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THE STERLING SPARK: LEGACY OF THE BEAST
THE STERLING SPARK: LEGACY OF THE BEAST
ผู้แต่ง: Ema

THE GLASS BASTION

ผู้เขียน: Ema
last update ปรับปรุงล่าสุด: 2026-02-23 01:25:44

Elena’s POV

​The Obsidian Tower did not just sit in the center of the city; it loomed over it like a dark god carved from shadow and glass. As the heavy doors of the ballroom swung open, the scent of the evening hit me like a physical weight. It was a mixture of expensive lilies, aged scotch, and the metallic tang of unbridled power. This was the annual Masquerade Gala, the one night a year where the monsters of the corporate world wore masks that finally matched their souls.

​I stepped onto the polished marble floor, my heels clicking with a rhythm that felt far too much like a countdown. Click. Click. Click. Every step was taking me further away from my old life and deeper into the mouth of the beast. My dress, a deep midnight blue that shimmered like a bruised sky, felt like armor. It was backless, draped low to show off the skin I had spent years caring for, all to serve as a distraction. The lace mask over my eyes was tight, the delicate patterns pressing into my skin, reminding me that tonight, Elena Sterling did not exist. Tonight, I was just a ghost in the machine.

​"Control your breathing, Elena," Jax’s voice crackled in my ear. It was faint, hidden behind the music of a live string quartet playing something hauntingly classical. "Your heart rate is spiking. If the biometric scanners in the hallway pick up your stress levels, security will be on you before you even see him."

​I took a slow, measured breath, forcing my lungs to expand against the tight silk of my bodice. "I’m fine, Jax," I whispered, my voice barely a breath. I reached for a glass of champagne from a passing waiter, my fingers grazing the cold crystal. I didn't drink it. I needed my mind sharp, like a razor. "Tell me where he is."

​"North corner. The high-stakes baccarat table," Jax replied. I could hear the rapid clicking of his keyboard in the background. "He’s been there for twenty minutes. He’s already cleared out three CEOs and a venture capitalist. He’s in a foul mood, Elena. The 'Beast' is restless tonight."

​I turned my head slowly, scanning the sea of tuxedos and gowns. The ballroom was a dizzying swirl of gold and black. Huge chandeliers hung from the ceiling, their crystals dripping like frozen tears. And then, I saw him.

​Alaric Thorne sat at a table carved from a single block of obsidian. He was surrounded by men who were powerful in their own right, yet they looked like children sitting next to him. He was dressed in a black-on-black tuxedo that seemed to absorb the light around him. He didn't lean back in his chair like the others; he sat with a terrifying, predatory stillness. His hands, large and scarred across the knuckles, rested flat on the green felt of the table.

​Even from across the room, I could feel the gravity he pulled. He was the man who had signed the order to liquidate my father’s company. He was the man who had sat in a courtroom and watched with cold, bored eyes as my family's legacy was stripped away until there was nothing left but debt and a hospital bed.

​"He's beautiful," I whispered, the words escaping before I could stop them. It was a hateful kind of beauty. He looked like something ancient and dangerous that had been forced into a modern suit. His hair was thick and dark, falling over a forehead that was currently creased in a frown.

​"He’s a predator," Jax corrected me sharply. "Don't forget why we’re here. You need that biometric key-card. It’s clipped to the inside of his jacket. Without it, we can't get into the server room in the basement. We have a forty-minute window before the guard rotation changes."

​I set my champagne glass down on a nearby pedestal. My palms were sweating. I wiped them discreetly against the silk of my skirt. I had rehearsed this a thousand times in my head. I wasn't just a girl looking for a husband; I was a soldier on a suicide mission.

​I began to move. I didn't walk straight toward him—that would be too obvious. Instead, I circled the room, pretending to admire the art on the walls. I passed a group of socialites gossiping about the latest scandal, their voices high and shrill. I passed a senator laughing too loudly at a joke that wasn't funny. The air felt thinner the closer I got to Alaric’s table.

​I watched him as I moved. He hadn't looked up once. He was focused on the cards, his expression unreadable. But as I stepped within ten feet of him, his head snapped up.

​It wasn't a normal movement. It was fast, like a wolf catching a scent in the wind. His eyes, a piercing, unnatural amber, locked onto mine. For a second, the entire room went silent. The music faded, the voices died away, and there was nothing but the heat of his gaze. It felt as if he were looking straight through my mask, straight through my skin, and reading the secrets written on my bones.

