LOGIN(Quinn's perspective)
Five years. Five years of hell isn’t something you can just sum up, you know? But I guess it all really started at the pier.
I was prepared to start my new life. I was irrational and temperamental, and I thought everyone would be better without me. As I contemplated how I would start my life, the water helped my anxiety, that steady rhythm of waves against wood. That night, though, it felt off. The air was heavy, almost suffocating. I told myself it was just my imagination.
And then he showed up.
At first, I didn’t see him clearly—just this figure emerging from the shadows, the edges of him rippling like smoke. When he stepped into the light, his face… God, I still see it when I close my eyes. Pale, sharp features, and eyes like black holes.
“I’ve been waiting for you Quinn,” he said, his voice like gravel grinding in my ears.
I tried to run. Of course I did. But the pier stretched on forever, like some sick, twisted nightmare. No matter how fast I moved, the end stayed out of reach. And when I looked back, he wasn’t running—he didn’t need to. The shadows obeyed him, swirling and twisting, blocking every escape. He dragged me into the forest, and there was no escape. I tried to use the powers from last time, but nothing happened, of course.
Then Luca was there.
I didn’t even hear him coming; he just appeared, his eyes wild and furious. “Let her go!” he roared, shifting partially—his claws and teeth bared, his voice more wolf than man. For a second, I thought I was saved.
But the Echo didn’t even flinch. He just smiled this slow, cruel smile that made my stomach twist. Then he raised his hand, and the shadows wrapped tighter around me.
Luca fought like hell. I’ll never forget how he ran like the wind trying to reach me. He got so close—close enough that I could feel his heat, hear him shouting my name.
But the black cloud was already seeping into me, cold and suffocating. I knew. I knew I wouldn’t make it.
And that’s when I looked at him. Really looked at him. I wanted to scream, to beg him to keep trying, to tell him everything I’d kept bottled up inside. But I couldn’t. My voice was gone, stolen by whatever the hell Cale was doing to me.
So I mouthed it. Three little words I never thought I’d say. I love you.
His eyes widened, his face twisting with something between rage and heartbreak. And then I was gone.
The first thing I remember after that was the smell. Damp wood, mildew, and something metallic that I couldn’t quite place. When I opened my eyes, I was lying on a thin mattress in the corner of what looked like an old mill. The air was cold, biting against my skin, and everything felt wrong.
I sat up, my head pounding, and tried to take in my surroundings. The room was massive, with high, crumbling walls and broken machinery scattered everywhere. The windows were small and high up, their glass covered in grime so thick it barely let any light in.
In front of me, on the floor, was a tray. A piece of bread, some kind of stew in a chipped bowl, and a bottle of water. My stomach growled, but I ignored it.
First things first: find a way out.
I ran to the nearest door, yanking at the handle. Locked. Of course. I tried another door. Same thing. The windows? Barred. I even tried climbing up to one of them, but the rusted metal dug into my hands, and I slipped, landing hard on the floor.
I screamed then. Not words, just a raw, guttural sound that echoed off the walls.
Time blurred after that. I had no way of knowing how long I was there, but it felt like weeks. Maybe more.
Every time I woke up, there was food. Always the same tray, always waiting for me in the same spot. I never saw who brought it, never heard them come or go.
I tried not to eat it at first. What if it was poisoned? What if it was a trap? But hunger won out eventually. The stew tasted bland, the bread stale, but it kept me alive.
The loneliness was the worst part. I’d walk around the mill just to keep myself sane, tracing the same paths over and over. There wasn’t much to see—just old machinery, rusted pipes, and cobwebs in every corner. I found a broken mirror once and stared at my reflection for what felt like hours. I barely recognized myself. My hair was tangled, my eyes hollow.
Sometimes I cried. I hated myself for it, but I couldn’t stop. I’d sit on the mattress, hugging my knees, and let the tears come until there was nothing left.
Other times, I got angry. I’d throw things—whatever I could find. A piece of wood, an old wrench. Once, I hurled the tray across the room, watching the food splatter against the wall. It didn’t make me feel better.
At night, I’d lie awake, staring at the ceiling. I thought about Luca. About my parents. Did they think I was dead? Did they miss me?
Then, one night, everything changed.
I was pacing again, my footsteps echoing in the empty space, when I felt it. A shift in the air. The kind of heavy, oppressive feeling that made the hairs on the back of my neck stand up.
I froze, my heart pounding.
And then I saw him.
The Echo stepped out of the shadows like he owned the place, his pale face lit by the faint glow of moonlight filtering through the dirty windows.
“Miss me?” he asked, his lips curling into that same cruel smile.
