Home / Fantasy / Moonlit Secrets / The Unnamed Arrangement

Share

The Unnamed Arrangement

Author: Tyson Roy
last update Last Updated: 2025-06-06 18:02:53

The cliffs breathed wind and thunder.

Xander’s home, if you could call it that, clung to the jagged edge of the mountain like a secret whispered too close to the void. It wasn’t a house, not really. It was a fortress carved from stormclouds and shadow, half stone, half silence. The kind of place that kept people out… or trapped things in.

By noon, Aria had moved in.

If “moved in” meant tucking a single duffel bag beside a dresser that didn’t even creak, and setting her toothbrush gently beside his in a glass that looked more like museum glassware than anything meant to hold two lives.

Xander hadn’t helped her unpack.

Hadn’t offered a tour or even a hint of small talk.

Just handed her a key, cool and heavy, its metal edges biting into her palm, and disappeared behind a silence sharp enough to leave cuts.

The living room stretched wide and quiet, panelled in black cedar that gleamed like obsidian under the gray hush of storm-filtered light. One wall was nothing but a window, tall and indifferent, revealing the steep valley below where fog clung to the pines like breath. Thunder curled somewhere behind the mountains, not close, not far. Waiting.

She stood at the glass, arms crossed tight, not for warmth but to stop the slow unravelling inside her chest.

He had kissed her once. Looked at her like she was a revelation. Touched her like she mattered.

And now?

Now they were shadows pacing the same walls.

That night, they shared the same bed. Technically.

The mattress could have fit four. Alphas always had everything larger, rooms, responsibilities, and burdens.

But when she slipped under the covers, careful not to let the sheets rustle too much, Xander was already there.

Facing the wall. One arm behind his head, the other curled loosely against his ribs. His breathing was even. Practiced.

He didn’t look at her.

Didn’t speak.

Not even a nod.

Not even goodnight.

Aria lay still, her body tucked to the edge of the bed as if her presence could unmake the space. Her heart beat hollow and bruised against her ribs, each thud echoing louder in the absence of words.

No explanation.

No comfort.

No I’m glad you stayed.

Only the storm outside, clawing at the glass, and the wind screaming like something had been forgotten too long.

The kitchen gleamed like something in a magazine. Cold light spilled across stone counters and stainless steel that didn’t bear a single fingerprint. It felt untouched. Like a place set aside for someone else.

Aria moved through it like an intruder.

She hesitated at the espresso machine, her hand hovering. The buttons looked expensive. Foreign. Like they knew she didn’t belong.

She chose water instead.

It was safer to be invisible. Safer to leave no trace.

The glass was half-empty in her hand when Xander padded in, shirtless, joggers slung low, hair damp with sweat. He looked carved from effort and silence, his chest still rising from the run he must’ve taken before the sun bothered to rise.

He didn’t speak.

Just opened the fridge, grabbed a protein shake, and downed it in three long swallows.

Aria looked away.

“You’re up early,” she offered, her voice too thin to stand on its own.

“I always am.”

Then nothing.

The silence that followed wasn’t awkward.

It was worse.

It was practiced.

She nodded like that made sense and turned toward the window before he could see the way her throat worked too hard to swallow.

The library was hidden.

Of course it was. Xander’s house had corners like secrets, and this one lay behind a narrow wooden door tucked between two cold stone columns. She hadn’t meant to find it.

But the house gave her nothing else to do.

Inside, warm amber light flickered over endless shelves. Books lined every inch, tomes with cracked spines, others wrapped in cloth, a few titled in strange, looping runes she couldn’t read. The fireplace was lit, though she hadn’t seen anyone strike a match.

Still, the air was thick with waiting.

She didn’t sit.

Didn’t touch anything.

Just stood in the doorway, staring at all the knowledge someone had bothered to keep.

Footsteps passed behind her, Xander, on his way to the office. He didn’t stop. Didn’t speak.

But he slowed.

Just for a second.

A flicker of hesitation, the kind only someone watching closely would ever notice.

And then he was gone again.

She was seventeen the first time she realized he wouldn’t see her.

Not really.

The training field had buzzed with celebration, Xander, golden with sweat, laughing with the other trainees after a brutal match. His shoulder was bandaged where a blade had kissed him too close. His smile burned too bright.

