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Chapter 5 - Chapter Five: The Weight of Secrets

Six Days

Before the Full Moon

Age 22

I woke to

the sound of rain tapping against a window, a soft, insistent rhythm that

pulled me from the darkness. My head throbbed, a dull ache that pulsed in time

with my heartbeat, and my chest felt tight, like something heavy was pressing

down on it. The pendant still hung around my neck, its warmth now a faint hum

against my skin, but the searing pain from the blood oath was gone—replaced by

a strange, lingering connection, a thread that tugged at me, faint but

undeniable. Darius.

I opened my

eyes, blinking against the dim light filtering through heavy curtains. I was

lying on a couch, the fabric worn but clean, in a room that smelled faintly of

leather and coffee. Bookshelves lined the walls, not unlike the bookstore, but

these were filled with volumes that looked older, heavier—tomes with cracked

spines and titles in languages I couldn't read. A small table sat beside me,

holding a glass of water and a folded note. Across the room, a fire crackled in

a stone hearth, casting shadows that danced across the hardwood floor.

I sat up

slowly, wincing as the movement sent a jolt through my still-aching body. The

note crinkled as I unfolded it, the handwriting sharp and precise: Stay here. I'll be back soon. -D. No explanation, no apology—just an

order. Typical Darius.

My wolf

stirred, a low growl rumbling in my chest, but it wasn't directed at him this

time. It was restless, agitated, like she sensed something I couldn't. I

touched the pendant, its runes faintly glowing under my fingertips, and my

mother's voice echoed in my mind—soft, urgent: You have to live. The memory made my throat tighten, but

I pushed it down. I didn't have time for tears. Not now.

The door

creaked open, and I tensed, my hand curling into a fist. Darius stepped inside,

his coat damp from the rain, his dark hair clinging to his forehead. He looked

different here—less the untouchable alpha, more… human. The scar on his jaw

stood out in the firelight, a jagged reminder of whatever had shaped him. His

eyes met mine, and for a moment, I saw something flicker there—relief, maybe,

or guilt—but it was gone as quickly as it came.

"You're

awake," he said, his voice low, cautious. He set a bag on the table, the rustle

of paper breaking the silence. "How do you feel?"

"Like I've

been hit by a truck," I muttered, my voice rough. I swung my legs off the

couch, testing my strength. My body felt heavy, but it held. "What happened?

That pain—it wasn't normal, was it?"

He

hesitated, running a hand through his hair. "No," he admitted, his jaw

tightening. "The blood oath shouldn't have hurt you like that. It's a standard

binding—protection, not punishment. Something… interfered."

I frowned,

my fingers brushing the pendant again. "The pendant," I said, the realization

hitting me. "It flared when we signed. It's connected to this, isn't it?"

Darius

nodded, his expression darkening. "I think so. Your mother's pendant—it's more

than just a keepsake. It's tied to your power, Liora, and to whatever's hunting

you. The oath amplified that connection, and it reacted… unpredictably."

I wanted to

argue, to tell him he was wrong, but the memory of the forest—of that creature,

of my mother's voice—silenced me. "So what now?" I asked, my voice steadier

than I felt. "You drag me into this oath, nearly kill me with it, and then

what? I just sit here and wait for whatever's coming?"

Before he

could answer, the door swung open again, and a familiar figure stepped

inside—Kael. My brother. His dark hair was longer than I remembered, falling

into his eyes, and his lean frame filled out the leather jacket he wore. His

green eyes—mirrors of mine—widened when he saw me, and for a moment, I saw the

boy he'd been, the one who'd protected me from the pack's taunts after our

father's fall. But that boy was gone, replaced by a man carrying the weight of

our family's shame.

"Liora," he

said, his voice rough with surprise. He crossed the room in three strides,

pulling me into a hug that was all tension and guilt. I stiffened, my wolf

bristling, but I didn't push him away. Not yet.

"What are

you doing here?" I asked, pulling back to look at him. "Last I heard, you were

the one who sold me out—arranged that marriage to Darius to 'protect' me."

Kael winced,

his hands dropping to his sides. "I know," he said, his voice low. "I messed

up, Liora. I thought if I could get you tied to Darius, it would shield you

from the fallout of Dad's mistakes. I didn't know it would end like this."

"End like

what?" I snapped, my patience fraying. "You mean the rejection? The creature in

the forest? The fact that I'm now bound to him—" I gestured at Darius, "—by

some magic oath that nearly killed me?"

