I leaned closer, dropping my voice to a conspiratorial whisper. “It’s about your daddy.”
The change in Adrian’s expression was immediate and heartbreaking. His eyes went wide, his small body practically vibrating with sudden excitement. “You know about my daddy? Mommy says she doesn’t know where he is.”
“I know exactly where he is,” I said, feeling only a small twinge of guilt at the hope blazing in those silver-blue eyes. “But it’s a secret, and I can only tell you if you come with me. Do you want to know about your daddy?”
Adrian nodded so enthusiastically I was afraid he might give himself whiplash. “Yes! Yes, please! I want to know everything!”
Seraphina’s POV
The words hung in the air like a toxic cloud, poisoning every breath I tried to take. “Are you completely insane?” I breathed, my voice barely above a whisper as the full horror of what Elizabeth was suggesting crashed over me like a tidal wave.
Harold’s oily smile widened, revealing those unnaturally white teeth. “Now, now, there’s no need for dramatics,” he said, his voice carrying the patronizing tone of someone who was used to getting exactly what he wanted. “I understand this might come as a surprise, but I assure you, I can provide very well for you and your… child.”
The way he said ‘child’ made my skin crawl. “This is not happening,” I said, taking a step backward toward the door. “I don’t know what kind of sick arrangement you two have cooked up, but I’m leaving. Right now.”
Elizabeth moved to block my path with surprising speed, her perfectly manicured hand shooting out to wrap around my wrist like a steel trap. “Sit down, Seraphina,” she commanded. “We’re not finished talking.”
“Yes, we are,” I snapped, trying to wrench my arm free from her grip. “I wouldn’t marry that man if he was the last person on earth. Find someone else for your disgusting little scheme.”
Harold chuckled, a sound like oil bubbling in a hot pan. “Oh, my dear, I think you misunderstand your position here. This isn’t really a request.”
Elizabeth’s grip tightened on my wrist, her fingernails digging into my skin hard enough to leave marks. “You’re going to marry Harold, and you’re going to be grateful for the opportunity,” she said, her voice taking on that sweet.
“Let go of me,” I said, my voice growing stronger despite the fear clawing at my chest. “I’m an adult, Elizabeth. You can’t force me to do anything.”
“Can’t I?” Her smile was like a razor blade wrapped in silk. “Tell me, darling, how is little Adrian enjoying his new school? Silver Moon Harbor Elementary, isn’t it? Such a lovely place. So many children playing outside every day at recess.”
The blood in my veins turned to ice water. “What did you just say?”
Elizabeth continued conversationally, as if she were discussing the weather instead of threatening my child. “Usually that friend of yours -Ophelia, is it? -picks him up. But accidents happen, don’t they?”
White-hot rage exploded through my system, so pure and intense that my vision actually tinted red around the edges. Ayla snarled in my mind, her mental voice sharp with protective fury that matched my own.
“If you go anywhere near my son,” I said, my voice dropping to a whisper that carried more menace than any scream, “I will kill you. I will tear your throat out with my bare hands and dance on your corpse.”
Harold laughed, actually laughed, as if my desperate threat was the most amusing thing he’d heard all day. “Such spirit! I do love a woman with fire. Don’t worry, my dear -once we’re married, I’ll teach you all sorts of ways to channel that passion.
The implications in his voice made bile rise in my throat. I lunged toward the door, but Elizabeth’s grip on my wrist was like iron, and Harold moved with surprising speed for such a soft-looking man, blocking my escape route completely.
“Now, now,” Elizabeth said, her voice taking on that mockingly gentle tone she’d used when I was a child and she was about to deliver some particularly cruel punishment. “Let’s not make this more difficult than it needs to be. Harold has very generously offered to overlook your… past mistakes and give you a proper home. The least you can do is show some gratitude.”
“I’d rather die,” I spat, still struggling against her grip.
“That can be arranged too,” Harold said pleasantly, stepping closer until I could smell his sour breath and the overwhelming cologne that couldn’t quite mask the scent of sweat and something else that made my wolf recoil in disgust. “But I think you’d prefer the alternative.”
They began dragging me toward the back of the house, toward the bedroom I’d once shared with Valerie during the worst years of my childhood. My feet slipped on the worn linoleum as I fought against them, my heart hammering so hard I could feel it in my throat.
“You know,” Harold was saying to Elizabeth as they manhandled me down the narrow hallway, “once this is settled, I’ll wire the first payment immediately. Fifty thousand should cover your husband’s medical expenses for quite some time.”
“Fifty thousand?” Elizabeth’s voice perked up with interest. “Harold, you’re too generous.”
“Nonsense. A beautiful young woman like this is worth every penny. And once we’re properly married, well…” He squeezed my shoulder with a pudgy hand that felt like a dead fish. “I’m sure we’ll find all sorts of ways to keep each other entertained.”
They shoved me into the small back bedroom, and the familiar smell of mothballs and old perfume brought back a flood of terrible memories.
Harold was already loosening his tie, his pale eyes roving over my body with obvious hunger. “Now then,” he said, his voice taking on that oily, coaxing tone again. “Why don’t we get better acquainted? Once you see what I can offer you, I’m sure you’ll be much more… cooperative.”
Harold reached for the top button of his shirt, and something inside me snapped like a breaking wire. This was not happening. Not again.
My eyes darted around the room, searching for anything that could be used as a weapon. On the nightstand beside the bed sat an old wine bottle -empty, but heavy, with a thick glass base that would make an excellent club.
