- Novel-Eng
- Romance
- CEO & Rich
- Billionaire
- Marriage & Family
- Love
- Sweet Love
- Revenge
- Werewolf
- Family
- Marriage
- Drama
- Alpha
- Action
- Adult
- Adventure
- Comedy
- Drama
- Ecchi
- Fantasy
- Gender Bender
- Harem
- Historical
- Horror
- Josei
- Game
- Martial Arts
- Mature
- Mecha
- Mystery
- Psychological
- Romance
- School Life
- Sci-fi
- Seinen
- Shoujo
- Shounen Ai
- Shounen
- Slice of Life
- Smut
- Sports
- Supernatural
- Tragedy
- Wuxia
- Xianxia
- Xuanhuan
- Yaoi
- Military
- Two-dimensional
- Urban Life
- Yuri
Chapter 12 That evening. Aria lay in bed aggressively refreshing job boards and submitting applications to dance companies, her laptop casting a blue glow across her determined face in the darkened bedroom The application process for elite werewolf dance companies was far more demanding than before. Applications required submission at least three months in advance, followed by a grueling series of auditions and technical assessments spanning weeks.
Only after clearing every hurdle could one secure even the most junior position.
Despite her legs not being fully rehabilitated, Aria began what her mother called her "application blitz." simultaneously developing a punishing practice regimen in the small dance stuthey'd installed in the townhouse basement.
Though Lucas's systematic revenge had prevented her from joining any professional companies during those three years, dance had remained her secret sanctuary. During those years, whenever he would disappear for "pack business" (which she now understood were rendezvous with Leila), she would retreat to a small stushe'd rented off-pack. There, alone with just mirrors and music, she'd maintained her technique through endless repetition of fundamentals.
Dance had been her first love-before Lucas, before everything. She had allowed that passion to be overshadowed, but never extinguished.
Follow on NovᴇlEnglish.nᴇtThree months later, during her final audition for the Northern Alpine Dance Company, Aria performed with a technical precision and emotional depth that left the judging panel visibly moved.
As she completed her variation with a flawless grand jeté into a controlled arabesque, the artistic director exchanged glances with her colleagues-they had found their new soloist.
When the scores were revealed, she had received straight A's across every category-a feat accomplished perhaps once or twice a decade.
During the feedback session, the senior artistic director studied her with professional curiosity. "Ms. Collins, your technical abilities are extraordinary, but there's something puzzling in your performance history." "Your training is impeccable-continuous since childhood without breaks. Yet after your junior year at Silver Crescent Academy, there's a complete absence of competition or performance for three 16:39 Chapter 12 years. Most dancers with your potential would be aggressively building their portfoduring that critical period. What happened?" Aria's grip tightened momentarily on the microphone, but her face remained composed. When she spoke, her voice carried neither bitterness nor regret, just simple fact.
"I got caught up in a toxic relationship that consumed those years," she said. "Classic story-wrong mate, wrong time." Noting the panel's sympathetic expressions, she offered a serene smile. "But that chapter closed now. Completely." "From this point forward, my career is my only partnership. Dance doesn't lie, manipulate, or betray-it just demands everything, which I'm more than ready to give." Her matter-of-fact handling of personal trauma impressed the panel as much as her technical prowess. She wasn't running from her past-she had processed it and moved beyond.
Aria's meteoric rise within the Northern Alpine Dance Company becthe talk of the dance world. As the only auditionee in five years to receive unanimous top marks, she bypassed the corps de ballet entirely, starting as a soloist.
Within a year, she claimed the position of principal dancer, then delivered a debut performance of "Giselle" that prompted the Alpine Times to declare: "Collins doesn't merely dance roles-she inhabits them with a vulnerability and authenticity rarely seen on contemporary stages." As the company's reputation soared under its dynamic new artistic director, invitations flooded in from prestigious venues across North and Southern Territory-including the historic Moonlight Theatre near The Thornwood Pack. Reviewing the performance calendar in her office, the director regarded Aria with obvious concern. Familiar with the extraordinary circumstances of her "death" and rebirth, she had nearly decided Aria would remain in the Northern territory during the Moonlight Theatre's tour.
Before she could suggest this arrangement, Aria interrupted: "I see that look, Margaret. I'm going. The company needs its principal dancer for the debut." "Aria," the director began carefully, "The Thornwood Pack is directly on the itinerary. Your former life-the people who think you died-it's a complication we don't need to face if-" "I've considered it thoroughly," Aria replied with the scalm precision that characterized her dancing. "I'll perform wearing the mask and covering my smell for each production. It's thematically 16:39 Chapter 12 appropriate for our modern 'Wolf's Serenade' anyway." "For press and interviews, Zoe can represent as first soloist. I'll be temporarily mute-doctor's orders for vocal rest."
The director drummed her manicured nails against the polished desk, weighing the proposal@gainst m pptentia complications. Finally, she nodded. "You've thought this through. We proceed as planned-with your modifications." The first stop on the Southern Territory tour was, inevitably, The Thornwood Pack. Given the company's revolutionary reinterpretation of classical works, tickets sold out within minutes- scalpers immediately listing them at triple face value.
The company's cachet had reached such heights that even Lucas Thornwood- who had withdrawn from most public appearances-received a VIP package from a European alpha eager to discuss a potential pack alliance over the performance.
His beta, Michael, watched nervously as Lucas stared at the embossed invitation on his desk, mentally cursing the investor's catastrophic lack of research.
Since that night a year ago when Leila had destroyed Aria's ashes in her final act of cruelty, Lucas had transformed into someone him barely recognized. Though Leila now served a lengthy sentence for desecration and the remaining ashes had been recovered and properly interred, Lucas could not bear even the most oblique reference to dance.
Follow on Novᴇl-Onlinᴇ.cᴏmA German business partner had once arranged a dinner companion for Lucas-a former prima ballerina from the Berlin State Ballet-thinking it might honor his late mate's memory.
That partnership, worth hundreds of millions, had ended before dessert was served. The company was immediately blacklisted from all Thornwood ventures globally, without explanation or recourse. Lucas's beta assumed he simply despised dance now, avoided the topic as if allergic.
But Michael knew the devastating truth. Lucas wasn't angry about dance-he was shattered by it. Every mention triggered the nightmares that left him screaming Aria's nat 3 a.m., the liquor cabperpetually restocked to help him self- medicate through the nights.
Always the snightmare-flames consuming the she-wolf he had finally recognized as his true mate, too late to save her, too late for anything but endless regret.
16.39