Whispers follow me everywhere I go now.
“Have you seen what she looks like?”, A low harsh rasp that comes from the elderly woman a few paces behind me.
“I heard she killed her husband.” A shocked gasp rings out as someone refutes that, “No, no, There’s no way… women aren’t capable of killing, Mar, we know that.”
I hear whoever Mar is scoffing in disbelief before the priest begins his sermon. He clears his throat to catch our attention, but my focus is on the coffin. How beautiful and regal it looks.
Mr Clifford Earl wasn’t part of any pack. Too wealthy to bow, and too old to obey the whims of any Alpha.
The priest’s voice is weathered and raspy as he begins, “On this day, we gather here to celebrate the life of a good man, a hardworking man. Mr. Clifford Earl lived a long healthy life, 74 years of age, and we can all agree that he had things a lot of people don’t in this day and age.”
A low murmur of approval ripples across the small crowd and someone bursts into sobs, the feminine kind. Deep, Heavy, Chest heaving and lips shuddering. Her muffled cries convey her grief and sorrow and I realize that should be me.
I should be crying.
A chill wind carries the priest’s voice over again, “I’m not talking about money when I say Mr. Earl had a lot of things. Anyone can have money, and Mr. Clifford Earl had a lot of money, but he also had the best thing of all. A family.
Mr. Earl had a wife he loved in his youth. He has a healthy son who is now grown, and after losing his wife, he found love again, in another woman who he was married to for five years before his death.
He is now succeeded by his widow and his son, two people who will forever carry him in their hearts, and in them, Mr. Clifford Earl lives on. His life has shown us that even if one has wealth, family is the greatest legacy.
So on this note, let us commit him to the earth. Let us ask that his soul be received and that those surviving him be comforted. Mr Earl will forever stay in our hearts so can we bow and say a word of prayer for him?”
Sounds of sorrow escape some of the guests attending the funeral and I clasp my gloved hands together. The cold suddenly bites and my heart feels heavy. My gloves cost three thousand dollars.
Three thousand of his dollars.
A bitter emotion roils in me as the thought invades my head. I want to see them burn.
“May he be received and welcomed in the afterlife.”
My heart whispers an entirely different prayer and I shudder as a tear rolls down my cheek. When I raise my head, the priest is staring at me. He looks away immediately and confusion overtakes the pity I was feeling for myself.
Does he also think I killed that bastard?
The rain begins with a clap of thunder and everyone around me squeals as cold heavy pellets begin to drop. I don’t squeal.
The rain doesn’t hit me.
Someone’s scent invades my space and warmth seeps off a living body. The reason the priest looked away is clear now. I’m sure he would have kept on staring.
I turn to see men handing out open umbrellas to those attending the funeral, but they don’t hand one to me. The employer of those men is holding the one I’m under.
Ryan Earl’s face is set in stone when I meet his eyes, all harsh angles and rigid lines, his cold orbs glow a deep blue and his forest scent makes me want to shift on my feet.
The whispers start again but this time they’re drowned out by the sound of the rain. The priest’s voice feels like meaningless mumblings but I catch words from his address occasionally as he continues.
I hear words, and “Wife”, and “Son” and “Ryan.”
Mostly Ryan. The priest clears his throat.
“Do…. you want to say any words as your father is laid to rest, son?”
Ryan looks away from me and the line of his jaw juts out as he clenches it. He shakes his head, but I feel I know some of the words he’d say if he goes up there.
He’d say “I’m glad my father’s dead. He was an aged bully who never loved me. Never valued me. He saw me as his bastard, and that’s funny because I’m 100 percent his child.”
Ryan glances deliberately at me and the priest picks up the hint immediately. He turns to me instead, his eyes bold and not like the others that’ rather be dead than caught staring, he asks “How about you Mrs Earl?”
“Do you have any last words to say before your husband is laid to rest?”
I realize again that this is the part where I should be the grieving widow.
If I had any sense, I’d walk over to the casket with tears streaming down my face, and I’d crumple right onto it, saying things like “You left too early Earl!” I’d sob even more and heave, my lips trembling violently as I'd cry and exclaim, “You didn’t even have time to make a child with me!”I would have done that if I loved him.
