MasukCatherine’s POV
It’s New Year. Everyone else looks bright and hopeful. Me? I’m two weeks deep in silent suffering, replaying the almost-happened scene at the Grand Palace Hotel with Clinton. Twice a day. Minimum. Honestly, if God hadn’t given me legs to sprint like a panicked cartoon character out of that hotel room, I… Nope. Not finishing that thought. My face still burns just remembering it. And Danny… Danny hasn’t called. Not once. Not even a sad, half-hearted Happy New Year text. I’m starting to suspect I’ve been erased from his life like a deleted file. School resumes tomorrow. I should be over it. Cry, heal, move on. Blah blah blah. Instead, I’m sitting at the kitchen table with a spoon frozen halfway to my mouth, cereal soggy and depressing, when my phone buzzes. My heart betrays me immediately. I grab the phone. Clinton. “What?” I blurt. No hello. No caution. No dignity. On the other end, his voice is calm. Confident. Like he never disappeared for two whole weeks and left my brain in emotional shambles. “Be ready in thirty minutes,” he says. “We’re going shopping.” I sit up so fast my chair screeches. “Shopping?” I hiss. “Are you insane? You disappear for two weeks, ghost me like some soap-opera villain, and now you just…what…snap your fingers and expect me to come running?” There’s a pause. Not the awkward kind. The deliberate kind. Then he chuckles…soft, low, warm. God, I hate that sound. “You missed me.” “I absolutely did not.” “Mmm.” I can hear the smile in his voice. “That’s not what your tone says.” I scowl at my cereal. “I don’t have time for this.” “You do,” he replies smoothly. “You’re just pretending you don’t.” I open my mouth to argue. He cuts in gently, “Thirty minutes, Hopkins.” The call ends. I stare at my phone. …Did he just hang up on me? I groan and drop my forehead onto the table. My life officially belongs to Clinton Blunt. --- Thirty minutes later, a sleek black sports car pulls up outside the convenience store where I work. I gave him this address because my house is a mess. And honestly, the fewer people who see my sad life, the better. Clinton steps out. And oh. That’s unfair. Sunglasses. Dark jacket. Hair perfectly messy in that I didn’t try but I definitely did way. He leans against the car like he owns the street. My stomach does something it has no business doing. “Morning, sunshine,” he says, lips curving. “You look alive again.” “Wow,” I deadpan. “Happy New Year to you too.” He grins. “Good to see you sober. But honestly, I liked you better drunk.” “Drunk? Me?” “You don’t remember, do you?” What the hell is he talking about? “I’m always sober,” I frown. “Relax. I mean that in a good way.” I climb into the passenger seat, folding my arms. “Why are you here?” “Because you need it,” he says, sliding into the driver’s seat. “I don’t need you.” He starts the engine and glances at me. “You keep saying that like you’re trying to convince yourself.” I glare out the window. “Stop flirting.” “Can’t. Occupational hazard.” --- At the mall, he walks like the building was named after him. Girls stare. One waves. He waves back. I scowl. “Do you enjoy being annoying?” “Only when you react like that.” “I’m not reacting.” “You’re reacting beautifully.” Inside a boutique, a woman practically sprints toward him. “Mr. Blunt! Welcome back!” His arm slips around my shoulders…casual, light, possessive. My body freezes. “I need your best work,” he says. “She’s my girlfriend.” My brain seizes like it’s been short-circuited. “I’m WHAT?” I glance at him, searching for a hint that this is a joke. There isn’t one. The woman squeals. “Oh, how adorable!” Before I can escape, assistants swarm me like fashion-hungry bees. Dresses shoved into my arms. Shoes thrown at my feet. Someone nearly stabs me with a mascara wand. “This is a crime,” I mutter. From the couch, Clinton grins. “You look cute when you’re mad.” “I’m not mad.” “You’re lying again.” --- When I step out in the dress he chose, the room goes quiet. Clinton doesn’t say anything at first. He just looks. Slowly. Thoroughly. My pulse jumps. “What?” He exhales softly. “Yeah. You’re trouble.” He stands, walks toward me, and hands me a sleek black dress. “Try this one.” I sigh and head back to the fitting room. When I come out, he freezes. Then his eyes sneak…lower. My cheeks go nuclear. “Clinton!” I cross my arms over my