She sat in the back of a black sedan, the scent of expensive leather and ozone filling her lungs. Across from her sat a man whose suit cost more than her college education-a beta for the Obsidian Syndicate. He hadn't spoken since they left the safe house. He just watched her with eyes that flashed a faint, predatory amber every time they passed under a streetlamp.
"The job was supposed to be simple," Lyra said, her voice cutting through the silence. "I scrub the server, I delete the GPS pings from the night of the fourteenth, and your Alpha remains a ghost. Why are we heading north? The servers are in the city."
The beta didn't blink. "The parameters have changed, Ms. Thorne. The Alpha wants to see the work personally."
"I don't do house calls. Especially not to the Syndicate's main estate. My contract is with the legal firm, not the pack."
"Your contract," the man said, a cruel smile touching his lips, "has been bought. Along with everything else your father owed."
The cold that washed over Lyra wasn't from the air conditioning. It was the realization that the floor had just dropped out from under her life. Her father, a man who had spent his life hunting the very creatures she protected, had finally gambled away the one thing he had left. Her.
The sedan took a sharp turn, leaving the paved highway for a private, winding road that cut through the dense forest like a scar. The trees here were old, their branches clawing at the moon, and the air grew heavy with the thick, musk-and-pine scent of a territory that didn't tolerate intruders. This was Obsidian land.
When the car finally stopped, it wasn't at a mansion. It was in front of a brutalist concrete structure built into the side of a mountain-a fortress masquerading as a corporate retreat.
The beta opened the door. "Out."
Lyra stepped into the mountain air. It was freezing, but the heat radiating from the guards standing at the entrance was palpable. They didn't look like security; they looked like soldiers in the middle of a war. They escorted her through a series of pressurized glass doors and down a long, sterile corridor that smelled of antiseptic and old blood.
They reached a heavy, reinforced steel door at the end of the hall. The beta swiped a keycard, and the locks hissed open.
"The Alpha is waiting," he whispered, stepping back.
Lyra walked in. The room was a massive, circular command center filled with monitors, but the lights were dimmed to a low, bruised purple. In the center of the room stood a man with his back to her. He was tall, his shoulders broad enough to block out the glow of the screens, his hair a dark shock against the pale skin of his neck. He wasn't wearing a suit. He wore a simple black tactical shirt that strained against the muscles of his back.
He didn't turn around. He didn't speak. He just stood there, staring at a frozen frame on the main monitor-a grainy security shot of a massacre.
"Caelum Vane?" Lyra asked, her voice echoing in the vast space.
The man stiffened. Slowly, he turned. His face was a mask of cold, sharp angles, his eyes a piercing, stormy gray that seemed to vibrate with an unspoken intensity. He was beautiful in the way a landslide is beautiful-magnificent and terrifying.
He didn't offer a greeting. He simply stepped toward her, his movements fluid and predatory. Lyra instinctively stepped back, but she hit the cold steel of the door. Caelum didn't stop until he was inches away. He was so close she could feel the unnatural heat rolling off his skin. He reached out, his hand hovering near her throat, and for a second, Lyra thought he was going to crush her windpipe.
Instead, he touched a small, silver device on the side of her neck. A collar.
"I don't respond well to jewelry," she snapped, trying to reclaim some shred of her dignity.
Caelum's eyes locked onto hers. He didn't open his mouth, but suddenly, a sound exploded inside Lyra's head. It wasn't a voice-it was a roar of grief, a jagged wave of images: fire, silver blades, the scent of burning fur, and a face she recognized.
You, the sound echoed in her skull, though his lips never moved. You were there.
Lyra gasped, her knees buckling. The psychic weight of his thought was like a physical blow. She saw herself on a screen, months ago, her hands flying across a keyboard as she wiped the logs of a security hub. She had thought she was protecting a corporate client. She hadn't realized she was erasing the footsteps of a death squad.
"I didn't know," she whispered, her lungs burning. "I was just doing my job. I didn't know they were coming for your family."
Caelum leaned down, his face level with hers. His hand moved from the collar to her jaw, gripping it with a firm, terrifying heat. He didn't need words to tell her she was his prisoner. He didn't need words to tell her that her life was now forfeit to his vengeance.
The psychic link flared again, softer this time, but more intimate. It felt like a low growl vibrating in her very bones. You will find them, Lyra Thorne. You will find the ones who paid you to bury the truth. And when you do, I will let you watch what I become.
He released her, and Lyra slumped against the wall, gasping for air. The silence in the room was deafening now, heavier than any shout. Caelum Vane turned back to his monitors, his presence filling the room like a storm front.
She looked at her hands. They weren't shaking anymore. They were cold. She was trapped in a mountain with a silent god who wanted blood, and she was the only one who could hear his command.
The door behind her clicked shut, the sound of the locks engaging like a final sentence. She wasn't a Closer anymore. She was a ghost in the house of a monster. And as the moon rose over the mountain, Lyra realized that the worst part wasn't the collar or the threat of death. It was the fact that when Caelum had touched her, for a split second, her own blood had sung back to his.