SOPHIA'SPOV
Today has been really busy for me. Customers kept coming and going, and I barely had time to catch my breath. At one point, I had to quickly mix the dough just in case I needed to make more. All I kept hearing was, "Can I have that?" "Oh! This looks nice, can I have two of them?" "Oh! My husband loved the doughnuts from last time; I think I want to place an order." It was one voice after another, a chorus of demands that made my heart race with excitement. I was glad things were moving fine for me. I was starting to get my life back to normal. At least now, I could afford some things for myself without having to disturb Dr. Grace about my needs. The freedom felt refreshing. I was also glad I could do something for myself, and I had Dr. Grace to thank for all this. Speaking of Dr. Grace, we had missed two sessions. Though she was done with the conference, she had something important to take care of. I couldn’t wait to see her again to tell her about the progress of my bakery. "Can I have two of those?" a middle-aged woman spoke as she pointed to the pillow doughnuts lying in my display case. The doughnuts were round and looked sumptuous, their golden-brown color enticing customers to take a bite. I quickly picked two of them up and placed them in a box. "Mummy, cake," the two-year-old beside the woman spoke up, her little finger pointing at the colorful cakes in the display. The woman smiled down at her. "Okay, baby. Add the cake too, miss," she said to me again. "Alright, ma'am," I replied, trying to keep my tone upbeat despite my growing fatigue. I hurriedly grabbed a slice of cake and carefully placed it in the box. The microwave beeped, signaling that the doughnuts were ready. I removed them, packaged them, and handed everything over to the woman. She smiled brightly, passing the treats to her daughter. "Thank you, miss," she said with a broad smile, which I reciprocated. "Thank you for your patronage, ma'am. Bye, kid!" I said, and the little girl waved at me with delight. "Bye, miss!" she called in a cute voice that made my heart melt. I smiled at her cuteness, feeling a warm glow inside. My business was doing well, and I was so glad. It was usually very busy, sometimes overwhelming. If my bakery continues at this pace, I might need an assistant to help me manage the rush. The thought of expanding filled me with hope and excitement. It was a long day, and as the sun began to set, casting a golden hue over everything, I decided it was time to wrap up. I wiped down the surfaces and cleared the tables, humming to a tune that echoed the joy I felt in my heart. Suddenly, a wave of nausea washed over me. I had been feeling it for hours, but this time it hit hard, and I dropped the towel, running out to the back of the bakery to ease myself. My head spun, and I could feel a slight fever creeping up on me. I knew I needed to go for a test later; something wasn't right. ✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦ A Few Minutes Later…. I walked into the clinic and stopped at the receptionist’s desk, the sterile smell of antiseptic filling the air. It irritated me as I waited for her to finish speaking to someone. This was why I disliked hospitals and clinics. The wait felt interminable, and a wave of dizziness washed over me, so I went over to sit on the bench in a corner, clutching my stomach. I closed my eyes, trying to steady my breathing. After about ten minutes of waiting, the receptionist finally called me. "Hello, ma'am. Sorry for keeping you waiting. How may we help you?" "I would like to see the doctor, please," I said, forcing a smile despite my unease. "Oh! He just stepped out. Hold on for a few minutes; he’ll be back in no time," she said, continuing to type on her computer, oblivious to my discomfort. After another 15 minutes of anxious waiting, I was told that the doctor was back. "You can see him now, ma'am. He's waiting for you," she said, and I nodded, my heart racing as I walked into the doctor's office. Just as I expected, it was filled with all kinds of books and medical supplies. Calendars of the heart and other related images that I couldn't decipher were hung on the wall, the sight both familiar and intimidating. "Please, sit," he said, gesturing to the chair across from him. "So, what's the issue?" he asked in a deep, professional voice. I explained everything I had been feeling for the past few days to him, leaving out no detail. "When was the last time you had your monthly flow?" he asked, and I wondered why he brought up that question. I was about to ask him the reason for it when he spoke again. "We'll carry out a pregnancy test on you and a typhoid test as well, just to be sure what's wrong, okay?" he said calmly. "Why a pregnancy test, Doctor?" I asked, my heart sinking as the reality of his words settled in. "Because you're showing signs of early pregnancy," he said, and I gasped, my mind racing. "That's not possible," I said, almost in a whisper, panic bubbling up inside me. "Don't worry, my dear. You'll be fine. We'll find out what's actually wrong once the test results are out," he said, and I fell silent, the weight of his words pressing down on me. "So, shall we begin?" he asked, and with that, he got up from his chair and retrieved a new syringe from a pack. A few minutes later, my blood sample was taken, the prick of the needle, was sharp but bearable. Afterward, I was told to wait at the reception for the results. For the first time in my life, I prayed to have typhoid. I couldn't afford to be pregnant right now. It’s got to be typhoid. Yes, I thought desperately, clinging to that notion. I refused to think about my monthly flow or anything that would suggest I might be pregnant. After waiting for almost thirty minutes, I was called into the doctor's office once more. "You're pregnant, Miss Sophia," the doctor said without hesitation, his voice steady but my world started to crumble. "What?" I exclaimed, disbelief flooding through me. "You're two months pregnant," he repeated, looking at me with concern. "Excuse me! That's not possible," I said, a bit louder now, my heart racing as fear gripped me. He passed the test results to me, and my eyes popped open wide. It showed that I was indeed two months pregnant. This is not possible, I thought, shaking my head vehemently. No. How can this be? What