Evelyn POV:
"Luna. Alpha orders you to go home."
Lynn Sullivan, Kaden's Beta and personal assistant, stood by my car window, her expression cold and laced with pity. She rapped her knuckles softly against the glass, waiting for me to roll it down. Over the past few months, she had relayed all sorts of excuses-meetings, business trips, overtime. Now, not even a reason.
Outside the car window, the polished chrome and dark glass of the Alexander Group's private club reflected the city lights like scattered jewels. A place I was never invited to.
I lifted my gaze past Lynn, to the grand revolving doors of the club. And then I saw him.
Kaden. My husband. My Alpha.
He was a silhouette of power against the warm interior light, tall and imposing. But he wasn't alone.
A smaller, delicate figure stood beside him. Bianca Black. His childhood friend. His confidante.
The wind picked up, whipping a strand of her pale blonde hair across her face. She shivered, a theatrical, fragile gesture, and looked up at him with wide, innocent eyes.
Kaden's brow furrowed. Without a moment's hesitation, he shrugged off his tailored suit jacket-the one I had pressed for him this morning, making sure the lapels were perfect-and draped it over her shoulders.
A sudden, sharp pang lanced through the mate bond in my chest-a wave of emotion that wasn't mine. It was warm, tender, laced with a fierce protectiveness and a deep, undeniable affection. Love. Kaden's love. But it wasn't directed at me. It was aimed at her. The woman beside him. A feeling I recognized. Maybe, in the very beginning, it had been mine. But that had changed long ago, faded into something distant and foreign. Now I understood-his coldness was never for anyone else. It was reserved for me. Only me. My stomach clenched.
My heart didn't just sink. It felt like it was ripped out of my chest and stomped on the cold pavement. The jacket, a symbol of his protection, his warmth, now cocooned another woman.
He led her to his car, a sleek black Aston Martin. He opened the passenger door for her. A seat I had never once occupied. In our four years of marriage, I had always been driven by his security, or I drove myself.
As he leaned in to make sure she was settled, Bianca tilted her head up. Her lips pressed against his cheek in a soft, lingering kiss.
Kaden didn't pull away. He didn't even flinch.
A raw, guttural cry tore through my mind, the sound of my inner wolf howling in agony. It was a pain so profound it felt physical, a tearing of my very soul.
My foot slammed on the accelerator.
The tires shrieked in protest, burning rubber on the asphalt. I was gone before Kaden could even turn his head, the image of his betrayal seared into my memory.
The penthouse, our multi-million-dollar cage in the sky, was dark and silent when I arrived. The only greeting was the echo of my own footsteps on the marble floor.
I walked into the master bedroom. His side of the king-sized bed was pristine, untouched. He hadn't come home last night either.
On his nightstand, a single piece of paper was held down by a heavy crystal paperweight. His handwriting, a bold, arrogant scrawl, covered the note.
"Sign it."
Beneath the note was an attendance confirmation for a charity gala. Another night of playing the perfect, devoted couple. Another masquerade.
A cold, humorless laugh escaped my lips.
I walked into the massive walk-in closet. His suits were lined up with military precision, the air thick with his scent-cedarwood and power. It was a scent that used to make me feel safe. Now, it just made me feel hollow.
My eyes landed on the white shirt he'd worn yesterday, tossed carelessly onto the valet stand. I picked it up. On the collar, faint but unmistakable, was the cloying, sweet scent of gardenia perfume.
Bianca's scent.
The shirt slipped from my fingers.
Four years. Four years I had honored the bond the Moon Goddess had forced upon us. I had been the perfect Luna, the dutiful wife, enduring the whispers of the pack who saw me as nothing more than a stray Omega who got lucky.
And for what? For this public humiliation. For the constant, gnawing ache of loneliness.
My hand went to my stomach. I thought of the secret I held close, the one I'd never shared with him. The reason, I suspected, for his coldness. The silver dagger from that rogue attack years ago hadn't just left a scar on my skin. It had poisoned me, stolen my ability to give him what an Alpha wants most.
A pure-blooded heir.
Maybe that was it. But he didn't know. He couldn't know. And yet, this still felt like a slow, cruel punishment.
My gaze fell on the smart-home control panel by the door, its small screen glowing in the dark. A sudden, reckless resolve hardened within me.
If he wanted to treat me like I didn't exist, then I would erase my presence.
My finger pressed the "Main Power" icon. The screen flickered, asking for confirmation. I pressed "Yes."
Instantly, the entire penthouse plunged into absolute, suffocating darkness. The hum of the refrigerator died. The glow of the alarm clocks vanished. Silence.
I wasn't done. I navigated to the water supply. Off. The building's private network connection. Off.
I pulled out my phone, its screen the only light in the vast darkness. My fingers were steady as I found the number.
It rang twice before he picked up.
