but his brows were furrowed like someone trapped in a bad dream.
Her steel-gray eyes studied him under the warm halo of her lamp.
'This was... wrong!' she mentally screamed. 'No human healed that fast. Not even models or actors. This was definitely not natural.'
She traced the edge of the gauze with her fingers. His skin felt warm... too warm. His heartbeat was steady but faintly irregular. She made a mental note of everything: accelerated healing, unnatural temperature, physical perfection, golden irises.
This surely was not normal.
She then sank into her armchair and rested her temple against her knuckles, her wrist still sore from where he had grabbed her.
“What are you?” she murmured to the silence, as the clock ticked toward midnight.
The moonlight slipped through the blinds in pale ribbons, sliding across the floor until it bathed his body in silver. Evangeline hadn’t taken her eyes off him in nearly an hour. She’d meant to call someone... anyone. But something told her to wait, something instinctual.
And, then he finally moved.
He didn’t jolt awake or stir like a man disturbed. He simply opened his eyes.
The gold in them was brighter now like liquid fire.
“You shouldn’t be here yet,” he said softly, voice cracking like old wood.
“Yet?” She stood. “Who are you?”He didn’t answer. Instead, he sat up slowly, the muscles in his abdomen tightening beneath his skin like he’d never been injured at all.
“You need to leave, Evangeline.”
Her heart froze. “How do you know my name?”
He blinked once, and then, too fast for her to react, he lunged at her.
Pain shot through her body as his mouth clamped around her wrist. His fangs - yes fangs - sank into her skin. She screamed, twisting and trying to free herself, but he held her with impossible strength. Hot venom rushed into her veins, burning like acid and ice at once.
Her then knees gave out as she collapsed to the floor, gasping as her vision began to blur.
He was above her now, crouched. His face twisted in agony.
“I’m sorry,” he whispered. “It wasn’t supposed to be like this.”
“W-what did you do to me?” she gasped, voice barely a whisper.
He didn’t answer with words.
His bones then began to crack at the final stroke of midnight, the sound of muscles tearing and reforming soon filled the room. Bleach white gur then exploded across his body as his limbs elongated and reconfigured. His mouth elongated into a snout, his eyes still glowing gold as his human frame vanished into the shape of a massive white wolf.
Seven feet tall at the shoulder, he was still luminous and ethereal.
He stepped toward her on silent paws, the floor creaking under his weight.
Through the haze in her mind, she heard one final phrase - not spoken aloud, but pressed into her consciousness like a branded promise:
“Wait for me.”
And then, the world went black.
The Next Day,The city wore the aftermath like a second ski - smoke still curled from the skeleton of the Valemont Museum, and news anchors painted the ruins in polite lies.“An act of terrorism,” they called it.“Unknown extremists,” some murmured.“Cult activity,” others speculated.No one said vampires and one mentioned the Song, because the truth was a language only a few could still speak. And most of them were either dead or hiding.Emma stared up at the shattered facade from behind the police tape, her coat wrapped tightly around her, hair pulled back, heels replaced with boots.She hadn't slept... not really, as the images wouldn’t leave her. Not the flames, not the screaming, not the chandelier crashing down like a fallen crown, and definitely not Evangeline - standing like something ancient in the center of the chaos, singing a note that shattered reality.“She’s not dead,” Emma whispered to herself for the third time that morning. “She never was.”Her breath steamed in the
Darkness closed around them like a second skin as the hidden passage twisted deep beneath the museum, no wider than a coffin, no taller than a breath. The air was damp, the walls crumbling. Rats skittered in the shadows. Old sigils, long-erased and barely glowing, pulsed faintly in warning as they passed.Evangeline stumbled, her legs barely worked. The Hollow Song had drained her, though it still ripped through her lungs and bones like lightning. Her throat burned, her limbs shook, and the mark on her palm had split open, bleeding soft light down her wrist.Xander caught her - though he didn’t speak - his jaw was clenched so tightly she could hear his teeth grinding.Behind them, Lucien swore under his breath. “Did we get it?” he asked. “The last fragment?”"We got it.” Selene smirked, as she pulled out the scorched sheet of music from her coat, still humming faintly with cursed melody. “And half the world’s eyes, along with it,” Cassius muttered. His coat was torn, one blade miss