do I do now? Nathan and I only did it twice—once on the day he marked me and again the day before the incident. Is that enough to get me pregnant? What am I even saying? How do I raise a child right now? I'm not ready for this. With tears streaming down my cheeks and millions of questions flooding my mind, I dashed out of the doctor's office and hurried home, my heart pounding in my chest. Nathan has successfully ruined my life!NATHAN'S POVThe ancient records smelled like dust and time, brittle pages flaking at the edges as I gently turned them in the dim candlelight of the Moonstone archives, just a small room where we kept tomes and things we liked to tell the young ones stories about. I hadn’t visited this section in years – maybe even since I was a teenager – but something told me the answers I was looking for wouldn’t be in the usual tomes.Victoria’s mother.The witch who vanished.After the encounter with Victoria and the chaos she nearly brought upon us all, I couldn’t shake the feeling that something was missing from the story. Something deeper. Darker. So I came here – beneath the Moonstone archives, to where the histories were guarded not just with dust, but with vigilance.I knew I could let it go. Not even as Victoria was banished, the twins safe and Lewis in the cells. Something about it just got me thinking, “How did the friend I had growing up turn into this?”My fingers paused over a passag
LOLA'S POV I avoided the west wing of the compound like it was on fire. That happened to be where Hernandez’s office was. Of course. He hadn’t come looking for me yet, which meant one of two things at this rate. He didn’t care – or he was giving me space. Considering how we’d ended things, I was leaning toward the second, but that didn’t make it any easier. I should’ve just let it go. But no. I had to take what was a great moment – no, a perfect moment – and ruin it. He’d said one wrong thing, and I’d shut the door on him like he’d personally set it on fire. “Stop thinking about it.” I muttered to myself, tugging another book from the shelf and pretending like reorganizing my little Moonstone pop up book corner was more important than facing the way my heart had been twisting in my chest since the kiss. Since he. Since us. I didn’t know what terrified me more – how right it had felt, or how quickly I’d thrown it away. My hands froze around the spine of a hardback as his s
HERNANDEZ’S POVThings were going great. Better than great.Lola was sharp, faster than anyone I’d ever worked with, and that mouth of hers? Made for arguments and kisses in equal measure. We’d spent the last three days cooped up in the Moonstone meeting room sorting through Nathan’s insane directive – some joint diplomatic initiative to bring the Silverfang outliers in line with Moonstone’s reforms, amongst other ventures. I’d expected tension, maybe resistance. I hadn’t expected her.And certainly not... whatever the hell had happened last night.My jaw still tingled with the memory of her teeth dragging across it.We hadn’t spoken of it today. Not directly. She’d shown up at dawn, lips painted in a color I knew for a fact was called Rose Stain, hair up in a sharp twist, wearing a blazer like armor. And I... I was an idiot in a Henley shirt trying to pretend he hadn’t lost sleep imagining her laugh.We’d been working for hours, bouncing ideas off each other, bickering over logistics
LOLA'S POV If there was one thing I didn’t need today, it was a man who looked like he belonged on the cover of Alpha Monthly getting under my skin. But that was exactly what Hernandez did the moment we started working together. It began in the conference room, over a stack of reports, maps, and the persistent hum of frustration. “You can’t reinforce this side of the border without leaving the south ridge vulnerable," I said, jabbing a finger at the map spread out on the table. Hernandez leaned back in his chair, arms folded. "And you can’t keep pretending that the south ridge is the only weak spot. What about the Hollow Pass?" I rolled my eyes. "The Hollow Pass hasn’t been breached in over a decade. It’s a natural deterrent." "That’s what people said about Moonveil." I paused. Damn it, he had a point. And worse—he knew it. His smirk was slight, barely there, but enough to make my pulse quicken. Not from attraction, I told myself. From irritation. We had been put on this tas
LOLA'S POV Moonstone was colder than I remembered.Not just the weather, though the breeze did bite more sharply here than in the city. It was the kind of cold that sunk into your bones and reminded you you didn’t quite belong. Not anymore. Not that I ever did to begin with. It was like looking at an old pair of shoes and wondering why they didn't fit....Then remembering they weren't yours. I stood at the edge of the training grounds, arms crossed, watching wolves shift back into human form one by one after their drill, all glistening sweat and adrenaline. I didn’t flinch when the enormous Beta, Hernandez, turned his gaze on me for the third time.He was infuriating. Overbearing. Loud. Bossy. And way too perceptive for his own good.Also… unfairly attractive, in a rugged-Alpha-who-never-smiled kind of way.I looked away first. I hated that.“I thought you said you weren’t staying long,” Nathan said, coming up beside me, offering me a coffee. A real one. From my own beans, too.
LOLA'S POVI’d been to Moonstone territory plenty of times over the weeks — but never for this long.Two days in, and already I was regretting agreeing to Nathan’s request to “help out” with some of the pack restructuring.I liked Nathan. Respected him. Admired what he and Sophia were trying to build here.But sitting through endless meetings with territorial Alphas, Betas, and Elders all posturing and growling at each other?I’d rather stab myself with a butter knife. Seriously.I sighed. Still, I owed Nathan. He helped me see that there was more to life that pretending an entire part of me didn't exist.And deep down… I missed this. The rhythm of pack life. The noise, the laughter, even the tension in the air that only came when wolves were forced to share a room for too long.Not that I’d admit it out loud.When I arrived at the Moonstone pack house that morning, it was already buzzing.Nathan caught me at the door, looking equal parts relieved and amused to see me.“You didn’t hav