LOGIN- Luca
I walked into the house past midnight, still wired from the pack meeting that refused to end. My head was fizzing with stress from territory disputes, budget headaches, and warriors complaining about training schedules. All of it piled on top of each other until it was enough to make me crazy. But under all that noise? Aria. Earlier at dinner, she was totally silent. She kept dodging my eyes when I tried to talk. She was moving around the house like I had the plague. I told myself I wasn’t thinking about her. But I was. All damn night! And it irritated me more than the stupid meeting did. Now I wanted quiet. Instead, my steps froze the moment I walked into the study corner. The small desk lamp was still on. We shared this desk once. It used to be hers—before the kids, before everything went sideways and salty. She did her sketches here, her late-night readings, her quiet little hobbies I ignored because I was too busy being a duty-obsessed Alpha. The desk looked like someone was packing up their life piece by piece. Her laptop sat open. I walked over and was about to shut it off when my eyes caught on the screen. Some tabs. A dozen job applications. Different packs. Different cities. Seamstress work. Designer apprenticeships. Freelance tailoring. I didn’t even notice until my hand landed on the table. I saw her resume. Her skill list. Her portfolio of designs—clothes she never showed me, never bragged about, never once tried to make me notice. My stomach dropped. This wasn't a threat; she was dead serious about leaving. She had been quietly building a world outside of mine, just for herself and our children. A nasty knot twisted in my gut. Was it jealousy, guilt, or panic? All I knew was I hated the feeling. Furious, I slammed the laptop shut. I stood frozen there for a long moment. Then I walked upstairs, moving too quietly. I pushed open the bedroom door. It was empty. The bed was made. Her nightgown was gone from the hook on the door. The bathroom was dark. A slow, simmering anger built in my chest. Where the hell was she? It was nearly one in the morning. The twins were asleep. The nanny had gone home hours ago. I checked my phone. No messages. I scanned my contacts. Then I did something I never do, tapping Find My Mate. A green dot pulsed on the map. And my blood ran hot. My chest tightened. That’s when I heard her laugh. I heard a soft, clear, happy laugh from the balcony. I froze. Aria… laughing? At this hour? I walked toward the balcony, slower this time, quiet enough that I heard her through the half-open door. “Hey, stop,” she giggled cheerfully in a way I hadn’t heard in years. “If I mess up the interview, you'd better pretend you don’t know me.” Her laughter faded into a playful groan. “Don’t tease me. I finally told him about the divorce. And guess what? He didn’t freak out. Maybe the Moon Goddess took pity on me.” My jaw clenched hard. She talked like it was already finalized, without even telling me first. Like I was history, a finished chapter she was neatly closing up. That unwelcome, stabbing pain hit my chest hard. I pushed the door open. Aria looked up, briefly startled, but the shock quickly vanished. Her bright joy disappeared, replaced by a storm cloud the moment our eyes met. “Hey, I’ll call you back,” she said quickly, and ended the call. The room suddenly felt too quiet. I leaned against the doorframe. “What are you doing?” “Talking to my friend.” "Who was it? Tell me now," I demanded. “Why do you care?” “Tell me. Or I'll find out myself.” “Not that it’s any of your business,” she shot back. Because someone else got her warm laughter, and I couldn’t remember the last time she’d laughed like that. But I wasn’t about to say all that. “You’ve never laughed like that with me,” I said instead. “Maybe because you never gave me space to.” Blood roared in my ears. My anger flared. “I told you, Aria. We’re not done.” “Oh, really? Because you seemed pretty done when you left me alone in our room last night.” She crossed her arms, defiantly. I couldn’t stop myself from stepping closer, my gaze fixed on the screen of her phone. "You told everyone that we're getting a divorce?" She hesitated, then her chin lifted. “Yes.” A fresh surge of rage boiled in me. “You don't get to make that decision alone.” “Watch me,” she said. “The paperwork is already in process.” I took a heavy step forward, moving into her space until I could feel the warmth coming off her skin. She backed up instinctively, sucking in a sharp breath. My patience snapped. I grabbed her wrist, not to hurt her, but to keep her from running. “You think you can just walk away?” I asked, my voice dangerously low. She tried to pull away. “I think I can,” she whispered, standing her ground, even though I could see a faint tremor in her hands. “And I think I will.” “And what were you doing with your laptop?” She hesitated. “Working.” “There were many job applications.” Her jaw twitched. “Yes.” “You’re actually doing it,” I said before I could stop myself. My grip tightened just enough to make a point. “You’re seriously planning to leave.” Her breath caught. For a moment, I thought she was about to shove me away or snap back. But she didn’t. She went still, looked right at me, and in that split second, there was something in her eyes that I hadn’t seen in years. Fear. And I hated it. I hated that I was the reason she looked so worn down. I hated whoever was on that phone, making her smile like they owned a part of her. And I hated myself for not noticing how much she was hurting until it was almost too late. I decided to let her go. *****ARIAThe heavy, drug-induced fog finally started to lift, but my brain felt like it was being rebooted by a very slow processor.I blinked, the ceiling of my apartment coming into focus. I’d been out for a while. Three hours, if the shift in the light was any indication."Aria? You with me?"I jumped slightly, the motion sending a sharp spike of pain through my temples. Brandon was sitting on the edge of the sofa, leaning in too close. I could see the flecks of gold in his eyes and the fine lines of worry etched into his forehead."I’m awake," I croaked, pushing myself up. My voice was still a wreck, but the fire in my throat had cooled to a dull simmer."Gosh, you scared me," he breathed, sitting back just an inch. "You went totally still. I was about five seconds away from calling that medic back to check your vitals. I thought you’d fainted in your sleep.""Just the meds," I said, pulling the throw blanket tighter around my shoulders. Being close with him was making me twitchy. It
