Chapter 3
The Valent Approach
The city of Swiss was a sprawling concrete jungle of neon lights and cold shadows, a stark contrast to the manicured, suffocating lawns of the Wolfe estate. Laila gripped the steering wheel of her Porsche so hard her palms were raw, her eyes fixed on the road ahead as the mountain of her old life grew smaller in the rearview mirror. The sun was beginning to dip below the horizon, painting the sky in bruised purples and bloody oranges, a fitting backdrop for the death of her future.
She pulled into the driveway of the Swiss Hotel, a towering glass structure that screamed anonymity and luxury. It was exactly what she needed, a place where no one knew she was the failed Wolfe daughter, a place where she could bury her head and figure out how to survive the wreckage of her heart.
The valet approached, his expression neutral, but Laila did not even look at him. She climbed out of the car, handed him the keys with a trembling hand, and marched into the lobby. The air conditioning was sharp and clinical, a welcome shock to her heated skin.
“I need a suite,” she told the receptionist, her voice sounding hollow and metallic to her own ears. “The best one you have available for the night.”
The woman behind the desk tapped away at her keyboard, her smile polite and plastic. “Certainly, Miss. That will be the Presidential Suite on the fortieth floor. Will you be paying with card?”
Laila slid her black credit card across the counter. It was a card linked to her father's account, a final middle finger to the man who thought he could buy her silence with a wedding. She did not care if he tracked the transaction. By the time he realized where she was, she would be a ghost.
After checking in and dropping her purse in the sprawling, cold suite, Laila stood by the floor to ceiling window, watching the city lights blink to life. The silence was deafening. It allowed the voices of the afternoon to crawl back into her mind, the sound of the bed frame, the wet slap of skin, and the icy dismissiveness of her mother’s voice.
You will forgive her. It was just a mistake.
A sob threatened to break through her throat, but she swallowed it down. She could not stay here. The silence was an enemy. She needed noise. She needed to feel nothing.
“I’m going out,” she whispered to the empty room.
No, Laila. Do not do this, a low, velvety voice rumbled in the back of her mind.
It was Noir, her wolf. For years, Laila had kept Noir suppressed, forcing her into a state of semi dormancy so she would not frighten the civilized wolves of the Silver Moon pack. But tonight, Noir was awake, and she was pacing behind the bars of Laila’s psyche.
You are weak to the vine, Laila. You cannot handle the human poison. Stay here. Sleep. We will hunt at dawn, Noir pleaded, her golden eyes flashing in Laila's mental vision.
“Shut up, Noir,” Laila snapped aloud. “You do not know what it feels like to be treated like a piece of meat. I need to forget.”
Alcohol will not make you forget. It will only make you vulnerable, Noir warned, her voice growing distant as Laila grabbed her keys and headed back to the elevator.
Laila ignored the protest. She drove aimlessly through the city until she saw the flickering sign of a bar tucked between two warehouses. It was called The Den, a dark, gritty hole in the wall that looked like the last place anyone would look for a Wolfe.
The interior was thick with the smell of stale beer, cheap tobacco, and the underlying pheromones of low ranking wolves and humans. Laila walked straight to the bar, her heels clicking against the sticky floor. She felt the eyes of the room on her, a woman in an expensive silk dress was a target here, but she did not care.
“Give me the strongest mix you have,” she told the bartender, a man with a scarred face and weary eyes. “And do not stop until I tell you to.”
“You sure, sweetheart? This stuff is not for the faint of heart,” the bartender grunted, reaching for a bottle of dark, unlabeled liquid.
“I am not in the mood for a lecture. Just pour,” Laila snapped.
She took the first shot. It burned like liquid silver, searing her throat and sending a jolt of pure heat through her chest. Noir howled in protest, the wolf’s senses recoiling from the toxin. Laila ignored her and slammed the second shot down. Then the third. By the fifth shot, the edges of the room began to blur, and the agonizing image of Davis and Lyra started to lose its sharp, jagged clarity.
By the tenth shot, she was floating. The betrayal felt like a distant dream, a story that happened to someone else. She leaned her head back, her eyes half closed, enjoying the numbness that was finally settling into her bones.
“You look like you are celebrating something,” a rough, gravelly voice said near her ear.
Laila did not turn. She could smell him, stale sweat and a cheap, aggressive cologne. It was a man with a messy, bearded face and spiky hair that looked like it had not seen a comb in weeks. He leaned against the bar, his eyes traveling over Laila’s exposed neck with a predatory hunger.
“Leave me alone,” Laila muttered, her words slightly slurred.
“Come on now. A pretty thing like you should not be drinking alone in a place like this. Why do not you let me buy you a real drink? Something that will really get you going,” the man said, reaching out to brush a stray lock of hair from her shoulder.
Laila flinched away, her skin crawling. “I said leave me alone. I am not interested.”
The man’s face darkened, his ego clearly bruised by the blunt rejection in front of the other patrons. He stepped closer, his stature looming over her. “You think you are better than me because of that fancy dress? You are just another girl looking for a good time. Do not act all high and mighty.”
Laila turned to face him, her eyes cold despite the fog of the alcohol. “I am better than you. Now walk away before you regret it.”
The man let out a harsh, ugly laugh. “Regret it? You and what army?” He raised his hand, his fingers curling into a fist as if he intended to slap the arrogance right off her face.
Before his hand could move an inch, the atmosphere in the bar shifted violently. A wave of pure, unadulterated stranger energy rolled through the room, so thick and heavy that the music seemed to die in the air. The low chatter of the patrons vanished instantly as every wolf in the room instinctively bared their necks in submission.
The door to the bar swung open, and a man walked in with a demeanor that commanded the very shadows to move out of his way. He was tall, dressed in a suit that cost more than the entire bar, and his face was a masterpiece of cold, lethal beauty. Behind him followed a massive bodyguard with a scarred, stone like face.
The spiky haired man froze, his hand still suspended in the air.
The bodyguard stepped forward, his expression neutral but his eyes deadly. He reached into his jacket, subtly pulling back the fabric to reveal the gleaming silver of a gun tucked into a holster. He did not say a word, but the threat was loud enough to shatter the man’s bravado.
The bearded man’s face went pale. He began to tremble, his eyes darting between the bodyguard and the stranger who stood a few feet away, watching the scene with bored, icy indifference.
“I... I am sorry. I did not know... I was just leaving,” the man stammered, his voice cracking. He turned and practically ran out the door, nearly tripping over his own feet in his haste to escape the crushing pressure of the newcomer's presence.
Laila watched him go, her head spinning from the sudden shift in energy. She turned back to the bar, intending to ask for another shot, but the stool beside her was already occupied.
The stranger sat down, his movements as fluid and graceful as a panther's. The bodyguard stepped back, positioned a few feet away like a silent, watchful gargoyle. The stranger smelled of cedarwood, rain, and something ancient, a scent so powerful it made Laila’s wolf, Noir, stop her pacing and whimper in a strange mix of fear and curiosity. Laila suspected there was more to him than met the eye, his aura was too overwhelming for a normal man.
The stranger turned to Laila. His eyes were the color of a winter sky, sharp and incredibly intelligent.
“I am sorry you were treated that way,” he said, his voice a deep, resonant baritone that vibrated in Laila’s chest. “A beautiful woman like you should not be alone by herself in a place like this.”
Laila looked at him, the alcohol making her bold, though her heart was hammering against her ribs. “I can take care of myself.”
The stranger smiled, a slow, dangerous tilt of his lips. “I do not doubt that for a second. But even the strongest hunters need an ally occasionally. My name is Kaden.”