LOGIN'AT LUNA MIRELLE'S PLACE'
Rhydian had always believed that the best plans were the ones that looked like accidents. The cottage sat at the northern edge of Thornwell territory, tucked back from the tree line like something that had been trying to disappear for years and was mostly succeeding. Luna Mirelle's retirement, the pack called it. A dignified withdrawal. A choice. It had never been a choice. Rhydian stood by the window with his hands in his pockets, looking out at the dark tree line, listening to his sister move around behind him with the particular unhurried energy she got when things were going well. The cottage smelled like lavender and old grief and the specific kind of loneliness that settled into walls when someone had been alone inside them for too long. He'd always found it depressing. Saskia found it useful. "She's not going to tell him anything useful," Saskia said from across the room. Her voice was light, almost bored. "She barely knows anything." "That's not why we're here." "I know why we're here." Rhydian turned from the window. Luna Mirelle sat in the armchair by the fireplace, very still, her hands folded in her lap with the careful composure of a woman who had learned a long time ago that stillness was its own kind of armor. She was watching Saskia the way you watched something you couldn't afford to look away from. Smart woman. Always had been. Just not smart enough, apparently, to stop loving a man who destroyed everything he touched. "You don't have to look at her like that," Saskia said pleasantly, crouching down to Mirelle's eye level in a way that was designed to feel condescending. "We're just visiting." Mirelle said nothing. Saskia smiled and stood back up. Rhydian's phone buzzed in his pocket. He pulled it out, looked at the screen, and felt the particular satisfaction of a thing confirmed. The photograph was clear enough. Fourth floor apartment building, third window from the left, a light burning behind thin curtains. Time stamped just past midnight. He turned the screen toward Saskia without a word. She looked at it for a moment, then looked at him, and something passed between them that didn't need language. "That was fast," she said. "It wasn't complicated. She drives the same route home every night. Parks in the same spot." Rhydian pocketed the phone. "Creatures of habit are easy to find." Mirelle's eyes moved to him. Something shifted in her expression, something that had been composure a second ago and was now something colder and more focused. "Whatever you're planning," she said quietly, "leave her out of it." Rhydian looked at her with genuine curiosity. "You don't even know her." "I know what she is to my son." "Then you know she's already in it." He said it without cruelty, which somehow made it worse. Just a fact. Just the shape of things. "She was in it the moment he walked into that club. We didn't put her there. Fate did. We're just making use of the geography." Mirelle's jaw tightened. She said nothing. Saskia had drifted to the fireplace, picking up a framed photograph from the mantle and examining it with the detached interest of someone browsing a shop they had no intention of buying from. Kadence, maybe fifteen in the picture, standing beside his mother with his hand on her shoulder and that look on his face he'd always had even then. Like he was already carrying something too heavy and had already decided not to say so. "He really is devoted to you," Saskia said, setting the photograph back down with exaggerated care. "It's almost sweet. Fourteen years of holding everything together. Running himself into the ground for a pack that mostly just feels sorry for him." She tilted her head. "Do you ever feel guilty about that?" "Saskia." Rhydian said it without heat. A correction, nothing more. She stepped back from the mantle. Rhydian checked his watch. Eleven minutes since the phone call. Kadence had been at Ember when they'd reached him, which meant depending on how fast he was driving, and Rhydian had a reasonable idea of how fast Kadence was driving right now, they had somewhere between four and seven minutes before headlights appeared at the end of the cottage road. That was enough. The point had never been the confrontation. Kadence arriving to find his mother unharmed, shaken but unharmed, and the two of them already gone was exactly the intended outcome. Let him rage at empty air. Let him pace the cottage and hold his mother's hands and feel the particular helpless fury of someone who got there just in time to find nothing to fight. That feeling would do more damage than anything Rhydian could have said to his face. And while Kadence was here, burning hours he didn't have on a crisis that had already resolved itself, other things would be moving. The elders had ears everywhere. Word traveled fast in a pack this size. By morning the story would have shifted slightly in the retelling, the way stories always did, and somewhere in that shifting a seed of doubt would take root. An Alpha who couldn't protect his own mother. An Alpha whose mate lived alone and unguarded in a human apartment building on the wrong side of the territory line. An Alpha who was already distracted, already compromised, already half lost to a woman the pack hadn't accepted yet. Seeds were patient things. Saskia appeared beside him, pulling on her coat with the unhurried movements of someone who had already decided the evening was a success. "Time?" she asked. Rhydian looked out the window at the empty road. In the far distance, at the very edge of where the tree line broke, two pale lights appeared. Moving fast. The sound of an engine pushing hard carried through the cold air a second later. "Now," he said. He held the door open for his sister and didn't look back at Mirelle as they walked out into the dark.She checked her email before she was properly awake on Sunday