Despite what everyone thinks, I didn't despise Earl because of his age. I’d grieve for him if I had anything but hate in me for him, but I don’t and I won't, ever, so I decline.
My husband’s coffin is laid in the grave and the gift bags start being distributed by Ryan’s men. I want to turn and get out of here, but I feel someone’s presence mentally jostle me, his cold voice comes right after as he orders. “Go greet the guests.”
Ryan’s raspy voice sends a shiver down my spine, but that’s just the cold. My voice is low and my eyes are steady as I reply.
“You’re his son. Go greet your father’s guests yourself.”
Ryan chuckles deep and low, “Dead father, My father’s dead. But you’re his wife, his widow, aren’t you, Layla?”
I can hear the bite in his tone. The hoarse spite in his words. There’s a slight dusting of hair on his chin and Ryan Earl’s eyes are menacing when I meet them so I nod, conceding.
“I am his widow, and that makes me your stepmother. Now be a good boy and go send the guests away, and Ryan….” I step closer to him invading his space and letting the hatred in my heart make my tone sharp “Don’t ever sneak into my room again. Do I have to call the police and let them know you’re a creep, Mr. Earl?”
Ryan's gaze meets mine as a rare smile greets his lips. His face turns even colder and he leans low to whisper into my ear.
“You could have sent me out, Layla.”
At six foot two, well built, and startlingly handsome, I have to tilt my head upwards if I want to look at Ryan's face, but it’s a price I’m willing to pay.
I crane my neck upward lightly, boring my gaze into his and letting the ice all my pain has left me seep into my bones.
“I have a headache, so give the guests my regards Ryan.”
I walk away and wait for him to stop me.
The rain patters heavily on the stone hedges and the interlocked pathways. The fur coat I wear gets heavy with water each step I take. My heart slams in my chest as my heels clack against the stone floors, but I keep my head high, and I walk past all of them.
I walk until I get to the car and I slip in. I nod to the driver and immediately we’re on our way to the mansion.
The image of Ryan in the rain assaults me. The open umbrella still in his hands and his emotions clearly locked away from his face.
I feel my stupid heart do something stupid at the sight of that so I push that image away and contemplate how cold I feel inside instead. I scoff under my breath.
I don’t need anyone to hold an umbrella for me.
A tear slides down my cheek and my lips wobble but I push the emotions away. I can’t cry.
I won’t cry. Not anymore.
That bastard’s dead, and I'm a full-grown woman now, so I'm free. I’m free to go wherever I want.
And I will. I’ll go as fast and as far away from here as I can.
Ryan’s face is stormy as he steps into the house. His men, fully suited in black and wearing sunshades spread out into every corner of the place.Some of them take the stairs to the left, the others take the stairs to the right, more flank into the kitchen, and the gymnasium downstairs, They simply fill the whole house and I nod to myself.He’ll have company then.“I’m leaving.”Ryan casts stormy eyes at me as he looks up, his Adam's apple bobbing when he husks a response, “I didn’t hear that right.”His voice is a deep rasp that sets fear churning low in my belly but I ignore that feeling. I extinguish it and clear my throat as I repeat myself.“I said I'm leaving.”My purse is in one hand and the handle of my traveling bag is in the other. “I’m catching the next bus out of town, and then the next flight, and the next flight after that. I’m leaving.”My chest constricts as images flash through my mind but I hold myself steady.For five years I have suffered in the marriage my parents
Ryan’s pov.“What’s she doing now?”My hand skims over the rim of the monitor as I look at the small figure.In my field of vision is a man by a window. One of my windows, and one of my men. The dark-suited man answers in a low whisper.“She’s getting a refill, sir.”My eyebrows bunch in annoyance.“A refill of what?”My tone is impatient but I keep my temper in check. It’s one of the things I'll need to work on if I want to be better.The video changes, switched automatically from the CCTV cameras to the eye camera in the sunshades all my men wear. Layla looks like an actress out of an eighties movie.That summer yellow-tinged appeal all old Hollywood movies have to them lends her an air of exotic beauty, and for a while, all I can do is stare.Her hair falls like golden wool down her back. It looks soft to the touch, even with the slightly blurred resolution. Her hair feels wild and matted from days spent in her bed yet unbelievably soft and thick.Layla looks beautiful.So beautifu
