Lexi
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?
WHY DID YOU LIELexi’s POVI could still hear the faint echo of Manny’s footsteps fading outside the room, his final warning hanging in the air like a thick, suffocating fog. My chest burned with anger, frustration, and disbelief all at once. I stood frozen in place, my nails biting into my palms as I balled up my fists, replaying every second of what had just happened.Manny had looked me straight in the eye, his face hard, accusing, cold, and chosen to believe Clara over me. Not surprising though, but I expected better at least.And Dexter… my son, my own little boy, had looked me dead in the face, after telling me the truth in secret, and lied. He lied so smoothly to his father that for a moment even I questioned whether I had imagined our earlier conversation. But I hadn’t, I knew what he said. I remembered the way his small voice had trembled when he told me Clara was the one who locked him in the freezer.And now, after Manny stormed out, leaving that bitter trail of disappoi
Accusation Manny’s POVI could not believe what I had just heard.For a second, I thought I must have misheard her, that the tension of the day and my own exhaustion were twisting my mind into something ridiculous. But Lexi’s voice had sounded too certain, too accusing for it to be anything but deliberate. I turned back slowly, my eyes narrowing on her, trying to keep my face unreadable. I could not allow my thoughts, my confusion, shock, or the uneasy coil forming in my gut, to show.“Repeat that,” I said finally, my voice steady, though inside my heart hammered against my ribs.Her eyes blazed at me, unflinching, like a wolf staring down a storm. “I said Clara was the one who locked Dexter in the freezer.” Her voice did not shake, it carried that sharpness of someone who was certain of what she was saying. For a moment, all I heard was the sound of my own breathing and the quiet shuffle of Dexter shifting on his feet.I turned back to my son. My boy, Dexter, standing small yet
BETRAYAL OF HER BLOODLEXI'S POVI sat beside Dexter on his bed, pulling him closer to me.“Repeat everything you just said,” I told him, trying not to smile too excitedly.Dexter leaned closer to me. “I know who put me in that freezer that day, mom.”“Tell me everything that happened that day,” I said to him, with a firm look on my face.“It started that morning, after breakfast,” Dexter started, closing his eyes like he could picture it. “I was sitting in the room, playing video games when Miss Clara walked in,”My heart steeled as I heard this, I knew Clara was behind this but hearing it from Dexter's mouth still unnerved me.How could someone be capable of such wickedness to a child?“She made some jokes about my game and said that she wanted to ask me something, so I paused the game and turned to her. She then asked me if I was interested in playing a game to win a prize that I could give you.”I stayed silent, bracing myself for what he was about to say.“I told her I wanted to
WHEN SHE WAS EXHAUSTEDLEXI’S POV“Can you both just stop this!” I called out again, weaker this time. Jax and Manny paused immediately, turning to me. “You guys always do this, you turn my issues into some kind of sick competition, like I am supposed to be flattered that you guys are fighting because of me,” I yelled at them and Jax frowned, solemnly while Manny avoided my eyes.“Everytime something happens to me, you guys somehow twist it around and make it about yourselves.”I turned to Manny, “was coward really the only thing you heard Jax say, or is that the only one you plan on taking accountability for?”“And Jax… you are my friend, not my defender, not my warrior, so stop picking fights on my behalf,” I said to him and he gave me an apologetic look.“I am sorry Lexi, I just allowed my emotions to get the better of me,” he apologized, stepping closer.“I honestly didn't think that I hurt you like that,” Manny explained, his eyes glinting in sincerity.“You don't know how many
FRACTURESLEXI'S POV Wayne gave me an incredulous look, like he couldn't believe what I said.“Come down to my bed now and tell me everything right now,” I insisted.“I am not doing that mom,” Wayne replied, and I scoffed at him.“I never said I was giving you a choice,” I replied firmly.His secrecy had gone on long enough, it was time for him to tell me the truth.“No matter what you do, I can't tell you mom,” Wayne replied frankly. I looked into his eyes, taken aback by his stubbornness. “Why not?” I asked him, sounding almost desperate.“Because I don't want her to hurt you,” he said, his eyes watery like he was about to cry. “So please mom, stop asking me to tell you what she did.”Before I could say another word, Wayne turned away from me, pulling his covers over his head.I stared at him helplessly, feeling my own eyes moisten.Did my son have that little faith in me that he felt that I couldn't protect myself against someone like Clara?I retreated back to my bed, staring a
BUILDING UP AND FALLING APARTLEXI’S POVI shook my head, feeling disappointment and anger flood my bones as I stared at Manny.Was he actually serious?I had asked him to do one thing for me, just one thing and he had let me down as usual.“Lexi I wasn’t thinking,” he tried to explain, reaching for me, but I stepped away from his grasp.“That is the issue with you Manny, you never think!” I yelled, barely controlling my temper.“I had to rush here because I thought your life was in danger,” Manny said and I shook my head again, clenching my fists.“You made a promise to me,” I said to him, feeling my heart sink. Why was it always so hard for him to keep his promises to me?Was my worth to him so fickle that he didn’t even take my concerns seriously?Around us, the guards and the elders stared in curiosity, but I honestly didn’t care. All that mattered to me right now was getting back to my boys before Clara could hurt them.“Lexi, you don’t have to worry about Clara, I spoke to her