ARIAThe taxi ride back was a blur of hazy streetlights and the nauseating scent of pine air freshener. By the time I climbed out at my building, my legs felt like they were made of overcooked noodles. I was just reaching for my keys when a bright flash of movement caught my eye near the entrance."Aria!"I winced. Nova was pacing by the mailboxes, looking like she was ready to vibrate out of her skin."Hey," I croaked. I pulled my scarf tighter, trying to hide the flush I knew was creeping up my neck. "What are you doing here?""What am I—? Girl, you stopped texting! I thought you’d passed out or Luca had hauled you off to some mountain retreat." She stepped closer, her eyes narrowing. "You look like hell. Where have you been?""The clinic," I said, leaning against the cold brick of the building. "Just a bad cold. They gave me an IV and some meds. I’m fine, Nova. Really."She reached out to touch my face, but I ducked away, nearly losing my balance. "Don't. I’m a walking biohazard ri
ARIAI sat on the edge of the bed, staring at the empty IV bag still hanging like a ghost from my wall. My throat was a jagged mess of fire, and every time I tried to swallow, my vision blurred.The phone buzzed. Tasha."Hey," I croaked. It sounded like I’d been gargling broken glass."Aria? What the hell happened to your voice?" Tasha’s tone was instant alarm. "You sound like you’ve been screaming into a pillow for three days straight.""Just a bug," I said, leaning my head against the cool plaster of the wall. "It’s fine. I’m fine.""You aren't fine. You’re hoarse and breathless, and I can practically hear the fever through the speaker. Why aren't you in the hospital? Go to the clinic, get a proper room, let them pump you full of the good stuff."I closed my eyes. A hospital stay meant a deposit. It meant insurance paperwork that would ping the Stormbourne accounts. It meant a bill I couldn't pay without dipping into the startup money Brandon and Nova had just put up. "It’s unnecess
ARIAMy vision was doing this weird, rhythmic pulsing thing, matching the heavy thud-thud of the headache behind my eyes.I was curled on the bed, my skin feeling like it had been swapped with sandpaper. I knew I looked like a wreck—face flushed hot, lips probably the color of dry bone.I felt the mattress dip. The air shifted, bringing with it that sharp, familiar scent of mountain rain. Luca."Aria," he said. It wasn't a question. It was a command for me to be okay.I tried to glare at him, but my eyelids felt like they had lead weights attached. "Get... out," I croaked. My throat was so dry it felt like I’d swallowed a handful of gravel.He didn't move. He reached out, his hand hovering near my face, but he didn't touch me. He just looked at me with frustration and something that looked dangerously like pity."You’re a mess," he muttered. "Is this your 'independence'? Dying in a closet while you wait for your phone to ring?"I wanted to bite back. I wanted to tell him to go to hell
ARIAThe stairs to my apartment felt twice as steep as they had yesterday. By the time I reached the fifth floor, my legs were shaking so badly I had to lean against the peeling wallpaper just to find the keyhole. I just needed the door to close. I needed the world to stop moving for five minutes.I stepped inside and didn't even bother taking off my coat. The silence of the apartment, which usually felt like freedom, now felt heavy—like it was pressing down on my lungs.Twenty years.I slumped onto my bed, the mattress groaning under my weight. My mother’s face was a blur in my memory, a smudge of red lipstick and the scent of expensive cigarettes before she’d walked out and never looked back. And now? A BMW. Asking about the "wealthy wolf.""Pathetic," I whispered to the empty room. My voice sounded thin, like paper.I checked my phone. Three missed calls from Brandon. Five texts from Nova. I tried to type a reply, but my fingers felt like lead. The screen was too bright, the white
ARIAThe guest room felt like a holding cell with better thread count. I spent the night staring at the ceiling, waiting for the digital clock to hit 6:00 AM so I could bolt. But at 5:30, my phone buzzed on the nightstand. It wasn’t an alarm."Aunt Martha?" I whispered, my voice raspy from lack of sleep. "Is everything okay?"Aunt Martha only called from the hometown at odd hours if someone was dead or the taxes were overdue."Aria, honey," Martha’s voice was shaky, echoing with the static of a bad landline. "You won’t believe who just pulled up to my porch. I’m looking out the window right now. There’s a shiny new BMW in the driveway.""Did Uncle Joe win the lottery?" I tried to joke, but my stomach did a slow, ugly roll."No. It’s her, Aria. It’s your mother."The air left the room. I felt like I’d been punched in the solar plexus. "My... what?""She’s been gone twenty years, and now she walks in like she just went out for milk. She’s dressed in silk, asking where you are. Asking if