The guard looks unsure when I arrive but my glare gets him cooperating immediately. I shove him aside when his wits don’t tell him he has to move and I crouch to peer through the keyhole.Layla’s taken a blanket to every security camera in her room.She’s shut down every electrical appliance and blocked all her windows. There’s barely any light filtering in through the glass and her room has been thrown into semi-darkness. I frown because how many dresses can one woman have? And how thick can they be?A voice from behind interrupts my thoughts.“I… almost went in to dissuade her, Sir Ryan. I remembered you said we shouldn’t.”I turn back to glance at the guard and I peer at him, “You’re new aren’t you?”He nods eagerly and I take stock of his featuresTall the way all my men are tall, although he’s a bit on the shorter side compared to most of their general height. He’s stocky the way all my men are stocky.He’d have made a typical Earl guard, except he seems a bit empty up there whe
Layla's pov.I am not a fan of alcohol. Never was, at least not before I married my late husband. He always went to these events, meetings that I had to escort him to and they never served strawberry juice for some reason. I eventually got used to the Champagnes and wines they served and soon… I found that I craved them and needed them to go through life being married to a man that thought it okay to pimp me out to his friendsA surge of anger overtakes me in that moment and I physically shake my head to smooth out my emotions. I want to lose myself for a while.I sway my hips to the sweet sensual music playing from the old music box, following the flow and beat of the alcohol now in my system, letting loose as much as I can.Tears run down my cheeks as the memories I try to keep at bay force their way through the walls I carefully built a long time ago. This was supposed to be my big break, the opportunity to get out of a house that has done nothing but scar me in the last five y
I hear Ryan’s pained groans echoing from the kitchen, but I pay them no heed, this is my chance, my way out. My mind is consumed with one thought: escape. With silent determination, I slip out of the ornate mansion, my steps light and swift as I navigate the dimly lit corridors. The cold air greets me like a long-lost friend as I make my way towards the desolate parking lot, wrapping me in its cool embrace as I emerge from the imposing structure. The scent of rain lingers in the air, a prelude to the storm that looms in the distance. My eyes dart around for any sign of Ryan’s guards, I know all it will take is one slip up and I’ll be stuck back in that house.My hope of freedom would be gone forever. Every footstep feels like a victory, each turn a step closer to freedom. My heart pounds in my chest, the adrenaline surging through my veins, urging me forward. In the solitude of the lot, I clutch the keys in my trembling hands, trying them on several cars before one obediently respo
Ryan’s pov.My breaths come in sharp, uneven gasps as I struggle to shake off the remnants of the tormenting dream. The faceless figure’s words still echo within me, a bitter reminder of my inadequacy.In the darkness of my subconscious, the silhouette looms, its features concealed by an impenetrable shroud. The air hangs heavy with anticipation, an unspoken certainty that something pivotal is about to unfold. And then, like a razor, the voice pierces the silence. “You’re not good enough for me, Ryan. I reject you,” it whispers, laden with scorn and contempt.I feel my heart plummet, burdened by the weight of those cruel words. I attempt to protest, to refute the unjust condemnation, but my voice fails me, leaving me exposed and defenseless. The figure dissolves into the shadows, leaving behind a desolate void that reverberates in the depths of my being.As I sit upright, the remnants of the dream ensnare my consciousness, a lingering fog that refuses to dissipate. Rejection is unfam
Layla’s pov.“Where do you think she was even headed to?” I stir from sleep, my eyelids heavy with the weight of unconsciousness. A hazy fog envelops my mind, leaving me disoriented and lost. The sterile, white hospital room seems unfamiliar. Two voices converse in low tones, their words muffled by the cottony haze lining my senses. One voice rises slightly, The other man mumbles in response, his tone troubled yet urgent. I strain to comprehend their discussion, but the effort leaves me with a throbbing ache in my head. Although I cannot understand the men, their conversation continues.The taller man leans In, his eyes fixed on my fragile form. “She looks so lost, so different from the last time we saw her. What do you think happened to her, man?”His companion, a wider blurred figure with a furrowed brow, shakes his head in disbelief, his tone more robotic, almost solemn but in that hard way. “I don’t know, but she’s barely alive."The taller man’s voice softens and he asks almo
