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ELARA'S POV
"Where the hell do you think you’re going, Elara?" The voice was like a low-frequency hum that vibrated right through my spine, cutting through the heavy bass of the club. I didn't turn around. I didn't have to. I’d know that authoritative, dark velvet tone anywhere. "Away from you, Silas," I snapped, my voice thick with the burn of cheap whiskey and even cheaper heartbreak. I stared down at my phone screen until the light blinded me. The pixels felt like they were bleeding into my retinas. There they were. My mate, Jax, lounging on white silk sheets in nothing but his briefs, looking every bit the golden boy I’d loved for three years. And draped over him like a prize was Mia. My sister. My blood. She was wearing lace panties I’d helped her pick out for her own birthday. The hotel room was unmistakable—The Grand Crest. The best suite in our Pack’s territory. "Now, do you believe me?" The text underneath the images felt like a branding iron pressed against my ribs. I’d spent months laughing off the anonymous warnings. I’d cursed the sender for making AI pictures and false texts, defended Jax with my life, and boasted about the 'unbreakable' strength of our bond. What a joke. I signaled the bartender for another glass. My throat was already raw, but I needed the fire. I needed to drown out the memory of Jax kissing my forehead two hours ago, claiming he had an "emergency pack meeting" on our anniversary dinner. I had smiled. I had trusted him. I had sent him off with a kiss while he went to fuck my sister. "You’ve had enough," Silas said. A large, calloused hand reached over my shoulder, his fingers wrapping around the glass before it could touch my lips. He set it firmly back on the mahogany bar. I spun around on the stool, my head swimming. Silas Vane. My mate’s supposed father. A man who was powerful, married, and entirely too observant. He looked down at me, his dark suit perfectly tailored, his eyes swirling with an intensity that made the air in my lungs vanish. "Go home, Elara. Your mate has been calling me for an hour, frantic because you aren't answering." "My mate?" I let out a jagged, hysterical laugh that tasted like salt and copper. "You mean the man who’s currently busy with my sister? Don't use that word with me. It’s disgusting." Silas’s expression didn't flicker, but his grip on the edge of the bar tightened. "You’re drunk. You’re making a scene in a place you don't belong." "I don't belong anywhere!" I shouted over the music, poking a finger into his hard chest. "Stop acting like you care. You’ve spent three years correcting me, judging me, and watching me like I’m some stray pup that needs training. Just leave me alone!" "Damn you! We’re leaving. Now!" He grabbed my upper arm, his touch firm and scorching. I tried to yank away, but it was like trying to move a mountain. "Let go of me! You're hurting me!" "I'm keeping you from being hunted," Silas growled, leaning in so close his lips brushed my ear. His scent—cedarwood and something dangerously masculine—overpowered the club's stench. "Look around, Elara. There are five men at the end of the bar waiting for you to pass out so they can take what isn't theirs. The only person scaring you right now should be me." Something dark flashed in his eyes—a predatory, possessive hunger that made my stomach flip in a way that wasn't the alcohol. He had always been the one with the rules. The one who told me to stand straighter, speak less, and follow protocol. Jax indeed gave me freedom; Silas gave me boundaries. And god help me, as my heart lay in pieces on the floor because of Jax's 'freedom,' I found myself leaning into Silas’s strength. "You’re a Luna," he hissed, his voice dropping to a dangerous, intimate level. "Act like it. Or should I treat you like the brat you're being and find a more... private way to handle this defiance?" My breath hitched. My body, traitorous and broken, thrummed with a sudden, illicit heat. He was married. He was my father-in-law. He was the line I could never cross. "Please," I whispered, though I didn't know if I was asking him to save me or ruin me. "Strength, Elara," he muttered, pulling me toward the exit. "Pray for it. Because you're going to need it to survive the night I have planned for you." "My breath hitched, my pulse racing as he looked at me with an intensity that promised consequences. "You wouldn't dare," I whispered, my voice trembling with a mix of fear and a heat I couldn't suppress. "Try me," Silas growled. Before I could even blink, he moved. In one fluid, powerful motion, he bent down and hoisted me up, flinging me over his broad shoulder like I weighed nothing at all. The world tilted as my stomach hit his hard muscle. "Silas! Put me down!" I shrieked, kicking my legs, but he didn't even flinch. Instead, his large palm came down with a sharp, echoing smack against my backside. The sting was sudden and hot, sending a jolt of pure electricity straight to my core. "Quiet, Elara," he warned, his voice a low rumble against my thighs as he strode toward the exit. I went still, my face flushing a deep crimson. The shame was there, but beneath it, my hormones were spiraling out of control. My heart was shattered by Jax’s betrayal, yet as Silas’s scent filled my senses, my mind began to betray me too. I’d spent years secretly watching him from across dinner tables, wondering what those disciplined hands would feel like if they weren't so busy correcting me. Now, draped over him, I could almost imagine it. I could see myself pinned beneath him, his suit discarded, his cold discipline snapping as he pounded into me with the same relentless power he used to command the Pack. The thought made me ache in places that should have been numb with grief. He pushed through the heavy club doors and reached his sleek, black SUV. With a rough jerk, he opened the door and shoved me into the front passenger seat. I bounced against the leather, my hair a mess, my eyes stinging with fresh tears. Before I could scramble out, he slammed the door and locked it with a sharp click. He rounded the hood, his movements predatory and fast, and slid into the driver’s seat. The engine roared to life, filling the cramped space with a tension so thick I could taste it. He didn't say a word; he just gripped the steering