Chapter 5

Chapter Five

Seraphina

Falling Like The Stars – James Arthur

Las Vegas burns beneath the sinking sun, the city stretched out in veins of neon and fire. Reds. Golds. Electric blues. The Strip pulses beneath me—cars crawling, people spilling onto the sidewalks, laughter drifting upward toward a sky scorched by man-made light.

I wonder about them. Are they happy down there? Do they know how fragile it all is, how easily a life can be taken, rerouted, owned?

My palm rests against the cold glass. I am so far above it all, like I’ve stepped outside the world instead of into it, trapped in luxury.

Behind me, Johnathon sits at the table with two armed men, jackets open just enough to reveal the black outlines of guns at their hips. A map lies spread between them, weighted down by glasses and folded paper. They speak quietly. Their words aren’t meant for me, so I don’t listen.

My mind is elsewhere, tethered to images Jonathan showed me days ago, news that had lifted my spirits and kept me breathing inside this glamorous cell. I think of my husband. I think of Trey.

What is he doing right now? Is he awake? Is he in pain? Does he resent me for what happened? Is he trying to move on? I can’t blame him. I couldn’t. What Trey did for me… I doubt anyone else would have. Marrying a stranger. Offering me a home. Protection. Freedom. A voice.

Does he feel me the way I feel him?

The ache hits sudden and deep, stealing my breath. Thirteen days without his voice, his touch, the certainty of him beside me.

A chair scrapes softly across the floor.

One of Johnathon’s men drops into it, boredom etched across his face as he grabs the remote and flicks on the television.

The sudden glow cuts through the dim room, and sound rushes in—voices overlapping, camera static, the hum of a crowd too large to be contained. Then the image sharpens.

A hospital. Lights blazing against the night. Thousands packed into the streets outside. Candles dot the darkness like stars fallen to earth, trembling in hands pressed shoulder to shoulder. Some are crying, some praying, some holding up phones, signs, pictures.

Burnt Ashes.

Trey.

My breath leaves me in a broken gasp. The reporter’s voice cuts through the murmur of the crowd.

“—fans gathered in the thousands outside Cedars-Sinai Medical Center over the weekend, holding vigil for Burnt Ashes lead guitarist, Trey Baker, who remains hospitalized following the violent attack earlier this month—”

The camera pans over tear-streaked faces, hands clasped in prayer, candles lifted high like offerings. My chest tightens painfully. Then his face fills the screen. Bruised. Pale. But unmistakably alive.

He’s alive. A fresh sob tears from my throat before I can stop it.

The room falls silent. Even Johnathon’s men freeze.

The reporter continues, but I barely hear her as the footage shifts to a still image.

It’s us. Our wedding day. Trey dips me low, one arm firm at my lower back, the other hand spread across my thigh, holding me like a man in love—as if everything between us had always been real.

His smile is wide, reckless, his joy so pure it nearly hurts to look at.

I remember the moment—the dizzying whirl of it all, his eyes laughing at some private thought, the way my chest had ached from being in his arms. I remember his voice, low and sure, commanding me so effortlessly, as though he had always known how to pull the invisible threads of me into his hands.

Just look at me, Dove.

I fell into his eyes as easily as breathing, as naturally as if I had been made to do nothing else, and even now I wish I could live inside that moment forever.

Word for word, second by second. Tears pour down my face, hot and fast, blurring everything.

I press a trembling hand to my mouth, trying to stop the sob clawing from my chest. Every set of eyes in the room locks on the screen.

The talking dies completely. Then the screen shifts again.

A video starts. Trey on stage. Christmas lights glow behind him, soft and golden, wrapping the crowd in warmth.

He grips the mic, eyes shining, voice thick with emotion.

“She came into my life when I didn’t know what peace was…” My heart splinters.

“She reminded me that love doesn’t have to save you—it can change you.” Tears blur him further.

“It makes you want to fight for it. It makes you want to be a better person.” His voice roughens.

“So, this one’s for her. For the girl who taught me how to breathe again.

” The music swells, his voice echoing rich and alive through the silent venue, wrapping around me as if his arms are still here, as if I can feel his warmth.

For a moment, I am not trapped. I am not running.

