Chapter 135 The Quiet After the Storm
Morning came slowly.
The house had the strange stillness that followed a long night of violence. It did not feel peaceful. It felt exhausting.
Aria stood in the kitchen with both hands around a mug that had already gone cold. Pale sunlight crept through the tall windows and stretched across the floor.
Doors opened and closed with restraint. Footsteps stayed soft. Voices remained low. Everyone understood instinctively that this was not the kind of morning for loud conversations.
Kane entered a few minutes later.
He had already showered and changed. His hair was still damp, and for the first time in days his shoulders looked relaxed. He poured himself coffee and leaned against the counter beside her.
For a moment they simply stood there.
Then he reached over and took her hand.
“It’s over,” he said.
Aria looked at him.
“Is it?”
“Yes.” His voice was steady. “Alexander is dead. The war ended last night.”
He squeezed her fingers.
“The twins are safe. You’re safe. The territory is stable again. We can finally breathe.”
Aria wanted to believe that.
More than anything.
She nodded slowly.
“What happens now?” she asked.
“Damage control.”
Kane took a sip of his coffee.
“Marcus has already started moving the story through the human world.”
“What story?”
“The one they will believe.”
He watched her carefully.
“A private jet explosion,” he said. “Alexander Pierce died when his aircraft went down over the Atlantic shortly after midnight.”
Aria exhaled quietly.
“That will hold?”
“It already is.”
Footsteps approached from the hallway.
Marcus walked into the kitchen with his phone in one hand and a tablet tucked under his arm.
“First press conference starts in forty minutes,” he said. “Human media is already circulating the crash report. Markets reacted within an hour.”
“How bad?” Kane asked.
“Twelve percent drop for Pierce Industries.”
Aria blinked.
“That fast?”
Marcus gave a faint smile.
“Investors panic quickly when billionaires die.”
“And?” Kane asked.
“And we’re buying.”
Marcus tapped something on the tablet.
“Quietly. Through secondary firms and holding accounts. By the end of the week we’ll control the majority stake.”
Aria watched the two men for a moment.
“You were ready for this.”
Kane shrugged slightly.
“I planned for the possibility.”
Marcus turned the tablet toward her.
The screen showed a live broadcast.
A serious anchor sat behind a desk while an image of twisted aircraft debris filled the background.
Billionaire industrialist Alexander Pierce presumed dead following a private jet explosion late last night.
One sentence.
One image.
That was how a powerful man like Alexander vanished from the human world.
Marcus lowered the tablet.
“Press conference,” he reminded them.
Kane nodded.
“Let’s finish this.”
Two hours later the main hall of the territory headquarters was filled.
Human reporters occupied one side of the building under careful supervision, cameras pointed toward the podium where Marcus and several representatives were handling the official narrative.
Across the hall, the wolves gathered.
Alphas. Betas. Elders.
Leaders from the seven territories Alexander had taken.
The truth had already reached them during the night. They knew what had happened. They knew what Alexander had done and how it had ended.
Now they waited.
Aria stood beside Kane near the center of the room as Marcus addressed the press.
Questions about the crash filled the hall.
Flight records. Mechanical failure. Rescue operations that would never find survivors.
The story was solid.
Clean.
Believable.
While the reporters focused on the podium, Aria noticed movement near the back of the room.
Several children stood there with a pair of caretakers.
For a moment Aria did not recognize them.
Then she did.
Her chest tightened.
They were the children Alexander had taken.
The ones he had used in his moon fever experiments.
She walked toward them slowly.
The smallest boy looked up when she approached. He could not have been more than seven.
“Hi,” Aria said gently.
He studied her for a moment before giving a shy smile.
“You’re the one who helped us,” he said.
Aria crouched down so she was at eye level.
“How are you feeling?”
“Better,” the boy said.
One of the older girls nodded enthusiastically.
“They said we’re going to be okay.”
Aria looked at them carefully.
They did look better.
The hollow exhaustion she had seen in their faces months ago had faded. Their skin had color again.
“And Alexander can’t find us anymore,” the little boy added.
His voice held a certainty that made Aria’s chest ache.
“That’s right,” she said softly.
“He’s gone.”
The children exchanged relieved looks.
One girl hugged her caretaker’s arm.
“We don’t have to hide anymore,” she said.
Aria felt something loosen inside her chest.
For the first time since the war began, these children were laughing.
Talking.
Planning their lives like normal kids again.
She stood slowly.
Across the hall the press conference was ending.
Marcus stepped aside while Kane moved toward the center of the room where the wolves had gathered.
The noise settled almost immediately.
Kane did not raise his voice.
He did not need to.
“Last night the war that has controlled this territory ended,” he said.
His eyes moved across the gathered leaders.
“Alexander Pierce is dead. The power he used to rule through fear is gone.”
No one spoke.
“We will tell the human world he died in a jet explosion,” Kane continued. “That story protects us and keeps them from looking where they should not look.”
Several wolves nodded.
Then Kane stepped forward.
“The seven territories Alexander captured now fall under my authority.”
The room tightened instantly.
“But listen carefully.”
He opened his hands slightly.
“You are not prisoners,” Kane continued. “If any pack wishes to leave and govern themselves independently again, they are free to do so.”
Quiet murmurs spread through the gathering.
“You will not be hunted,” Kane said. “You will not be punished. The choice belongs to you.”
An older alpha stepped forward.
A tall gray haired man from the western territory.
“You’re offering us freedom,” he said.
“Yes.”
The man studied him for several seconds.
Then he bowed his head slightly.
“My people will stay.”
Another voice followed.
“And mine.”
“And mine.”
The tension began to dissolve.
Respect replaced suspicion.
Marcus leaned toward Aria.
“He just secured seven territories without threatening a single one of them.”
Aria nodded quietly.
Around the hall wolves stepped forward to clasp Kane’s arm in greeting.
Laughter slowly returned.
Food appeared. Conversations grew louder. Relief spread through the room as the weight of the war finally lifted.
Kane found Aria again in the crowd and took her hand.
“You see?” he said softly.
She looked around the hall.
The children laughing with their caretakers.
The wolves celebrating.
“You did it,” she said.
Kane shook his head.
“We did.”
Later, when the crowd had thinned, Aria stepped onto the balcony overlooking the territory.
For the first time in a long time, the world felt calm.
Kane joined her a moment later.
“You disappeared.”
“I needed air.”
He leaned beside her.
“It’s over.”
Aria looked out across the bright landscape.
Amanda’s voice still echoed faintly in her mind.
The traitor is closer than you think.
She folded her arms slowly.
“The war is over,” she said.
“Yes.”
She exhaled.
“But the traitor is still out there.”
It was not over yet.