Chapter 24: Three Moves Ahead
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She reacted like I had actually pulled a trigger on a loaded gun. She reeled back so hard, I had to catch her. Still, she staggered like her legs could no longer hold her upright. Her head drooped, her shoulders quivering under some unseen weight.
When she raised her head to me, her eyes were dry.
A mischievous smile curled her full lips.
It was my turn to be caught in the headlights.
>"You put a gun to her head and she smiles," Zverâs tone was curious, amused.
"Iâm in a new place now," she said, her voice steady but her fingers betraying the faintest tremor. "A new realm. The old rules, the old obligations... they donât apply here." Her gaze stayed fixed on me, dry humour curling her lips more, though they still trembled. "I see that now. And yesâmaybe I went about it the wrong way."
The words had a looseness to them, almost casual, but the quiver in her shoulders told a different story. She was still running on the echo of what Iâd just done, still feeling the phantom weight of the barrel that had tested her nerve.
Any person would, much less a hybrid not used to the high stakes of the Umbra realm.
My eyes narrowed.
She pulled away, tearing my arms off of her. She glanced at me, her smile turning thinner with each second she held it. She twisted away from me, still unsteady on her feet, yet moved towards the bed.
My fingers twitched, instinctively reaching for her, the need to keep her within armâs length flaring before I could think better of it.
She didnât look back, didnât slowâjust kept that shaky, stubborn walk toward the bed like she was determined to pretend her legs werenât about to give out.
"Careful," I said, my voice lower than I intended.
She stopped. Not because she obeyedâLilith Brooks didnât take ordersâbut because the air between us shifted. Her chin tilted just enough for me to see the edge of her profile, the curve of that thin smile that was holding on by threads.
"Iâm not glass, Vladimir," she murmured, though her voice had that hitchâthe kind you heard from someone still steadying themselves.
Guilt unfurled, but I stomped it out before it could blossom fully. She needed to learn this. There was too much at stake here, and if she didnât learn to act on instinctâto let herself be a little feralâshe was a goner. The Umbra didnât tolerate hesitation, and neither would the things hunting her.
And then there was her goal. The thing that mattered to her more than her own skin.
"About your proposition," I said at last, letting the words fall with deliberate weight. "Kustavâ"
Her eyes snapped to mine so fast I felt the air move between us. Hope flared there, sharp and bright, like stars tearing through a night sky.
"What about it?" Her voice was suddenly alive, trembling with tentative hope, almost breathless.
I didnât answer immediately. Watching her like thisâunguarded, strung tight between desperation and beliefâwas its own kind of weapon. One I hadnât decided whether to use or spare her from.
Finally, I spoke.
"The Onyx Concord has reached a decision." My voice was even, but the quiet in it felt heavier than shouting. "You will be put in Kustavâs care... within his pack."
If I hadnât seen the worst things this realm could carve into a person, I might have said Iâd never seen anyone wither so fast. The colour drained from her skin as if the words had pulled it out. The hope in her eyes shattered, leaving something hollow and wild in its place. Horror seemed to pour from her in waves, seeping from every pore, until it clung to the air between us.
Her fingers curled against her palms in the way a body braces for a blow it canât dodge. She bit down on her lips, her eyes darting as if calculating every possible outcome. When she spoke again, her voice was hoarse. "I will have to live in his pack," she mumbled. "He will be my handler."
"Yes," I replied. "That will be the basic arrangement."
"Because I happen to be his daughter," she muttered.
I didnât need to clarify for her.
"They want that man to have some sick power over me. A rapist, a tyrant, his borders closed to even this council of yours." She lifted her eyes to me. "Arenât you High Alpha? Youâre higher in rank than the rest of them. Why canât you stop this?"
I held her stare. "You mistake my position for absolute rule," I said. "I might wear the crown, but the Onyx Concord is not a single headâit is a living thing. Thirteen Alphas. Thirteen packs. Each with teeth of their own. The head commands, yes, but it cannot survive without the body. And the body has a say."
Her lips parted, but I continued, my voice low, deliberate. "I have the ultimate word when there is unity. When enough of them stand behind it."
"There could be fallout if not allâor manyâagree," she finished for me without missing a beat.
It caught me. Not in a bad wayâIâd never thought her stupidâbut I hadnât expected her to cut to the marrow so quickly. There was no panic in her voice now, only the sharp, measured tone of someone piecing together a puzzle while the clock bled seconds away.
My eyes narrowed, reassessing her in real time. "You understand more than I thought."
"I studied political systems," she said, the words sharp but quiet, as if measuring how much to reveal. "Governance, power structures, negotiation tactics. I know how a council works when the figurehead isnât absolute. I know that every motionâevery decisionâbleeds compromise from all parties involved.
"So what is it they want from me? My guess is, putting into consideration how this realm views hybrids, despite being forced here, tells me you are desperate."
I crooked a brow. "How do we view hybrids?" I asked.
"Low ranks, halflings..." her words curled with feigned venom. "I am aware I am not exactly welcome."
Maybe her hesitance to fight was a con, but her sharpness was definitely a pro.
"I know enough to understand that most councils donât waste time on what doesnât feed their own interests." Her gaze narrowed. "You donât just want me. You need me." She drew out the words.
She tilted her head, studying me from head to toe, deliberate and unhurried. "And you..." her lips curved faintly, though the sound behind it wasnât amusement, "you donât look like a man who wastes either time or money. You wouldnât have dropped a billion dollars unless I was necessary. Which tells me Iâm more than some pawn to hand over for convenience. You donât want me to be handed over to Kustav."
>"She is not to be underestimated," Zver purred, intrigued.
"So, are you going to tell me your plan or..."
My brows rose, slow. "And how are you so sure I have one?"
She didnât hesitate. "Because youâre High Alpha for a reason. In a realm like this, where most have claws and teeth, the man who wears the crown over all must be able to see the board three moves ahead," she finished.
>"No greater truth has ever been told," Zver agreed with a cackle.