“You know what, Harold?” I said, forcing my voice to sound defeated and resigned. “Maybe you’re right. Maybe I should be more… grateful.”
His face lit up with triumph, and he took a step closer, already reaching for the zipper of my dress. “That’s more like it, my dear. I knew you’d see reason eventually.”
The moment his sweaty hands touched my skin, I moved.
My fingers closed around the wine bottle’s neck, and I swung it with every ounce of strength I possessed. The heavy glass connected with Harold’s skull with a sickening crack that echoed through the small room like a gunshot.
Harold’s eyes went wide with shock before rolling back in his head. He toppled backward like a felled tree, his soft body hitting the floor with a wet thud that shook the entire house.
“SERAPHINA!” Elizabeth shrieked, lunging toward me with her claws extended.
But I was ready for her. As she reached for me, I caught her wrist and twisted, using her own momentum to spin her around. Then I sank my teeth into the soft flesh of her forearm, biting down with all the fury of years of suppressed rage.
Elizabeth’s scream was like breaking glass as my teeth found bone. The metallic taste of blood filled my mouth, but I held on, grinding my jaw until I felt something give way beneath my teeth.
“You little animal!” she gasped, trying to shake me off. “You savage little -“
I released her arm and shoved her away from me with enough force to send her stumbling into the wall. Harold was groaning on the floor, a trickle of blood running down his forehead from where the bottle had connected, but he was still breathing.
I didn’t wait to see if either of them would recover enough to stop me.
I ran.
Out of the bedroom, down the hallway, through the living room where my childhood nightmares still lingered like smoke. I burst through the front door and into the cool evening air, my heart hammering against my ribs as adrenaline flooded my system.
My hands were shaking so badly I could barely get my keys into the car’s ignition. Behind me, I could hear Elizabeth’s voice rising to a hysterical shriek as she called for help, probably for Harold rather than for me.
I gunned the engine and tore out of the driveway, gravel spraying behind my tires as I put as much distance as possible between myself and that house of horrors. In my rearview mirror, I could see Elizabeth standing on the front porch, clutching her bleeding arm and screaming something I couldn’t make out over the roar of my engine.
I drove without really seeing the road, my hands gripping the steering wheel so tightly my knuckles had gone white. My whole body was shaking with the aftermath of violence and terror, and I could still taste Elizabeth’s blood in my mouth.
I was halfway back to Silver Moon Harbor when my phone rang.
The sound cut through my panicked thoughts like a knife, and I fumbled for the device with trembling fingers. Ophelia’s name flashed on the screen, and relief flooded through me. She would have picked up Adrian from school by now. Everything would be fine.
“Ophelia?” I answered, barely keeping my voice steady.
“Sera!” Her voice exploded through the speaker, sharp with panic and terror. “Where are you? Please tell me you picked up Adrian early today!”
My blood turned to ice in my veins. “What? No, I… Why? What’s wrong?”
Ophelia’s voice was rising to a frantic pitch. “The school said Adrian was picked up by someone!”
Valerie’s POV
The drive toward the territorial borders felt endless, made worse by the constant chatter coming from the back seat. Adrian had been asking questions nonstop for the past hour, his little voice bright with excitement and hope that made my teeth clench with irritation.
“Are we almost there? When will I see my daddy? What does he look like? Does he know about me?”
Each innocent question was like fingernails on a chalkboard. I glanced in the rearview mirror at the child strapped into Gabriel’s old car seat -a pathetic piece of safety equipment that had seen better days, much like everything else in my miserable life. Adrian’s dark curls were messed from leaning against the window.
“Soon,” I said tersely, not bothering to hide my annoyance anymore. “We’ll be there soon, and then you can ask him all the questions you want.”
Adrian bounced excitedly in his seat, pressing his small hands against the window as we passed increasingly sparse neighborhoods. “Will he like me? Mommy says I’m a good boy. I can tie my shoes now, and I know all my letters!”
“I’m sure he’ll be… thrilled,” I muttered, pressing harder on the accelerator. The sooner I finished this unpleasant task.
The residential areas gradually gave way to industrial zones, then to empty lots and finally to the wild forestland that marked the outer boundaries of our territory. This was as far as I could go without crossing into rogue territory -dangerous, lawless land where pack protection didn’t extend and anything could happen to an unwary traveler.
Perfect for my purposes.
I’d heard the reports over the past few months about increased rogue activity in this area. Lone wolves and outcasts who’d been banished from their packs, desperate and dangerous, with nothing left to lose. They wouldn’t hesitate to attack anything they perceived as weak or vulnerable.
Like a four-year-old child who hadn’t even had his first shift yet.
“Aunt Valerie?” Adrian’s voice had grown smaller as he noticed the changing landscape outside his window. “This doesn’t look like where people live. Where are we going?”
“We’re almost there,” I said, pulling off the main road onto a dirt track that led deeper into the forest. The car bounced and jolted over the uneven ground, and I could hear Adrian’s confused whimpering from the back seat as branches scraped against the windows.
“I don’t like this place,” he said, his voice trembling with the first hints of fear. “It’s scary. Can we go back to Mommy now?”
“Not yet,” I said, my voice sharp enough to make him flinch. “We have something important to do first.”
The dirt track ended in a small clearing surrounded by thick forest on all sides. Perfect. Remote enough that no one would find him quickly, but not so deep that I’d get lost trying to find my way back out. I put the car in park and turned to face the child who was looking at me with growing uncertainty.
“Alright,” I said briskly, unbuckling my seatbelt. “Out you get.”
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