Chapter 117: To End a Lineage
(MAYA)
"The disease," I whisper, comprehension dawning. "You’re trying to target the royal family and the nobles."
"Well, we can’t really pick and choose who it affects. It’s airborne, and it seems so shifters are immune to it. We’re currently working on a third version, one that will be able to target the rest."
"Phase one was a test," Cassian explains, returning to his seat. "Separating shifters from their wolves, leaving them weakened but alive. Phase two is more permanent. Phase three will be the final one."
My stomach drops. "You’re going to kill them."
"Not all at once," Mathew says, as if this is sohow rciful. The disease will spread slowly, giving us ti to dismantle the royal families. Once that happens, only shifters who are willing to follow the new leaders will be allowed to retain their wolves. You’ve been very helpful in creating the antidotes for us, Maya. And you’re going to keep helping us."
My mind races, searching for a way out of this nightmare. "What makes you think I would ever help you?"
"Oh, I think you’ll find we can be very persuasive." Cassian’s smile turns cold. "Mathew?"
Before I can react, Mathew grabs
by the hair and pulls my head back. He has a small vial in his hand, and he pours the liquid in it down my throat.
I don’t get the chance to struggle because he pinches my nose shut and covers my mouth, forcing
to swallow. As soon as he releases , I begin coughing, gasping for air. "What the hell was that?"
"Just a little sothing to make you compliant." Mathew pats my cheek.
"Griffin will find ," I say, trying to sound confident and not let the fear show through. "He’ll tear you apart."
Mathew laughs, a sound I once found endearing that now sends shivers down my spine. "The wolf king? He doesn’t even know where you are. By the ti he figures it out, we’ll be long gone, with you securely in our possession."
"I wouldn’t be so sure," I reply, desperately playing for ti. "He’s protective of what’s his."
"His?" Cassian raises an eyebrow. "From what I’ve heard, he rejected you quite thoroughly. Left you alone when your mother died. Danced with another woman at his coronation."
Each word is like a knife, reopening wounds that had just begun to heal. "You don’t know anything about us."
"We know everything about you, Maya," Mathew says softly. "We’ve been watching you for months. Your drinking. Your isolation. Your grief. You’ve been destroying yourself quite efficiently without our help."
I flinch, the truth in his words cutting deeper than I want to admit.
"You know what’s truly fascinating?" Mathew asks, watching
closely. "The connection between humans and shifters. The biology of it."
I hesitate. "What do you an?"
"Haven’t you ever wondered why so humans are naturally drawn to shifters?" Mathew continues, eyes gleaming with intellectual fervor. "Why do so of us, like you, seem to understand them so instinctively?"
"I’m a scientist," I reply cautiously. "I observe. I learn."
"It’s more than that." Mathew leans forward eagerly. "So humans carry dormant shifter genes. Recessive, inactive, but present nonetheless. Evidence of interbreeding generations ago."
I go completely still. "That’s impossible."
"Is it?" Mathew’s smile widens. "We’ve identified several genetic markers. Tested them extensively."
"What does this have to do with ?" I ask, though a cold suspicion is already forming.
"You, Dr. Sorin," Cassian interjects, "have the most promising genetic profile we’ve ever seen. With the right stimulus, the right catalyst, and just the right amount of sacrifice—"
"You could beco sothing extraordinary," Mathew finishes, eyes alight with scientific zeal. "We’ve been developing a serum to activate those dormant genes. We want to elevate you. To make you the bridge between the two species. Imagine the possibilities!"
"You’re insane," I whisper. "Both of you."
"Insanity is a matter of perspective," Cassian says coolly. "Where are the others?"
Others? What others?
I can feel my body becoming heavy. I have to get out of here. If they’ve called in reinforcents... I stand abruptly, knocking my chair over backward.
Mathew sighs, reaching for , but I’m already moving. I grab the heavy wine bottle from the table and swing it hard, catching him across the temple. He staggers back, blood instantly welling from the gash.
Cassian moves with supernatural speed, but I’m running on pure adrenaline. I hurl the bottle at him and then overturn the table, sending the glassware crashing to the floor between us.
However, I lose my balance.
Before I can hit the floor, Mathew catches . He doesn’t seem frustrated, just smug. Guiding
to a chair as my legs finally give out, he asks, "Do you rember when Cassian brought you to the facility? You were supposed to et ."
