Kael’s POV
The air in the warehouse changed the second Lucien said it. “Father hired her himself.” It wasn’t loud. It didn’t need to be. It just sat there and spread through everything like poison. Raven didn’t move, not even a blink.
But I felt it, something inside the room tightening, like the walls had decided to stop breathing with us. I turned slowly toward her. “What did he mean?” My voice came out lower than I expected. Silence.
Raven’s grip on her gun didn’t change, but her eyes did. A fraction colder. Sharper. Like I had just stepped one inch too close to something I was never meant to see.
Marcus muttered under his breath, “Lucien talks too much.” That wasn’t an answer; that was avoidance. I took a slow step toward Raven. “You were hired to kill me,” I said quietly. “I know that part. You said it yourself.” She didn’t respond. My chest tightened. “But he said Father hired you.” Still nothing.
Outside, footsteps circled the warehouse again. Slow. Controlled. Waiting. Like they already knew we were trapped and just hadn’t decided when to end it.
Lucien’s voice came through the loudspeaker again, softer this time. “She didn’t tell you the full contract, did she?”
Raven’s jaw clenched. That was the first real reaction she had given, and it told me everything. My stomach dropped. “No,” I whispered. “No, no, no.” I turned fully toward her now. “Tell me you’re not part of this family’s games.” Her eyes finally met mine, and for the first time since I met her, I didn’t see a killer. I saw hesitation. That was worse.
“Kael,” she said quietly. That’s it, just my name. Like she didn’t know which version of the truth would kill me slower.
Marcus stepped forward fast. “This is not the time.” I snapped at him, “Then when is the time?” A loud metallic crack echoed outside. Something was being placed against the warehouse doors: charges. They were setting charges.
Lucien was done talking. I heard him again, closer now. “You were never supposed to survive long enough to ask questions.” My fingers tightened around the gun Raven gave me earlier. My hands were shaking, not from fear of dying. From the fact that nobody here was telling me the truth, I was starting to realize something very ugly. I wasn’t just being hunted; I was being handled.
Like an experiment, like a piece on a board. I looked at Raven again. “Did you know who I was before tonight?” I asked. She didn’t answer fast enough. That was the answer. My throat went dry. “Of course you did.”
Raven exhaled slowly, like she was weighing something she should have buried long ago. “I was told to observe you.”
Marcus snapped, “Raven.” But she ignored him. Her eyes stayed locked on mine. “Not just kill you,” she said quietly. “Observe. Report. Decide.” My grip loosened slightly. “Decide what?” A distant explosion shook the outer wall. Dust fell from the ceiling.
Raven didn’t look away. “Whether you were worth saving.” The words hit harder than the gunfire outside. For a second, I forgot how to breathe. Worth saving. I let out a short, broken laugh. “You tried to kill me.” “I was ordered to,” she replied instantly. “And now?” I asked. That question stayed between us longer than it should have.
Raven didn’t answer. And that silence did something ugly inside me.
Lucien’s voice came again, almost amused now. “This is why Father liked her.”
Marcus raised his voice. “Enough.” But I wasn’t listening anymore.
Something inside my chest had shifted. Slowly, painfully. Like a door locking shut. I looked at Raven again. “So I was a job,” I said." “No,” she answered immediately, sharper now. “You were a target.” “That’s worse.” Another explosion rocked the warehouse door. The metal groaned loudly this time.
Marcus moved fast toward the back. “We have minutes.”
Raven didn’t move. I could still feel her eyes on me. Like she was still trying to decide which version of me I was becoming.
Lucien spoke again, quieter now. “Kael.” That tone was different. Not mocking, not playful. Interested. “You’re standing in the middle of something you still don’t understand.” I laughed under my breath. “That’s your favorite line.” A pause, then Lucien said, “Open the card.” My hand froze. I looked down at it.
The black card. The silver wolf symbol. It felt heavier now than it had ten minutes ago, like it had absorbed every lie in the room. Marcus shouted, “Don’t!”
Raven stepped forward slightly, tension snapping through her posture. “Kael, don’t.” Even that made me pause. Because now I had two people telling me not to, and that meant I absolutely should. Outside, something clicked. The charges were armed.
Lucien’s voice came one last time. “You don’t get to stay ignorant anymore.” Silence. Then, “Open it.” I swallowed. My fingers tightened around the card, and I pulled.
A thin seam along the edge split open like it was waiting for this exact moment. The silver wolf symbol split in half. For a second, nothing happened. Then the warehouse lights flickered violently. Every screen, every monitor, every device in the room turned on at once.
Marcus went still.
Raven stepped back. And I saw it.
A map. Not of a city, Not of a building. A network. Names. Locations. Bank accounts. Private routes. Hidden transactions. Blackthorn City wasn’t just a place. It was a system, and every single line on that screen connected back to one name. Alessandro Varez. My stomach dropped. "This," I whispered.
Marcus looked like he had just aged ten years in one second. Raven’s voice came out low. “That’s impossible.” The warehouse door exploded inward. Light and smoke flooded the space. Armed men rushed in, but I barely saw them because my eyes were still on the screen. On the list forming itself in real time, and at the very bottom, one line appeared that wasn’t there before.
ACCESS GRANTED: HEIR CONFIRMED
My heart stopped. A voice came through the chaos: "Close now, not over a speaker. Inside the room. “Welcome,” Lucien said softly. I turned. He was standing just inside the broken doorway. No umbrella now. Rain soaking through his coat. Silver eyes locked on me like I was no longer a person. Just a key finally turning.
Raven raised her gun instantly.
Marcus backed away slowly.
Lucien didn’t even look at them. His attention stayed on me, and then he smiled. “Now,” he said calmly. “Let’s see what kind of monster you really are becoming.”
