LOGIN"This is completely unacceptable!"
A woman's shrill voice cut through the murmur of the crowd as Noah and Yuna approached the main field. Students were packed together in tight rows, teachers positioned at the edges like sentries. On a raised platform at the front stood Mr. Jack Peterson, the school proprietor, looking more stressed than Yuna had ever seen him.
Beside him stood a group of men in dark tactical gear, silver weapons gleaming at their belts.
Hunters.
Noah's hand found Yuna's, his fingers threading through hers. The gesture sent a jolt through her chest, but she couldn't tell if it was fear or something else entirely.
"Just breathe," he whispered, leaning close. "You're just another scared student. That's all."
But Yuna wasn't just another student. She was the monster they were hunting. And Noah knew it.
The weight of that knowledge sat between them like a third presence. Noah's jaw was tight, his expression carefully neutral, but Yuna could feel the tension radiating from him. Protecting her went against everything he had been taught. Everything his family stood for. One wrong move, one slip, and they would both be destroyed.
"How could you let a dangerous creature into this school?" a father shouted from the crowd of parents at the back. "My daughter could have been killed!"
"We had no way of knowing," Mr. Peterson said, his voice strained. "There hasn't been a kitsune sighting in over fifty years. We thought they were extinct."
"Well, clearly they're not!" another parent yelled.
Yuna's stomach churned. She tried to pull her hand free, but Noah held on tighter, his thumb brushing across her knuckles in silent reassurance. The contact should have calmed her. Instead, it made everything worse. He was risking everything for her, and she didn't even understand why.
They found a spot near the middle of the crowd. Camille materialized beside them moments later, her eyes going wide when she saw their joined hands.
"When did this happen?" she whispered, her French accent thickening with excitement.
"Not now," Yuna said quietly.
Across the field, Megan stood with her arms crossed, a bandage across her nose. When their eyes met, Megan smiled slowly, deliberately. The look promised revenge. Yuna's heart sank.
"May I have everyone's attention, please," Mr. Peterson called out, and the crowd gradually silenced. "I understand you're all frightened. We are taking this threat very seriously."
He gestured to the man beside him. Tall, broad shouldered, with graying hair and eyes like chips of ice. Even without an introduction, Yuna would have known this was Noah's father. They shared the same strong jaw, the same intense presence.
"This is Andrew Phillips, chief hunter of the Los Angeles region," Mr. Peterson continued. "He and his team will locate and eliminate the kitsune threat."
Andrew stepped forward, and every person on that field seemed to hold their breath. When he spoke, his voice carried with absolute authority.
"I want you to understand the severity of this situation," he began. "Kitsunes are master manipulators. They appear human. They trick you into trusting them. They kill before you realize you're in danger."
Yuna's throat tightened. Noah's thumb continued its slow circles on her hand, but she could feel the conflict in him. Every protective instinct warring with years of training. He was the hunter's son. She was the prey. This should be simple.
But nothing about this was simple.
"Kitsunes have weaknesses," Andrew continued. "They cannot maintain human form indefinitely. Newly awakened ones especially. They need an anchor. A talisman to bind their fox spirit."
The bracelet. Yuna's pulse hammered in her ears.
"Report anything suspicious immediately," Andrew said, his gaze sweeping the crowd. "Strange behavior. Unexplained absences. Do not confront a kitsune yourself. They will kill you."
For one terrifying moment, his eyes seemed to land directly on Yuna. She froze, unable to breathe, unable to move.
Then his gaze shifted, and air rushed back into her lungs.
"We will find this creature," Andrew declared, his voice hard as steel. "And when we do, we will eliminate it."
The crowd erupted in applause. Students cheered. Parents nodded approval.
Yuna stood there, hand clasped in the hand of the man who would kill her if he knew the truth, trying not to be sick.
"Starting tomorrow, all students will carry silver charms," Andrew added when the applause faded. "The school will provide them. Silver disrupts a kitsune's illusions. If one is disguised among you, the silver will force them to reveal themselves."
Yuna's heart stopped.