"Mr. Davis," I said, my voice as cold and dead as the apartment around me. "Start the proceedings. I want to file for a separation of bond from Kaden Alexander."
There was a moment of stunned silence on the other end.
"And," I added, my voice dropping to a whisper of steel, "as per the pre-nuptial agreement, I want what's mine. My half. The shares in Alexander Group. Every last one."
Evelyn POV:
The private elevator opened with a soft chime, a sound that was immediately swallowed by the oppressive silence of the penthouse floor. Kaden stepped out, his powerful frame silhouetted against the hallway's emergency lighting. I watched his shadow move before I saw him.
He paused, his head tilting slightly. The entire floor was dead. No lights, no climate control, not even the backup generators. A frown creased his brow.
He used his key on the main door, a primitive act in this fortress of technology. The heavy door swung inward, letting in a draft of cold, lifeless air.
"Evelyn?"
His voice, deep and commanding, bounced off the marble floors and bare walls. It was the voice of an Alpha used to being answered.
Silence was my reply.
He strode into the living room, his expensive leather shoes making sharp, angry sounds in the dark. He nearly tripped over a porcelain vase I'd knocked over in my blind rush earlier. A curse muttered under his breath.
The thin, blue light of his phone screen cut through the gloom. It swept across the room before landing on me.
I was sitting on the sofa, perfectly still, looking out at the glittering expanse of the city below. A ghost in my own home.
"What is this?" he demanded. It wasn't a question. It was an accusation, laced with the fury of a king whose castle had been trespassed.
I didn't turn to look at him. My eyes remained fixed on the distant, indifferent lights. "It's a power outage," I said, my voice flat, devoid of any emotion.
"You did this." A statement of fact. The anger in his voice was rising, a tangible heat in the cold room.
"Restore it."
The Alpha's command. A force that every member of his pack was biologically wired to obey. An order I had never once defied.
Until now.
I slowly turned my head, my neck stiff. In the dim light, my eyes met his. His were stormy gray, flashing with impatience. "No," I said. The word was quiet, but it landed in the space between us with the force of a physical blow.
His shock was visible. His jaw tightened, a muscle flexing in his cheek. I could see it in his eyes-he had expected me to crumble, to obey as I always had.
He closed the distance between us in two long strides. The air crackled with his power, his Alpha presence pressing down on me, a physical weight meant to crush my defiance. He smelled of the cold night air and her perfume. Bianca's gardenia, cloying and unmistakable.
"Have you forgotten who you are, Evelyn?" he snarled, his voice a low growl. "You are my mate. The Luna of this pack."
I rose from the sofa, my legs surprisingly steady. I met his furious gaze without flinching. "Not for much longer."
His eyes narrowed, the pupils dilating as he processed my words. A flicker of disbelief, then pure, undiluted rage.
He let out a short, harsh laugh. "Is this because I didn't come home last night? Don't be pathetic. You have one primary duty in this arrangement, Evelyn. To give me an heir."
The words were a poisoned blade, twisting in a wound he didn't even know existed.
A wave of nausea washed over me. The blood drained from my face, and a tremor started in my hands. It wasn't fear. It was a pain so sharp, so absolute, it threatened to shatter me.
He mistook my reaction for guilt. For the petty jealousy of a scorned wife.
He reached for me, his hand moving to cup my chin. Even in the gloom, his features were devastating-the chiseled jaw, the dark hair falling over his brow, eyes the color of storm clouds. Once, I would have melted under that gaze. Now it only made my skin crawl. "Perhaps I need to remind you how we fulfill that duty," he murmured, his voice dropping into a tone of threatening seduction. He leaned closer, his body heat pressing against me, his intention clear-to claim what he believed was still his.
The moment his fingers brushed my skin, I recoiled as if I'd been burned.
"Don't touch me," I hissed, the words raw with a disgust that was bone-deep. "You're filthy. You make me sick."
That broke his control. The civilized veneer of the CEO vanished, replaced by the primal fury of a slighted Alpha. He lunged, trapping me between the back of the sofa and his hard body. His heat, his scent, his power-it was all suffocating.
The mate bond flared, a hot, searing line connecting us, saturated with his anger and possessiveness. It felt vile.
"Kaden," I said, my voice shaking but clear. I lifted my chin, forcing myself to look into the storm of his eyes. "I've already filed the application to sever the bond. Soon, you'll be free to be with Bianca. Tomorrow we sign the formal contract and finalize the asset division. Don't be late."
His name. The application. Bianca's name.The contract.
Each word was a stone, and they built a wall between us. His body went rigid. The hand that was about to grab me froze mid-air. The fury in his eyes was eclipsed by utter, stark disbelief.
I used his momentary paralysis to my advantage. I shoved hard against his chest, the contact making my skin crawl. He stumbled back a step, surprised by my strength.