Latest Chapter
Chapter 41: THE GHOST FILE
Kael's POVThe room smelled like old paper and expensive whiskey. Neither belonged in a bunker buried beneath an abandoned church, yet here we were.The Council's emergency safehouse sat beneath Blackthorn City's oldest district, hidden behind three reinforced doors and enough armed guards to start a small war. Nobody trusted anyone anymore, not after Elena disappeared, not after the archive, and not after Alessandro's final message.I stood near a narrow window, watching rain slide down the glass. Three days. Three days since the council chamber exploded into chaos, Three days have passed since Elena Luca vanished, and nobody has found a single trace. Behind me, Marcus closed another folder and rubbed his eyes. "Nothing."His voice sounded rough. He hadn't slept much; neither had I.Across the room, Adrian sat with his feet on a table. His posture looked relaxed. The dark circles beneath his eyes told a different story. "You know what bothers me?" Adrian said. "Everything?" I asked.
Chapter 40: THE LIE
Kael's POVNobody moved; nobody even blinked. The room felt frozen. Like time itself had stopped working.Victor stood calmly among armed men and dead bodies, holding the black folder in one hand, waiting, watching, and enjoying this. Because he knew exactly what he'd just done. My eyes slowly shifted toward Elena.Then Marcus.Then Raven.Then Lucien. Every single person avoided looking at me, and suddenly that felt worse than Victor's claim. My pulse slowed, dangerously slow. "What did you just say?"Victor didn't answer immediately. He studied me carefully. Like he was measuring the damage.Then he repeated it. "Alessandro Varez wasn't your biological father." Silence. My chest felt hollow. Not because I believed him, not yet. Because nobody immediately called him a liar, nobody. I looked at Marcus. "Tell me he's full of shit." Marcus stayed silent. My stomach dropped. I turned toward Elena. "You too?"Pain flashed across her face. That wasn't the reaction I wanted. That wasn't eve
Chapter 39: THE TRUTH HE LEFT BEHIND
Kael's POVNobody moved, nobody spoke. The man outside the door had somehow done the impossible. He'd made an entire room full of dangerous people go silent. My eyes locked onto Lucien. Because his reaction told me everything.He knew exactly what the man was talking about. And he didn't want me hearing it. Interesting. Very interesting.The voice outside waited patiently, not nervous, not rushed. Like he already knew how this ended. "You should leave," Lucien said coldly.A soft laugh answered him. "No." The footsteps shifted slightly. Then the man continued. "I've spent twenty years cleaning up Alessandro's mistakes." My pulse slowed. Twenty years. That was longer than I'd even been alive. The realization sat heavily in my chest. Because suddenly this wasn't about me, or Lucien, or the city.This war had started long before either of us entered it. The voice continued calmly. "Open the door."Lucien raised his rifle. "Not happening." The man sighed, disappointed, almost bored. Then
Chapter 38: ENEMIES FIRST
Kael's POVThe explosion shook the entire building. Dust rained from the ceiling. Somewhere below us, glass shattered. Then came gunfire. Lots of it: automatic weapons. Short controlled bursts, professional. The Syndicate wasn't here to negotiate. They were here to eliminate problems, and apparently I was at the top of their list.Adrian checked the security feeds again. His expression immediately darkened. "That's bad."Marcus grabbed the tablet. "What now?" "They brought breach teams."Raven swore.Lucien looked annoyed. Not worried; annoyed. Like someone had interrupted his evening. Honestly, that was somehow more unsettling. Another explosion thundered through the building, closer this time.The lights flickered, then stabilized, for now. "We need to move," Raven said. "Agreed," Marcus answered, but Elena was staring at one of the monitors, frozen. I followed her gaze. The camera showed a man walking through the lobby, tall, in a dark suit. No tactical armor, no visible weapon. Ye
Chapter 37: THE OPENING
Kael’s POVNobody spoke.The archive had been opened. The words hung in the air like a gunshot that hadn't finished echoing. Lucien was the first to move. "Who?"Adrian shook his head. "I don't know." "That's not an answer." "It's the only one I've got." The tension inside the room sharpened instantly.Marcus grabbed the tablet from Adrian and started scanning through the incoming reports. His expression got worse with every second, which wasn't encouraging. I stepped closer. "What are you seeing?"Marcus looked up. "Multiple access confirmations." My stomach tightened. "What does that mean?" "It means whoever opened the archive didn't just access it." A pause. "They downloaded everything." Silence, heavy silence. The kind that made your chest feel tight.Raven swore quietly.Lucien's jaw locked. Even Elena looked shaken now. That scared me more than anything. Because Elena already knew things the rest of us didn't, And if she looked worried? We were in trouble, real trouble. "How mu
Chapter 36: THE MESSAGE
Kael’s POVThe room stayed silent after Elena finished speaking. Nobody rushed to answer. Nobody tried to deny it. Which told me everything.The recording was real, the threat was real, and whatever Alessandro had hidden all those years ago was finally coming back to destroy everyone connected to it.Lucien stood near the far window, staring out across the city. For once, he looked distracted. Not scared, not nervous, distracted. Like he was trying to solve a puzzle that suddenly had too many pieces.Elena noticed it too. "You're worried."Lucien glanced toward her. "I don't worry.""That's a lie." His jaw tightened. Interesting. Nobody spoke to Lucien like that, nobody except Elena.Marcus stepped forward. "We need to know exactly what Alessandro was hiding." "We already know enough," Raven said. "No," Marcus replied. "We know people are dying over it. That's not the same thing." Fair point. I looked toward Elena. "You said Alessandro created something before he died." Her eyes found
