Eve
My eyes burned. Hades’s voice was a low, steady rumble—gravelly and somehow still soothing—and all I wanted was to curl into him, close my eyes, and sleep.
But the maps spread across the office desk kept me anchored. Strategy markers. Quadrant divisions. Enemy positions. I couldn’t afford to drift.
I glanced up just as Hades said something that stopped me cold.
"The casualties will be high in Silverpine. I hope you know that."
His voice carried a solemn note that pierced through me like a heated blade.
I blinked. It wasn’t shock I felt—I wasn’t naive. As someone raised to one day take the Silverpine throne as its Alpha, I’d been taught the stakes of all-out war. I knew the brutal arithmetic: sons would lose mothers, daughters would lose fathers, entire families would be wiped out. War fed on violence. There was no version of this where everyone survived.
But Silverpine’s population was different.
There was no contingency laid out for their survival. If Darius got what he wanted—if he kept hiding the truth of the prophecy from them—they wouldn’t die from bullets or aerial bombardment. They’d die from the radiation. The Blood Moon’s corruption seeping into their bones, turning them feral or killing them outright.
They had no protection.
No domes. No Arrays. No composite shielding.
Nothing.
It would be genocide. A holocaust of an entire race in a single night.
My throat tightened. "How many?" I asked quietly, though I wasn’t sure I wanted the answer.
Hades’s jaw worked for a moment before he spoke. "Without intervention? Ninety percent casualties, maybe more. With what we can manage..." He paused, his finger tracing a route on the map. "Seventy-five percent."
Seventy-five percent.
The number was a crushing weight in my chest.
"That’s not war," I whispered. "That’s extermination."
"I know." His voice was rough with something that might have been grief. "But there is something we can do. It won’t save everyone, but—"
"Tell me." I leaned forward, desperate for any thread of hope.
Hades tapped the map where a thin line connected Silverpine to Obsidian territory. "The tunnels. The same route Cain’s team used. We can bring people through—evacuate as many as we can before the Blood Moon rises."
My heart stuttered. "How many?"
"A few thousand. Maybe five, if we’re lucky and move quickly." He met my eyes. "We’ll send the Eclipse Rebellion members through first. They know the territory, they have contacts among the dissidents. They can identify who’s genuinely fleeing Darius versus who might be spies."
"And once they’re here?" I asked, my mind already racing through the logistics.
"Those with military training—we offer them the serum, equipment, a place in our Gamma forces if they want to fight." Hades gestured to the quadrant markers. "The rest we distribute among the four quadrants. Civilian shelters. They’ll be cramped, but they’ll be alive."
It was something. Not enough, but something.
"What about more shelter capacity?" I pressed. "Can we build another safehouse? Expand the domes?"
Hades’s expression darkened. "We’re already building one. On the outskirts, in the eastern perimeter—the farthest point from the Iron Quarter." He rubbed his face, exhaustion evident in every line. "It’ll be rushed. Weaker than the others. But it should shield a few thousand more."
"Should?" The word felt like ash in my mouth.
"The composite material takes time to cure properly. We won’t have that time." His voice was flat, factual. "It’ll hold against radiation, but if Darius’s forces breach that far into our territory and hit it directly..." He didn’t finish the sentence. He didn’t need to.
I looked down at the map, at the tiny markers representing hundreds of thousands of lives. The numbers swam before my eyes.
"So we save five thousand through the tunnels. Maybe another three thousand in the emergency safehouse." My voice was hollow. "That’s eight thousand out of a population of—what? Sixty thousand? Eighty thousand?"
"Closer to a hundred thousand," Hades said quietly.
A hundred thousand people. And we could save eight.
Eight percent.
"Ninety-two thousand people are going to die," I said, and the words felt like they were being carved out of my chest with a dull knife. "Ninety-two thousand of my people—"


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