Three souls. One bond. No way out. When Alpha wolf Rhett Calder arrives at the Moon Summit to broker peace between warring packs, the last thing he expects is to be hit with the mating bond. Twice. He’s fated to Mira Ellan, a sharp-tongued enforcer with a painful past and zero interest in destiny. But the bond doesn’t stop there—it also pulses between Rhett and a complete stranger: Jace Rowan, a quiet Beta with haunted eyes and a loyalty that runs deep. Neither man has ever desired another male, yet their souls burn for each other with the same pull they feel for Mira. Confused, drawn, and dangerously tempted, the three are forced together by fate—and hunted by those who see their triad as a threat to tradition. As the mating bond tightens and ancient power awakens, passion turns into loyalty, and strangers into something much more. But when secrets surface and betrayal lurks in the shadows, love alone may not be enough to protect them. Because the most dangerous thing in the world… is a bond the old world refuses to accept.
View MoreThe Northern Moon Summit
Alpha Rhett Calder hated crowds, even ones filled with other Alphas. The ceremonial grounds were carved into the bones of a mountain, surrounded by pine and mist, lit only by torchlight and the looming glow of the full moon. Every step he took echoed against the stone-lined circle where the Summit was held, drawing wolves' attention from every pack in the northern territories. He kept his expression cold, unreadable. As Alpha of the Blackstone Pack, he had a reputation to uphold—brutal in battle, decisive in politics, and impossible to sway. That’s what they said about him. That’s what he needed them to believe. But beneath the surface of his composed exterior, his instincts itched. The hairs on the back of his neck stood on end. Something was off tonight. He smelled it before he saw it—sharp pine, lightning in the air, and something else, something alive and primal that hit him like a punch to the chest. His wolf lunged forward inside him, clawing for release. Mate. Rhett halted mid-step, his boots grinding against the stone. Around him, conversations faded. He barely registered the startled look from Alpha Rourke across the circle or the subtle tightening of shoulders from the war-hardened Alpha of the Thorn River pack. All he could focus on was the scent twisting through the air. Then she stepped into view. She wore all black—tight leather pants, a fitted jacket, combat boots, and a scowl that looked like it belonged there. Her dark hair was pulled back in a braid that brushed her spine as she walked, and her eyes—wolf eyes, silver with flecks of storm—locked with his. His wolf howled. The moment stretched, thick and electric, tethering him to her with an invisible thread that yanked hard and didn’t let go. Mira Ellan. He didn’t know her name yet. Didn’t know she was from the Ridgeback Pack. Didn’t know she’d been raised outside of the traditional pack system, trained as an enforcer, a ghost with no Alpha and no one to claim her. All Rhett knew was that something ancient had just shifted under his feet, and the mate bond had snapped into place. Mira stopped walking. Her nostrils flared, eyes narrowing as she took in Rhett’s broad frame, clenched fists, and rigid jaw. She didn’t soften. She didn’t smile. She tilted her head. “Well, that’s inconvenient,” she muttered. The words hit him like a slap. Rhett blinked, stunned. “Excuse me?” “You heard me.” She crossed her arms, looking entirely unimpressed with the towering Alpha before her. “The gods have a wicked sense of humor.” He stepped closer, drawn by something beyond logic. “You’re my—” “I know what I am to you,” she interrupted him coolly. “Doesn’t mean I asked for it.” The insult didn’t sting so much as it intrigued him. Rhett wasn’t used to being dismissed. He wasn’t used to mates who looked like they were considering bolting. “I didn’t ask for this either,” he said carefully. “But I won’t ignore it.” “I didn’t say ignore,” she replied. “I said inconvenient. There’s a difference.” Before he could answer, the Council’s drums sounded from the far end of the circle. Alphas, Betas, and their entourages turned toward the raised stone dais where the Summit rituals would begin. But Rhett couldn’t look away from her, and Mira didn’t flinch from his gaze. She stared back like she was assessing a threat or memorizing him before