MasukKatelyn's POV
By the time the sun dipped below the trees and the house lights started to glow, I heard the front door open.
Ethan was back. His voice came through the hallway, casual as ever. “Lucas? Where’s your mom?” I stayed upstairs. "She went upstairs," Lucas said quietly. "She looked upset." I didn’t make my way down to greet him like I usually would. Instead, I gave myself the luxury of brushing my hair methodically at the dressing table—not because I cared how I looked, but because it gave me something to do with my hands. A minute later, the door opened behind me. Ethan walked in, slow like he was testing the air. I caught his reflection in the mirror. He scanned the room, then looked at me. I didn’t turn around. He sat down on the edge of the bed, resting his hands on his knees. Normally, by now, there’d be a full dinner waiting for him downstairs. I’d have poured his tea, laid out clean towels, maybe even drawn a bath if the day had been long. But today, I did none of that. I stayed quiet. He rubbed his forehead, his movements slower than usual. He looked tired—but not in a way that made me feel sorry for him. Just in a way that showed up when someone had used all their energy somewhere else. Eventually, he got up and headed into the bathroom. I heard the water running. Fifteen minutes passed. Then the sound of the shower shutting off. When he came back out, he grabbed a towel and dried his hair, standing near the door. “I’m sorry I couldn’t make it today,” he said, voice low. “About your mom.” I glanced at him through the mirror. He wasn’t even looking at me when he said it. And his tone—flat. Like he was checking something off a list. I looked at him steadily through the mirror and said calmly. “I want a divorce.” Ethan froze. He lowered the towel in his hands and stared at me like he wasn’t sure he’d heard me right. “You’re kidding,” he said after a second. I turned slightly toward him. “Do I look like I’m kidding?” He stepped forward, half-laughing under his breath. “Didn’t you just say a few days ago that you wanted to work? Now you’re making a fuss about divorce?” “You don’t see the connection?” I asked quietly. He shook his head. “So what’s this really about? You’re tired of being a rich man’s wife? Is it that boring for you?” I stood up from the dressing table. “You think I should be grateful,” I said, looking him in the eye. “You should be,” he said. “Do you know how many people out there would trade places with you in a heartbeat? You live in comfort, everything’s taken care of, and all you have to do is—what? Sit around and complain when things don’t go your way?” I gave a small, humorless laugh. “Right. Because that’s what this is to you—me complaining. There’s no other Alpha’s Luna who has to ask her Alpha‘s Beta just to get on the phone with him. Or who has to explain herself every time she wants to buy something. I once had to ask you for money just to get bread.” He stared at me like I’d slapped him. “If you leave,” he said slowly, “what kind of life do you think you’ll have? You think you’ll be happy? You think the world’s going to roll out a red carpet for a single mom who walked out on her marriage?” “It might be hard,” I said, my voice steady. “But I won’t regret it.” I turned away and walked to the closet. I grabbed a suitcase and started unzipping it. But before I could reach for anything else, he stepped in front of me and blocked the path. I looked up, expecting him to argue again, but he didn’t say anything right away. He just stood there, eyes locked on mine, arms stiff at his sides. Neither of us moved. The silence stretched. Then, finally, Ethan spoke—his voice lower, more controlled. “This is about Scarlett, isn’t it?” he said. “You’re mad because I went to pick her up.” I stayed quiet, my hands still resting on the suitcase. He stepped closer. “Why don’t you just say it? Just admit it. You’ve always hated that she and I had something real. You came into my life and took it away.” I lifted my eyes to his. “I didn’t take anything. You made your choices.” He didn’t answer right away. But something in his expression changed. The man standing in front of me wasn’t composed anymore. His jaw clenched hard, and his eyes darkened—not with sadness or frustration, but something raw, unfiltered. It was like watching a mask fall away. The polite, camera-ready Ethan—the one who knew exactly when to smile, when to say the right line—was gone. What stood there now was someone I didn’t recognize. And before I could move, he surged forward and kissed me.It wasn’t a kiss—it was a collision.