Kael's eyes

flicked to Darius, a silent question passing between them, and I felt a surge

of anger. "What aren't you telling me?" I demanded, stepping between them.

"Both of you. I deserve to know."

Darius

sighed, leaning against the mantel, his posture weary. "Kael's been tracking

the ones who took your father down," he said. "A faction tied to the Mafia

Leader—the man who orchestrated your family's ruin. They've been quiet for

years, but they're back, and they're after you."

I turned to

Kael, my heart pounding. "The Mafia Leader?" I'd heard the rumors—whispers of a

shadowy figure who'd destroyed our father, who'd left our family to rot. But

I'd never known his name, never had proof. "Who is he?"

Kael's face

darkened, his hands clenching into fists. "I don't know his real name—not yet,"

he said. "But I've pieced together enough. He's a wolf, Liora, an alpha who

used Dad's secrets to build his power. He's got connections—money, men, magic.

And he's been watching you since Dad died."

"Why me?" I

asked, my voice barely above a whisper. "I was a kid. I didn't know anything."

"Because of

Mom," Kael said, his voice breaking. "Because of that pendant. She knew

something, Liora—something about the pack, about its history. She gave you that

before she died, didn't she?"

I nodded, my

hand tightening around the pendant. "The night before," I said, the memory

sharp and painful. "She told me it would protect me."

Kael's eyes

softened, but there was a hardness there too, a guilt I didn't understand. "She

was right," he said. "But it's also a target. The Mafia Leader wants it—and

whatever power it holds. That's why I pushed the marriage. I thought Darius

could keep you safe. I was wrong."

I stared at

him, my mind reeling. My mother's pendant, my father's betrayal, the creature

in the forest—it all felt like pieces of a puzzle I couldn't solve. "So you've

been spying on me?" I asked, my voice cold. "Following me?"

Kael shook

his head, but his hesitation told me everything. "Not spying," he said.

"Protecting. I've been tracking their movements, trying to figure out who's

pulling the strings. But I got a message tonight—" He pulled a phone from his

pocket, showing me the screen. A single text glowed there, the number blocked: She's next.

My stomach

dropped, a cold dread settling over me. "Next for what?" I asked, my voice

shaking.

Kael

exchanged a glance with Darius, and I felt that thread of the blood oath

tighten, a silent pull toward the alpha. "They're planning something," Darius

said, his voice grim. "An attack, maybe. Or a ritual. Whatever it is, they need

you—and that pendant—to complete it."

I laughed,

the sound harsh and hollow. "Great. So I'm a pawn in some supernatural chess

game. What do you expect me to do about it? I'm an omega, not a warrior."

"You're more

than that," Kael said, stepping closer. "Dad always said Mom had

power—something she passed to you. That pendant proves it. You fought off that

creature in the forest, didn't you?"

I froze, my

breath catching. "How do you know about that?" I hadn't told anyone—not Kael,

not Darius.

Kael's face

paled, and he looked away. "I've been watching the forest," he admitted. "I saw

the light, heard the roar. I didn't get close enough to help, but I knew it was

you."

Anger

flared, hot and bright. "You let me face that thing alone?" I shouted, shoving

him back. "You stood there while I nearly died?"

"I couldn't

risk it!" Kael snapped, his voice rising. "If they'd seen me, they'd have known

I was onto them. I had to wait, to plan—"

"Enough,"

Darius cut in, his voice a command that silenced us both. He stepped forward,

his presence filling the room. "Blaming each other won't help. We need to work

together. Kael, keep tracking the Mafia Leader. Liora, you stay with me. The

oath will protect you, but we need to figure out what that pendant does—and how

to use it against them."

I wanted to

argue, to tell him to go to hell, but the weight of Kael's confession—and the

memory of that creature—held me back. "Fine," I said, my voice tight. "But if

you're lying to me, Darius—if this is another trick—I'll find a way to break

that oath, no matter what it costs me."

His eyes met

mine, steady and unreadable, but there was a promise there, a vow I couldn't

decipher. "I'm not your enemy, Liora," he said. "Not anymore."

I didn't

believe him—not fully—but as Kael slipped out into the rain and Darius turned

to stoke the fire, I felt the pendant pulse again, a soft glow lighting the

room. My mother's voice whispered once more: You

have to fight. And for the

first time, I wondered if she'd been preparing me for this all along.

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