Silver charms. Everyone would be wearing them. How could she possibly hide?
Noah leaned down, his lips close to her ear. "Don't panic. We'll figure it out."
But Yuna could hear the strain in his voice. He didn't know how they would figure it out either. He was in too deep now, protecting something he was bred to destroy. If his father found out, Noah would be branded a traitor. Disowned. Maybe worse.
And still, he held her hand.
The assembly ended, and students began dispersing. Noah guided Yuna away from the crowd, Camille trailing behind with barely contained questions.
"Okay, seriously," Camille said once they were clear. "What is happening? And Yuna, where were you during the attack? I looked everywhere."
"Bathroom," Yuna lied. "I hid in a stall."
Camille's eyes narrowed, but before she could press, a voice called out.
"Noah!"
They turned to see Noah's parents approaching. His mother was elegant and cold, blonde hair in a perfect bun, jewelry glittering. Andrew's expression was stern.
Noah tensed but didn't release Yuna's hand.
"Who's your friend?" Andrew asked, his eyes dropping to their joined hands.
"Yuna. A classmate."
"Just a classmate?" his mother asked with a smile that didn't reach her eyes.
"A friend," Noah corrected. "She was shaken up. I was making sure she was okay."
Andrew studied Yuna with those ice cold eyes, and she felt stripped bare. Examined. Analyzed. Did he know? Could he sense what she was?
Noah's entire body was rigid beside her. He was walking a razor's edge, and one wrong word could send them both tumbling over.
"Nice to meet you, Yuna," his mother said. "Noah, we need to discuss your training. With a kitsune loose, you need to be prepared."
"Remember what we taught you," Andrew said, still staring at Yuna. "Kitsunes prey on sympathy. They make you think they're weak. Helpless. Harmless. Then they strike."
He was describing her. Describing this exact moment.
Noah's hand tightened almost painfully around Yuna's. "I know, Dad."
"I'm telling you again. These creatures cannot be trusted. Not for a second. You see anything suspicious, you tell me. No exceptions."
"Yes, sir."
The unspoken words hung heavy in the air. Noah was lying to his father. Betraying everything he had been raised to believe. And his father was standing right there, close enough to sense the deception if he looked hard enough.
"Come by the house tonight," Andrew ordered. "We need to review patrol routes."
"I'll be there."
His mother gave Yuna one last assessing look. "Stay safe, dear."
They walked away, and Yuna finally exhaled. Her legs felt weak.
"Your father is terrifying," Camille breathed.
"Yeah," Noah said quietly.
He released Yuna's hand, and she immediately missed the warmth. The anchor.
"I should go," Yuna said. "I need to rest."
"Be careful," Noah said, and his eyes held a warning she understood. Don't go anywhere alone. Don't give them reason to suspect. "I mean it."
Camille looped her arm through Yuna's. "Come on. You're telling me everything."
As they walked away, Yuna glanced back. Noah stood watching them, his expression conflicted. Torn between duty and something neither of them could name yet.
He was protecting her. The hunter's son was protecting the prey.
And they both knew it would destroy him.