chest. He smirks. “Relax. I was just admiring the fabric. Very… form-fitting.” “You were looking at my boobs!” “They’re cute. Small but cute.” “EXCUSE ME?!” He raises his hands. “Relax. I’m teasing.” “You’re a menace.” “A sweet one.” I turn away, flustered. He reaches for my wrist…gentle, barely there. My breath stutters. Every nerve in my body suddenly awake. I jerk back instinctively. His expression softens, not in offense, just… something warmer. I want to tell myself I’m imagining it, but I know I’m not. “Hey. I won’t cross lines you don’t want crossed.” “Good,” I mutter. “Because I don’t like you.” He leans closer anyway. Just enough for me to feel his warmth. “I know,” he whispers. “That’s why you keep arguing.” My heart thumps violently. “You’re delusional.” “Maybe.” He smiles. “But you still blush every time I look at you.” I hate that he’s right. --- Outside, he takes my hand once more. I protest instantly. “Don’t.” “We’re fake dating, remember?” “Not in public yet,” I snap. “Only my boyfriend can hold my hand.” The second the words leave my mouth, I regret them. He stills. Slowly, he turns to look at me. Not teasing. Not smug. “Boyfriend?” he repeats quietly. “You mean the one who cheated?” My chest tightens. I look away, hoping he won’t notice. Too late…he notices. He steps closer, lowering his voice. “Maybe it’s time you stop saving space for someone who didn’t deserve it.” A couple passes us. The girl whispers, “They’re cute.” I choke. Clinton grins like he won something. “You enjoy this way too much.” “I enjoy you pretending you don’t,” he says, then tilts his head. “Just don’t fall in love with me, Hopkins.” “I’d rather fall off a cliff.” “Good,” he says softly. “Because if you do…” He pauses. Smiles. “…you’ll jump on your own.” My heart does something stupid. Before I can answer, his hand lifts to his chest like something sharp just struck him from the inside. “Clinton… you okay?” He pauses. Then he straightens, the smile snapping back into place like armor. “I will be,” he says lightly, “when I find the bastard who did this to me.” I blink. “Did what?” He smirks, hiding something darker underneath. “Come on, Hopkins. Don’t start worrying. It’s adorable…but unnecessary.” I don’t push. I don’t know why. As we drive off, he glances at me. “Tomorrow,” he says, “we’ll make our debut. And trust me, Hopkins, the whole school won’t know what hit them.” I grin despite myself. “Let’s make him jealous.” He beams. “That’s my girl.” And for one dangerously thrilling second… I forget it’s all fake. Then he leans closer, just enough for my pulse to spike, and whispers, “Try not to fall for me before tomorrow.” A spark shoots straight to my chest. My brain screams, danger, danger, but my body… my body doesn’t care. I know I’m in trouble. And somehow, impossibly, I like it.Catherine's POV The moment I step into the hallway, Natasha’s voice and drama fade behind me, but something else takes its place almost immediately.Clinton.Of course.Because apparently my brain has decided that no matter what chaos is happening around me, that boy must always be part of the problem.He still hasn’t called.Not one call.Not even a message.I let out a quiet scoff as I keep walking.Maybe he forgot.Maybe he got busy.Or maybe he just doesn’t care.That last thought settles in a little too easily, and I don’t like it, so I push it aside and reach into my bag for my phone.I’ll just check.Not call.Just check.Because there is a difference.I pull it out and unlock it quickly, my thumb moving over the screen as I scroll…Then I pause.Wait.What if something actually happened to him?The thought comes out of nowhere, and suddenly everything shifts. My chest tightens a little, and I stop walking.What if he’s in trouble and needed help, and I’m here getting annoyed
Natasha's POV Before I can even enjoy it, Catherine’s hand is already on mine, yanking it away from her hair with more force than I expect.“What’s wrong with you?”She looks at me with that mix of confusion and irritation that almost feels insulting…like I’m the one who just did something strange, not her.I let out a quiet laugh.Oh, she’s good.She’s really good.Still acting.Still pretending nothing’s wrong, nothing happened, nothing exists beyond whatever story she’s decided to stick to.I swing at her, my hand moving before the thought even fully forms, but she dodges it cleanly, stepping aside at the last second…and suddenly, there’s nothing holding me up anymore.The ground rushes up.Face first.Sand gets into my mouth, rough and dry, and I push myself up immediately, spitting it out with a grimace.I sit there for a second, brushing my tongue against my teeth, making sure nothing’s stuck there, and then it hits me.The situation.The fall.The way she’s standing there, loo
