LOGINLexi
I pace the sterile linoleum floor of the hospital corridor, the antiseptic stench clawing at my nose as machines beep faintly behind the door to Dexter’s room.
My heels click against the tile, a sharp rhythm against the chaos brewing in my heart. They rushed him here hours ago, my boy, his small body limp in my arms, blood still staining his shirt.
The doctors swarm him—tests, scans, needles piercing his fragile skin—but they find nothing. Almost two hours later, a white haired doctor comes out of the room.
“We're doing the best we can,” he says when I asked if Dexter is alright now. He didn't seem confident.
Then he added, “There's no sign of infection, no rupture, no reason for the coughing, the blood, ma'am.”
“What does this mean?” I ask, more alarmed than I was when I brought him in.
“It means, whatever is making your son bring up blood anytime he coughs isn't—”
“No, doctor—you can't be serious.”
The doctor sighs. “Ms. Rex, I'm afraid we've run out of options. Your son's condition defies medicine and all I've learned.”
I watch in shocked dread as my son's body jerks every few seconds and his throat swells, ready to expel another bout of coughing.
“Except—”
“Except what?” I ask, my throat closed tight, not sure if I'm ready for what the doctor has to say.
“We can induce a coma?”
My lips part but only a confused gabble comes out. I grimace at him, shaking my head. “Excuse me?”
He glances at Dexter fighting for his life on the bed. “It's the only way we can keep him alive long enough until we know what to do.”
I grip my son's hand desperately, my feet turning to water as I stare at his precious body helplessly. The stranger the situation, the more desperate it gets. Rubbing his palm, I call his name under my breath, “Dexter, can you hear me?”
My chest burns with a suppressed scream, as his body jerks, his little chest rising and falling with terrifying, irregular rhythm. Behind me, the doctor and nurses cluster, silently waiting for my call.
Drawing a heavy inhale, I look at the doctor. “Do it,” I whisper harshly. “Save him, please.”
Standing by the door, I watch the nurses prep him for sedation, then pump medicine into his veins. Seconds later, like a clock winding down, Dexter's muscles slacken, his head rolls to the side and he falls into a deep sleep.
It’s all they can do, the doctor said. All their science, and it’s not enough.
They all walk out to let me have a moment with Dexter. With a heart in turmoil, I sit beside him and hold back the tears tugging at the strings in my core.
Just then, I hear running footsteps—two sets. Jax bursts through the door, his broad frame blocking the light behind him, and little Nia rushes in just behind him.
“Mommy!” Nia gasps, but her eyes go straight to the hospital bed.
“Dexter!” she cries, voice cracking, and runs to the side of the bed. She grabs his hand, tears already soaking her cheeks. “Wake up, Dex… please don’t be sick…”
I rise slowly, my voice hoarse as I walk over to Jax. “He just started coughing up blood,” I whisper. “Out of nowhere. We came straight here. They did everything—they still don’t know what’s wrong…”
Jax's jaw tightens, his eyes flicking between me and our son. His usual calm is gone, replaced by something raw and helpless. He steps forward, laying a hand on Nia’s shoulder as she sobs softly by Dexter’s side.
One of the doctors lingers, an older woman with gray streaks in her hair and a hesitant look in her eyes.
In a low voice, she asks if we can have a word. “Ms. Rex, we’ve exhausted our options. This… it might not be medical.”
I start shaking my head, about to disagree with her but she shrugs.
“I’ve seen cases like this before, unexplained things happen here, Ms. Rex.”
“What're you trying to tell me?”
“It could be supernatural. Have you considered a mage?” she asks, almost warily.
A mage. The word hits me like a slap, but I nod, desperate. “Do it. Find one. Now.” My voice is steady, but inside, I’m fraying.
Jax’s eyes snap to mine. “I’ll get him,” he says without hesitation. “Just tell me where.”
I nod quickly and hand him the doctor’s card with the name. “Torin. He's local.”
