LOGINThird Person POV (Kharl / Celeste / Lydia)The alarm didn’t come softly.It tore through the palace like a wound reopening.First the horns.Then the shouts.Then the running.By the time the words reached the upper halls, they had already changed shape, spreading faster than truth ever could.“Security breach—”“The dungeon—”“Guards down—”“Markus—”Escaped.The word settled over the Pack like poison.Panic followed immediately.Not loud at first.But sharp.Controlled chaos.Warriors flooded the corridors, armor half-fastened, weapons already drawn, eyes scanning as if the enemy might still be inside the walls. Orders were shouted, repeated, contradicted, then corrected again as the chain of command tightened around the situation.No one slept after that.No one could.Because this wasn’t just a failure.It was a crack.And everyone could feel it.—Kharl stood in the center of the command hall, his presence alone enough to steady the chaos around him, even if it did nothing to qui
Markus POVNight had always been my ally.Darkness does something to people. It slows them. Softens their focus. Makes them believe that what they cannot see does not exist.But men like me—We live in the dark.We breathe in it.We wait inside it.And tonight…The dark belonged to me again.I sat chained against the cold stone wall of the dungeon, my head slightly lowered, my breathing slow and controlled. To anyone watching, I looked like a man who had accepted his fate.Defeated.Contained.Broken.That illusion had been necessary.For hours now, I had played the role well.Silent.Unmoving.Watching.Listening.Counting.Every guard that passed.Every shift change.Every footstep that lingered longer than it should.Because no prison is perfect.And no Alpha—no matter how powerful—can watch everything at once.Especially when he believes the threat is already contained.A faint sound echoed through the corridor.Soft.Almost nothing.But I heard it.Of course I did.My lips curled
My head rested against his chest, the steady thump of his heart the only sound in the quiet room. No matter what happens… I won’t let anyone take them again. The thought anchored me, but so did the man holding me. Kharl’s arms were steel and velvet at once—strong enough to crush, gentle enough to heal. I breathed him in, pine and musk and the faint salt of the fear he’d finally let me see.He must have felt the shift in me, because his hand slid up my back, fingers threading into my hair. Slowly, he tilted my face up. Our eyes locked. No words. Just the raw, naked truth between us: we had almost lost everything tonight.Then he kissed me.It started soft—his lips brushing mine like a question, like he was still afraid I might vanish. But the moment I answered, pressing closer, the dam broke. The kiss deepened, turned hungry, desperate. His tongue swept in, claiming my mouth with a low groan that vibrated straight through me. I moaned into him, hands fisting in his shirt, pulling him h
Celeste POVFor the first time in days… I was alone.Truly alone.No children clinging to me. No guards standing too close. No whispers in the hallway. No tension pressing in from every direction.Just silence.I stood by the window in my room, staring out into the night. The palace grounds were calm again, but it didn’t feel the same. Nothing did anymore. Even the wind felt different, like it carried the memory of what had happened.My arms wrapped around myself unconsciously.I could still feel it.The ropes.The fear.The sound of Alora crying.Amelia going too quiet.The moment I thought—I might not see my children again.My chest tightened, and I closed my eyes briefly, trying to steady my breathing.“I almost lost them…”The words didn’t leave my lips.But they echoed inside me.A soft knock came at the door.My heart skipped.For a second, fear returned so quickly it made my body tense.Then I forced myself to breathe.“It’s just the palace,” I reminded myself.“Come in,” I sa
Ryan POVI watched him more than I wanted to admit.Not because I trusted him.I didn’t.Not fully.Maybe not even halfway.But Kharl had become impossible to ignore inside our lives now. He was there in the mornings when the children came down for breakfast. He was there during training, standing a little distance away as Rune and Blaze practiced basic stances. He was there in the evening when Alora demanded stories and Amelia sat quietly near him like she was still afraid to ask for space, but also afraid to be left out.And Celeste…That was what bothered me most.Celeste was letting him in.Slowly.Carefully.Not with open arms. Not with foolish softness. But still, she was letting him in.At first, she only allowed him near the children when she was present. Then she allowed him to take Alora to the garden for a short walk. Then Rune asked him a question about shifting, and Celeste didn’t interrupt when Kharl answered. Yesterday, Blaze sat beside him for almost ten minutes withou
Celeste POVThe palace had never felt so quiet.Not peaceful.Not calm.Just… quiet.The kind of quiet that comes after something terrible has already happened, when everyone is still waiting for the next thing to break.Even the air felt different.Heavier.As if the walls themselves had seen too much and were holding onto it.I walked slowly down the hallway, my hand resting gently on Alora’s head as she stayed pressed close to my side. She hadn’t let go of me since we returned. Not once. Not even when the maids tried to take her to wash up or change her clothes.She refused.And I didn’t force her.I couldn’t.Every time I moved too far from her, even just a step, her fingers tightened around me like she thought I might disappear again.So I let her hold on.Amelia walked on my other side.Quiet.Too quiet.That was what scared me the most.She wasn’t crying.She wasn’t clinging.She wasn’t asking questions.She just walked.Head slightly lowered, hands folded in front of her like
Kharl POVHe felt it before he understood it.A shift in the air. A subtle tightening along his spine that had nothing to do with the council discussion and everything to do with instinct.Kharl had learned long ago to trust that feeling. It was the same awareness that had kept him alive during bor
Ryan POVRyan did not go looking for Alpha Garrick.He simply stopped avoiding him.The council dining hall was full that evening, delegates scattered across long tables in careful clusters that reflected political comfort more than friendship. Laughter rose in low waves. Glasses clinked. Conversat
Ryan POVRyan chose the quietest place he could find.Not a corridor. Not a garden path. Not somewhere they might be interrupted by passing delegates or watchful eyes. He led Janet to a small stone terrace overlooking the lower valley, tucked behind an archway where lantern light barely reached and
Celeste POVThe council chamber felt sharper that morning.Not louder. Not more crowded. Just more alert.Word of yesterday’s successful proposal had spread, and today’s discussion involved broader policy—how similar disputes would be handled across multiple territories in the future. It was no lon







