LILA
I walked out of the Packhouse, on the verge of tears, after the heated altercation, and didn't looked back. The crushing acceptance of Lyric's death, my father's apologies and Tyler's disgusting proposal- they were driving me nuts.
I was about to step into the car when I heard the familiar clink of bells coming from behind, followed by a feminine voice.
"Lia." The voice called out, stopping me in my tracks.
I turned and saw Aethera ambling towards me with purpose. Her gray hair was tied back into a loose braid, and a pale crystal pendant rested on her chest.
"Aethera," I gave a curt bow, trying to muster a modicum of respect, despite the storm inside me.
"I need to speak with you before you go. This is important." She looked somewhat crestfallen.
I looked at my driver, then back at her, hoping she wasn't here to drop another bomb on me.
"Okay."
The woman stepped closer, her eyes darting around nervously, which was very unlike her.
There was a brief pause.
"Lila, I lied to your father and the Pack years ago."
My gut churned from the rising foreboding. "What?"
She nodded. "It's about your sister. The Moon goddess never chose Lyric to be the Luns of the Pack." She said slowly, shockingly smitten. "Lila. It was always you."
Emotions ranging from shock to anger followed, and it took a while before I finally found my voice. "You're lying. Again. Tyler sent you to brainwash me into thinking I'm meant for this."
She shook her head. I could see the pain flash across her features when I'd called her a liar. I didn't care, because she was a liar. "No, girl. Not this time. I let greed guide me. Lyric gave me something. An ancient artifact from your mother’s collection. Something sacred. I was weak. I let her buy her destiny."
I didn't realise how badly my hands were shaking until I tore my gaze away from her, choking with hatred.
"So... this was all your fault. My sister died because of you. Because if you did the right thing, she would have been free from whoever killed her. And not just that. You let me live in shame, you let me believe I was nothing. You have no idea how much I want to hit you right now." I snarled, repressing the urge to yell at her and wring the life out of her throat.
"I know." She said, head bowed. "And I will carry that guilt forever. But the Moon Goddess has spoken to me again. I also have good news, Lila."
I sucked in a deep breath, raising my face to prevent the tears from falling. "I don't care. You can go to hell with your lies." I lowered myself into the backseat and was about to slam the door when she roared at me.
"The goddess said you must marry Alpha Tyler."
That was a lie, right? I wanted to believe it was a lie, but disregarding the directives of the goddess or her messengers were often fatal. Right now, I wanted to disregard everything that came out of her mouth because she'd already lost my respect for her.
"Excuse me?"
The smitten look had vanished, and in its place was a sinister, serious look, like that of a statue carved from stone. "You are meant to rule. But you cannot do it alone. Tyler is the other half of the path."
No. No way this was true. It had to be a ploy, carefully constructed to fool me. And I'd be damned to fall for it. I laughed bitterly in her face.
"The same man who cheated on me? Who threw me out like garbage? You want me to marry him?"
"The future of the Crescent Pack depends on it." She said matter-of-factly, not seeming to care about my story. "Really? Like I could give a shit if this Pack burns. You go back to the goddess and tell her, if she was really the one who gave you this message, that I have a family now and I'd like to be left alone."
Her face turned an angry crimson in an instant.
"How dare you speak about the goddess in that regard? Watch your tongue, Child, or the goddess will bring down her wrath on you!"
I scoffed. "No, I don't think so. Liars and manipulators like you and Tyler deserve to face the wrath of the goddess. This is the last time we'll be having this conversation."
Her face was grim now. "Trust me, this is not the last time we'll be having this conversation. You're afraid, so you push it away. But you'll return, Lila. That child will bring you back to this place. And next time, it won't be an argument. It will be surrender. And when you return... the price of your pride will be heavier than you can carry."
There was a certainty in her tone that sent a chill skittering down my spine, but I slammed the car door close and the chauffeur drove me back to Raven Pack right after. I looked out the window most of the time, watching the trees blur past.
My mind was spinning. Aethera’s words felt like poison. I hated her. I hated that Pack. But more than anything, I wanted to be back here with my family. When we pulled into the driveway, however, Jackson was standing by the door, looking so worried. He strode towards us the moment he saw the car.
"Don't you have your phone?" He asked the moment I stepped out, looking so pale. I'd never heard him sound so stressed before. In my haste, I'd left it behind.
"No... what's going on?"
"It's Gavin. He's not well. I got a call from his school an hour ago. He was rushed to Central City hospital."
My whole body froze. "What do you mean?"
He sighed, "He collapsed at school. I have been calling your number but you left your phone. Where have you been?"
I didn't wait. I grabbed his arm and got back into the car. "Central City hospital." I barked. "Right now."
"Already called ahead," Jackson said, trying to keep calm but I could see the panic in his eyes. The fear. It scared the wits out of me.
I spotted the doctor near the nurses' station once we were inside the hospital. "I'm his mother. Gavin Greg. Where is he?"
"Mrs. Greg. He's in ICU. We're doing everything we can."
"Can we see him now?"
He didn't meet my eyes, just shook his head. "I'm sorry. Not yet. He's... he's unstable again. We need to wait a little longer."
I felt like I'd been rammed into a brick wall. "Please, I just need to hold his hand. Just for a minute. He needs to know I'm here. Please."
He looked at me pitifully. "If we let you in now, it could make it worse. His body's not responding to any kind of stimulation. It's like... it's shutting down."
I pressed my face into my palms. My skin was hot with fear. This couldn't be happening.