​"He saw me," I breathed into the microphone.

​"Stay calm," Jax hissed. "He sees everyone. You're just another guest. Execute the spill. Now."

​I moved forward, my heart hammering against my ribs so hard it hurt. I reached for another glass of wine from a table near the baccarat area—a deep, staining red. I timed my steps perfectly. A waiter was coming from the left, a guest was moving from the right. I created a bottleneck.

​I "tripped" on the hem of my long gown. It was a practiced fall, graceful but convincing. I felt the air rush past me as I stumbled forward, directly into the space where Alaric Thorne had just stood up from his chair.

​Impact.

​It was like hitting a wall of warm, solid stone. I felt his hands catch my upper arms, his grip like iron. The red wine left my glass in a slow-motion arc, splashing across the pristine white of his dress shirt, soaking into the fabric and spreading like a blooming wound.

​"Oh!" I gasped, my voice pitching high with feigned shock. I looked up, and the world tilted.

​Close up, the scars on his knuckles were more prominent. He smelled of sandalwood, rain, and something primal that made my skin tingle. His eyes were even more intense now, the amber swirling with a dark, golden fire. He didn't let go of my arms. If anything, his grip tightened, his fingers digging into my muscles.

​"I... I am so sorry," I stammered, my hands reaching out to touch his chest, pretending to wipe at the wine but actually feeling for the shape of the key-card beneath his lapel. "I'm so clumsy. The floor, it was slippery..."

​"You," Alaric said. His voice was a low, vibrating growl that I felt in the soles of my feet. He didn't look at his ruined shirt. He didn't look at the crowd that was now whispering and pointing. He only looked at me. "I smelled you before you even entered the room."

​My blood ran cold. "I... I don't understand."

​"Rain and steel," he whispered, leaning down so his lips were inches from my ear. His breath was hot, sending a shiver down my spine that had nothing to do with the cold air of the ballroom. "That is what you smell like. Why are you following me, little ghost?"

​My fingers froze against his chest. I could feel the hard, steady thud of his heart beneath my palm. It was slow and heavy. Thump. Thump. Thump. He wasn't scared. He wasn't annoyed. He was... curious.

​"I'm not following anyone," I lied, my voice trembling. "I was just looking for the balcony. I need some air."

​Alaric pulled back just enough to look into my eyes again. A small, dark smile tugged at the corner of his mouth—a look that was more of a threat than a gesture of kindness.

​"The air in here is foul," he agreed. "But the balcony is too public for what I have in mind."

​He turned his head toward his head of security, who was already stepping forward. "Marcus, cancel my meetings for the rest of the night. And find out who invited this 'clumsy' creature to my party."

​Before I could protest, before I could even find the key-card, Alaric’s hand moved from my arm to the small of my back. He steered me toward the private elevators with a force that left no room for argument.

​"Jax," I whispered, hoping the mic would pick it up. "He’s taking me to the penthouse. The plan is changing."

​There was no answer. Only static. I was alone with the Beast.

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  • THE STERLING SPARK: LEGACY OF THE BEAST   THE DARK HEIR

    ​Alaric’s POV​She was sleeping again.​I stood by the window of the bedroom, watching the sun begin to rise over the skyline. Elena was curled into a ball on the bed, her breathing soft and rhythmic. The gold key was still clutched in her hand.​She had stopped fighting. For now.​But I knew the peace wouldn't last. The Thorne blood was active now. I could feel it pulsing through the penthouse. It was like a third person was in the room with us. A dark, hungry presence that was growing stronger every hour.​I looked at my own hands. The scars were glowing faintly. The Beast was quiet because she was near, but I could feel it waiting. It knew she was the key. It knew she was the only one who could give it what it wanted—a new body. A fresh start.​I had told her the truth about her father. Mostly. I hadn't told her the part where I had to kill the men who betrayed him. I hadn't told her that the "Board of Directors" were actually a group of ancient families who had been hunting the Th

  • THE STERLING SPARK: LEGACY OF THE BEAST   THE CLOCKWISE CLINIC

    ​Elena’s POV​Suddenly, there was a knock at the door. "Mr. Thorne?" a woman's voice called out. It was sharp and professional. "The medical team is ready. We need to run the first blood panel."​Alaric stood up and smoothed his hair. The vulnerable man disappeared, replaced instantly by the cold CEO. "Come in, Dr. Vance," he said.​The door opened, and a woman in a white lab coat walked in, followed by two nurses carrying a mobile ultrasound machine. She looked at me with cold, calculating eyes. She didn't see a woman. She saw a laboratory.​"Is this the subject?" the doctor asked.​"This is my wife," Alaric corrected her. The word hit me like a physical punch. "And you will treat her with more respect than you treat yourself. If she loses even a single drop of blood more than necessary, I will personally see to it that you never practice medicine again."​"Of course, Mr. Thorne," the doctor said, her face going pale.​Alaric looked at me one last time. "I’ll be in the study. Don't f

