로그인Donald's POV
The gates opened as the car was approaching them. The sentinels were in position. The territory smelled of pine and cold earth — everything exactly as it should be. Rowan met me at the entrance. His face was careful in a way I did not like. "Where is she?" "She at the east wing, on the second floor. She is quiet. Has not said much since she arrived." "Injuries?" "The swelling around her eye is significant. The cut on her cheek is recent like it happened within the last twenty-four hours. She cleaned it herself." "What else?" Rowan hesitated. That was unlike him. "She saw someone shift in the courtyard. A sentinel who did not realize she was watching. She... did not take it well." "She will adjust." "Alpha, she has never seen anything like this. She is terrified. The wolves, the gates, the way the trees moved when you crossed the boundary — she thought she was hallucinating. She asked me twice if she was dreaming." I said nothing for a moment. Then, "Where is she now?" "East wing. Martha gave her tea. But he has not touched it." "Call her down. I will meet her in the study." "I can bring her something to eat first, let her settle." "I said call her down, Rowan." He held my gaze for a moment longer than he should. Then he nodded and went upstairs. I waited in the study for five minutes. Then ten. I reviewed the contract, scanned the pages Rowan had left on my desk. Her name was on the first page. Rebecca Sthalone. No address. No history. Exactly what I had asked for. Someone with nothing. I heard footsteps on the staircase. Light and careful. The footsteps of someone who had learned to move quietly through spaces where noise had consequences. I set the contract down and walked to the foot of the stairs. She had not seen me yet. She had one hand on the railing and her eyes on the steps, moving with caution. She was tiny inside the clothes Martha had found for her. Her hair was loose. Her face— Her face. The swelling around her left eye had darkened to a deep bruise. The cut on her cheekbone was still raw — an open wound, barely scabbed. Someone had done that to her yesterday. For what reason? I wondered. She looked up and saw me. And immediately, her foot slipped. I moved on instinct — up the remaining steps in two strides, and closed my hands around her arm to steady her. The moment my skin touched hers, the world split open. Heat tore through me from the point of contact. Something beneath physical, something that bypassed every rational process I had and went directly to the wolf. The wolf that had been a manageable silence for eight years came awake with such force that I nearly lost my footing on the stairs. MINE. The word came from somewhere underneath my mind, from a place I did not govern. It came with a certainty that was total and entirely uninterested in my response to it. She gasped. Her free hand flew to her neck. "What—" Her voice was small and shaking. "Why does my neck feel like it is burning? What did you do to me?" I looked at her throat and saw it. Silver-white, glowing faintly at her collarbone, a crescent overlapping a wolf's paw, pressed into her skin as though it had always been there and had simply been waiting for this moment to become visible. My mate's mark. "No," I said. The word came out harder than I intended. I did not soften it. "What?" She was still touching her neck, her eyes wide and confused, darting past me toward the courtyard where wolves still moved through the torchlight. "What is this? Who are you? What are those things out there, those animals. I saw a man turn into—" "Breathe." "Do not tell me to breathe! I saw something that is not possible. I am not supposed to be here. I signed a piece of paper. I did not agree to — to wolves." I released her arm and stepped back. A full step. Then another. I put distance between us that my wolf screamed against. The bond pulled at my chest like a hook in flesh. Every instinct I had screamed at me to go back, to touch her again, to hold her and nor let go. I pressed it all down. Eight years of silence. And this was what the Moon had been keeping from me. This. A contract bride. A woman with a bruised face and too-large clothes and terror in her eyes. Someone who had been sold to me like a line item on a spreadsheet. Someone who flinched when I moved too fast. Someone who looked at my world like it was a nightmare she could not wake up from. "This contract is terminated," I said. My voice was even. Controlled. "I do not want it, and I do not want whatever this is." I gestured toward the mark at her throat. "This bond, I reject it. Entirely and completely." She stared at me. Her hand was still pressed to her collarbone, the mark still glowing faintly between her fingers. "I do not —" She blinked. "I do not understand. What bond? What are you talking about?" "It does not matter. What matters is that you need to leave. Tonight." "Tonight." She repeated the word like it had no meaning. Her eyes moved past me again — to the courtyard, to the darkness beyond the torchlight where shadows moved in ways that were not human. She swallowed. I saw her remember the man who had turned into an animal right in front of her. "I cannot," she said quietly. "I do not have—" "I am not asking." She opened her mouth. I saw her about to say something about the wolves, about the darkness, and about having nowhere to go, but I did not let her finish. "Pack your things," I said. "You leave within the hour." I turned and walked back down the stairs. Every step away from her was physically painful. My wolf howled inside my chest. The bond flared and bit, and I pressed it down and kept walking. I was six steps from the study door when I heard a small, sharp sound. I turned. She was falling, crumpling at the top of the staircase, her hand sliding off the railing, and her whole body folding. Her face had gone grey and her eyes were half-closed, unseeing. The bond tore through my chest with a violence that made my vision white. Rowan was closer. He was already running, already halfway up the stairs. But he would not reach her in time. I do not remember deciding to move. I just moved. She hit the landing, almost on the floor, when I caught her. One arm under her shoulders, the other behind her knees. The moment she was in my arms, the bond screamed with something with a sharp pull. She was breathing. Shallow, too fast, but breathing. "Alpha." Rowan was beside me now. "Her injuries, the stress, the bond manifesting and the rejection. is too much for her system. She is not like us. The mark settling—" "I know what it is," I said. My voice did not sound like mine. "Get Martha. Now." Rowan ran. I looked down at her face, at the bruise, the cut, the grey tint under her skin, and felt something I had not felt in a very long time. Fear. For her. And I hated it.THIRD PERSON POVThe afternoon sun came in through the windows of Rebecca's sitting room, warming the pale stone floor and turning the dust motes into floating gold. Rebecca sat in the wide armchair Donald had moved from his study three days after she mentioned, in passing, that it was the most comfortable seat in the house. It had appeared overnight without discussion. He had never mentioned moving it. She had never thanked him. Some things did not need words.Maren sat across from her, the old woman's hands folded in her lap, her eyes holding a particular light that Rebecca had learned to recognize. It was the look she got when she was about to give someone something important."I have been holding something for a long time," Maren said. "I kept telling myself I would know when the right moment came. I think this is it."She reached into the worn leather bag she had brought and withdrew a small wooden box. Plain, unadorned, the wood polished to a deep, warm glow by decades of handli