I am back in his arms, breathing him in, safe.

Loved. My knees weaken, and I sink slowly into the chair beside the table, clutching my chest as if I can hold it together.

He loves me. So fiercely. So openly. The whole world knows.

The world is praying for him. For us. And I am here.

Stolen. Hidden. But not forgotten. The pain is unbearable—sharp, crushing, deep enough to steal my breath—but beneath it, something stronger rises.

If Trey can fight his way back from death, if he can stand on a stage and pour his heart into loving me…

then I can endure. How could I doubt him?

Lose faith? No. I know better. I know him.

He isn’t letting go, and neither am I. I wipe my face slowly, breathing through the ache, letting the sorrow harden into resolve.

They can move me. Threaten me. Hide me away. But they cannot break what binds us.

“Of course, this isn’t the first time Burnt Ashes has been in the news lately,” the reporter drones on, her voice light over the flickering screen, but I barely hear the rest. “With lead vocalist— Logan Dale—suffering a near life-changing injury, following the tragic passing of their former band mate, Braden—” I flinch.

My fingers tighten against the edge of the chair, but I can’t look away as images turn to Logan, then Braden’s funeral.

The words blur into noise. My mind is only on him.

My husband. Alive. I don’t hear Johnathon move until the air shifts behind me.

“Come, Seraphina,” he says evenly. “Let’s take the dogs down. I’m sure they’d like some air.” A pause. “Maybe you would, too.”

I turn.

His face gives nothing away—no warmth, no threat. But something coils beneath the calm.

I nod once.

Artemis and Klause rise immediately, sleek and alert as I call them to my side. Johnathon places his hand at my lower back as he ushers us toward the door, his touch light, deliberate. Control disguised as courtesy.

The elevator doors slide shut.

He presses the button for the basement.

No security follows.

Not that he needs them. He could overpower me easily if he chose. And I would never risk my dogs.

The doors open to concrete and shadow.

The air is cooler here—damp, heavy, clinging to my skin. Fluorescent lights buzz overhead, sparse and unforgiving, leaving wide pockets of darkness between them. Our footsteps echo as we move through the side exit and into the parking structure, the sound swallowed and returned in distorted waves.

The dogs surge ahead, restless.

I step into an open space and stop, keeping them both in sight. Johnathon leans against a concrete pillar, arms folded, posture easy. Waiting. His eyes never leave me.

“Let’s talk about my son,” he says quietly. “And what you would do to keep him safe.”

I meet his gaze.

“There’s nothing I wouldn’t do,” I say evenly. “Your son gave his life for mine.”

My chest tightens, but I hold his stare.

“Just ask what you really want, Johnathon. I’m tired.” My voice stays steady even as something inside me strains. “I’m tired of men using me like my voice doesn’t matter.” I draw a slow breath. “Your son taught me it does. He gave me strength. He gave me love. He gave me purpose.”

I swallow.

“You say love is a weakness,” I continue softly. “But love bears all things.”

A sound breaks the quiet.

Music.

Loud. Bass-heavy. It rolls in from the far end of the parking structure, deep in the shadows where the lights are dead and the concrete swallows detail. The melody is bright—wrong for this place.

A car engine idles beneath it.

Johnathon doesn’t look away from me.

I do.

The sound echoes, laughter threaded through it, voices carried and distorted by the cavernous space. Casino overflow, I think. Partiers drifting where they shouldn’t.

Johnathon exhales faintly, annoyed. “This city never shuts up.”

The dogs stiffen.

Klause turns first, his attention snapping toward the music. Artemis follows, body taut, ears forward, eyes fixed on the darkness where the sound pulses.

“Klause,” I say quietly.

He doesn’t come back to my side.

Instead, he steps forward—and crosses the edge of the light.

“Artemis,” I whisper.

She hesitates for half a second. Then she follows him.

My breath catches.

They move deeper into the dark, their shapes swallowed piece by piece until there is nothing left of them.

“Klause,” I call again, sharper now.

Nothing.

They’ve never disobeyed me.

My heart begins to race, the hairs on the back of my neck rise. A cold, crawling feeling settling low in my gut. Danger surrounds us.

If ads affect your reading experience, click here to remove ads on this page.