Eve
Seconds stretched into hours as I flew down the stairwell, Kael's desperate shout echoing behind me. I didn't stop. I couldn't. The elevator was too slow and I needed more than that now.
Floor after floor blurred past as I tore downward, the chill of the concrete walls barely registering against the fire in my veins. My heart pounded like war drums. My lungs burned, but I didn't stop.
I couldn't lose him.
Not again.
> "He wouldn't really go through with it, would he?" I asked Rhea, my voice little more than a frantic breath in my mind.
Rhea's silence was heavy.
And then—
> "I haven't been able to sense Cerberus in days," she said, voice hoarse with dread. "He's gone quiet. Drowned."
"Eve… if the Flux could suppress Hades' wolf this quickly after exposure—then it was never a fight. It was a slow erasure. One the Vassir's Vein is now accelerating."
I stumbled at the final step but caught myself on the railing, gripping it until my knuckles cracked.
> "If he does this…"
I couldn't finish it.
I wouldn't.
Because saying it would make it real.
Because if Hades injected all fifteen doses of Vassir's Vein.
He would be...
Erased.
Only the Flux would remain.
A predator in the body of a lycan. An Alpha. A father.
And even if it was for now. My husband.
I burst through the emergency doors at the end of the hall, the cold metal slamming against the wall. The corridor was dim and sterile, humming with the low whine of fluorescent lights. The restricted sector. Lower labs.
I didn't know which lab it was.
No signs. No maps. Just an endless stretch of reinforced doors and cold steel silence.
But I could feel him.
Rot—not the kind that came from death, but from something wrong—clung to the air like mildew in the lungs. Thick. Decaying. Familiar.
You can't mask that kind of rot.
Not his kind.
Not even behind reinforced titanium or with guards stationed like statues outside sealed labs.
Because his rot wasn't just physical. It was psychic. It bled through walls. It whispered through floor tiles. It clawed through the edges of thought like a scent you couldn't scrub off skin.
I followed it.
Each step drawn like gravity toward something festering.
Two guards stood by a sealed lab at the very end of the corridor—one holding a clipboard, the other stone-faced, armed.
They straightened as I approached, but I didn't slow down.
"Restricted—ma'am, you can't—"
My eyes met his.
He stopped mid-sentence.
Because he saw something in mine.
Rage. Terror. Fire.
"Your...highness. No one is allowed in." But he could not mask the uncertainty in his voice.
I placed my palm on the biometric panel.
It blinked.
Access Denied.
Of course it was.
Hades had sealed it.
The flux knew I would come and I did care if it was right or it had read me so perfectly.
"Override it," I said, turning to the guards. "Right now. Open the door."
They glanced at each other.
Neither moved.
One clenched his jaw. The other took a half-step back, but steadied.
"The Alpha issued a full lockdown," the clipboard one said. "No overrides. Not from the council. Not even from—"
"I am not asking," I snapped.
Still, they didn't move.
Their fear was obvious—but it wasn't fear of me.
It was fear of him.
Of what was behind that door.
And then—
Kael came stumbling down the hall, drenched in sweat, face ghost-pale and still smeared with blood. His shirt clung to him, torn and soaked from the sprint.
"Move—move!" he gasped, practically collapsing against the wall beside me. "He's not going to survive this—Eve, you have to get in there!"
The guards held their ground.
One of them raised a hand. "We can't let anyone in. The Alpha made that clear. He said any interruption is to be treated as a threat to the realm—"
Kael snarled, "You think this isn't a threat to the realm?"
Neither flinched.
Because they weren't looking at us like we were people anymore.
They were looking at us like we were civilians.
And he was still their Alpha.
Still their god.
Something inside me snapped.
The part of me that still believed anyone would save him but me.
The part that was tired of knocking.
Without warning, my bones surged forward—skin shredding into fur and muscle. My wolf form exploded from me in a torrent of pain and fury, and I lunged.
One guard reached for his weapon, but it was too late.
With a roar, I slammed my paw against the sealed door. A sickening crack shot through my shoulder as bone dislocated from sheer force.
I didn't care.
Again.
And again.
I tore into the steel with claws meant to break mountains.
With teeth that weren't meant for begging.
Blood dripped down my limb. My ribs screamed. The metal dented, warped.
The hinges groaned with every hit, sparks flying as the reinforced metal bent beneath my fury. Each strike sent fresh agony through my shoulder, but it didn't matter. I would get to him.
My thumb brushed beneath his eye, where the faintest trace of blue still flickered under the corruption.
My Hades.
Still holding on.
Still suffering.
Kael stepped forward, jaw tight, voice clipped. "We need to get him down. Now."
The trembling scientist whimpered from the corner. "You don't understand… we can't."
Kael turned on him. "What do you mean you can't?"
The man shrank further into the wall, shaking his blood-slicked hands. "He put himself there. He broke through the restraints we gave him. Used the old rig from Sector Twelve. Forced me to prep the doses. Said if I refused, he'd kill us all—and when one of us did refuse—he did. He ripped him apart."
His voice cracked, tears streaming down his soot- and blood-streaked cheeks.
"It's crazy. He's gone—that's not your Alpha anymore. That's something else."
Kael froze.
I turned back to Hades—no, to the thing that used to be him.
"Hades," I said softly, desperate. "Please—listen to me. I'm here. I'm here. You don't have to do this."
His body trembled.
His bound arms flexed against the rig.
And then—
He lifted his head.
Eyes wide, feral, burning.
One still fogged with memory.
The other—
Infernal.
And with a sickening tear, he clenched his jaw and ripped.
The black stitches split.
Skin tore.
Blood flooded his chin.
A ragged gasp left his mangled lips—wet, guttural, savage—and then he spoke.
But it wasn't my Hades' voice.
It was deeper.
Older.
Colder.
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"Elysia," he rasped, smiling through the blood. "You came."
My stomach twisted.
"No," I whispered. "Don't do this."
The thing in Hades tilted its head, the grin growing wider, darker. "You can stop calling for him. Hades is dead."
I shook my head.
Tears streamed down my cheeks.
"No."
"I am Vassir," it said, voice like razors scraping bone. "And this body is mine now."
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