Chapter six
Liliana Fear gripped my chest as Damon grabbed me from behind, putting me easily in a headlock. “I have no idea how you escaped from the ravagers, but you're not leaving this place alive.” “Please,” I choked out. “Don't do this.” He laughed darkly; the sound made my stomach curl. I had never seen this side of him before, and it sent chills down my spine. Cold metal pressed against my forehead. “Say goodbye…” “Wait!” A familiar voice sounded from the door. My eyes widened when I saw him. Gerald. What was he doing here? “What are you doing here?” Damon asked. “She escaped when we were about to execute her; I traced her all the way back to your pack. If you just give her back, we'll finish the job.” “How could a tiny woman like this escape from your grasp?” He asked with scrutiny. “The incompetence of a newbie… it won't happen again.” Gerald answered, his voice stable and firm. It shook me to the core. He'd followed me, but why? Damon’s nostrils flared. There was a long stretch of silence before Damon finally let me go and pushed me towards him. “Make sure you take care of it this time. I'll be expecting her corpse in the next 12 hours,” he said coldly. I shivered at the lifeless coldness in his eyes. I had known Damon for years. In those years of knowing him, he'd never acted with anything but compassion and love towards me. I had a huge crush on him by the time I was twelve, and it was better when I found out we were betrothed to each other. “Of course,” Gerald said. “Please,” I whispered as he grabbed me by the neck and slapped me across the face hard. I screamed, falling to the ground at the impact, my face inflamed and hurting like I had been hit by a bat. He picked me up and put me in a headlock and then took out a needle; he whispered, Sorry, in my ears. My stomach twisted in fear before I felt the prick of a syringe against my skin. For a split second, I forgot to breathe. Not from the pain, but from the shattering sound of his betrayal echoing louder than the slap itself. My ears rang. My heart stung. He'd really done it. The last thing I heard was Damon calling for his guards to see us out before I lost consciousness completely. ***** I felt a prickling sensation all over my body like I was being pricked by ice-cold needles, and then my eyes snapped open. I blinked, stunned for a second. I was in an open space. Some type of clearing. The moon stood high in the sky, full and bright in all its glory. I immediately sat up when the memories came crashing. “Where am I?” I whispered to myself. I can't believe I'm still alive. Was I just spared because I was useful? Or something deeper? “You're awake,” A familiar voice said behind me, confirming that I was really alive or we were both dead. I turned quickly to see Gerald crouched by a fire, eyes unreadable. “I had to make it look real,” he said. “If Damon suspected anything, you'd be dead.” I nodded and rose. Something fell off me, and I realized it was a jacket. Gerald's jacket, to be specific. His jacket still smelled like pine and leather and something I couldn’t name; it was a feeling of safety, and I didn’t know how long it could last. I picked it up and wore it over my shoulders, walking towards him. I took a seat beside him and stared into the eyes of the flames. “So, you are really not going to kill me?” I asked, feeling a bit flustered around him. His gaze pierced me. “Do you really think I'd go through all that trouble just to end up killing you?” Silence. “I didn't say the method had to make sense.” “I am not a man that wastes my time on frivolous kills.” Our eyes locked, and the air around us became denser. I quickly looked away, still confused. Why was he still keeping me alive? “Why not? You don't owe me any loyalties. Why not just kill me?” I asked, staring at his ruggedly handsome and beautiful face. The scar that ran from his forehead through his ears glistened like an intricate accident tattoo under the full moon's reflection and the reflection of the flames. Gerald didn't flinch and even moved to look at me. Just stared at the flames. “I felt like it,” he shrugged. I stared at him completely baffled. That answer made no sense and made me feel even more uneasy than I did five minutes ago. “I see.” I said, looking away. “Where are we?” I asked, deciding to drop the subject for now. He'd saved my life. There was no need to start acting funny now. “Jade garden," “An odd name,” I murmured, staring into space. We were surrounded by shrubs and trees. It gave me some kind of hidden comfort. “Yes, that's because I named it.” I blinked. “How did you find a place like this, much less name it?* “I found it when I was a teen. It was my favorite place in the whole world. Only two people know about this place. Well, three now.” He looked at me pointedly. I wasn't sure why he was telling me this, but I felt closer to him now. Like I had gotten a glimpse of how egoistic he was. “Oh. I see.” I said, looking around, taking in the absolute beauty of the place. Somehow the illumination of the place by the full moon gave the place a celestial feel. “It's beautiful.” “It's home,” he murmured, his eye locking with mine. His big amber eyes were unreadable but mesmerizing. It made me itch to dig into his head to reveal all the secrets and skeletons I knew he had buried in his chest. My lips parted to speak, but nothing came out. His eyes dropped to my lips. The air grew thick with tension. He suddenly looked away and then abruptly stopped. He put out the fire by simply stepping on it. “Let's go, kid.’ he said and began to walk towards his motorcycle. I stood from the log I was sitting on and followed him. He climbed on his motorcycle like he'd done this a hundred times. I stared at him, feeling grateful for his decision to save me. He handed me a helmet, and I put it on, climbing behind him. “Thank you,” I whispered to him, wrapping my hands around his waist. He didn't say anything in acknowledgement. Just gave a stiff and curt nod and then ignored the engine. And then we drove out under the moonlight. As the cold breeze of the night hit the exposed body parts, I finally stopped holding back the pain in my chest and the tears stinging my eyes and threatening to burst out. I remembered the way Damon once tucked a flower into my braid during training. How his fingers trembled when I got injured. That man was nowhere in those eyes now. Only frost remained. My entire world has crumbled in less than 48 hours. I was nothing but a refuge and a fugitive now. I