ログインChapter — EnoughShe couldn't stop seeing it.Every time she closed her eyes — the glass moving through the air, Kael stepping into its path, the sound of it hitting him. The way he hadn't made a sound. Just absorbed it and stayed standing and stayed in front of her like it was nothing.Like she was worth that without question.She turned over in bed.Stared at the ceiling.The other memory came next. The one she hadn't asked for. Kael in the canteen with that girl's hands on him, that smile on his face — the easy smile, the one he gave everyone — and Lior lying in her bed at whatever hour this was feeling the memory like a bruise she kept pressing.She turned over again.He was hurt because of her.That was the fact underneath everything else. Whatever complicated thing was happening between them — the avoidance, the cold, the canteen, the classroom — underneath all of it was the simple fact that he had stepped in front of glass meant for her and was somewhere in this house right now
Chapter — BreatheSol's room.He'd been pacing for twenty minutes.Phone in his hand. Put it down. Pick it up. Put it down again.He'd watched Zarian walk out of that corridor. Watched Amara fall to her knees in the driveway. Watched Lucian stand with glass in his arm and say nothing because there was nothing to say yet. Watched the whole house go into that specific silence of people who didn't know what to do with their hands.And then he'd come up here.Because the alternative was standing in that corridor being in the way of things that needed space.He looked at his phone.Zarian's name on the screen.His thumb hovered.He put it down.Picked it up.He needs to figure this out himself. That was the sensible thing. The right thing. Give him space. Don't crowd him. Don't be the person who shows up when someone needs to breathe.He put the phone down.Stared at the wall.Thought about Zarian's face in that corridor. About what disaster had done to him. About the glass on the floor an
Chapter — Father and SonThe knock was quiet.Zarian didn't move.The door opened anyway.Lucian's footsteps crossed the room. Not cautious. Not tentative. He sat on the edge of the bed like he had somewhere to be and had decided this was it."Can we talk.""You already said what you needed to say.""You misheard.""I know what I heard.""You heard part of something." Lucian's voice stayed level. "And you filled in the rest yourself."Zarian said nothing."Sit down.""I don't—""Sit down." Quiet. Final. The voice he used when he meant it completely. "That's an order from your father."The word landed.Zarian sat.Lucian reached to the side table. Poured two glasses. Held one out without looking at him.Zarian took it."There was a man," Lucian said. "Who had everything he wanted. And was told he had to leave it to keep it safe."He spoke to the room. Not performing. Just saying it the way you said things that had cost something."He faked his death. Took the throne. Watched from the u
Chapter — The TruthThe words wouldn't stop.He walked the whole way back with them running on repeat — your father was a vampire, the strongest one who ever lived, ask them why they never told you — and every time he tried to push them down they came back louder. More certain. More specific.His father.A vampire.That was why.That was why the staff stepped over him instead of around him. Why the court members went carefully neutral when he entered rooms. Why people flinched before he'd done anything. Why the voices had lived in him since before he could walk and why they felt like something that belonged there rather than something that had arrived.Not broken.Built this way.Built from something they never told him about.He came through the pack house gates and the grounds were quiet in the early morning light and he walked toward the front door and his chest was doing something that had no clean name — not rage yet, not grief yet, something underneath both of them waiting to be
Chapter — Breaking PointThe voices had been there his whole life.Not something that arrived. Not something that developed with age or trauma or circumstance. Just — always there. Since before he had words for anything. Since the first time a nursery maid found him sitting up in the dark staring at the wall and backed out of the room without picking him up.He had never told anyone that.He had learned to manage them the way you learned to manage anything that lived inside you without your permission. You built walls. You kept the face empty. You stayed cold. You gave them nothing to grip and they stayed low — threading through his thoughts like smoke, present but contained, something he'd made a kind of peace with.Twenty years of that.Twenty years of management.Today the management was failing.He didn't know why today specifically. Nothing had happened. No event. No trigger he could point at. He'd woken up and they were already different — louder, closer, pressing against every
Chapter — The First MoveThe mansion was dark the way it always was.No lights. No candles. Just the particular quality of blackness that existed in spaces that had decided light was optional and had been living without it long enough to stop noticing the absence.Aurora stood at the window.Wine glass turning in her fingers. Slow. Clockwise. The particular rotation of someone whose hands needed something to do while their mind was somewhere else entirely. Outside the sealed glass the city moved — ordinary, loud, completely unaware of what sat above it in the dark — and she watched it the way she watched everything.Like it was already hers.Footsteps behind her.The particular rhythm of someone approaching with reluctance. The maid. Aurora could identify her by the sound of her footsteps alone at this point — that specific hesitation before each step, the half-second pause that happened every time she got within ten feet of this room.Fear had a gait.Aurora had learned to read it ye