His hand gripped my arm tight, pulling me toward him like he could bend the air between us to his will. His mouth was rough, urgent, full of something he didn’t want to say out loud. It was aggressive, like he was trying to erase everything between us—our silence, my anger, the truth—with just the pressure of his lips. I yanked myself back, breath caught somewhere in my throat. “You bastard.” He stared at me, unbothered, eyes still locked on mine. “Yeah. I am.” His eyes locked on mine. “And right now, I’m about to do something only a bastard would do.” Before I could respond, he grabbed my face and kissed me again. Hard. My hands pushed against his chest, but his hold didn’t loosen. His mouth pressed to mine with rough insistence, the kind that ignored resistance and erased space. My body stiffened, shocked by the sudden closeness. A rush of heat climbed up my neck, fast and unexpected. I froze. I didn’t lean in, but I didn’t pull away fast enough either. My breath caught. My pulse jumped. For a second, the room felt smaller, the air heavier. His grip, his warmth, the sheer force of it—it overwhelmed my senses before I could think clearly. I wasn’t sure what startled me more: the kiss, or the way my body reacted to it without asking my permission.Ethan’s POVHer body shook against mine, her arms locked so tightly around me that it almost hurt. I didn’t care. The weight of her pressed into me was the only thing that proved this was real.“Katelyn,” I whispered, almost afraid to break the moment. My voice cracked when I said her name. “Katelyn.”She pulled back only enough to look at me. Her eyes were wet, her face thinner than I remembered, but she was alive. Then she threw herself back against me, hugging me harder.“I thought I lost you,” I said into her hair. My throat burned with the words.“I was gone for so long,” she murmured. “I tried to come back to you. I did.”We stood there in the middle of the village, neither of us caring about the curious looks from passersby. I couldn’t let go, not yet.Finally, we sat down on a wooden bench just outside a small house. A woman in a scarf waved gently before disappearing inside. Katelyn smiled faintly.“She’s the one who looked after me,” she explained. Her voice was soft but ste
Ethan’s POVSpring arrived almost without me noticing. The trees along the streets had started to green again, the air carried warmth instead of sharp cold, and people on the sidewalks no longer hunched into coats. But none of it touched me. My own life still felt like winter.Weeks had passed, and I still hadn’t been able to reach Katelyn. Every call ended the same: silence or unanswered rings. Every message sent into the dark, never answered. I told myself she was alive. I told myself she was safe somewhere. But the truth was, I didn’t know, and that truth gnawed at me until sleep and food barely mattered.Rachel and Xander’s wedding came in the middle of all this, like a fixed date that couldn’t be moved no matter what storms filled the rest of the world.I dressed in a suit, though my hands trembled buttoning it. My reflection looked hollow, the fever that had gripped me days earlier still written in the shadows under my eyes. But I went anyway. I couldn’t let them down.The
Ethan’s POVI stood in the street until my legs ached, until the cold slipped into my bones. Finally, I forced myself back inside. The apartment was still, the same stillness it had carried since she vanished. I dropped my phone on the nightstand and collapsed onto the bed without turning on the light. Sleep didn’t come easy, but exhaustion pulled me under.The shrill ring of my phone yanked me awake. Morning light pressed faint through the blinds. I fumbled for the phone, my chest pounding, and saw Allen’s name.I answered instantly. “Allen?”His tone was sharp, rushed. “Ethan, I found something. Katelyn isn’t missing—she was taken to a private medical institution. Secret admission. They’re treating her, though I don’t know what for yet.”I froze. The words landed like a blow and a relief at once. “She’s alive.” My voice cracked.“Yes. Alive. I’ve confirmed it.”I pressed my palm over my face. Relief surged so hard it left me shaking. Tears slid through my fingers before I could st
Ethan’s POVThe plane moved through calm air, steady and slow. The engine’s low hum filled the cabin and dulled everything else. Fallon sat one seat over, eyes closed, hands folded over her jacket. A flight attendant passed by with soft steps and didn’t speak. We were both too tired to pretend small talk would help.The stillness pulled me back in time. I saw Katelyn on our first wedding day, standing in a dress that wasn’t expensive but made her look like the center of the room. She smiled at me with hope I didn’t understand then. I told myself work would build a safe life for us. Instead, I buried myself in it and left her to carry us alone. I remembered when she left, her face set like a door I couldn’t open and the silence that followed. Then I saw how we found our way back, step by step, argument by argument, apology by apology. I heard Lucas laugh in the middle of it, the way he does when he thinks we’re not listening.I gripped the armrest and stared at my reflection in the
Ethan’s POVThe corridors of the hospital still smelled of smoke and disinfectant from the chaos of the bombing. Soldiers stood at every door, rifles slung over their shoulders, their boots echoing against the marble. Outside, sirens wailed and then faded, never fully gone.Inside, I refused to leave her.Katelyn lay pale beneath the sheets, her head wrapped, her chest rising and falling in shallow rhythm. The scans had shown bleeding inside her brain. The doctors’ words replayed in my head, about no specialist on staff and limited options with surgery being risky.I pushed down the panic clawing in my chest. She needed strength, not despair. So I scrubbed in, pulled the mask over my face, and stepped into the sterile brightness of the operating room.The light above the table was merciless, glaring down on her like judgment. Monitors beeped, steady but fragile. My gloves stuck with sweat as I helped hold tools, passing instruments to the surgeon, forcing my body into calm precisio
Ethan’s POVThe news of Reggie spread faster than any fire.In the days that followed, his small, fragile figure became the face on every broadcast. Reporters picked up his story, medical experts gave interviews, and people everywhere started asking why the government had failed to protect a child. Sympathy grew and anger grew with it. People demanded that he receive proper medical care.For once, the public was not divided. They were united by a boy’s suffering.Milo knew what he was doing. When he announced a ceasefire, the weight of the government’s failures came crashing down harder. Every voice demanding care for Reggie became another voice demanding answers from the army.Inside the compound, tension simmered. Soldiers whispered, their faces tight. Even the colonel looked like a man trapped between orders and shame.That afternoon, I was called to his office. The door closed behind me with a heavy thud, and I stood across from him while he sat at his desk, his jaw set, finger