She was kneeling on the sideline, wrapping another fighter’s ankle. Blood on her palms. Dirt in her braid.

He passed her without a glance.

But their shoulders had brushed.

And she had felt it for days.

Now they shared a bed.

And she couldn’t feel anything at all.

The storm rolled in with the hunger of something half-forgotten.

Rain battered the windows in furious bursts, the thunder curling through the walls like it was looking for somewhere to live. Aria curled on the edge of the couch, blanket wrapped tight, watching the flickering blue of the television screen. She wasn’t watching it.

Not really.

Xander stood by the far window, glass in hand, phone in the other. Whiskey. Tradition. Or maybe it was just something to keep his hands busy.

He wasn’t watching her either.

Finally, she spoke. Her voice barely breached the storm.

“You haven’t told me why.”

He didn’t move.

“Why what?” he asked, as if the answer hadn’t already been haunting them both.

“Why did you asked me to stay?”

The silence thickened. The fire behind the grate let out a low hiss.

“Because it felt right.”

Her throat tightened.

“That’s not an answer.”

He turned at last. His eyes were darker than the stormclouds behind him.

“I don’t have the right answer,” he said. “And I didn’t ask for questions.”

It landed like a door slamming shut.

She stood. “Then what do you want from me?”

He stared at her. Not cold. Not warm. Just... searching.

“I don’t know,” he said. “But I don’t want you gone.”

And somehow, that shattered her more than if he’d said nothing at all.

She nodded once. Her jaw clenched hard enough to ache.

Then she turned, quietly, and walked away.

The bedroom was darker than usual.

No lightning now. Just thunder, distant and pulsing.

Xander was already in bed. Facing away. Again.

Aria slid in next to him. Her side is cold. Her heart louder than anything else in the room.

She stared at his back.

Wondered what it would take to make him turn around.

She didn’t remember falling asleep.

But sometime in the middle of the night, when the storm had dulled to whispers, something warm brushed her fingers.

She didn’t open her eyes.

Didn’t pull away.

Her hand stayed where it was.

So did his.

The clouds broke.

Sunlight filtered pale and uncertain through the window, brushing the edge of the bed in gold. Aria blinked slowly, breath soft in the morning hush.

Xander was gone.

Again.

No note. No sound of movement. Just the distant call of runoff carving through stone outside.

She pulled herself up, joints aching from tension that hadn’t left all night.

There was a blanket folded on her side of the couch.

He’d been there.

But not long enough.

She padded barefoot to the window, staring out across the valley. Everything gleamed. Wet and new. The storm had passed.

But inside her, something hadn’t.

Not yet.

Far below, the trail to the healer’s wing twisted like a scar down the mountain’s side. Aria stared at it, heart knotted. For just a moment, she wondered if it would’ve been easier to stay invisible.

Because at least back there... she hadn’t expected to be seen.

And here, here, in this house full of ghosts and thunder, even the wind had stopped whispering her name.

Continue to read this book for free
Scan code to download App

Latest chapter

  • Moonlit Secrets   Rumors Reignited

    The dining hall was louder than usual. Packed shoulder to shoulder, it pulsed with gossip dressed up as laughter, speculation hidden beneath polite smiles. Lanterns burned warm overhead, but the energy in the room was anything but comforting. It felt… watchful.Aria walked in quietly, holding her tray close to her chest. Tea. Bread. A few slices of apple, she wasn’t sure she’d eat. She kept her head down, weaving past tables until she reached her usual seat, back corner, right near the tapestry with the faded crescent moon. Her safe spot.No one looked her way.Good.She sat down slowly, tucked herself in, and exhaled through her nose. Her hands were calm, but her stomach churned. Not from the pregnancy—at least, not this time. She already knew what tonight was about.Sienna was back. And tonight, she was going to be seen.The hall buzzed louder, louder—until the doors opened.First came Xander.He looked the way he always did when he put the weight of the world on his shoulders and d

