LOGINThe police station was a concrete sarcophagus, and escaping it felt like bursting through the surface of deep water. I didn't stop to look back. I didn't acknowledge the flood of relief washing over me. I just walked. The cool, damp air of the late November night was a brutal shock after the sterile, recycled hostility of the precinct, hitting my face like a welcome slap.
Ote’s voice, though left miles behind, was still a hot, poisonous knot tightening in my skull. His promise—"I will be watching you... I will get you this time"—was not merely a threat; it was a psychological tether, ensuring that every shadow and every parked car on the route home would feel like his surveillance.
My body was bone-tired and aching from the cramped hours in the interrogation room, but my mind was a shrieking siren, cycling through the impossibilities: the dead cafe customers, the impossible no-blood scenario, and the chilling realisation that the killer was back.
I couldn't go straight home. Home was the vortex of all my loneliness. My feet found a rhythm on the pavement, guiding me toward the city's river. For years, following the trauma of the first murder, the only thing that had offered me a semblance of sanity was the indifferent, ceaseless movement of water. It was a natural constant, a force that flowed regardless of human betrayal or supernatural interference.
I navigated the deserted streets, keeping to the shadows, a fugitive hurrying through the city’s underbelly. I passed closed shops and darkened office towers; the silence was broken only by the sharp, repetitive crunch of my boots on the gravel. Every glint of chrome, every sudden flicker of an awning light, made me flinch, expecting to see Ote’s cruiser idling nearby. The fear wasn't rational, but after two years of being framed, logic was secondary to survival.
Finally, after what felt like an hour of tense, hurried transit, I reached the local river. Its presence was a dark, serpentine line running through the city's heart.
The riverbank was silent, the concrete banks swallowed by shadow and the low, persistent swoosh of the current. I found a low, isolated concrete ledge, wet with dew, and sank onto it, pulling the woollen jacket tighter. The cold seeped up through the stone, chilling my bones, but I ignored it. Finally, I allowed my shoulders to slump, releasing the agonising tension I’d held in my muscles for twelve harrowing, caged hours.
There is a profound, almost spiritual comfort in watching water. It is ceaseless, relentless, yet completely uncaring of the chaos on the shore. The smooth, dark surface absorbed the faint, distant city lights, fracturing them into long, trembling silver spears that trailed into the distance. For a few minutes, I focused only on the sound, letting the rhythmic pulse of the current wash over the screaming static in my head. I didn't think about the ripped chests, the missing heart, the furious, unforgiving face of Detective Ote, or the impossible return of my nightmare. I just listened.
Rush. Flow. Fade.
As my heart rate finally slowed its frantic sprint, the questions began to emerge, rising from the sudden, illusory calm like bubbles from the riverbed, sharp and undeniable. I sat there, methodically cross-referencing my memories, trying to make sense of the brutal facts from two years ago against the fresh horror of today.
The two crimes were two years apart, separated by different counties, yet the method was identical: the missing heart, the surgical precision, the terrifying, impossible absence of blood.
If it was the same killer, they were a figure of impossible patience, meticulousness, and capability, operating with seamless stealth in both an isolated hotel room and a crowded urban café. They weren't just a killer; they were a vanishing act, almost as if they were not even human. The thought itself was absurd, yet the evidence demanded it. I let out a small, hollow laugh that was instantly swallowed by the current. How is that possible? Of course, they are human, I told myself, clutching desperately to logic, even as logic failed. The lack of blood remained the biggest, most impossible contradiction.
The sheer mathematical improbability of my being the one to find the café was crushing. If I hadn't been there, Ote wouldn't be involved, and the terrifying, definitive connection to Alex's murder might have taken days, weeks, or years to surface. Was it a random, horrible stroke of fate, or was the killer leaving a trail, knowing exactly who would follow? Was I being guided? Used as a witness, or perhaps, as a lure?
I ran a hand over the stubble on my jaw, my skin rough with exhaustion. I was a freelance photographer, a documenter of reality, not a police investigator. But after the relentless suffering Ote had inflicted—and was clearly intending to inflict again—I couldn't afford to be passive. I had to find the link, the key to the killer's movement, before Ote fabricated one to fit his warped narrative and lock me away forever. My survival depended on finding the truth that Ote actively ignored.
My gaze fell on the jacket I was wearing, a heavy, dark garment that smelled faintly herbal, like dried cedar. It wasn't mine. It was too soft, too high-quality, and certainly not police-issue or tainted by the stench of the interrogation room.
Who left this? The question was a low, insistent hum in my ear, a small piece of external evidence that didn't fit the pattern of malice.
Ote would sooner leave me naked in the hallway than offer a blanket. It had to be Officer Net, the one detective who had seemed genuinely disturbed by the brutality of the crime and the undisguised bias of his superior. The thought offered a small, flickering wick of hope—a single, fragile ally in this sudden, terrifying resurgence of darkness. He had intervened on my behalf, risking his career. He was a good cop, trapped in a corrupt system.
But that kindness felt intensely dangerous. If Ote found out Net had shown me empathy, or worse, had subtly protected me from Ote's immediate fury, he'd destroy the young officer's career with surgical precision. I couldn't risk revealing the garment, and I certainly couldn't call him for help. The lone island of humanity had to remain isolated for its own safety.
