Masuk~Lyra's POV~I called Silvercrest before Ivan's car had fully disappeared from the traffic feed.The phone rang once. Twice.Papa answered on the second ring. His voice was the particular evening version of it, slightly distracted, the tone of a man who had been reading and had put the book down to answer."Lyra.""Hi Papa," I said. My voice came out steady. I was actively making it steady. "How are you?"A brief pause, the kind that meant he was reading my tone. "Fine," he said. "I'm reviewing the pack ledgers. Your mother is in the garden." Another pause. "Is something wrong?""No, I was just thinking of you."He let that sit for a moment. He always knew when I was lying about the periphery of something while being technically accurate about the centre. "All right," he said, without challenging it. "Call me tomorrow. Properly.""I will. Good night, Papa."I ended the call.Xavier was watching me. "He answered.""He answered. Which means Ivan was testing how fast I move. He made th
~Lyra's POV~"Let's see if you can save her this time.”Ivan moved in the same breath.He didn't throw me from where we were standing. He grabbed my arm, crossed the courtyard in four strides, and before I had time to process the shift from his hand at my throat to his grip on my wrist, I was at the base of the exterior stairwell that ran up the estate's south face. He moved fast. The wrong kind of fast.I heard Xavier hit the invisible barrier again behind us. The sound of it was wrong, a muffled impact, like hitting something padded from the outside, the particular sound of force that has nowhere to go. Then again. Harder.The barrier held.Ivan pulled me up the stairs."Ivan…""Don't," he said. Just that. Quiet and flat.We were on the second landing. Third. I was pulling against his grip and it wasn't doing anything useful because whatever he had become, the strength in that hand was not what I remembered from the Alpha who had stood in my corridor at Nightshade and looked through
~Lyra's POV~The old number called back in under two minutes.Not a text. A call. The phone buzzed in my hand while I was still standing on the balcony looking at the empty courtyard below, and I stared at the screen for exactly three seconds before I answered."Lyra."His voice. Unchanged. Low, unhurried, with the particular quality he had when he was saying something he'd already decided and was simply delivering it.I didn't say anything for a moment."Come to the courtyard," he said. "Alone. Five minutes."The line went dead.I stood there with the phone in my hand and the empty courtyard below me and the warm amber lights making everything look calmer than it was. Xavier was inside. I could hear him on a call through the open balcony door, coordinating the perimeter sweep, doing the right things in the right order.I should have told him immediately.I went downstairs instead.I told myself it was because I needed to confirm with my own eyes before this became a war. I needed to
~Lyra's POV~Xavier pulled the archived result himself.He'd run Faye's description through the intelligence database facial geometry system the same night she gave it to him, before he'd called me back. The system had returned one match at 94% confidence. Then it had auto-archived the result because the matched identity had a death certificate on file, and the system's logic was simple: dead people don't appear in facial geometry searches.He showed me the archived file when I got back to Silverfang.I sat in front of his screen and looked at it for almost a full minute without saying anything.Ivan Slade. The photo was from the continental pack registry, the official headshot that every Alpha-ranked wolf had on file. The geometry overlay showing the match to Faye's description was clean and specific, eye spacing, jaw angle, the particular width between the temples.Ninety-four percent."What's the margin of error?" I asked."Six percent," Xavier said.A long silence."This doesn't m
~Xavier's POV~Twelve people had access to the information about Dara's arrest.I sat with that number for exactly as long as it took me to write it down and then I moved. Lyra had gone to Silvercrest with Brin and Holt as agreed. I was in my server room at Silverfang with the door locked and my personal device in my hand and nothing running on the main network.Twelve people. The two warriors who made the pickup. The dispatcher who coordinated the vehicle. Soren. Three analysts who had been in the server room during the operational briefing. My personal aide, Corin. Two senior warrior captains. My head of border intelligence. And Faye.The intercepted transmission had gone out eleven minutes after Dara was collected. That was the window.I pulled the door-access log for the secure server room. Physical keycard entry, timestamped. In the eleven-minute window between the pickup and the transmission, three people had been logged inside that room with confirmed access to the operational
~Lyra's POV~I didn't move on her immediately.That was the instinct, find the thread, pull it. But pulling threads without understanding what they're attached to is how you unravel the wrong thing. I had learned that from Seraphine's operation. Every time we had moved too fast, we had announced ourselves. Every time we had watched first, we had found something we wouldn't have found otherwise.So I watched.All Silvercrest warriors on active duty wore a smartwatch-style locator during shift hours. The system had been upgraded post-battle as part of the estate's security overhaul, timestamped GPS, logged automatically, accessible through the pack's internal security dashboard. Most of the data was routine and uninteresting, the ordinary geography of people doing their jobs.Dara's data told a story.Three times a week, on varying days but always between her shift end and her reported off-time, she stopped at a café in the commercial district. Not any of the three places other Silvercr