morning, sitting on the edge of her bed with her hair still flat on one side and her eyes adjusting slowly to the light from the screen.Nothing.She knew there wouldn't be. She'd known that when she sent the emails on Saturday and she'd known it when she woke up at three in the morning and checked the first time too. Clubs didn't sort their booking inquiries on Saturday nights. That wasn't how it worked. But knowing that hadn't stopped her from checking and it didn't stop her now so she put her phone down and got up and went to make coffee.Sunday had a different quality of quiet than Saturday. Saturday quiet felt like something you'd earned. Sunday quiet had an edge to it, that low persistent awareness of Monday sitting just beyond the afternoon, waiting with no particular patience.She studied for three hours after breakfast, working through a practice paper at the kitchen table with her second coffee going cold beside h
"Asha." Tony's voice had that specific quality she'd heard managers use before, the careful measured tone of someone who had rehearsed what they were about to say and was now delivering it slightly too smoothly. "Thanks for picking up.""Sure." She moved to the window without thinking, looking out at the street below. Force of habit now. "What's up, Tony?"A pause. Just a beat too long. "So, listen. I wanted to call you directly because you've been with us a long time and you deserve to hear it from me rather than through the schedule app."Asha said nothing. Just waited."We're making some changes at Ember. Restructuring the lineup, going in a slightly different direction with the bookings, and unfortunately your slot is one of the ones we're looking at." Another pause. "I'm going to have to let you go, effective end of next week. You'll get your full hours for the remaining shifts and I'll make sure your final pay is sorted by Friday."The street below was quiet. A woman walked a do
ASHA'S POVShe woke up to grey light and the sound of someone's car alarm going off three streets over, which was such a normal Saturday morning thing that for a moment everything was fine.Just a moment though.It came back the way things did when sleep had been keeping it at bay, not all at once but in pieces, the amber lighting of the bar, the woman's coat, the envelope sitting on the counter while she debated whether to open it, the photograph, his hand at that woman's waist, and then that last line, neat and patient and completely certain of itself.*He already made his choice. Don't be her mistake.*Asha lay there for a second staring at the ceiling. Then she pushed the covers back and got up.The apartment was cold the way it got on October mornings when she'd forgotten to turn the heat up before bed. She pulled her cardigan off the chair, wrapped it around herself, and went to the kitchen to make coffee. Ground the beans the way she always did, measured the water, watched the
Twins POVThe message came in at half past midnight.Rhydian read it once, set his phone down, and picked up his drink.Saskia was on the other end of the couch with her legs tucked underneath her, pretending to scroll through something on her phone. She'd been pretending for the last two hours. "Well?""She held it together." He swirled his glass slowly. "Didn't cry. Didn't make a scene. Put it in her pocket and went back to work."Saskia looked up. "You're joking.""Maya said she was back on stage within the hour." He took a sip. "Hands steady."Something crossed Saskia's face that she covered quickly. "Tough girl.""Smart girl," Rhydian said. "She didn't fall apart in public. Took it quietly and kept moving. That tells you a lot about someone.""It tells me she's going to be harder to shift than we thought."Rhydian didn't argue with that. He leaned back and looked at the ceiling for a moment, the kind of stillness that meant his mind was moving fast underneath it. "She'll move. Wh
Marcus had three expressions and Asha had learned all of them.There was the default, the neutral mask he wore through most of his shifts. There was concerned, which showed up maybe twice a month. And then there was the third one, the one she'd only seen the night a man followed Destiny to her car and Marcus had handled it so quietly nobody talked about it afterward.He was wearing the third one in her doorway.She followed him down the corridor without asking questions. The bass from the main floor grew heavier with every step. She'd always found it grounding before, that low persistent thrum. Tonight it just reminded her that her heart was beating too fast.She stopped at the curtain and looked out before stepping through.He was at the far end of the bar. Average height, dark jacket, hands folded on the counter in front of a drink he hadn't touched. His eyes moved across the room in slow deliberate sweeps and something in her stomach pulled tight before she'd fully decided why.She
Three days passed the way days did when you were trying not to think about something. Slowly and then all at once.Monday she took the long way to campus without deciding to, adding twelve minutes to a walk she'd done the same way for two years. She noticed halfway there and kept going anyway, telling herself it was the weather, the grey October morning that made the shorter route feel exposed in a way she couldn't explain.Tuesday she sat with her back to the wall at the coffee shop near the college, the small table in the far corner that nobody ever took because the lighting was bad and the wifi signal barely reached. She'd never sat there before. She opened her textbook and studied for two hours and didn't look up at the door more than four or five times and told herself that was fine.Wednesday she checked the security app before bed. Found nothing. Checked it again at two in the morning when she woke up for no reason and lay there in the dark with the warmth in her chest doing it







