Chapter 34

Bastion

There’s no manual for fixing a public relations disaster when half the city thinks you’re the reason an omega had a nervous breakdown and the other half thinks you’re a barely literate gorilla with a juvie record and anger issues.

Which, fair.

By the time morning comes and we peel ourselves from the nest, it’s clear the end of this bad press cycle is nowhere in sight. Which means Ranier’s father will be looming ever closer.

It starts with pings on Ranier’s phone. Pings he tries and fails to hide. He hurries off to his study and blames it on the Council. But as Emery gets herself ready for the day and starts to work on her art, Ranier calls Wyatt and I into his office.

“It’s bad,” is all Ranier says before pulling up his phone’s view on the TV on the wall—a stream of headlines from our PR representative.

LEGACY DISASTER: Everhart’s End

COMMONER OMEGA RUINS EVERHART TRADITION

EVERHART OMEGA ART SHOW: Enough to salvage the pack?

SILVERWOOD SCANDAL TO CANDY OMEGA’S DISRUPTION: Is this the end of Everhart Pack?

They talk about us like we’re a band with the power of monarchs.

“We need to fix what we broke.” Ranier’s words cut through my thoughts. He looks to Wyatt and me with a face graver than I’ve seen on him since the day Christopher died. “And we fix it by giving Emery the best art exhibition we can manage.”

That’s his only directive before Wyatt’s off to contact influencers and tap into his network. Ranier swears to talk to the Council because he’s the only one of us with the stomach for it. And me…

I ride away from the manor on my motorcycle and try my best to figure out what the hell I can contribute. I’m not exactly PR-safe and if there’s one thing I know, it’s that you can’t out-punch a story. You can only replace it with a better one.

So I opt for something simple. I start with the flyers.

They’re not even good—just grainy color copies of Emery’s latest painting with the date and location of her show scrawled in blue marker across the bottom.

Wyatt made up the image for me in about five minutes over the phone.

It took me longer to print them all than it did for him to sneak into her nest studio for the picture.

I take the whole stack and start walking.

The city’s cold. The kind that crawls into your bones and makes you think about all the bad things you ever did. My breath hangs in the air, little proof-of-life statements that evaporate before anyone can use them as evidence.

The next hour is a blur of sidewalks, back alleys, and the hot, oily air of my favorite food stand, where the woman at the window knows my order before I say it. I hand her a flyer with my cash and she tucks it into the tip jar, as if maybe it’ll breed and multiply.

The city is alive, even when it pretends to be dead.

Every bar I step into, every smoke break outside a Council building, there’s a crowd hungry for something to talk about.

I give them Emery. I give them the show, the better story because of her innate talent for art, but I don’t let them turn it into a weapon.

By noon, I’ve run out of flyers and switched to tearing the info out of my notebook and shoving it into anyone’s palm who will take it.

It’s at The Hole—a bar so old the neon sign just says “Bar”—where things get interesting.

The place is packed for lunchtime, wall-to-wall with construction betas, old alphas too mean to retire, and the one omega who runs the pool table like a warlord.

I order a beer, because coffee makes my hands shake more than they already do, and lean against the bar to watch the action.

Someone tugs my sleeve. I turn, expecting a fight or a debt collector, and instead get a woman in a pea coat with a press badge clipped to her scarf. She’s small and looks at me like she’s already written three versions of this story and hates all of them.

“You’re Bastion Silverwood,” she says, not a question.

“I am.”

She slides onto the stool next to me and nods at the bartender, who pours her something brown and cheap. “You’ve been busy this morning.”

I shrug. “Somebody’s got to get the word out.”

She glances at the info card I handed to a guy down the bar. “That’s a bold move, considering the press cycle.”

I snort. “Nobody ever accused me of subtlety.”

She toys with the rim of her glass. “Why do it? Everyone’s saying you want her gone. The Council, your own family, even the blogs. Why stand up for an omega who’s not even yours?”

There it is. The old, sharp-edged question. Why bother?

Emery is ours. Plain and simple. So why can’t it just be that simple? I don’t ask the reporter that, though.

I wave a hand at the room. “Look, it’s not a secret.

We were supposed to be the pack that did it without an omega.

Legacy, tradition, all that. We thought it would be easier.

It wasn’t. It was shit. Emery came in and made it better.

She made us better. And we were too proud to say thank you, so we made it worse.

But we’ve moved past that. Emery is Everhart’s omega, and that is never going to change. ”

She’s scribbling in a little notebook now, fast. When she finally looks up it’s with a smile. “You’re not what I expected.”

I finish my beer. “That’s the story of my life.”

She hesitates. “Is it true what they’re saying? About the exhibition being a joke? About her not being good enough?”

Now it’s my turn to be serious. “You’ve seen her stuff?”

She shakes her head.

“Then you don’t know shit.” No malice, just fact. “She’s the only thing in this city that’s not pretending. If you don’t show up, you’re missing out.”

The bartender slides another beer down the bar, and I catch it one-handed, then turn back to the journalist. “What’s your name?”

She grins. “You know I can’t tell you that. But I’ll be there. You have my word.”

“Bring friends,” I call after her, and she raises a hand as she pushes out into the gray afternoon.

I keep visiting bars and other high-traffic areas where my face is familiar.

I even reach out to my racing peers to extend an invite.

I’m not sure that’s necessarily the crowd Emery wants at her art exhibition, but I do know that I want as many people there as possible.

I want her art and her story, her real story of hard work and determination, on display for the entire city.

For the entire world.

The world will get to see what she’s made of. And if anyone tries to start shit, they’ll have to go through me first.

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