She'd watched Marcus fall for her with barely any effort on her part-they'd been true mates, destined, inevitable. But she'd learned from that experience. Learned how to read desire, how to feed it, how to manipulate the space between wanting and having until it became unbearable.
She would use every weapon she had.
"I'll engineer encounters that seem accidental. I'll dress just provocatively enough to catch his eye but not so much that it seems deliberate. I'll be vulnerable at exactly the right moments. I'll share carefully calculated pieces of truth wrapped in lies. I'll make him want to protect me, save me, possess me."
Her voice dropped to barely a whisper.
"And when he's completely in love with me, when he's canceled his mating ceremony, when he's made himself vulnerable in every possible way..." She looked up at the grey sky, rain streaming down her face. "That's when I'll destroy him. That's when everything he loves will turn to ash. And in his final moments, before his world ends completely, I'll tell him why. I'll tell him it's because he killed you."
Somewhere in the hollow space where her wolf used to be, she felt the faintest flicker. Not life, exactly. But acknowledgment. Agreement.
This was right. This was justice.
"Wait for me," Sera whispered, pressing one hand to her chest where the mate bond had once lived, warm and golden and perfect. Now there was just scar tissue and ice. "This won't take long. Six weeks-maybe eight at most. And then..."
She didn't finish the sentence. Didn't say what would happen then, after the revenge was complete and Kael Stormridge was destroyed and Marcus was avenged.
She didn't know if there would be anything left of her after. Didn't know if she cared.
Sera turned and walked away from the grave without looking back. The rain fell harder, washing away her footprints, erasing the evidence that she'd ever been there at all.
By the time she reached her car at the cemetery gates, she'd wiped the tears from her face and straightened her spine. Sera Blackwood, the grieving mate, was dead. She'd died six months ago in that alley along with Marcus.
In her place was something colder. Sharper. More dangerous.
A weapon with a single purpose, wrapped in soft skin and false smiles.
A hunter who'd already chosen her prey.
She started the car and pulled out her phone, checking her messages. One new email, received three hours ago:
From: Elder Moira Silvermoon Estate
Subject: Employment Opportunity
Dear Miss Blackwood,
Thank you for your application to the housekeeping position at Silvermoon Estate. After reviewing your references and qualifications, we would like to invite you for an interview. Would tomorrow at 2 PM be convenient?
Please respond at your earliest convenience.
Regards,
Elder Moira
Head of Household Staff
Sera's lips curved into something that wasn't quite a smile.
"Tomorrow," she said to the empty car, to the ghost of Marcus that would haunt her forever, to the cold and pitiless thing she'd become. "Tomorrow it begins."
She typed out a response with steady hands:
Dear Elder Moira,
Tomorrow at 2 PM would be perfect. Thank you for this opportunity. I look forward to meeting you.
Sincerely,
Sera Blackwood
She hit send.
Then she sat in the car for a long moment, engine running, watching the rain stream down the windshield like tears the sky was crying on her behalf.
Inside her chest, where her wolf used to live, there was still only silence. No excitement. No anticipation. No fear. Just cold, focused determination.
She felt nothing when she thought about Alpha Kael Stormridge. No instinctive response to his power, no curiosity about him as a potential mate. Her wolf was too broken to recognize anything anymore, and her human half was too consumed with revenge to care about anything else.
Perfect.
Emotional detachment would make this easier. Would let her do what needed to be done without hesitation or guilt.
Sera put the car in gear and drove away from the cemetery, leaving Marcus behind in the rain. She had preparations to make. A role to perfect. A monster to become.
"I'm coming for you, Alpha Kael," she whispered to the storm. "And you'll never see me coming until it's far too late."
The rain washed away her words, but the vow remained, carved into her heart like Marcus's name on that headstone.
A mate for a mate.