تسجيل الدخول[Sera]Two weeks later, I brought tea to the wrong shop.Not wrong. Different. I'd been making two cups every evening since Killian came home from the hospital: one for me, one for him. The first night I carried them across the sidewalk, he'd looked at the cup like I'd handed him a contract he didn't know how to read. By the fourth night it was just routine. Close Vance's. Boil water. Walk twelve feet. Sit.He was at the workbench. Left arm still in a sling, though Nakamura said he could take it off next week. He was sanding something with
[Sera]The nurses arrived in thirty seconds. Two of them, then a third, then Nakamura, who must have been somewhere close because she was in the room before the third nurse finished checking his vitals.Killian's eyes tracked everything. The ceiling, the monitors, the IV lines in his arms, the nurses moving around him with the efficient choreography of people who do this every day. His gaze landed on Lulu last. She was still asleep on my lap, undisturbed by the commotion, her fist still clenched around Mia's jacket collar.He stared at her
[Killian]I was in a room with no walls.Not darkness. Darkness has edges, corners, the suggestion of something beyond it. This was gray. A flat, featureless gray that extended in every direction without variation or end. Like standing inside a piece of paper that someone forgot to write on.I couldn't feel my body. Not numbness. Absence. The place where my hands should be was just more gray, and when I tried to move there was no feedback, no muscle or bone or resistance to push against. Just intention with nothing to act on.
[Sera]Liora didn't sit. She leaned against the wall opposite the ICU window and crossed her arms. The cat settled on the floor between us like a referee."His wolf isn't dead," she said. "Dead would be simpler. What happened is worse. It shattered. The trauma, on top of months of depletion, broke it into fragments. Those fragments are scattered through the residual channels of your old bond.""Our bond was severed. I was there. You were the one who severed it."
[Sera]The paramedics arrived before the police. I don't know who called them. Silas, probably. He was on the phone while I knelt on a carpet that had turned warm and dark under my knees, pressing both hands against Killian's chest while Lulu screamed from the rocking chair where I'd set her down because I needed both hands and couldn't hold them both at the same time.That was the choice. Hold your daughter or keep a man's blood inside his body. I chose the blood. Lulu screamed and I chose the blood, and if that is a thing I have to carry for the rest of my life, then fine. Add it to the pile.
[Killian]The hallway was nine feet long. Conrad stood at one end. I stood at the other. Between us was his security consultant with an undrawn weapon and fifty years of accumulated certainty that the world would do what it was told.I'd done this math before. Boardrooms, negotiations, the particular arithmetic of power where you count leverage and exposure and available exits. But the math had never included a gun, or a child five feet behind me breathing into her mother's neck, or the sound of Silas somewhere downstairs, motionless, coiled.
[Killian] The Voss estate sits on forty acres of old-growth forest north of the city, behind wrought-iron gates that haven't rusted in a century because someone is paid specifically to ensure they don't. The drive is lined with oaks—bare now, skeletal fingers against the gray sky. The house looms
[Sera] "What if I say no?" The words hang between us like a dare. Killian's jaw tightens, and for a moment, I see something flicker behind those icy gray eyes—surprise, maybe. Like he genuinely didn't consider that possibility. Rich people. They really do live in their own reality, don't they?
[Killian] I walk out of her apartment like I'm shedding a skin I never meant to wear. The morning air bites, sharp and clean, but it does nothing to scrub her scent from my lungs. Vanilla and something warmer, something that clings to the back of my throat and makes my wolf pace like a caged ani
[Sera] I step out of the elevator, my bandaged wrist throbbing like a bad reminder, and there she is. Victoria Thorn. Standing in the hallway like she owns the damn building—which, let's be real, she probably could if she wanted to. Her white cashmere coat hugs her figure perfectly. And her hair