Natasha's POV I pull into the school parking lot harder than I need to. The car stops with a sharp jerk, and my bag slides off the seat. I don’t even bother fixing it. I just grab my phone, push the door open, and slam it shut behind me so loud it echoes across the almost empty space.Useless.That’s the only word sitting in my head right now.Alpha, elders, pack members… every single one of them stood there yesterday pretending to be powerful, pretending to be in control, only for everything to fall apart the moment it actually mattered.The Alpha himself stood in front of everyone, declared a death sentence with that deep, commanding voice of his, and then what…changed his mind five minutes later behind closed doors?I let out a dry laugh as I start walking toward the school building.So much for power.So much for authority.And I don’t even need to think too hard to know who’s behind it.Clinton.Of course it’s him.Who else would bend the Alpha that way? Who else would stand in
Catherine's POV I told him one hour.Just one hour to do whatever he needed to do. One hour isn’t long. It’s barely enough time for anything serious to happen, which is why I said it in the first place.But when I look at the time now, the numbers don’t make sense anymore.It’s almost eleven.I sit on the edge of the bed, staring at my phone as if that alone will make it light up, or like waiting hard enough will pull him back through the door.Did he forget?The thought slips in without permission, and I push it away immediately, but it doesn’t go far. It stays close, hovering at the edge, waiting for me to give it space.I unlock my phone and scroll through my contacts, my thumb slowing down when I get to his name. It sits there, unchanged, just letters on a screen, but it feels heavier than everything else on the list.I press it.The call screen opens, the number already dialing, and I hold it there for a second before ending it.No.I shouldn’t be the one calling him.He said he
Clinton's POV I push the door open again without knocking, already halfway inside before I take in what’s happening.He’s on the phone.“Call off your men.”I don’t need to hear the voice on the other end to know who he’s speaking to…the head guard.I stop where I am, the rest of my thoughts stalling for a second as relief settles in quietly.He actually did it.He kept his word.I stand there watching him. He ends the call, sets the phone aside, and sits back on the bed as if that decision doesn’t carry any weight.“I did what you asked.” His eyes lift to me, steady, already expecting something in return. “And now it’s your turn to keep your part of the…”“I know you didn’t send that assassin,” I cut him off, holding his gaze as I say it.His brows draw together slightly…not anger, not yet, just confusion at the shift.I take a step closer.“Why? Why did you make me believe you were the one who tried to kill me?”He studies my face like he’s trying to figure out what changed…what ma
Clinton's POV My father stands from his bed so suddenly that the air in the room shifts before I even register what is coming. I barely have time to steady myself, barely time to form another sentence, when he closes the distance between us.The slap lands before thought catches up.My head snaps to the side with the force of it, and for a moment there is nothing but a ringing silence in my ears, sharp and disorienting, as if the room itself has been struck.“You are a disgrace to this family.” His voice cuts through the ringing, colder than the strike, heavier than the pain still blooming across my face.I keep still, forcing my body not to react further, because anything else will only give him more reason.“Do you know how disgusted I was today, watching my own son defend a human against his own kind in front of the entire pack?”My chest tightens in response. I would have taken another hit…anything would have been easier than hearing him say that.“You are the Alpha’s son, and ye