I didn't wait. I turned and fled to the bedroom, my heart hammering against my ribs. I slammed the door shut and twisted the lock, the click echoing in the silent apartment.
A moment later, a guttural roar of pure Alpha rage erupted from the living room, followed by the sickening thud of a fist hitting a wall.
I leaned my forehead against the cold wood of the door, my body trembling, and listened to the sound of my husband, my mate, losing control.
EVELYN POV:
The conference room on the 50th floor was a sterile box of glass and steel, designed to make you feel small. The view of the city sprawling below was supposed to be inspiring. Today, it felt like a long way to fall.
I sat on one side of the expansive mahogany table, dressed in a stark white pantsuit that felt like armor. My lawyer, Mr. Davis, a calm, methodical man in his late fifties, sat beside me, his briefcase open.
Kaden occupied the head of the table, his natural throne. He radiated a cold, controlled fury that seemed to lower the temperature of the room by ten degrees. His Beta and lawyer, Graham Stone, sat at his right hand, his expression unreadable behind his wire-rimmed glasses.
Mr. Davis cleared his throat, the small sound unnaturally loud in the tense silence.
"As per the pre-nuptial agreement, section seven, subsection B," he began, his voice even, "in the event of a dissolution of the bond, all assets acquired during the union are to be divided equally. This includes the four percent of Alexander Group stock granted to my client upon the formalization of the bond."
Kaden let out a soft, contemptuous sound. It wasn't a laugh, just a puff of air that conveyed utter disdain. His gray eyes, cold as a winter sky, were fixed on me.
"Four percent?" he said slowly, his voice a low, dangerous rumble. "Evelyn, do you have any idea what you're asking for? That's three billion dollars and a seat on the board of directors."
"I'm aware," I replied, my voice steady. I refused to let him see how much his condescension affected me.
He leaned forward, lacing his powerful hands together on the polished table. "Our union was decreed by the Moon Goddess. It is the bedrock of this family and the stability of this pack. It is not a business deal you can renegotiate when you feel slighted."
He was trying to use tradition, duty, to shame me into submission. The same old tactics.
"When one party to that bedrock has a... confidante... waiting in the wings, the stability of the entire structure comes into question," I countered, my words sharp and precise.
Kaden's face darkened. The pressure in the room intensified, a physical manifestation of his displeasure.
Graham Stone cleared his throat, attempting to mediate. "Luna, the Alpha's relationship with Miss Black is purely platonic-"
"Mr. Stone," I cut him off, my gaze unwavering. "As an attorney, I'd advise you not to make statements about facts you cannot possibly be certain of."
Graham flinched, a flicker of surprise in his eyes. He wasn't used to being challenged. No one in Kaden's inner circle was.
Kaden's patience snapped. He pushed his chair back and rose to his full, intimidating height. He stalked around the table until he was standing directly behind me, looming over me.
"I will not agree to sever the bond," he stated, the Alpha command vibrating in his voice. "Not now. Not ever."
"The law says otherwise," I said, tilting my head back to meet his gaze.
A cruel smile touched his lips. "Human law? Or pack law? In this building, on this land, Evelyn, I am the law."
He leaned down, his mouth close to my ear, his breath warm against my skin. The proximity sent a shiver of revulsion through me. "You want a war?" he whispered, his voice a venomous caress. "I'll give you a war. And you will lose everything."
The mate bond flared with his threat, a sharp, painful sting. My hands, hidden beneath the table, clenched into fists so tight my nails dug into my palms.
I took a shaky breath and leaned slightly toward him, my own voice barely audible. "We'll see about that."
He straightened up, adjusting the knot of his silk tie as if he hadn't just declared total war on his own wife. He was once again the unflappable CEO, the powerful Alpha.
"This meeting is over," he announced to the room. He turned to Graham. "Show her, and her counsel, the addendum."
The word 'addendum' made Graham's expression tighten almost imperceptibly.
Kaden didn't wait for a response. He turned and strode out of the conference room, leaving a wake of chilling silence behind him.
I watched him go, a cold certainty settling in my gut. The real fight hadn't even begun.
Graham hesitated for a moment, a flicker of what looked like genuine regret in his eyes. Then, his professional mask slipped back into place. He reached into his briefcase and pulled out a slim file folder. He slid it across the table.
It stopped directly in front of me.
The title was printed in stark, black letters: Addendum to Pre-Bond Asset Agreement.
My eyes scanned the first clause, the legalese blurring until a single phrase snapped into focus.
In the event that the Luna is unable to fulfill the primary duty of the union, defined as the bearing of a pure-blooded heir, all articles pertaining to the division of assets are rendered null and void.
The air rushed out of my lungs.My blood ran cold.
It was an unconscionable clause, designed to strip me of my right to the assets on the pretext of a hypothetical heir. Kaden had played his hand well. This round, I had lost thoroughly.