Lily’s Perspective
It was hopeless. A goddamned dead end.
Aurora and Brett might as well have vanished into thin air. Nearly forty hours had passed since the kidnappers sent that video of Aurora. Silence. No new demands, no threats, nothing. This quiet was worse than constant harassnt—a dull blade slowly sawing through our nerves.
We’d thrown every resource we had at it. The Moonlight Pack’s networks, both above and below board. Ethan’s contacts in the police and city administration. Even tentative queries to underground information brokers. Surveillance footage was scrubbed fra by fra. Suspect vehicles were tracked and lost. The industrial district where they’d last been seen was turned inside out, sewers included. Jacob road day and night like a caged beast, returning each ti with red-rimd eyes, slling of dust and despair. Celena forced herself to maintain the pack’s daily routines, but everyone could see she was a ghost, her gaze often drifting into empty space before silent tears fell.
Everything was sliding into the worst possible scenario. The ransom sat ready, a useless, mocking pile. Had the kidnappers changed their minds? Altered their plans? Or... sothing worse?
I sat in the study, a map and scattered intelligence reports spread before , a throbbing pain behind my eyes. Ethan stood at the window, his back to , shoulders rigid. Only the crackle of the fireplace broke the suffocating silence.
"Lily," Ethan’s voice was rough. He didn’t turn. "Are we missing sothing? Sothing... more fundantal?"
I massaged my temples. "We’ve tried every channel, conventional or otherwise. They’re professionals, Ethan. Not common street trash or extortionists. I’m starting to wonder... have our recent... *actions*... drawn attention from sothing deeper in the shadows?" Our pack sotis had to deal with dangerous outliers, human or otherwise. Enemies were inevitable.
Ethan was quiet for a mont. "Perhaps. But retribution from those quarters is usually more... theatrical. They boast. This silence doesn’t fit."
Just as the weight of anxiety and helplessness threatened to crush us, a familiar, boisterous commotion erupted from downstairs. The study door burst open.
"Hey! Why’s the place feel like a tomb? We’re back! Brought the Hawaiian sun and—" Dave’s loud voice cut off as he absorbed the room’s grim atmosphere. Jim followed, his smile vanishing. The twin brothers, fresh from a two-week island vacation with tanned skin and garish shirts, were a jarring splash of color against the manor’s gloom.
"What happened?" Jim asked sharply, his eyes darting between my face and Ethan’s.
We both exhaled, a fraction of the tension easing at the unexpected but tily reinforcent. Dave and Jim were not just reliable fighters; their partners, Maya and Rose, were the most talented witch sisters we knew.
"Aurora and Brett were taken," Ethan stated flatly, his tone heavy.
The twins’ faces hardened. "What?!" "When?"
"Two days ago. Brett may be with another group, status unknown. Aurora was with kidnappers, but now radio silent," I summarized quickly. "We need Maya and Rose. Now."
No further questions. The twins turned and ran. Minutes later, Maya and Rose hurried into the study with them. The witches still wore their vacation dresses, travel-weary, but their eyes were already sharp and focused. After hearing the details and watching Aurora’s video, they exchanged a look and nodded.
"We need a quiet room. No interruptions. And..." Maya listed items for the working—herbs, crystals, symbolic objects. Celena and the staff mobilized with terrifying speed.
A little-used, thick-walled storeroom in the manor’s lower level was cleared as a makeshift ritual space. The rest of us—Ethan, Jacob, Celena, and I—waited outside, wound tight with anxiety. For a long ti, there was only silence from within. Then, a low, rhythmic chanting began. The air grew thick with the scent of burning herbs and an indescribable, crackling energy.
A full hour later, the door opened. Maya and Rose erged supporting each other. They were pale, their hairline damp with sweat, looking utterly drained. A flicker of sothing like shock lingered in their eyes.
"What did you see?" I moved forward, steadying Rose. Jacob and Celena pressed close, their gazes desperate.
Maya drew a shaky breath. "Aurora... I saw her in a room. Like... a laboratory. Cold tal and glass. Harsh white light. She was on the floor, unconscious. No... no obvious injuries I could see. Clothes intact. But I couldn’t sense more. There was strong interference. The space felt... sealed off."
A lab? Unconscious? Shielded? My heart clenched. It confird one of our worst fears—Aurora wasn’t with ordinary kidnappers.
Rose spoke next, her voice softer, uncertain. "Brett... his location feels oppressive. Chaotic. Surrounded by many... strong, hostile, feral wolf scents. The environnt... like a cell, but not a normal prison. More primitive. Rougher. He was in the middle of them. Those wolves... don’t seem to offer much warmth, even to one of their own young. It felt more like... scrutiny. A test. That’s all I could get. The emotional noise there is too loud, too muddy."
A prison? Surrounded by strays? Jacob’s knuckles cracked. Celena stifled a sob with her hand.
"Locations? Landmarks? Any sounds for positioning?" Ethan demanded.
Both witches shook their heads, apologetic and frustrated. "The visions were fragnted. Blurry. The interference was imnse. We pushed as far as we could," Maya said, exhausted. "Whoever has them has wards against scrying, or the places themselves are shielded."
It wasn’t an address, but it was a direction. Crucial.
"A lab... privately funded institute..." I connected the dots imdiately. "Ethan, run down every possible private or clandestine lab we have on file! Especially those with powerful backing, tight security, remote locations!"
"Jacob," Ethan turned to him, eyes fierce. "Municipal jails, state prison annexes, nominally abandoned holding sites that might be repurposed! Anywhere with rumors of wolf activity, *stray* wolf activity! Take Xaver and as many as you need. Turn over every stone!"
Jacob gave a sharp nod, a renewed fire in his eyes, and strode out to gather his team. Celena moved to follow, but I gently held her back. "Let him do what he does best. We need you here. The pack needs stability."
As others dispersed on their tasks, the study settled back into silence, leaving just Ethan and . The shell of the decisive leader I’d worn crumbled. Exhaustion, profound helplessness, and that gnawing, gut-wrenching guilt crashed over .
I sank onto a sofa, fingers digging into my hair. "It’s my fault, Ethan," I rasped. "I was always too hard on her. Pushing her to mature faster, to fit the ’heir’ mold. I fought her recklessness, her rebellion... If I’d just *listened* more, talked *with* her instead of *at* her... maybe she wouldn’t have felt so stifled here, wouldn’t have kept running outside for a thrill, wouldn’t have..." My throat closed.
Ethan ca over, sat beside , and wrapped a strong arm around my shoulders. His body trembled slightly. "No, Lily. It’s mine. I was too focused on external pack politics, the damn balancing act. I thought they were old enough, capable enough... I neglected being a father." He buried his face against my neck, his voice muffled and uncharacteristically fragile. "I failed them."
We held each other tightly in the darkening study, two damaged ships clinging together in a storm. The firelight danced over us, offering no warmth against the cold fear in our hearts. We didn’t speak, just drew what little strength and solace we could from each other’s presence.
I prayed then, to every god, spirit, ancestor, or power that might be listening: *Bring them ho. Bring Aurora and Brett ho safely. Whatever the cost.*
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