This couldn't be real. He'd been full of energy this morning when he brought me my phone. Now they wouldn't even let me see him.
What if I never got to see him again?
Then, in the middle of the storm inside my head, a memory came hurtling back. I remembered Aethera’s words.
"Trust me, this is not the last we'll be having this conversation. You're afraid, so you push it away. But you'll return, Lila. That child will bring you back to this place. And next time, it won't be an argument. It will be surrender. And when you return... the price of your pride will be heavier than you can carry."
LILA“Janet,” I whispered again.The name lingered in the room like a spell, thickening the air.Tyler stopped mid-step.I hadn’t expected the reaction to be so immediate.His shoulders stiffened, jaw clenched, and when he turned to face me, there was no confusion in his eyes only recognition.I took a breath. “You knew her.”His lips parted, then closed again.Then, finally he nodded. Once.“I didn’t just know her,” he said. “She was my wife.”The words cracked something inside me. “What?” How did I not know that Janet was once married to the Alpha. The discovery that I’m wife number three leaves a bitter taste in my mouth.“It was… years ago,” he said, walking toward the window, avoiding my gaze. “Arranged by the council after my father died. She was powerful. The most gifted enchantress we
LILAThe machines were quieter today.For the first time since he collapsed, the frantic beeping and harsh alarms had been replaced by something steadier and calmer. The monitors blinked in soft rhythm, like a lullaby I hadn’t dared hope to hear.I hadn’t left his side all night.A guard stood just outside the door by Tyler’s orders. I hadn’t asked him to do that, but I also hadn’t told him to stop.Gavin’s tiny chest rose and fell beneath the thin blanket. His skin was less pale now, his cheeks tinted faint pink.He looked peaceful.Like the worst was over.I reached forward, brushing my fingers across his curls, then cupped his small hand in both of mine.“You’re safe, baby,” I whispered. “You’re going to be okay. I’m right here.”A moment passed. Then another.And then, his fingers twitched.I froze.His eyelids fluttered once, twice… and then slowly, slowly, opened.Emerald green, glassy with exhaustion but alive.I gasped, tears springing to my eyes. “Gavin! oh my god. Baby, can
LILAThe Blackwood estate never truly slept.Even in the early morning, when the mist still clung to the ground and the sky hovered between night and day, the mansion breathed with the soft movements of guards changing shifts and servants lighting lanterns.I hadn’t slept at all.I sat on the balcony of the guest wing, arms wrapped around my knees, a blanket draped over my shoulders, trying to feel something that resembled calm. But all I felt was the air.Then I heard boots on gravel and voices just below. I crept to the railing and looked down.Tyler stood near the eastern path of the estate, shoulders tense, speaking to two of his border scouts. Their heads were lowered in respect, but their tone was urgent. One of them handed him something: a thin strip of bark.Tyler held it up to the light.My breath caught when I saw it: a blood-red symbol etched into the bark’s surface.It looked like a jagged eye enclosed by broken claws. I didn’t recognize the mark immediately, but something
LILAThe doors to the Blackwood mansion loomed before me; tall, carved of obsidian wood with the crescent wolf insignia scorched into the center like a brand.I turned back for a moment, only a moment, and found Jackson still standing by the car. His jaw was tight, but his eyes, gods, his eyes were breaking. Like he was memorizing me, just in case I didn’t come back the same.“Come here,” I whispered, my voice already trembling.He stepped forward without hesitation and pulled me into his arms.For a few seconds, we just stood there, wrapped around each other in silence. His chin rested on top of my head, and my face pressed into his chest. I breathed in his scent, trying to commit it to memory before it faded behind marble walls and memories I never wanted to relive.“You still have time,” he murmured against my hair. “We can leave right now. We can find another seer. Another way.”I pulled back just enough to look at him. “We both know there isn’t another way.”He didn’t argue. He k
LILAThe house was too quiet. The kind of silence that crept into your skin and settled in your bones.I sat curled on the edge of the couch, legs drawn to my chest, staring at the flickering flames in the fireplace.But even the fire couldn’t warm me.Not after what I’d just learned and what I had to do.Jackson stood by the window, his back to me, arms crossed so tightly across his chest I could see his knuckles whitening.He hadn’t said a word since I walked through the door. He didn’t need to, the tension in the air said enough.“I went to four different seers,” I said, finally breaking the silence. My voice cracked like glass underfoot. “Four. They didn’t know each other. I didn’t even tell them my name.”He didn’t turn around.“They all said the same thing.”Still nothing.I licked my lips and continued, even though I could barely breathe.“That Gavin is dying… because his soul is tethered and the only way to heal him… is if the bond between his parents is made whole again.”Jac
LILAWhen I finally walked into the ICU, after being granted access to see Gavin, my heart shattered. His skin was pale like paper, dark circles shadowed his closed eyes and his lips had lost their pink color. Wires and machines surrounded him, beeping, blinking- reminding me every second that something was wrong. Terribly wrong. The doctors were still working on his diagnosis. Nobody knew the reason for this sudden mysterious illness and even with my gift, I couldn't see the answer. I was born with the power to feel into people's energy, to see hidden wounds inside. And since the inception of my career as a healer, I'd seen things people couldn't describe. But Gavin... I couldn't see what was hurting him. "Why is this happening?" My voice was shaking like a leaf caught in a wild wind. It was like standing in front of a thick, dark, wall. A fog. Every time I tried to reach inside him, something pushed me away. And it terrified me. I was his mother. I should know. I should feel.