Riley’s POV
I didn’t say anything.
Just reached into the shopping bag and pulled out the dress.
?
+8 Pearls
Red. Spaghetti straps. Generic cut. The <b>kind </b>of thing you’d find in the clearance bin of any downtown <b>boutique</b>. Cheap, boring, <b>and </bpletely forgettable.
Even when they tried to pretend they cared–they couldn’t be bothered to do it <b>right</b><b>. </b>
“How <b>thoughtful</b>, Luna Zara,” I said,cing each word with sarcasm, dragging out “thoughtful” like a knife across ss.
Her smile twitched. She knew exactly what I meant
“If you don’t like it,” she said awkwardly, “I <b>can </b>find something else. Something more your taste.”
I tossed the dress back at her. “You do realize I’m still covered in bruises, right? You want me to <b>show </b>up at a formal event looking like I walked through <b>a </b>warzone?
my back. And
The welts ric left behind with his belt had faded, but the shadows were still there–on my arms, my <b>thighs</b>, the worst of it–my shoulder–still bore the angry red stretch of half–healed scars. A strappy dress like this would put every mark on disy.
Zara blinked like she’d only just remembered. “I–I didn’t think-
“Yeah, I figured. You don’t think much when ites to me.”
“I’m sorry, truly,” she murmured, lowering her eyes. “I wasn’t being considerate. <b>I </b>apologize.”
“Forget it. Just give me the money. I’ll buy my own dress–one that actually fits.”
My body had never <b>caught </b>up with me. Years of malnourishment behind cell doors will do that. Where I should’ve filled out, I never did. I was small, <b>fragile</b>–looking. <b>Thin </b>in ways that screamed neglect.
Everyone in the Ebonw Pack had model–perfect genes. ric stood at 6’1. Kael Vale was even <b>taller</b>. Zara had once been a beauty queen at Mooncrest Academy.
Met
I barely hit 53, with bones like bird wings and not a curve in sight. If I didn’t have this face–one that mirrored <b>every </b>sculpted feature of theirs–no one would believe I was the Ebonw heiress at all.
The dress Zara bought <b>wasn’t </b>mine–it <b>was </b>tailored to Scarlett’s measurements,
Of course it was.
She turned red <b>from </b>neck to ears and fumbled inside her purse before shoving a card at me. “There’s… ten thousand credits on here. If it’s <b>not </b>enough, <b>just </b><b>ask</b>.”
And with <b>that</b><b>, </b>she <b>practically </b><b>ran</b>.
I didn’t waste time. Threw on a hoodie <b>and </b>left the estate, gged a hover–<b>cab </b>straight to the <b>Nightshade </b><b>Mall</b>.
But I <b>didn’t </b>goed a dress boutique.
I walked into a suit tailor’s shop
Formal. Functional. Full coverage.
Exactly what I needed.
The assistant helped me pick a fitted ck suit. I took it into the changing room. As I zipped it up and turned to face the marror, something caught my attention just outside the door.
139 PM <b>d </b>
+8 Pearls
A guy. Young. Slim. <b>Clean</b>–cut. No Pack crest visible, but judging by the leather briefcase and polished shoes, he worked for someone high up.
He held up a <b>ruined </b>jacket. “<b>You </b>really can’t fix it?”
The tailor grimaced. “It’s Moonfang silk, <b>sir</b>. Top grade. <b>But </b>the burn is right through the chest. You’d need <b>a </b>master stitcher to reweave the fibers, and even then it won’t be perfect.”
The guy cursed under his breath. “Damn it, Our Alpha has a summit tonight–this was supposed to be his custom piece.”
He looked like he was about to cry.
I nced at the jacket in his hands. It was exquisite. Rich texture<b>. </b>Tailored to someone broad in the shoulders and lean at the waist, I’d only seen this level of craftsmanship a few times–always on visiting Alphas from the Stormridge Pack or Northhaven.
<b>Moonfang </b>silk could cost a small fortune per yard.
And repairing it would cost even more.
He turned–and <b>caught </b><b>sight </b>of me.
my bones.