  • THE STERLING SPARK: LEGACY OF THE BEAST   THE VELVET PRISON

    Elena’s POV​The penthouse didn't look like a museum anymore. It looked like a cage. A very beautiful, very expensive cage made of glass and gold.​Alaric didn't say a word as the elevator glided back up to the 125th floor. He held me against his chest the whole time. I could feel the heat radiating from his body, even through his damp sweater. I wanted to pull away. I wanted to scream. But my body felt like lead. The run through the rain and the shock of his words had drained everything out of me. He walked straight to the master bedroom—a room I had only seen in shadows a few hours ago—and placed me on the edge of the massive, silk-covered bed.​"Don't move," he commanded. It wasn't a request. It was the growl of a king.​I watched him walk to a small hidden bar in the corner. He poured a glass of amber liquid and drank it in one go. His back was to me. I could see the tension in his shoulders. Even from across the room, I could hear his breathing. It was heavy, like a bellows. It w

  • THE STERLING SPARK: LEGACY OF THE BEAST   THE HUNT

    Elena’s POV​"Go! Go! Go!" Jax screamed. He didn't even stop to grab his coat. He just snatched his laptop and shoved it into his backpack.​The red light on the computer screen was still flashing. It felt like a heartbeat—Alaric’s heartbeat. He was coming. I could feel it in the air. The room suddenly felt too small, too hot. That strange spark in my stomach was glowing again, like a tiny heater inside my skin.​We ran out the back door of the warehouse. The air outside was cold and smelled like old rain and car exhaust. My blue silk dress was ruined. The hem was torn, and I had kicked off my high heels so I could run faster. My bare feet hit the cold, dirty pavement, but I didn't care about the pain.​"This way!" Jax pulled me into a dark alleyway.​The city was waking up. I could hear the sounds of distant sirens and the rumble of garbage trucks. But over all that noise, I heard something else. It was a low, heavy sound.​Vroom.​A black SUV turned the corner at the end of the bloc

  • THE STERLING SPARK: LEGACY OF THE BEAST   THE BITTER SUN

    Elena’s POV​The sun was too bright. It cut through the dark curtains of the penthouse like a golden knife. I opened my eyes and felt the soft, expensive silk of the pillows against my face. For a second, I forgot where I was. I felt warm and safe.​Then, I felt the heavy weight of an arm across my waist.​Memory hit me like a physical blow to the stomach. The gala. The wine. The scars on Alaric’s back. The way I had fallen into the arms of the man I was supposed to destroy.​I looked down. Alaric was still asleep. Without the angry look on his face, he didn't look like a "Beast." He looked like a man who hadn't slept in years. His dark hair was messy, and his long eyelashes cast shadows on his cheeks. He looked peaceful.​But I couldn't be peaceful.​Slowly, very slowly, I lifted his arm. I held my breath, waiting for him to wake up and growl at me. He didn't move. He just let out a deep, quiet sigh.​I slipped out of the bed. My legs felt weak, and my head was spinning. I felt a str

  • THE STERLING SPARK: LEGACY OF THE BEAST   THE PRICE OF THE TRUTH

    Elena’s POV​The penthouse was silent, but my head was screaming.​Alaric knew who I was. The secret I had carried for ten years—my real name, my real family—was gone in a single second. I felt naked, even though I was still wearing my blue silk dress. I looked into his amber eyes. They weren't cold anymore. They were burning.​"Why?" I whispered. My voice shook. "If you knew I was a Sterling, why did you bring me up here? Why didn't you call the police?"​Alaric stepped closer. He was so tall that I had to tilt my head back to see him. Without his shirt, he looked like a giant. The muscles in his chest were hard, and his skin was warm. He smelled like wood and expensive soap.​"The police are for boring criminals," Alaric said. His voice was deep and smooth, like honey. "You are not boring, Elena. You are the daughter of the man I hated the most. And yet, when you touched me in the ballroom, the pain in my head stopped. For the first time in months, I didn't feel like a monster."​He

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