she burned the whole thing down. Then, without another word, she turned on her heel and walked toward the central fire. Rhett stood frozen, heart hammering with something dangerously close to awe. His mate was fire wrapped in a storm. The Summit dragged. Political posturing. Territory disputes. Trade agreements. Rhett kept one eye on Mira the entire time. She stood alone, arms crossed, expression unreadable. No pack insignia. No visible allies. A lone wolf. Claimed by the gods, not a pack. He should have been suspicious. He should have asked questions, but all he could think about was how the bond had snapped taut in his chest. Every instinct told him to follow her, speak to her, claim her, but he waited until dusk fell again, and the firelight flickered shadows across stone and bone. Rhett made his move. He found her behind the council tent, where the torchlight didn’t quite reach and the air smelled like smoke and anticipation. She didn’t startle when he stepped from the trees. “I figured you’d come looking,” she said without turning. “I figured you’d run,” he answered. “I still might,” she replied, spinning to face him. “You don’t know what you’re asking for, Rhett Calder.” He paused. “I haven’t asked for anything yet.” Her lips curved—sharp, not soft. “Then let me make it easy. I’m not interested in belonging to anyone.” “I’m not here to cage you.” His voice was low. “But don’t pretend you didn’t feel it.” She did. He could see it in the tremble of her fingers, the tightness of her jaw. “I felt it,” she admitted. “And I don’t know whether to worship it or rip it out of my chest.” A pause. Heavy. Real. “That’s the bond,” Rhett said. “It doesn’t ask permission.” She stared at him for a long time. “You’re not the only one it snapped to.” His brow furrowed. “What?” “I don’t think it’s done,” Mira whispered. “I thought it was just you. But there’s something else.” She turned slowly, gaze lifting toward the path behind the tents. Rhett followed her line of sight, and from the shadows, a man emerged. He was taller than average but lean, dressed simply in dark clothes. He walked like a soldier—deliberate, cautious, guarded. His hair was tousled, his jaw stubbled. There was a scar at his temple and a flicker of something unreadable in his dark blue eyes. He didn’t look at Rhett. He looked at Mira, and she inhaled like she’d been struck. “You,” she whispered. Rhett’s wolf bristled. Not in challenge—but confusion. Something ancient stirred, uncoiling. The stranger stopped a few feet away, visibly tensing as his gaze snapped between them. He hadn’t spoken yet, but Rhett could feel the energy ripple around him—wrong, off, important. “Who are you?” Rhett asked, already suspecting he wouldn’t like the answer. The man met his eyes finally. “Jace Rowan. Beta of the Hollowshade Pack.” Mira’s voice was barely a whisper, “He’s mine too.”The forest was alive with the pounding of paws and breath. Moonlight flickered through the pines as the pack ran in full form—wolves streaking through the trees in a tide of fur and muscle and freedom. For one night, there were no monsters, no politics, no hidden bonds. Just instinct and freedom. Rhett ran at the front, Mira at his flank, Jace trailing just behind. Their bond hummed in the space between them, not touching, not acknowledging, but present. This was how they worked. Wild, wordless, powerful. His wolf thrived on it. Until it was shattered. A hawk’s cry overhead—three sharp bursts. A signal. Urgent. Rhett slowed, then stopped, shifting in a breathless flash of fur to skin as he stepped toward the messenger. Beta Kellen, clothes in hand, stood stiff-backed at the tree line, already halfway dressed. Rhett yanked his pants from the pile where he’d stashed them and gave a growl. “What is it?” Kellen hesitated, then: “A Summit observer’s been dispatched. They’ll arrive with
“Have you found your mate?” The words echoed through the Summit hall like a dropped blade. Rhett didn’t move. Didn’t blink. Didn’t breathe for just a moment. He could feel Mira’s heartbeat across the room, a sharp spike of adrenaline laced with panic. Jace didn’t shift, but Rhett knew him well enough now to feel the sudden tension winding tight in his chest. The smart thing would be to deny or, better yet, deflect, but Rhett had never been a coward, and the moment he opened his mouth, mating instinct spoke before politics could catch up. “Yes.”The room shifted. A quiet intake of breath from someone in the second row. A rustle of papers. Mira’s spine went rigid in his peripheral vision. Thorne’s eyes sharpened. “You’ve accepted a mate bond?” The air stretched thin. Rhett didn’t break her gaze. “I have.” Her head tilted slightly. “And your mate is…?” He let the pause drag just long enough to gather all eyes, then said evenly, “Jace Rowan.” It hit the room like a thunderclap. Even