pressed my forehead to his back, letting the wind dry my tears. I couldn't go back to who I was. I wouldn't. That girl was gone, and the woman left behind would learn how to survive. I had lost my home, my title, and the man I thought I loved. One day, I would return. Not as the broken girl they tried to bury, but as the storm they couldn’t outrun. But one question kept running through my mind, Gerald. He could’ve killed me. He was supposed to. But he didn’t. And that terrified me more than anything Damon ever did. Why did Gerald spare me? I didn’t know if it was mercy… or something far more dangerous.Chapter sevenLilianaThe training yard was bright and sunny."Think fast,' Tony said, his wooden sword hitting my sword with a force that vibrated through my entire body, causing me to almost lose balance.I managed to hold on to my sword, but Tony was not giving up.He struck my sword again, sending it flying from my tiny seven-year-old hands.I pouted as he charged towards me with his sword, ready to strike again.He immediately stopped when he noticed and pretended to fall, making me win.My father's laughter warmed my chest."You did good, my princess." My father walked over to us, clapping his hands.He high-fives Tony. "Good work on protecting your sister, son," he said with a proud smile.He turned to me and carried me up.I smiled, happiness radiating in my chest.I never wanted to grow up.But then the illusion broke when I heard the sound of laughter and yelling.I groaned at the crushing realization that I had been dreaming this whole time.I kept my eyes shut, knowing tha
Chapter six LilianaFear gripped my chest as Damon grabbed me from behind, putting me easily in a headlock.“I have no idea how you escaped from the ravagers, but you're not leaving this place alive.”“Please,” I choked out. “Don't do this.”He laughed darkly; the sound made my stomach curl.I had never seen this side of him before, and it sent chills down my spine.Cold metal pressed against my forehead.“Say goodbye…”“Wait!” A familiar voice sounded from the door.My eyes widened when I saw him.Gerald.What was he doing here?“What are you doing here?” Damon asked.“She escaped when we were about to execute her; I traced her all the way back to your pack. If you just give her back, we'll finish the job.”“How could a tiny woman like this escape from your grasp?” He asked with scrutiny.“The incompetence of a newbie… it won't happen again.” Gerald answered, his voice stable and firm. It shook me to the core.He'd followed me, but why?Damon’s nostrils flared.There was a long stre
Chapter 5 – Escaping Death's Door, Part 2 Liliana My heart was beating against my chest as I got farther and farther away from Gerald's pack. I was half sure he would return and kill me. It didn't make sense for him to let me go. After an hour on the bus and no sign of them, I relaxed a bit. I was almost in the gladiator pack. In about 30 minutes I'd be in his arms. In the arms of the love of my life. It wasn't long when I entered the Gladiator's pack. The familiar tall but stylish buildings of the Eastern province welcomed me. The smell of spice and the sound of soft music coming from a bar penetrated the night air. In a couple of minutes I will be at the pack house. A sigh of relief escaped my lips as the taxi stopped me in front of the pack house. I was here and alive. I paid the man and made my way to the gate. The guards immediately opened the door. “Thanks, Sylvester,“ I said. “Are you okay, Luna?” They asked. They'd always called me this. Even since I was a kid
Chapter 4—A blast from the buried past GERALD I couldn't believe it. The woman we’d been hired to kill…was my late best friend's daughter. Fear clamped around my chest the moment I recognised her. I hadn't seen her since she was a child, back when her father and I fought side by side under the blood moon wars. Back when he made me promise – promise – that if anything ever happened to him, I’d look out for her. That was before we fell out as friends. I had failed him. A storm brewed inside me. And then something shifted; something unfamiliar stirred in my soul. For a second, it felt like a wolf’s presence… but that was impossible. I was of the cursed Grand Lee clan, wolfless for generations. The curse only broke when we found our mate. But I’d long abandoned that hope. Still, the presence lingered, like a whisper of instinct. Protective. Angry. Maybe I was imagining things. I had been having weird dreams and nightmares for the past month. Centuries ago, my ancestors betraye
Chapter 3 – Escaping Death's Door Liliana The silence was deafening. I could practically hear everyone's heartbeat. But their heartbeat isn't the loudest thing in the room. My heart was. “What?” The assassin called Max and the one that was about to decapitate me said in unison. “Bring her to me, Landen. In one piece,” the Alpha said to the men and immediately turned away, storming out of the shed. Landen dropped the sword on a table, his brows furrowed in confusion. Max gave him an equally confused look, and they both pulled me up and dragged me to the pack house. A gloomy building that was nothing like the one back at home As they dragged me through the uneven terrain of the road, all I could think about was what the Alpha of the pack was going to do to me. Fear didn't begin to describe how I felt. Was he going to do something evil to me? Like, force me? He stared at me like he recognised me, or was it all in my head? Whatever it was, this was my chance to plead with him to
Chapter two Liliana The forest was cold and dreary. It was nothing like I remembered when my father and I used to come here to hunt when I was a teenager. It was eerie looking now with the trees and leaves staring down at me with judgemental eyes just like the elders had done. Everything had happened so fast. I still couldn't believe I was now packless, nothing but a pitiful rogue. I had been framed so perfectly; I had not been able to defend myself. How could Tony do this to me? He'd always hated my guts; in fact, his behaviour towards me since Father became sick had been nothing short of mean and dehumanising, but I had thought that it was simply because he was upset and I was his only outlet, but for him to do this? To frame me? It was evil. With each step I took away from the pack house, I was growing more wary. I had nothing, no supplies, no direction, just the heavy feeling of betrayal and the raw sting of loss. My father's face haunted every breath I took. I didn't eve