I sigh and look up at the sky. There is only one thing for it- I must investigate this case myself. Only then might the killer be caught, but I am on my own, and I am going to have to do my investigation silently and quickly.
After all, if the killer is not caught, then the one being fingered for the crime is going to be yours truly.
The door to Alex’s room clicked shut, finally sealing out the cold, metallic scent of the docks and the distant, muffled shouts of Silas hauling Detective Ote toward the pack’s prison cells. Outside, the Hidden Hearth pack was a symphony of rustling leaves and distant patrols, but inside the four walls of the bedroom, the silence was deafening.Danny didn't move from the door. He stood with his back against the wood, his shoulders slumped, looking smaller than he had on the pier. The adrenaline that had allowed him to stand up to Ote had evaporated, leaving behind a hollow, aching exhaustion.Alex stood by the window, his silhouette framed by the moonlight. He looked like a statue carved from shadow, his presence still vibrating with the residual energy of the Alpha. He didn't turn around immediately, his hands gripped tight behind his back."He’s in the hole," Alex said, his voice a low, gravelly rumble. "Net is setting up the dampeners. He wo
The docks were a graveyard of rusted shipping containers and the smell of salt and rotting timber. Rain turned the oil-slicked asphalt into a mirror for the flickering amber lights of the security towers. At the far end of Pier 19, a lone black sedan sat idling, its headlights cutting through the fog like a predator’s eyes.Danny watched from the back of the transport as Alex and Silas moved. They didn't run; they vanished. One moment they were there, and the next, they were shadows blending into the industrial landscape.“Jamming active,” Net whispered, his fingers dancing over a tablet. “Ote is in a dead zone. He couldn't call for backup if his life depended on it. Which, statistically, it doesn't.”The passenger door of the sedan opened. Detective Ote stepped out, glancing at his watch and lighting a cigarette. He looked nervous, his eyes darting toward the darkness. He was waiting for Vane, but he didn't realize the mountain had
The armoured transport sat idling in a dark alleyway fifty yards from Danny’s apartment complex. Rain lashed against the reinforced glass, blurring the neon signs of the city into long, weeping streaks of colour. Inside the cabin, the only light came from the flickering green of Officer Net’s monitors."Isolation complete," Net whispered. "Filtering the background noise. It’s dated two days after your disappearance. Ote is in your home office. He’s with a man—sounds like a heavy-set smoker. He’s not a cop. The gait is too weighted; the scent would be... wrong."Alex leaned in, his body coiled like a spring. "Play it."Static crackled through the speakers, a hollow, echoing sound that made the hair on Danny’s arms stand up. Then, a chair scraped against a floorboard—Danny’s chair."I'm telling you, he's gone," Ote’s voice came through, clear and sharp. "Marigold took him. The extracti
As the armoured transport hissed through the forests fog, descending toward the sprawling carpet of city lights below, the cabin was silent. Danny sat huddled in the back, the heavy wool cardigan pulled tight around him. He watched Officer Net, who was meticulously calibrating a series of glowing antennas.Officer Net didn’t look like a police officer. He looked like a man who hadn't slept since the turn of the century, his movements precise and clinical."Net," Danny said, his voice cutting through the hum of the engine. "How did you find me that day at the crime scene? I am guessing you weren't just a lucky assignment. You were waiting for me."Net looked up from his screen. He glanced at Alex, who was sitting across from Danny, his eyes fixed on the dark road ahead."Tell him, Net," Alex said softly. "He deserves the full picture."Net sighed, pushing his spectacles up the bridge of his nose. "I was never assigned to your case, Danny. I&rs
The mangled remains of the mobile phone lay on the floor like a dead insect, but the air in the room remained charged with the static of Ote’s threats. Alex’s embrace was a physical weight, a wall of muscle and heat meant to keep the world out, but Danny’s mind was already three hundred miles away, back in the dusty, cramped reality of his city apartment.Danny pulled back slightly, his eyes clearing as a sharp, crystalline thought cut through the fog of his panic. The journalist—the part of him that lived for the "gotcha" moment—was clawing its way back to the surface."Alex," Danny whispered, his voice gaining a sudden, frantic edge. "The recording. I have him."Alex frowned, his thumbs tracing the back of Danny’s hands to keep him grounded. "What are you talking about? The phone is destroyed.""Not on the phone," Danny said, shaking his head. "Before you... before I was brought here, Ote arrested me for the café case. I knew he was dirty. I could smell
The aftermath of the balcony incident had turned the Hidden Hearth into a literal fortress of silence. Alex had moved Danny into a smaller, more intimate suite adjoining his own, refusing to let him out of his sight for more than a few minutes at a time. The air in the estate was thick with a protective tension; the pack knew their alphas beloved was fragile, and the Alpha’s fury was a hair-trigger away from erupting.Danny sat by the window of his new room, wrapped in a thick wool cardigan that smelled of Alex’s cedar and wood-smoke scent. He was staring at the distant treeline, trying to reconcile the wolves he had seen with the warmth he felt in the kitchen. He was lost in the rhythm of his own shallow breathing when the impossible happened.On the nightstand, his mobile phone with a violent, jarring buzz.Danny froze. His heart gave a painful, frantic lurch against his ribs. The device had been charged and returned to him by Silas only an hour ago, a gesture meant to help him feel