  • Moonlit Secrets   Ghost in the Den

    The healer’s den was steeped in stillness.It always had a calming quiet, a sacred hush that clung to the woven curtains and stone floors like breath held too long. Tonight, though, that calm felt deceptive. The scent of mint and sage still drifted from the apothecary shelves, but to Aria, it all felt sharper somehow. Like the air knew what was coming.She stood near the end of the room, quietly restocking gauze, though her eyes flicked often to the cot near the centre, where Sienna White lay, finally still.Pale beneath the wool blanket. Breathing steadily, at last.Aria’s fingers moved automatically through the vials and linens, but inside, her chest felt tight.She had spent days tending to this woman. Changing dressings. Sponging fever from her skin. Mixing potions to draw the infection out, praying under her breath when Sienna had slipped too far under.And through it all, Aria hadn’t broken.She couldn’t afford to.Not when the name on every tongue was Sienna White. Not when eve

  • Moonlit Secrets   Burnt Bridges

    The cliff was quiet tonight.Not the stillness of peace, but the kind that comes before something is let go.Aria stood at the edge, the wind catching at her coat, cool against her skin. The overlook stretched wide before her, the river far below reflecting slivers of moonlight. Pine needles were scattered across the rocks. The sky above was painted in bruised colours, deep purple bleeding into steel grey. The air carried the faint scent of ash from an old fire pit and the wild herbs growing in the cracks of the cliff.In her hands: a bundle tied in a faded blue ribbon.Letters. Dozens of them.She hadn’t opened the bundle in years, but she remembered every word. Every night spent hunched over parchment, whispering confessions to the moon. Letters written from a place of hope, of aching want, of belief that maybe—just maybe—love could bloom in silence.Tonight, she’d come to let that silence burn.Aria lowered herself onto the flat stone at the edge of the overlook, where the ground d

  • Moonlit Secrets   Denied and Defended

    The packed council chambers loomed with the quiet weight of history. High-arched ceilings, stained with age and smoke, pressed down over a long stone table carved with generations of decisions and disputes. The sun filtering through the lattice windows made the air feel heavier, like even the light was hesitant to intrude.Aria stood near the back wall, partially hidden behind a tall pillar. She wasn’t meant to be here—just a messenger dropping off council records. But as the discussion unfolded, something in her made her stay. Maybe it was instinct. Maybe it was the ache in her chest she couldn’t ignore anymore.At the head of the table sat Xander.He looked every bit the Alpha—broad shoulders squared, jaw locked, gaze steady. But Aria had learned over time that stone could crack without warning. And today, something in the air warned her it might.Beta Linwood rose first. He was tall, angular, with eyes that always seemed too sharp. “We gather in concern,” he said. “There is unrest

  • Moonlit Secrets    Whispers in the Clinic

    The halls of Moonrise Medical always smelled faintly of antiseptic and wild herbs, a strange mix of science and tradition. The floors gleamed under soft lights, and the echo of footsteps never quite faded. For most, this place was sacred—where wounds healed, where life began and sometimes ended. But for Aria, it was becoming something else. A stage. A trap.She moved through the corridors like she always had, clipboard in hand, hair tied back, focus sharp. But something had changed. Not in her routine. In the way people looked at her.It started with glances. Quick, sidelong stares that slipped away the second she turned. Then came the lowered voices. The sudden silences when she walked into a room. The shift in air when her presence broke their rhythm.By week twelve, she couldn’t hide it anymore. Her uniform tugged slightly at the curve of her belly. She’d catch glimpses of herself in reflective surfaces—glass cabinets, dark screens—and her hands would move instinctively to cover th

  • Moonlit Secrets   Walls Between Them

    The ground was soft from last night’s rain, still damp beneath the worn soles of Xander’s boots. Mist clung to the edges of the clearing as the sky hovered between dull gray and reluctant sunlight. But none of it mattered. Not the sting in his arms, not the cold air biting his skin—only the rhythm of motion, the need to outrun the noise in his head.He was already drenched in sweat by sunrise.Each punch against the sandbag landed with a sharp, brutal snap. His knuckles were torn open, blood mixing with sweat, but he didn’t stop. Couldn’t. The silence she’d left behind echoed louder than any scream. That look on her face, the quiet finality in her voice as she closed the door—he couldn’t unsee it. Couldn’t unhear it.She had been calm. Not angry. Not begging. Just... done.That was what tore through him.“Alpha,” his beta called gently from a distance. “You’ve been out here since before dawn. Take a breather.”Xander didn’t look at him. “Again.”The beta hesitated. “Sir—”“I said agai

More Chapters
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status