"I said WHAT the hell are you doing here!" My voice echoes in the room, my eyes filled with hate as I glare at these pieces of my past."Layla.." Damien's deep familiar voice begins. His eyes hold a softness that I have never seen in them before and It irks me.Where was this kindness when I needed it? I try to sit up but I wince as a sharp pain around my ribs momentarily stops me from doing so."Shit, are you alright?” He asks softly, "Please don't strain yourself." He says, his hands wrapping around me but I quickly slap it off."I'll do as I please, and don't touch me." I see the tight clench that appears to his jaw but I couldn't care less about that.Damien withdraws his hands hesitantly but he still watches me closely as I right myself. I wince again, trying to find a more balanced position to sit.Everything hurts."Are you sure you’re…?"He stops the moment he notices my glare and I try to gather the thoughts in my head. My eyes seem to spin as I think about it, because the
38: Alek doesn’t ask me weird questions anymore and I feel thankful for that. There would have been a limit to my answers and once I passed that limit, I’m not sure I wouldn’t have snapped at him.Right now though, there’s something else on my mind, something more pressing.How do I…deal with all this?I know that sounds incredibly vague but it’s still what’s on my mind. Today is the first day of 120 days I need to be around Damien and Alek.Alek just said he and Damien came into the city to track down someone who’s been giving the pack trouble, and even though I have no idea who that might be, I want to assume that it will take up most of their time.This trial we’re having is for them to see if they can get me to come over to them, but for me, it’s a way to fulfill a simple formality. I don’t think Damien and Alek can ever change.Sure. I might have thought that yesterday, but today, I feel differently.The images of Damien I caught while in his wolf form as he hunted still flash p
“Is Ryan being rude to you?”I find that I haven't really forgotten how to ride. It just feels like it’s a memory I locked up for a while, and which is now taking some time to come back open. I try to keep my hands to myself, and not in my hair aiming to get out the twigs and leaves that have taken root in it.My horse shot me right into the copse of trees on the Earl mansion grounds.Alek dangles the reins in his hands lightly so I can return my attention to him and I do. He’s helping me lead the horse now, so I have to pay him some attention at least, I respond to his unanswered question,“Why should that be any of your concerns?”I sound like I just got told my favorite cat died.“Because there was tension between you two earlier today?”And in response to that, I look up to meet Alek’s eyes in a gesture that I hope shows I do not appreciate whatever it is he’s doing right now, and he looks away, shrugging and clearing his throat. The air between us grows awkward even before he sp
Alek’s voice is an annoying presence when it enters my head,“Trouble in paradise?”But I ignore him. He sidles up closer to me, and this time he asks verbally, clearly seeing I don’t like how he speaks into my mind,“Trouble in paradise Layla?”Alek’s voice is a husky soft thing and I take it in, letting myself breathe a bit before shaking my head and responding to him calmly,“What paradise?”Alek chuckles and out of instinct, a smile lines my lips. I wipe that smile away immediately because it’s obvious I'm letting their joint effect influence me too much. The task in front of me is what I should focus on right now, and I do, trying to clear my head as I look at the stables.Ryan is gone like I asked.Damien is somewhere behind, and I don't know if he’s behind trying to talk to Ryan, or if he’s behind because he’s trying to figure out where he can get what we’ll need for hunting. Absentmindedly I ask,“Is Damien still…”I catch myself before I can complete the statement but Alek
Layla’s pov.Alek and Damien are waiting for me by the time I get back to my room and something in me squirms at the sight of them. I did not think they’d be here so I was not ready for them. I still am not, and for some reason, I feel it’s because of what happened just now with Ryan.I frown because what even happened with Ryan?The confusion that question brings to my heart is brief, and yet it plagues me in an odd way. Damien’s voice interrupts my thoughts and I snap my head to him as he asks in his deep baritone again,“Are you okay, Layla?”Ryan’s voice echoes in my mind as he asks me that same question and I shake my head just to get it out. That felt like deja vu just now, and there’s no need for anything like that.I feel Damien’s and Alek’s gazes fixed on me and I decide I have to take some deep breaths, just to get this choking feeling out of my heart.They watch me close my eyes and take those deep breaths.They watch me as I try to stabilize this strange pounding in my hea