THIRD PERSON POV"God is my help," he translated immediately. His eyebrows lifted slightly. "That is a weighty name for a child.""He will need it," she said. "All three of them will. They are heirs of a territory that has faced war and exile and betrayal. They are descendants of a lineage that has been hunted and broken. They will need to know that they are not alone. That something larger than themselves walks with them."Donald looked at her. "You are speaking about yourself as much as them."She was quiet for a moment. Then she said: "Yes. I am."He reached for her face, cupping her cheek with a gentleness that still surprised her after all this time. "You are not alone either, Becca. You will never be alone again."She leaned into his palm. "I know. But they will need to know it too. In their bones, in their blood and in the very shape of their names.""Azriel," he said again, tasting the word."Azriel," she confirmed.He set the paper down and turned to face her fully. "Tell me
THIRD PERSON POVThe territory had surrendered to sleep hours ago. The bedroom held only the soft amber glow of a single lamp, its light pooling like honey across the pillows. Rebecca reclined against the headboard, her hands resting on the generous curve of her stomach, where three distinct lives moved in their own private rhythms. She had a cup of cooled tea that sat forgotten on the nightstand.Donald lay beside her, one arm folded behind his head, and the other resting possessively on her hip. This was the only version of him that existed in these quiet hours where he was unguarded, unhurried, and completely hers."We need to talk about names," she said.He turned his head and found her eyes. "I thought we had already discussed this.""We discussed possibilities," she corrected. "We have not yet decided.""Is there a difference with you?"She slapped his chest lightly. "Yes. Possibilities are what we talk about when we are being polite. Decisions are what we make when we are seri
THIRD PERSON POV"You are doing it again," Donald said.Rebecca looked up from the land report she was reading. She was sitting sideways in the large chair by the window, her legs over the armrest, a cup of warm ginger tea on the table beside her. She was four months along now and the morning sickness had finally eased, replaced by a hunger that arrived at inconvenient hours and a heaviness in her body that she had decided to simply work around."Doing what?" she asked, like she didn't understand what he was saying."Working when Sable specifically said to rest in the afternoons.""I am reading," she said. "Reading is not working.""That is a land dispute report.""It is light reading," she said.He looked at her."Rebecca.""Donald." She replied, laughing.He crossed the room and took the report out of her hands. She let him, because she had learned which arguments were worth having and which ones were not. This was not one of them."One hour," he said. "No reports. No correspondence.
THIRD PERSON POV"Rowan is going to fall off his chair in shock," Rebecca said, laughing. They decided to tell Rowan the following morning. As they were walking to Rowan's office together, Donald had his hand at the small of Rebecca's back, the corridor quiet at this early hour."He will not fall off his chair," Donald said."He is going to fall off his chair, I tell you," she said again.Donald almost smiled.Rowan was at his desk already working through the morning reports, when they arrived. He looked up when they walked in and read their faces. He set his pen down."What happened?" he said."Nothing bad," Donald said, grinning widely."Okay…" Rowan said, then looked at Rebecca.She was watching him with the particular expression of someone who is about to say something they have been looking forward to saying."I am pregnant," she said, unable to hold it anymore.Rowan stared at her in shock.He looked at Donald. Then back at Rebecca. Then at Donald again."Congratulations," he
THIRD PERSON POV"You have not touched your food," Donald said.Rebecca looked down at her plate. He was right. She had moved things around without eating any of it, which was unlike her. She picked up her fork and made a deliberate effort."I am fine," she said. "Not very hungry this morning."He said nothing. He watched her for a moment and then returned to his own food. But she caught the way his eyes moved back to her twice more before the meal was done.It had been like this for about a week.Tiredness that arrived earlier than it should and stayed longer than it had any right to. A faint nausea in the mornings that she had been quietly managing by eating plain things before she got out of bed. A sensitivity to certain smells — the candles in the east corridor, the particular soap the kitchen used — that had never bothered her before.She had told herself it was the aftermath of everything. The trial, the poison, the revelations about her mother. Her body catching up to the weigh
THIRD PERSON POVThe day of the mating ceremony arrived with a clear sky. From the earliest light, the grounds of Black Moon Territory had begun to fill. Packs arrived from far and wide—The Ironwood, Starfall, Ember Hollow, and even small clans from the northern ridges, each bringing gifts made of
THIRD PERSON POVThe door of the council chamber swung open with a soft creak, making every head that was present in the room turn as one.Rebecca stepped inside, her gown the color of a dawn sky, catching the lamplight like forest water under moonlight. The flower crown from Fountain of Beauty sti
THIRD PERSON POVVladimir found Rebecca at the fountain just after dawn. She sat on the stone rim, bare feet dangling in the cool water, watching the first light turn the spray into liquid gold. She looked peaceful—more peaceful than he had ever seen her, but the tightness around her eyes told him
THIRD PERSON POVRebecca looked at Rowan. “What now?”“We wait and plan," he said. "Because if Vladimir won’t open the gate… we’ll make him.”Rebecca’s eyes hardened. “How?" She asked. "How do you plan on doing that? I had asked him to please let me out the very same day I came. He agreed. I woke u







