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"Vows of Silver and Stone" Chapter 9

Chapter 9: Four Years of Ashes

Gold did not burn. It merely melted, waiting to be reforged into something sharper.

Four years passed over the continent like a heavy, ash-choked winter.

In the mortal world, empires rose and fell on the stock market. In the supernatural world, a new name emerged from the dark, whispered with equal parts absolute terror and desperate reverence.

“S.”

No one knew the gender of the underworld tycoon. No one knew the bloodline.

To the high-ranking vampire syndicates in New York, S was the ghost who held their dirtiest political secrets.

To the ancient witch covens in New Orleans, S was the mythical master restorer who could piece together dead, shattered relics that had been buried since the witch trials.

And to the rogue Alphas operating in the neutral zones, S was the absolute king of information—a shadow entity who could destroy a pack’s entire economy with a single leak.

Seraphina Novak died in the snow four years ago.

Now, standing in the center of a hyper-modern, glass-walled penthouse overlooking the dark, sprawling skyline of Chicago, she was the architect of the underworld.

The fading gray sweater and the stained, coarse maid uniform were ghosts of a previous life.

Tonight, she stood in front of a floor-to-ceiling mirror, her posture carrying the sharp, unyielding majesty of a sovereign. Her porcelain skin was flawless, completely healed of the blisters and scars her family had left behind.

Her sunlit copper-red hair no longer fell in messy, unkempt tangles; it cascaded down her back in loose, elegant waves that caught the amber reflection of the city lights like a wild, controlled fire.

She reached out, her long, slender fingers tracing the cool glass of a display case. Inside sat a pristine, ancient obsidian compass—the very relic she had fixed in Alistair’s study on her first day of freedom.

Her hands were bare. They were beautiful. And they were deadly.

Over the past forty-eight months, she hadn't just used Alistair’s black-market routes; she had conquered them.

She had crawled through the blood-soaked trenches of the underground auctions, survived three separate assassination attempts by rival rogue syndicates, and executed every single traitor with a cold, smiling detachment that shocked even the oldest vampires.

She had learned to compartmentalize her soul. The girl who loved, the girl who hoped, the girl who wept—she had left that girl’s corpse frozen in the Silver Moon woods.

"You look detached tonight, my Queen."

The low, velvet voice drifted from the shadow of the velvet curtains near the balcony.

Alistair stepped into the ambient glow of the room.

Four years had not changed a single line of his carved, Nordic features. His platinum-silver hair was still slicked back into that sharp, classic side part, his immaculate charcoal suit hugging the massive, dangerous expanse of his shoulders.

He looked like an immortal god who had simply watched the decades roll past.

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But his eyes were different.

Whenever he looked at Seraphina, the cold, calculating indifference he showed the rest of the world completely evaporated. His amethyst-violet eyes burned with a deep, silent, and fiercely protective devotion.

He had spent four years watching her from the shadows. He had given her the black-gold crest, but he had never fought her battles for her.

He had stood back, allowing her to grow her own claws, to bleed, to conquer, and to ascend. And in doing so, he had fallen completely, hopelessly in love with the dangerous monster she had become.

He walked over, stopping exactly one pace behind her. He didn't touch her—he never did without her permission—but his heavy, dominant scent of ancient stone and dark violets enveloped her like a royal shroud.

"The board is set, Alistair," Seraphina murmured, looking at his reflection in the dark glass.

"The pieces are moving exactly where I told them to go."

Alistair looked down at her profile, a small, dark smirk tugging at his lips.

"I received the latest analytical reports from the eastern sectors this morning. It seems a certain pack has finally reached its breaking point."

Seraphina turned around slowly, her emerald-green eyes flashing with a sharp, calculating amusement.

"Tell me."

"The Silver Moon Pack is facing absolute, catastrophic bankruptcy," Alistair said smoothly, pulling a silver pocket watch from his vest with a slow, rhythmic elegance.

"Alpha Kilian’s aggressive territorial expansions over the last three years have failed. He overleveraged his pack’s assets, relying on weapon contracts that were mysteriously cancelled by the black market. And his new Luna..." Alistair paused, his voice dripping with aristocratic disdain.

"...Elena Novak, has spent the last eighteen months emptying their reserves on illegal magical artifacts to sustain her failing fire-wolf aura."

Seraphina let out a low, soft laugh. It was a beautiful, chilling sound that didn't reach her eyes.

"They don't know that every single weapon contract they lost was redirected by S," she whispered, her fingers curling over the edge of the glass case.

"They don't know that the black-market dealers who sold Elena those fake artifacts were on my payroll."

"They are desperate," Alistair continued, his amethyst eyes locking onto hers with a lethal intensity. "Kilian has sent three separate, high-priority encrypted messages to the shadow empire this week.

He is begging—literally begging—the great information king S for a private meeting at the upcoming global Supernatural Summit. He is willing to sell his pack's ancestral land rights just for a injection of underground capital."

The trap had officially snapped shut.

For four years, Seraphina had fed their arrogance. She had watched from across the continent as Kilian played the part of the powerful, billionaire Alpha, while she slowly, methodically ate away at the foundations of his castle. She had turned his pride into his own noose.

And now, he was coming to her, on his knees, begging the shadow he didn't know he had created to save him.

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"He wants a meeting," Seraphina murmured, her gaze drifting toward the wardrobe across the room, where a garment bag hung.

"Then I suppose it would be terribly rude of me to keep my former Alpha waiting."

Alistair stepped closer, the heat of his massive body radiating through his silk shirt, his dark purple beast humming with a fierce, quiet ecstasy in his chest. He reached out, his long, pale fingers lightly brushing against the tips of her copper-red hair.

"Are you ready to see him again?" Alistair asked softly, his voice dropping to a dangerous, low octave.

"The moment you walk into that ballroom, Seraphina... the world will know exactly what you are. The Firstborns will be standing behind you, but the blood on the floor will be yours to paint."

Seraphina looked up at him, her emerald eyes completely steady, devoid of a single trace of hesitation.

"I have spent four years living in the ashes, Alistair," she whispered, her hand rising to lightly touch his jawline, a rare, intimate gesture that made Alistair’s violet eyes instantly darken with a fierce possessiveness.

"It's time to let Kilian see what happens when the fire comes back."

She pulled away smoothly, walking toward the wardrobe. With a fluid, decisive movement, she unzipped the garment bag, revealing a breathtaking, custom-tailored emerald green silk gown with an asymmetric, one-shoulder cut and a hip-high slit designed to reveal the lethal grace of her legs.

Beside it hung a heavy, pristine pure white cashmere coat—the perfect cloak for a winter queen.

She slipped into the green silk, the expensive fabric whispering against her skin like a quiet promise of victory.

She pulled the white cashmere coat over her shoulders, zipping it up to her throat, completely hiding the emerald gown beneath it.

She walked to the private elevator, her high heels clicking against the marble floor with a rhythmic, terrifying precision that sounded exactly like a countdown.

Alistair stood by the window, his dark purple pupils fully bleeding into his irises as he watched her hand slip into her pocket, fingers resting securely against the heavy black-gold Rothschild crest.

The elevator doors opened on silent tracks.

Seraphina stepped inside, turning around to face the city skyline. She looked at her reflection one last time—the porcelain skin, the vibrant red hair, the cold, lethal green of her gaze.

The maid was dead.

The queen had arrived.

"Time to go home," Seraphina whispered as the elevator doors began to close, "and collect my debts."

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