I was still in my ck suit, brushing invisible <b>lint </b>from the sleeve. The <b>shoulders </b>gave me power I didn’t have in The clean <b>lines </b>skimmed my <b>waist </b>and made my pale skin glow like polished pearl. Under the lights, I didn’t look like a victim. I looked like someone in control.
He rushed over, desperation in on his face.
“You’re the tailor <b>here</b>, right? Can you help?”
I blinked. “What?”
“This <b>jacket</b>. Please. If you can patch it before sundown, I’ll pay anything. Anything”
I should’ve told him no.
But the way he looked at me–like I mattered–like he needed me… it made something flicker deep inside. Something <b>I </b>hadn’t felt in a long time.
“Say yes,” Nyra whispered faintly<b>. </b>“Let them see what your hands can do. Let them remember who you are.”
“Can I… embroider something over it?” I asked cautiously.
He hesitated. “Like a <b>patch</b>?
“More like a crest. I could use Moonweave–something <b>detailed</b><b>. </b>Artistic.”
The man looked torn.
“You know Moonweave?” he asked, eyebrows rising.
“I learned it… a while <b>ago</b>.”
I didn’t tell him I learned it behind prison <b>bars</b>. That the warden saw potential in my hands and put me under a master seamstress <b>who’d </b>been jailed for stealing royal silks.
That <b>those </b>womenbroke me, starved me, beat me–but never let anyone ruin my fingers.
Beordse my <b>hands </b>meant profit.
I
I didn’t know if I was any good. Maybe I was just better than the rest of the broken women I stitched beside.
But I could try.
“Alright,” he said atst, teeth clenched. “You’re right. The hole’s visible anyway. Might <b>as </b>well make it art.”
He handed over the jacket like he was handing me hisst breath
I took it and sat down, rolling up <b>my </b>sleeves.
“Do you have thread?” I asked the <b>tailor</b>.
She brought over a box of high–end silks–ck, gold, crimson.
I chose gold.
Moonweave embroidery required precision.
+B Pearls +8
Before stitching. I split one thread into forty–eight slivers–each thinner than a hair. The assistant’s <b>jaw </b>dropped. The guy with the jacket looked like he’d seen a ghost.
1 let the needle glide between my fingers, In. Out. Under. Over<b>. </b>
It was meditative. Addictive.
I stitched in silence–just me, the thread, <b>and </b>the silk.
Each movement was deliberate. The threads formed the shape of a flower. <b>A </b>peony, bold and unfurling. Layer uponyer of golden petals shimmered under the light. I added tiny silver strands in the center, mimicking <b>morning </b>dew.
The whole thing pulsed with life.
When I finished, I sat back <b>and </b>exhaled slowly.
The guy took the jacket with trembling fingers–and gasped.
“This… this is unreal. You didn’t fix it–you elevated it.”
The staff all crowded around, murmuring admiration.
I smiled. faint and tired. “d it’s good enough.”
“<b>Good </b>enough<b>? </b>It’s perfect.” He looked dazed. “What do I owe you?”
“Nothing.” I said, “Call it a <b>favor </b>to the Moon. I needed something good today. This helped.”
He thanked me <b>again</b>–profusely–and hurried out with the jacket,
When I stepped outside, the sky had gone dark.
Streemps lit the sidewalk in soft golden hues,
I gged another hover–<b>cab</b><b>, </b>returned to the estate–only to find it empty.
ric, Zara, Scarlett, and Kael were already gone.
I didn’t care.
In fact, I was halfway back up the stairs when a ck SUV pulled up, window down, driver ring.
“Get in,” he snapped. “<b>Alpha </b><b>and </b>Luna said to bring you to the auction.”
I didn’t move.
He frowned “Well”
I narrowed my eyes. “Get out. Open the door.”
He scoffed “<b>You </b>don’t have hands?”
Wrong answer
3:30 PM
I took one step <b>toward </b>him<b>. </b>My presence alone made him flinch.
“Remind them.” Nyra purred. “Remind them who you are.”
They still hadn’t figured it out.
This wasn’t about me begging to be epted.
This <b>was </b>about them needing me to marry into Stormridge for the Pack’s survival.
They needed me.
Send Gifts
264