They were going to watch her. Not the way a soldier watches an enemy. No, this was worse. This was political scrutiny—cold, exacting, and unrelenting. Mira had seen it before, at training summits and disciplinary boards, but never like this—never when the thing under the microscope was her heart. The Summit gathering wasn’t a battlefield, but it might as well have been. The only difference was that the wounds would be invisible unless she let them show. So she dressed with care, straightened her posture, silenced her wolf, and stepped into the hall like a weapon that had never been touched.The gathering room was formally arranged, with the task force, Summit officials, Alpha, and Beta seating. The symbols of allied packs flanked the main wall. Each leader brought quiet expectations, their judgments carefully concealed behind patient smiles.Mira took her seat near the task force delegation. Not beside Rhett. Not beside Jace. That had been deliberate. Distance was a strategy, even i
Lena didn’t believe in coincidences, not in battle, not in behavior, especially when an Alpha, his pack liaison, and a visiting Betabegan operating as though they were one breath, one thought, one heartbeat. She leaned against the far end of the barracks hallway, arms crossed, watching Mira slip quietly into the Alpha wing once again.It wasn’t the first time and wouldn’t be the last, but what mattered was why. Her encryption logs were protected. Standard Summit protocol allowed her to bypass local pack channels, and she kept it that way for a reason. She didn’t trust Rhett Calder, not because he was reckless. The opposite, actually. He was controlled, and control was often the best place to hide corruption. Or something else. Something deeper.Like a forbidden bond.The reports were mounting, unofficial, observational, and quiet, but they painted a picture she could no longer ignore. Calder’s refusal to disc
“ I’m saying he can’t mark you.” Rhett’s voice was firm. Unyielding and Mira hated him for it. Not in the way that made her want to tear him down, but in the way that made her want to shove him up against the wall and make him feel what it cost her to nod and say, “Fine.”Because it wasn’t fine. Jace stood just behind her, silent and she could feel the ache in him. It was the bond twitching just under the surface, the longing curling in his chest like smoke. She wanted to mark him too.Her body burned with it, but Rhett was right. The pack was already whispering. “They smell it,” he continued, pacing in front of the hearth. “Not everything, but enough. The tension. The attention. A bond doesn’t need teeth to be noticed.”She folded her arms. “So we just pretend I belong to you, and Jace is—what—?” “Not yours,” Rhett said, but softer this time. His tone held more regret than order. Jace said nothing. But she knew his silence wasn’t surrender, it was containment. He was holding himself
There was something about the quiet that didn’t feel like peace. It felt like prey. Jace stood near the edge of the compound, where forest met wall, arms folded, listening to the birdsong, the breeze, and the faint echo of drills in the yard, but even more, to the silence behind it all. It felt intentional, like someone was watching.He hadn’t told Mira or Rhett yet. Not because he doubted himself, but because this wasn’t like the Kalyven. It wasn’t danger in the teeth-and-blood sense. It was colder. Calmer.This felt like someone was observing patterns and waiting for a misstep. A predator in politics, not in fur, and that chilled Jace more than any rogue scent on the wind.The bond was quiet today. Mira had been sent to oversee inventory resupply runs, and Rhett was locked away in his office, prepping for the following Summit address. This meant that Jace had space to think, and lately, that was dangerous. His thoughts drifted to the way Sergeant Lena’s eyes lingered too long duri
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