This chapter hurt me to write, so now it’s your problem too 💔
The sun was setting low behind the towering Blackthorn estate, casting streaks of amber and crimson across the sky. The place looked more like a fortress than a home, with its wrought-iron gates and endless rows of perfectly trimmed hedges. My heart was already in my throat, but when I saw her walking toward us, I felt my chest tighten like a vice.Casey.Her smile was polite but sharp, the kind that felt like it was carved from marble—cold, unyielding, and fake as hell. She strolled up with the grace of someone who knew she was untouchable, her sleek navy-blue dress hugging her figure just enough to be classy but not so much as to be vulgar. Her eyes flicked to me, lingering for a moment longer than necessary, and I knew she was assessing me. Calculating.“They’re waiting for you inside,” Casey said, her eyes darting to Cale like she wasn’t sure if she should curtsy or bow. Her gaze barely touched me. To her, I wasn’t a threat. Not yet, anyway.Cale’s grip on my arm tightened as if h
Being "perfect" was never something I aimed for, but here I am, sitting in a high-end café dressed in a sleek beige outfit that hugs every inch of me like a second skin. My legs are crossed just so, my posture elegant and deliberate. The soft leather of the chair beneath me feels too plush, like it knows I don't belong here. But I make it look like I do. My every movement is measured, calculated, and graceful. I lift my coffee cup to my lips, pinky slightly raised, and sip slowly. My eyes stay forward, focused, even though I can feel the stares of passersby through the glass window.They always look. Men. Women. Even the baristas try to be subtle but fail miserably. I can’t blame them. It’s the aura I’ve built. I’m not just another woman sitting in a café. I’m the Luna. Cale’s Luna.The girl who once flinched at the mention of his name is gone. She’s buried so deep I doubt I could dig her up if I tried. This version of me? She walks beside him into meetings with alphas of other packs,
The smell of rosewater and jasmine clung to my skin, the oils still fresh from the omega women’s hands. My skin felt slick and soft, like I’d been molded from wax and dipped in honey. They’d scrubbed every inch of me, their faces blank as they worked. No words. No kindness. Just hands rough from duty. My hair was pulled back, loose curls spilling over my shoulders, and the dress they’d given me—if it could be called a dress—was nothing more than a slip of silk clinging to my body like a second skin. Every part of me was on display. Every flaw. Every scar. Every reminder of what had been done to me.But they didn’t see that. No one did. Not anymore.I caught my reflection in the mirror across the room and barely recognized myself. Pale blue eyes, sharp and unyielding. Not the dull, lifeless stare I’d seen for years. My gaze flickered with something I hadn’t seen in a long time. Control. Purpose.He thinks he’s testing me.“Trinity,” I whispered in my mind, my lips unmoving."I’m here,
CONTENT WARNING: This chapter contains contents of violence that may disturb sensitive readers and can be triggering for survivors of trauma and abuse.(Quinn’s perspective)Pain used to be a constant. Not the kind that fades after a few hours or even days. No, this was the kind that buried itself so deep in your bones that it felt like it would be part of you forever. But now… I don’t feel it anymore.The first time I noticed it, I thought I’d gone numb. It wasn’t a slow process either—one day, I was screaming and thrashing under their blows; the next, I just... stopped. The barbed wire bat hit my ribs with a sickening thwack, but I didn’t flinch. The guard cursed under his breath and swung it again, harder this time. Still nothing. My skin tore, and my bones ached, but there was no reaction. No sound. No satisfaction for them.I’d won that day. Not because I fought back. No, because I didn’t. They couldn’t break me anymore. Their weapons, their fists, their fire—none of it mattered.
(Luca’s perspective)I used to believe in things like love. Loyalty. Humanity. I thought those things made us strong—made me strong.They didn’t. They made me weak. A fool. A dreamer who thought he could keep his world intact with hope and sheer determination.But hope is a liar.It whispered in my ear for months, telling me she’d come back. That I’d find her. That Quinn would be okay.She wasn’t.I knew it the moment I burned the last picture of her. The edges curled under the flame, the image of her face shrinking into black ash. That photograph was the final piece of her—the last link to the boy I used to be.The boy who searched for her.The boy who loved her.Gone.I stood there, staring into the fire as the smoke curled into the night sky. My hand tightened around the lighter until my knuckles turned white. This was it. The final step.I let the lighter fall into the flames, and with it, I let Quinn go.I used to think I was different from my father. That I could lead this pack
CONTENT WARNING: This chapter contains contents of violence that may disturb sensitive readers and can be triggering for survivors of trauma and abuse.(Quinn’s perspective)I lay on the cold stone floor, the chill biting into my skin, but it was nothing compared to the ache in my bones. Every part of me throbbed, a dull reminder of what I had become—a prisoner, a plaything for the pack to break.My breathing was shallow, each inhale laced with pain. Ribs—probably cracked. Lips—split and crusted with dried blood. Eye—swollen shut. The room stank of iron, sweat, and fear. My fear. Their victory.They’d beaten me again today, just like yesterday. And the day before that. And the day before that.At first, I thought I’d die from it. I hoped I would. Death would’ve been a mercy, an escape. But no. My cursed blood healed me. Every single time. Bones snapped back into place, bruises faded, and cuts stitched themselves together. I was the perfect punching bag—never staying broken long enough