Jax gives me a curt nod and bolts out the door, already pulling out his phone.
Hours later, the mage arrives, a wiry man named Torin, dressed in a dark coat, his fingers stained with ink and ash.
I lead him to Dexter’s room, where my son lies still, tubes snaking from his arms, his chest rising and falling too slowly. I hover as Torin sets up, scattering herbs across the floor, lighting candles that flicker with an eerie blue flame.
He mutters under his breath, tracing symbols in the air, and I feel it, a prickle along my skin, the air thickening. Then he presses his palms to Dexter’s chest, and a glow flares, sharp and sudden.
I gasp as an invisible mark blooms into view on my son’s neck, a jagged, swirling rune, pulsing faintly with a sickly green light.
“What is that?” My voice trembles.
Torin’s face hardens. “A hex. Old magic, vicious. Someone wants your son to suffer, someone with a grudge.”
I stare, my mind spinning. “A grudge? I don’t have enemies.”
I’ve built Rogue Haven to help, not harm. I’ve buried my past, outrun it, or so I thought.
Who could hate me enough to strike at my child?
There are many who oppose Rogue Haven and seek to keep us rogues under their feet but…
Torin extinguishes the candles, his eyes grim. “The hex is deep. As it stands, he’s got seventy-two hours before it claims him.”
Seventy-two hours. Three days. My knees buckle, but I catch myself on the bed’s rail, staring at Dexter’s pale face.
“What do I do? How do I save him?” My words are a desolate plea.
The mage hesitates, then meets my gaze. “He’s a twin, yes?”
“Yes, he is…how could you know this?”
“A mage knows what he should,” he replies. “The essence of his other half might break the curse. Twin bonds are rare, powerful, strong enough to unravel even this. Find his sibling, draw on that connection. It’s his best chance.”
His words crash over me like a tidal wave of memory and dread. My other son, the one I left behind on that cliff as I jumped with Dexter.
Manny took him, raised him, and I’ve spent seven years burying that loss, telling myself he’s better off, safer without me. Now Dexter’s life hangs on that choice I made, and I’m choking on it.
I sink into the chair beside Dexter’s bed, my hand finds his cold fingers. Helpless, realize the uncertainty of motherhood’s terrain is nothing like sitting behind a desk, ordering staff around.
I can't order my son into wellness.
I’m just a mother now, staring at a clock that’s already ticking down. Seventy-two hours to face my past or lose my future. I don’t know if I can do this—but for Dexter, I have to.
I see Manny’s wild eyes, hear his roar—“Give me the boys, Lexi!”—and my stomach twists.
Return to him, to that pack, with Dexter in tow, begging for the twin I abandoned? Or stay here, and helplessly watch my son die?
Lexi’s POVWhen the vision finally released me, the air of my room felt sharper.Sadie’s presence lingered in the corner, faintly shimmering, as if part of her energy refused to leave entirely.I drew a slow, deliberate breath, letting the warmth of reality settle into my skin, grounding me after the ethereal intensity of what I had just experienced.“I’m staying,” I said quietly, more to myself than to her, but Sadie caught the words anyway. Her lips curved slightly, approval in the smallest of gestures.“Yes,” she replied. “Your choice was always yours. The celestial order honors it. You will remain here, with your children, your mate, your pack. But I will return, occasionally, to ensure that one of your own is not threatened or in need. You are their strength, Lexi, and I will remain their eyes when you cannot be.”I nodded, absorbing the weight of her words. The idea of being watched, guided, protected, even from the unseen, didn’t feel intrusive.It felt like a promise, a wire c
Sadie POV / Spirit PlaneThe moment darkness settled over the packhouse, I found myself drawn to Lexi.Her energy pulsed through the walls of her room even before I was inside, a rhythmic tension that told me she had not slept, that the weight of her discoveries had pressed too heavily on her.I appeared silently, a presence she had grown to expect but still startled her each time I manifested.“Lexi,” I said softly, letting the words hang in the space between us.She jumped, her hands gripping the edge of the bed, eyes wide and filled with alarm. “Relax,” I told her gently. “It’s me. I’m your proxy. I’m here as a friend, not as a judge.”Her gaze narrowed, suspicion warring with relief. “A friend?” she repeated, voice trembling. “After everything… after everything I’ve seen, everything I’ve felt… how can I trust that?”I floated closer, letting my form shimmer in the moonlight filtering through the window.“Because I have walked this path before, and now I walk it with you. You carry