I stare at him, horror dawning even through the growing fog in my mind. "You’re the crazy scientist I was supposed to work with?"
"I prefer the term ’visionary.’" Mathew grins, crouching to my eye level. "But yes. I was devastated when you escaped with the wolf king. Your mind, Maya—it’s extraordinary. The work we could have done together..."
My brain is getting confused now. Fear is thick on my tongue.
The door opens, but my vision swims too much to make out who enters. Voices murmur around , distorted as if I’m underwater. I try to focus, to fight through the haze, but whatever they gave
is holding my mind in a thick fog.
"Ti to go," soone says, their voice unnervingly gentle.
Hands grip my arms, lifting
to my feet. I try to resist, but my limbs won’t cooperate, moving like they belong to soone else. I’m guided out of the restaurant. Nobody helps. Nobody questions why a barely conscious woman is being escorted out.
"Just had too much to drink," Mathew explains to soone, his voice carrying that convincing concern that now strikes
as utterly false.
Warm air hits my face as we erge from the building. A car idles nearby. I’m folded into the backseat, my head lolling against the window. Through half-lidded eyes, I watch the restaurant shrink behind us, its golden lights blurring into streaks as we speed away.
Ti fractures, skipping forward in disjointed chunks. Highway lights. Dark forest roads. The crunch of gravel under tires.
My consciousness fades in and out, never quite reaching clarity.
I vaguely sense soone carrying
when the car finally stops. A door opens and closes. The air slls musty and unused. "Sit her here." Cassian’s voice, sharp with authority.
I’m placed in a hard, wooden chair. Rough rope scrapes my wrists as they are bound behind , tight enough to bite into my skin. My ankles are secured to the chair legs, immobilizing
completely.
"She’s coming around," Mathew observes. "The dose is wearing off."
Cold water splashes my face, shocking
into greater awareness. I gasp, blinking rapidly as the room swims into focus. A small cabin, sparsely furnished. dical equipnt lines one wall, familiar and terrifying.
Cassian stands before , smiling that pleasant smile that now turns my stomach. "Welco back, Dr. Sorin."
"What do you want?" My voice erges as a croak. A cold knot of fear tightens inside my chest. "Griffin won’t co for ."
"Oh, but he will." Cassian’s hand grips my shoulder, fingers digging painfully into my flesh. The great king rushed to save his human pet. How predictable."
"You’re wrong." I force the words out, each one tasting like ash. "He doesn’t love ."
Mathew laughs, the sound echoing harshly in the small space. "You should see your face when you say that. You’re a terrible liar, Maya."
"It doesn’t matter what I feel," I snap, struggling against my bonds. "He made his choice. He chose his kingdom, not ." "We’ll see," Cassian says, moving to prepare sothing I can’t quite glimpse. "We’ll see exactly what the wolf king is willing to sacrifice for you."
My thoughts are fracturing, reality blurring at the edges. Sothing stirs within —a strange sensation, like an entity awakening deep in my consciousness. I’ve never felt anything like it before, a buzzing awareness that seems separate from my own mind.
Cassian lifts a needle and hands it to Mathew, who bends down.
As the needle pierces my skin, darkness creeps over the edges of my vision. The strange presence inside
grows stronger, more distinct. Is this death finally coming to claim ? After months of emptiness, of grief, of alcohol-numbed existence, is this how it ends?
A part of
welcos it. A part of
welcos the release and the end of the pain.
Another part, the part that spoke with Griffin this morning and that felt sothing other than numbness for the first ti in months, rails against it. I want to tell him that I understand why he pushed
away. I want to say I forgive him, that he shouldn’t bla himself once I’m gone.
But the darkness is pulling
under, and I have no strength left to fight it.
Distantly, I hear glass shatter. Shouts. A roar that shakes the very foundation of the cabin. Then, chaos erupts.
A massive silver wolf crashes through the window, its fur gleaming like polished tal in the dying sunlight. Teeth bared, muscles taut with deadly power, it launches straight at Cassian.
Griffin!
Despite everything, my heart leaps with recognition.
Cassian shifts in an instant, his wolf form smaller but wiry and quick. The two beasts collide in a blur of teeth and claws, snarling and snapping. Furniture splinters beneath their weight. Equipnt crashes to the floor.
Two figures rush out the door, and Mathew yanks
from the chair, using
as a shield. Sothing cold and sharp presses against my throat, a scalpel, I realize dimly.
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