The Malibu property looked exactly like what it was trying to look like: a retreat.Low, modern buildings connected by walkways, overlooking the ocean. The kind of place that communicated safety through architecture, warm lighting and open spaces and the sound of water. Noah recognized the design intelligence in it. Caine hadn't built a compound. He'd built something that felt like an exhale.He and Christopher had arrived separately, Noah using his father's credentials as a framework for a routine hunter perimeter check, Christopher with a cover story about a real estate inquiry that was thin but plausible."I hate this," Christopher murmured as they walked toward the main building. He said it without drama, just statement of fact."You asked to help," Noah said."I know. I still hate it." Christopher glanced sideways. "Is Yuna watching somehow?""No. She's on campus." Noah scanned the property as they walked. Six people visible outside. Probably more within. None of them looked dist
Grace was twenty four and she had her sister's face without her sister's impulsiveness.She was waiting at Andrew Phillips's estate when they arrived, sitting in the kitchen with a mug she wasn't drinking from, her eyes showing the particular exhaustion of someone who had been frightened for a long time and was very close to the end of their ability to manage it.She looked up when Yuna walked in and something in her expression collapsed with relief, just briefly, before she composed it."Thank you for coming," Grace said.Yuna sat across from her. "Tell me what happened.""Sophie and I have been staying with Patrick in Los Angeles. It's been good. Stable." Grace wrapped both hands around the mug. "Three days ago, Sophie got a call. She didn't tell me who from, but she was different afterward. Quieter. Thinking about something she wasn't saying.""Caine's person," Yuna said."I think so. Yes." Grace stared at the table. "Then yesterday Tyler showed up at Patrick's. Said he'd been in c
The council building was downtown, on a street that looked unremarkable from the outside because it was designed to.Noah drove. Camille had offered to come but Yuna declined, partly because this needed to be a small, focused meeting and partly because she needed Camille back on campus keeping an eye on Garrett, who had been visibly absent for two days, which was somehow more unsettling than when he was present.The lobby had the cold, functional energy of a place that had been serious for a long time. A woman at the front desk checked Noah's name, glanced at Yuna with careful neutrality, and directed them to the third floor.Walter Bishop was already in the room.He was smaller than Yuna expected. People with reputations often were. A compact, white haired man with a hearing aid in his left ear and hands that shook very slightly when he stood to greet them. His face was deeply lined, not from age alone but from decades of expression, furrowed brows and squinted focus all pressed perm
The call happened at nine on the dot.Yuna was alone in her room, Rebecca and Camille giving her the space, Noah two floors down in a study room but with his phone on and his attention pointed her direction like a compass needle.Diane answered on the second ring."Yuna." Her voice was measured. Not cold exactly, but carefully positioned. The voice of a woman who had been careful for so long it had become her default setting."Thank you for taking the call," Yuna said."Rebecca said you wanted to listen. I figured that was worth twenty minutes.""Then I'll listen."A beat of silence, and Yuna could almost hear Diane recalibrating."I've been in Durango for six years," Diane said finally. "Same apartment. Same job at the library. Same twenty minute walk every morning. I built a small life." Her voice was even but something underneath it wasn't. "I have colleagues who trust me. A neighbor who leaves me soup when she thinks I look tired. A cat named after a poet.""What's the cat's name?
"What exactly did Caine say to them?"Yuna had pulled Rebecca into the common room at the end of the hall, which was empty at this hour. The fluorescent lights buzzed overhead, unhelpfully clinical.Rebecca sat on the arm of a chair, her posture tight. "He reached out through an intermediary. Someone who approached Diane in person at the coffee shop near her apartment in Colorado.""Someone who knew where she was," Yuna said."Yes. Which means he either has resources we underestimated or someone gave him the locations." Rebecca's jaw was set. "I've been going through who knew where Diane was staying. It's a short list.""You think there's someone on the inside.""I think it's possible." Rebecca looked at her carefully. "I'm not pointing fingers. I'm telling you what the facts suggest."Yuna sat down. "What was the message? Exactly.""That the Binding is a leash. That royal bloodline doesn't mean qualified leadership, it means inherited control. That Yuna Kanzaki is twenty years old, u
Monday morning arrived grey and purposeful.They loaded the car in Margaret's clearing while she stood on the porch with her arms crossed, watching. She had spent both days putting Yuna through training that was nothing like Noah's physical combat preparation. Where Noah had taught her body, Margaret taught her attention.How to feel the Binding without being overwhelmed by it. How to project calm through the connection rather than anxiety, which apparently kitsunes in distress broadcast like a radio signal. How to recognize when something pressing against the connection was safe and when it wasn't.By Sunday evening Yuna was exhausted in a way that had nothing to do with her muscles."Three weeks," Margaret had said at dinner. "I'll be in Los Angeles in three weeks. Before then, practice daily. Even five minutes. The Binding is like a muscle. Use it or lose the strength you built.""I will.""And stay away from Garrett." Margaret had looked at her very directly. "Not because you can'







