She shouldn't have taken the shortcut through the industrial district. Her teacher at the conservatory had warned her: "Ivy, a girl with a face like yours shouldn't be wandering the docks after dark. This city has teeth, and it's always hungry." But the bus had broken down, and her shift at the diner had run late. Every cent she earned went toward her younger brother's hospital bills, leaving nothing for a taxi. Her feet ached in her worn-out flats, and the silence of the docks felt heavy, almost predatory.
The alleyway was a canyon of rusted corrugated metal and overflowing dumpsters. A single flickering streetlamp cast long, skeletal shadows against the brick walls, the light buzzing like a dying insect. Ivy's breath hitched as she heard a sound-not the scurrying of a rat, but the heavy, rhythmic thud of a boot on pavement. It was the sound of someone who didn't care if they were heard. Someone who owned the darkness.
Then, a scream.
It wasn't a long scream. It was short, wet, and ended in a sickening crack of bone against concrete.
Ivy froze. Her heart hammered against her ribs like a trapped bird, the rhythm so loud she was sure whoever was in the alley could hear it. Logic told her to run back toward the street, to scream for help, but her legs felt like lead, rooted to the spot by a cold, paralyzing dread. Slowly, as if pulled by a morbid thread of fate she couldn't snap, she peered around the corner of a massive shipping container.
In the center of the clearing stood three men. Two were dressed in expensive, charcoal-grey suits that looked out of place among the grime. The third was on his knees. Blood soaked through his white shirt, turning it a dark, bruised purple. The man on the ground was shaking, his hands clasped in a desperate, silent prayer.
"Please," the man on his knees wheezed, his voice bubbling with fluid. "I have a daughter. She's only six. I can get the money. Just one more week. I'll sell the house, I'll-"
The taller of the two men in suits didn't speak. He stepped forward, the light finally catching his profile. He was strikingly handsome in a way that felt dangerous-like a jagged piece of glass you knew would cut you if you touched it. His hair was dark, slicked back, and his jawline was sharp enough to draw blood. He moved with the grace of a predator, silent and deliberate, his movements devoid of any hesitation.
He pulled a silenced pistol from a shoulder holster. He didn't look angry. He didn't look like he enjoyed this. He looked bored, as if he were checking an item off a grocery list.
Phut.
The sound was no louder than a cough. The man on the ground slumped forward, his forehead hitting the asphalt with a dull thud. The silence that followed was even more deafening than the shot.
Ivy gasped. It was a tiny sound, a mere intake of air, but in the vacuum of the alley, it sounded like a thunderclap.
The tall man's head snapped toward the shipping container. His eyes-cold, piercing, and the color of a winter sea-locked onto hers. For a heartbeat, time stopped. Ivy saw the reflection of her own terror in those icy depths.
"We have a witness," the other man in the suit said, his hand reaching for his own weapon with mechanical efficiency. "Clean it up, Kaelen."
"No," the tall man said. His voice was a low, gravelly baritone that sent a physical shiver down Ivy's spine. "I'll handle this one."
Ivy finally found her legs. The adrenaline hit her like a lightning strike. She turned and bolted, her lungs burning as she gulped in the humid air. The weight of the cello case slowed her down, the heavy fiberglass hitting against her hip with every stride. Run. Just run. She could see the lights of the main road fifty yards away. If she could just reach the light, if she could just find a witness, she would be safe.
She didn't hear him behind her. She didn't hear footsteps at all. It was as if he had simply vanished from the spot and reappeared in the air behind her.
Suddenly, a hand like an iron vice clamped over her mouth. A powerful arm wrapped around her waist, lifting her off her feet as if she weighed nothing. She was hauled backward into the shadows, the scent of expensive sandalwood and cold steel filling her nose.
"Hush, Little Bird," the man whispered into her ear. His breath was warm against her skin, a terrifying contrast to the coldness of his words. "If you scream, I'll have to let them kill you. And I've spent too much time looking for you to let that happen now."
Ivy's eyes widened. Looking for her? She struggled, kicking her legs, clawing at the hand over her mouth, but he was a wall of muscle. Her efforts were useless.
"Stop," he commanded. The authority in his voice was absolute, the kind of tone that demanded the world stop spinning.
He spun her around so she was pinned between his massive frame and the rough brick wall. The moonlight hit his face fully now. He was beautiful, yes, but there was a jagged scar running from his temple down to his ear, a mark of a violent life. He looked down at her, his gaze traveling over her messy blonde hair, her wide hazel eyes, and finally, the small, star-shaped birthmark on the side of her neck.
His expression shifted for a fraction of a second. It wasn't pity. It was something more ancient. Something like a hunter who had finally cornered his prize.
"Kaelen?" the other man called out from the clearing. "You want us to bring the car around to dispose of the body and the girl?"
Kaelen-that was his name-didn't take his eyes off Ivy. He reached out with a gloved hand and traced the line of her jaw. Ivy trembled so hard her teeth rattled. She wanted to scream, to cry, but her throat was frozen.
"No," Kaelen called back, his voice steady. "This one is mine. She's coming with me. Inform the Don she's been found."
He looked back at Ivy, his thumb pressing firmly against her lower lip, pulling it down slightly. "Three years, Ivy. You've been hiding for three years. Did you really think a city this small could keep you from me? Did you think I'd forget the way you looked the night the world burned?"
Ivy's mind raced. She had never seen this man in her life. She was a nobody. A student. A waitress. But as she looked into his eyes, a flicker of something-a memory of fire, of screaming, of a boy's hand holding hers in the dark-threatened to surface. It was a memory she had buried deep, a trauma she had locked away to stay sane.
"I don't know you," she whispered, her voice cracking, her vision blurring with tears.above
Kaelen leaned in close, his lips brushing against her ear. "You will. By the time I'm done with you, you'll forget everyone else's name but mine. You'll thank me for finding you in this gutter."
He raised his hand, and before Ivy could react, something heavy struck the side of her head. The world tilted, the stars the alleyway blurred into streaks of light, and the last thing she felt was Kaelen's arms catching her before she hit the cold, hard ground. She was falling into the dark, and for the first time in her life, she was more afraid of the man saving her than the men trying to kill her.