Chaos bloomed like fire as the red warning lights spun in frantic spirals as steel shutters slammed down over the arched windows.Panic rippled through the crowd like a virus - heels cracked against marble, glasses shattered to the floor, and somewhere, a woman shrieked loud enough to rattle the paintings on the walls.But Evangeline didn’t move.Her heart thundered beneath her ribs, pounding in time with the fragment’s song. It was louder now, echoing in her bloodstream, in her bones, screaming at her to act... to choose.Across the hall, Cassius drew both blades in a single motion, his tuxedo splitting at the shoulders as he lunged into the fray. A vampire disguised as a valet dove for him , Cassius spun and slit its throat, black ichor spraying the floor in a crescent arc.“Too many,” Selene hissed into her comm. “They’re swarming; there’s at least thirty on this floor alone!”“Lucien, block the lower corridor now!” Xander growled, already lifting a dagger carved from witchbone. “N
A week later, the Valemont Museum - The House of Eclipsed Light - glittered like a diamond in the corpse of the city. It was cold, beautiful, and entirely indifferent to the lives that passed beneath its arching glass spine.From a distance, it looked like salvation: towers of sculpted crystal, cascading fountains, golden chandeliers glowing like fireflies, but Evangeline knew better. Underneath all the elegance, the Valemont was a cage with velvet walls and silver locks.Floodlights shimmered across glass spires, illuminating the figures gliding up the grand staircase in gowns and suits worth more than some of their souls. A black-tie charity gala, they said. “Historical Art Preservation.” What a noble cause and dazzling ruse.Inside, the museum’s marbled interior was a symphony of art, wealth, and deception. The red carpet bled into polished obsidian floors, and spotlights shimmered off golden frames and jewel-toned paintings. Waiters in crisp velvet uniforms floated through the c
Still at Teatro Della Notte, the silence after death was always loudest.The stage was still slick with blood - black, steaming, and unnatural - but none of them moved. Not even Selene, whose fingertips hovered inches from the cursed violin again.“The violin’s cry…” she murmured, her voice distant, like it was trapped in a memory she hadn’t consented to remember. “It’s not just cursed, it summons. That’s what it was designed for... The Blood Sorrow Song - yhe perfect trifecta.”“Then it’s already begun. The aria woke something.” Lucien’s gaze slid to the trembling chandelier overhead. Evangeline stepped back instinctively as the floor beneath her vibrated - faint, like a distant tremor. The air felt heavier, like the walls themselves were breathing.And then, without touch… the violin exhaled one mournful note, stretched impossibly long. Not played. Not intentional.Alive, it moved like a cold wind through her bones causing Evangeline to gasp, knees buckling. The sound didn’t pierce
The haunted opera house loomed like a memory too long suppressed, its bone-white facade cracked and swallowed by ivy, with stained glass windows that once refracted color now dulled by soot and age. Inside, the air was dense with the scent of mildew and broken echoes. Evangeline crossed the threshold last, her footsteps uncertain, her fingers twitching slightly at her sides. She’d told herself she could stomach anything after the In-Between - monsters, magic, gods, but murder scenes was another thing entirely.They moved in silence through the gilded corridors, led by Selene, whose black boots whispered over dusty red carpet. Lucien flanked the left, claws not drawn but itching beneath the surface. Xander kept behind Evangeline, eyes scanning every shadow, every cracked statue that lined the marble alcoves. Cassius walked ahead, blade sheathed but hands loose, like a predator in perfect control.“This place was warded,” Selene said, eyes flicking to the vaulted ceiling, where faded
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