wheel, his knuckles white, and peeled away from the curb. I squeezed my eyes shut and turned my head away, staring hard at the dark window. I didn't want him to see my tears, and I definitely didn't want him to see the desperate, shameful hunger in my eyes. I prayed for the strength to survive the night, because I was standing on the edge of a cliff, and Silas Vane looked like he was ready to push me off.ELARA’S POVI sat at the head of the table, flanked by my father and Silas, watching the scene unfold like a beautiful, improbable dream."Try the smoked salmon, Elara," Rosa chirped, leaning across the table to heap a generous portion onto my plate. Her gold bracelets clattered against the china with a cheerful, domestic percussion. "It’s imported from the northern coast. Silas said it was your favorite, though how he knows these things, I’ll never guess."I glanced sideways at Silas. He was leaning back in his chair, a glass of amber liquid in his hand, looking more relaxed than I had ever seen him. He didn’t look like the man who had systematically dismantled his son’s inheritance an hour ago; he looked like a man who had finally brought his world into alignment. He caught my gaze and offered a microscopic nod, the corner of his mouth twitching upward."I have my sources, Rosa," he said, his voice a low, pleasant rumble."Well, your sources are impeccable," my father, Theron, bo
ELARA’S POV“Congrats on your freedom." He finally broke the silence and I just gave a curt nod."Everything is different now," I whispered, looking at my hands. They were clean of the ink, clean of the ring, but they felt strange.Silas didn't answer immediately. Instead, he stepped behind me. I tensed, my breath catching in my throat as I felt the sudden, radiating heat of his body pressing close to my back. Before I could ask what he was doing, his large, calloused hands moved upward, sliding over my temples until his palms rested firmly over my eyes.The world went black."Silas? What are you doing?" I asked, my voice trembling slightly. The darkness made my other senses flare—the scent of his cologne, the steady thrum of his heartbeat, the cool morning breeze against my neck."Calm down, Elara," he murmured, his voice a low, soothing vibration right against my ear. "Relax. Just trust me. Walk.""I can't see where I'm going," I protested, my pulse quickening."I have you, just…tr
ELARA’S POVSeven days.It had been exactly one week since the rain had tried to swallow me whole, and one week since the oak doors of the Vane manor had closed behind Jax’s retreating, broken figure. Time in the manor felt different—slower, more deliberate, like the ticking of an antique clock that refused to be rushed. I had spent those days tucked away in the guest wing, like a ghost haunting the corridors of my own history.I was slowly moving on. Or at least, I was learning how to breathe without feeling like my lungs were full of glass.Elena had been my anchor. In the quiet hours of the morning, she would come to my room with a tray of tea and books she thought I’d like, sitting with me in a silence that didn't demand explanations. She had become like a second mother to me, her presence a cool balm on the raw, open wounds of my pride. Seeing her poise, her quiet strength in the face of her son’s disgrace and her husband’s dominance, had stirred something in me. I looked at
ELARA’S POVThe silence between us was so thick it felt like it had a heartbeat. I gripped the edge of the table, my knuckles white against the forest-green silk of my new sleeves, waiting for the storm. I expected Elena to scream. I expected her to call me a whore, to demand I leave her home, to blame me for the stain on her family’s name.Instead, Elena let out a long, shuddering sigh that seemed to deflate her entire frame. She stepped further into the room, her gaze softening into something so weary it made my chest ache."How are you, Elara?" she asked quietly. "Truly?"I blinked, the question catching me completely off guard. "I... I’m fine, Elena. I’m just trying to process everything.""You don't have to lie to me, child," she said, her voice thin but steady. She walked toward the door and raised her voice slightly. "Gina!"The maid appeared almost instantly, as if she had been hovering just outside."Get us a fresh pot of tea. The Earl Grey," Elena commanded. "And see that
ELARA’S POVThe bathroom door clicked shut behind me, the sound echoing against the cold marble like a finality. I stood there for a long moment, my forehead pressed against the cool wood, waiting for my heart to stop its frantic hammering. The air in the room was already beginning to warm, the humidity rising as I turned the handles of the shower to their fullest extent. Steam began to billow, thick and white, curling around my ankles and rising to the ceiling until the mirrors were wiped clean of my reflection.It felt like a shroud. A heavy, humid veil trying to hide me from the woman I had been only twelve hours ago.I stepped into the spray slowly, my movements mechanical, as if my body were a machine I was learning to operate for the first time. The water was scalding, needle-sharp against my skin, but I didn't turn it down. I needed the sting. I needed something to tether me to the present moment, because the past was a weight that felt ready to pull me under.I am no longer
Light filtered into the room, a cruel, invasive gold that forced its way beneath my eyelids until I was left with no choice but to wake. I tried to roll away from the brightness, but my limbs felt like they had been replaced with lead, and my head throbbed with a rhythmic, dull ache that pulsed behind my temples. My throat was dry, like I’d been swallowing sand, and for a few blissful, fleeting seconds, I didn't remember why I felt so utterly wrecked, until…I shifted my legs.The friction of the silk sheets against my skin sent a jolt of memory straight to my gut. The night before came rushing back in a violent, chaotic montage—the sound of the divorce papers being signed, the stinging spray of rain on the porch, the predatory heat of the SUV, and the way Silas had looked at me as he claimed the ruins of my marriage.I sat up slowly, the world spinning on its axis for a moment before righting itself. I looked around the room, squinting against the glare. The decor was opulent, hea