Ryan’s pov. Layla is standing outside my door when I open it and I can see it in her eyes. She’s caught me.She caught me red-handed, And while I don't want to let her know if that affects me, I know it does.There’s a stilted kind of hurt in her green eyes, and then it seems she gathers herself rapidly, pulling on a brave face and giving me the kind of look that tells me she understands this game, she’s brought herself to understand it for a while now and she’s done all that for a reason. Her eyes tell me if I want to screw half the population of the help in the mansion, then I can. If I want to have more girlfriends that she can count on the fingers of her hand, then I can too. She’s not going to stop me. It’s not like we had an agreement that I wouldn't take my fun where I could find it.Somehow that makes the reality of all this even more depressing, because as much as I can, I’d like her to know it’s not like that. This was just a one-time thing, but before I can even formulate
Damien is the first to show up at my door the next day.I feel surprise run through me when I open the door to meet his face, and he also looks surprised when he sees me, all dressed up, all ready for whatever the day might bring. He swallows awkwardly, and then he drops a statement,“You forgot this outside yesterday.”I frown, lost at first as to what he might mean, then I look at what’s in his hands and I see it’s a bracelet. My bracelet.How…I snatch it back almost selfishly, because this is one of those things I do not joke with. How did it even get outside?Damien huffs, a sound that I think is laced with amusement, and I recollect myself immediately because this isn’t what I'm meant to be doing. I’m not meant to be grabbing things so greedily. I should show them I am as in control of myself as I need to be.“Thank you.” The words, thankfully come out sincere, and also aloof at the same time. I clear my throat and go on, “I didn’t know I'd taken it out yesterday.I must have fo
Layla’s pov.I am left alone and the moment I get to my room, I close the door and crumple right behind it - my heart pounding in my chest and my breath coming in decidedly short bursts.I don’t know why I feel like this. Or why this even affects me, yet I can't get the image of their faces out of my head, and I wonder if I'm not in over my head.Ryan and Damien seem to have made up, and if they have then I'm guessing he’s going to be helping them in… wooing me, or getting me to trust them. I suspect he’s doing that already, and I know Ryan.Ryan does not do anything that does not benefit him first, and this is a game we’re all playing - a sly game, and to succeed, I have to be as smart as they are. If not smarter.I go through all Breanne said to me earlier again and I recount the points in my head.Men do not like an easy woman, or sometimes they do, depending on the type of man, but to be on the safer side, be the difficult type.I tuck that away in my mind and move on to the next
Ryan’s pov.Layla leaves and we are plunged into silence again.Damien sits to my far right, by the window and nursing an astrology book, Alek sits to my far left, nursing a book on music and musical chords.I am also with a book, because I couldn't bear to sit here without anything to do when they came in, yet when I look at the book in my hands, I see that it isn’t one I like.I never really liked books.My father never really liked them either. My mother did, and she almost taught me to, but when she died, my father killed it.Alek and Damien seem like people who like to read, genuinely like to read, and I guess with reading comes silence, and so they have been silent.They have been silent ever since we came here, but right now I can feel the tension in the air. Layla is gone now, probably back to her room.She’s announced that she has agreed to stay for four months, the way I had asked her to agree to it, yet something feels bitter in me at the fact that she is actually giving th
I go back into the manor to look for them.The strangeness of this action feels like ice on my skin, because two days ago, if anyone had asked me what I would be doing at this moment, I'd have said I'd still be in my room, not doing anything and waiting to die from hunger or lack of sunlight.Yet here I am, looking for the same three people I consider the current punishment the world is dealing to me.Their scent fills the whole place….It’s almost like everywhere I step foot, there’s a slight fragrance that tells me Damien has been here, Alek has been there,Ryan has been… literally everywhere in this house.I find them in one of the relaxation rooms, and the moment I come in, all three of them snap their heads to me. It’s an eerie sight, but it becomes less eerie when I feel the mate bond pulsing. Damien and Alek must have sensed me, and Ryan… must have heard my footsteps.They’re reading books.They each have a book in hand, and the sight of it makes me feel something squirm in me