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Billionaire Alpha's 99 Deadly Games

Chapter 14
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Chapter 13 Recalling the disastrous fate of that previous business partner, Michael silently calculated how many hours he'd need to be prepared to be expelled from the pack.

He inhaled deeply, steeling himself for the tempest of Lucas's rage.

To his absolute shock, Lucas not only picked up the tickets but examined them with unexpected interest, his fingers tracing the embossed lettering with something approaching tenderness.

The tickets were elegantly minimal-clean black typography on heavy cream cardstock, containing only essential information without a single decorative flourish.

The stark simplicity transported Lucas to a moment he'd spent years trying to forget.

Aria, curled up on their bed three years ago, sketching ticket designs on her tablet, her hair piled messily atop her head. She'd been so alive then-passionate, determined, completely herself.

"Look at this," she'd said, holding up a clean, minimalist design. "Don't you think this actually communicates more than all that cluttered nonsense they keep asking for?" He remembered how she would return from her internship at Silver Crescent Ballet, tically flopping onto their couch with entertaining impressions of the marketing director.

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"It needs more pizzazz," she'd mimic in an exaggerated voice, gesturing wildly. "Make the font bigger! Add sparkles! People won't know it's art unless we hit them over the head with it!" Lucas had laughed then-casually, carelessly, not appreciating how perfect those ordinary moments were. How perfect she had been.

If he hadn't destroyed everything with his revenge plot, would they be sharing those moments still? Would she be designing minimalist tickets for performances he attended proudly as her mate? The thought sliced through him with surgical precision.

Something about these tickets felt like a sign-an impossible, irrational signal that he should attend. A whisper in his mind suggested that perhaps, somehow, he might find a trace of Aria there, secho of what he'd lost.

Without fully understanding his own impulse, he carefully slid the tickets into his jacket pocket and 16:39 Billionaire Al addressed his beta: "We're going. Tonight." Inside the theater, The Southern Territory's elite buzzed with pre-performance excitement. Various alphas and society figures made obligatory pilgrimages to Lucas's front-row seat, attempting to secure a moment of his increasingly rare public attention.

Lucas acknowledged them with minimal effort-a slight nod, a disinterested "sure"- until they retreated, sensing the invisible wall surrounding him.

As the lights dimmed, Lucas tensed reflexively. Dance performances had becemotional landmines since Aria's death.

The curtain rose to reveal a solo dancer in a blush-pink costume, frozen in elegant repose. When the music began, she unfurled like a flower opening to moonlight, her movements transcending mere choreography. Her raven hair caught the stage lights as she turned, creating the impression of liquid shadow following her movements. Despite the pearl-white half-mask concealing her features, her artistic expression radiated through every gesture. Lucas, who had been enduring rather than watching, found himself inexplicably drawn to her performance. There was something in her movement quality that struck a chord of deep recognition within him. After many years of silence, Lucas's wolf suddenly showed signs and reactions of awakening.

The precise way she extended through her fingertips during an arabesque, the characteristic tilt of her head during pirouettes, the musicality of her phrasing-all of it achingly familiar.

A memory surfaced with painful clarity: Aria dancing in their den, barefoot on hardwood floors, demonstrating a phrase she'd been working on. "Watch this transition," she'd said, executing the exact sdistinctive port de bras he was witnessing now.

Lucas's breath caught in his throat as past and present began to blur.

The dancer on stage moved with such similar qualities that he could almost believe the impossible-that somehow, through smiracle, he was watching Aria herself.

As she completed a particularly challenging sequence, approaching the edge of the stage nearest his seat, Lucas found himself leaning forward involuntarily, heart hammering against his ribs. His wolf was a bit restless.

16:39 Billionair Chapter 13 "Aria?" he whispered, the nan escaping before he could stop it.

For the briefest moment, almost imperceptible to anyone else, the dancer's rhythm faltered slightly-a millisecond hesitation before she recovered flawlessly and continued her variation without acknowledging the front row.

That momentary break in perfection sent electricity through Lucas's veins. It couldn't be coincidence. It couldn't.

As the piece concluded and thunderous applause erupted around him, Lucas remained fixated on the masked dancer, searching for further confirmation of what seemed both impossible and suddenly, desperately necessary to believe.

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Backstage, surrounded by the euphoria of a successful openingn night, Aria pressed one hand against her racing heart, trying to steady her breathing behind her mask. She had prepared herself intellectually for seeing Lucas again-had rehearsed this moment in her mind countless times. But nothing could have prepared her for the visceral reality of hearing his voice call her nafter all this time.

During her variation, when his voice had carried to her ears, memories had crashed through her carefully constructed defenses-quiet Sunday mornings in their den, his rare but genuine laughter, the way his eyes would sometimes soften when he looked at her.

For a dangerous moment, muscle memory had nearly betrayed her-her body remembering the way it used to respond to his voice, almost turning toward him as it had hundreds of times before. But she had recovered instantly, continuing her performance without visible reaction. The past was past. Whatever genuine feelings might have existed between them had been built on a foundation of lies.

Her hands trembled slightly as she reached for her water bottle. Let him suspect. Without proof, his suspicions would remain just that. After all, Lucas Thornwood himself had presided over Aria Collins' funeral, presented her remains to Silver Crescent Pack. That woman was legally, officially dead.

As this clinical reminder steadied her nerves, Aria turned toward her dressing room, eager to remove her costand mask before departing through the stage door.

Before she could escape, the artistic director appeared, clapping sharply for attention. "Places, everyone!" she announced with barely concealed excitement. "Alpha Thornwood and 16:40 Ril Chapter 13 several major pack alphas will be coming backstage momentarily to meet the company. This is not a drill, people-our future funding may depend on this impression!" I (0) 16:40