Hades
I dropped to my knees.
But not from weakness.
From fury.
From the sheer weight of what I was becoming.
I could still smell her in this room. Her scent—honey and lavender —clung to the walls like memory. The closet hung open, barren. Hollow. Mocking.
"You gave her everything," the Flux cooed. "And she chose Cain. She chose pity over power. Loyalty over love."
Black veins crept up my throat now, blooming like thorns. My mouth tasted of ash and regret. My nails sharpened without permission. My muscles spasmed, my back arching as the corruption tore further down my spine.
"She was supposed to be mine," I rasped.
"She is yours," the Flux growled. "You marked her. Claimed her. Bound her. She is part of your blood now. She can't run far."
"Then why," I choked, "does it feel like I'm dying?"
"Because you are."
A beat of silence.
"But what crawls from the grave you've made will not be so easily broken."
I dragged myself to my feet, spine hunched, horn still dripping crimson, breath sawing out of my lungs like razors.
And in the mirror across the room, I saw what I'd become.
Eyes that no longer looked human.
Veins like rivers of tar.
Grief stitched into every inch of my monstrous skin.
And underneath it all—a heart still aching for the girl who had chosen to walk away.
But love had failed me.
And the Flux was patient.
"Let her have her space," it whispered now. Cold. Sure. Triumphant.
"Let her have her moment in the sun."
A pause.
"It will not last."
Eve
Empty.
Hollow.
That was how the room felt, mirroring my feelings.
His haunted gaze still bore into me, weighing like a ton of bricks, despite my efforts to pretend otherwise.
The red rim around the grays I knew so well had grown. They swallowed his stormy irises, tainting them with crimson flecks that promised nothing but ruin.
Dread was a wet blanket on my shoulders as I settled onto my old bed—the one I had been given when I first crossed the border into Obsidian.
I touched the new bedsheets…
It felt like a lifetime ago. Before he rescued me from Felicia. Before he taught me to fight, wore that ridiculous onesie, took me on that date.
I had cherished those moments... with trepidation... but cherished them all the same.
And yet, he had been plotting.
I lowered myself onto the pillow that was entirely too cold without his strange warmth—the kind that burned just a little.
I had been here after Jules died. After Hades held me through the mental storm that followed. He stood by me when my parents came for me. He did all that, and yet it was all tainted...
By what his true intentions were.
And I was a fool, eaten alive by guilt from the secrets I shielded from the light.
Afraid of him hating me.
How the tables had turned...
I closed my eyes. Darkness and silence watched, but did not console me.
And then there was Danielle, and—
A knock on the door ripped me from my reverie. I was at the door in a blink.
I twisted the knob and opened it.
Green, solemn eyes met mine. A little hopeful smile tilted the corner of his mouth.
"Eve..." he said, my name laced with hesitation.
I tried to offer a smile in return, but I couldn't mold the emptiness into something it wasn't.
"Hello, Kael," I replied hoarsely. I stepped aside to let him in, which he did with some uncertainty.
He cleared his throat as I gently closed the door. "I wanted to show you something important."
I raised a brow. Dread coiled in my chest. "What?"
"It's about the encrypted video file you gave us a password to," he murmured, eyes narrowing as he gauged my reaction.
The dread burned hotter. The passwords had been something Ellen and I shared. Which meant one thing...
It was from Ellen. And that could only mean it would be to my detriment.
I swallowed.
"It might surprise you, Eve," Kael muttered, pulling out the tablet and unlocking it. "It surprised me. Surprised all of us."
I gulped in air. "Hit me," I whispered, unable to hide the tremor in my voice.
"Your wish is my command." He clicked play.
I held my breath as the scream burst from the speakers, searing the air with a haunting pitch that ripped into me.
I knew that scream even before the video cleared.
It was hers.
I had heard it—in slivers and snippets. Broken echoes that had haunted me in the weeks before everything came together in one horrific vision.
It was Danielle.
My eyes widened. The massacre site played out on screen. I knew it like my own reflection—branded into me.
The footage shook—but there she was.
Danielle. In the car.
Bleeding. Screaming. Alive.
I watched, frozen, as the beast—me—ripped through the wreckage.
For her.
Then came her voice again:
"Not my baby. Please—"
I lurched forward, breath caught in my throat.
Then the beast grabbed her.
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