Lexi’s POVI opened my eyes slowly, blinking against the cold silver of the hilltop moonlight.The vision had ended, but Sadie hadn’t returned with me. Her words lingered in my mind like a chant:“Your people need you. You have to come back.”The hill was silent around me, the wind shifting through the trees as if holding its breath, and for a moment I wasn’t sure whether I was awake or still trapped between the threads of that shimmering memory.I sat there for a long while, the truth pressing against me from every angle, a weight I hadn’t anticipated.I had known my life carried its share of burdens, but nothing like this, nothing that tied me to a world I had never walked in, a family I never met, and a duty I had never chosen.I thought of Lunara, my mother, the woman who had given up everything to protect me, to give me a chance at a life she could not have.And I thought of Clara, that twisted shadow, consumed by jealousy, by obsession, by a hatred that had echoed across nearly
Sadie’s POV (Vision Sequence)Lunara’s StoryLexi didn’t speak after I revealed the truth. She simply stared at me, breathing unevenly, unsure, resisting the pull of everything her life had been leading toward.I saw the questions forming, the panic rising behind her eyes, the disbelief sitting raw on her face.“I know it’s a lot,” I murmured. “And I know you don’t trust me yet. You don’t have to. Just… let me show you.”She hesitated, torn between stepping back and stepping toward something she didn’t understand. Finally, she nodded once, small, stiff, but definite.I lifted my hand slowly, letting silver light gather between my fingers. The air trembled, as if responding to a language only I could speak. “This won’t hurt,” I said softly. “But it will reveal everything.”The world around us blurred. The hill, the moon, the forest, they dissolved into silver threads drifting upward like smoke.Lexi tensed as the ground vanished beneath her feet, replaced by weightless space that shimm
Lexi’s POVThe date on that damned paper came faster than I expected. Every day leading up to it, I told myself I wouldn’t go, that it was stupid, reckless and completely unnecessary… but every night, when the house went quiet and everybody fell asleep, I felt a pull to go.A promise of truth.I didn’t breathe a word to anyone.Peace had just returned after so long, and I refused to be the one to snap them out of it by worrying about me.Whatever this was, whatever this person wanted with me, it needed to stay contained.When I looked up at the clock, it was exactly 11:30pm, I slipped into black jeans, a fitted top, and a thick jacket that hid the pocket gun and knife tucked inside.The weight of both weapons grounded me, though it didn't calm me.As I crept through the quiet hallways of the packhouse, I paused for a heartbeat at the boys’ door.I didn’t open it, just pressed my palm softly against the wood. Dexter talked too much for someone who forgot to mention he’d received a lett
Tristan’s POVI had imagined this day a thousand different ways, but standing here now, with the sun spilling gold across the courtyard and the kingdom gathered in quiet anticipation, it felt entirely new. The council members were lined up in their ceremonial robes, deep green trimmed with silver, the colors chosen to represent renewal and clarity. My people whispered among themselves, a soft buzz of hope threading through the air, and for the first time in a very long time, I felt as though the ground beneath us was steady.“Your Majesty, everyone is ready,” one of the palace attendants murmured beside me.I nodded, my eyes scanning the crowd again. Almost everyone was present, elders, warriors, healers, the new council members… except one face. Lexi’s. She was nowhere in sight.Of course she’s late, I thought, not with irritation but with something almost like fond amusement. She had a talent for arriving exactly when she intended to, even if that wasn’t when everyone expected her







