LOGINCordelia's Pov
The enforcer waiting by the car was someone I recognised, which was both a blessing and a curse. Rupert Whitmore had been Lysander's beta back when I'd been foolish enough to think I belonged in their world.
He'd also been one of the few people who'd looked genuinely sorry during my very public humiliation.
"Delia," he said, straightening as I approached. His voice carried that careful neutrality that screamed 'this is awkward for everyone involved.'
"Rupert." I kept my tone equally neutral, though inside, my wolf was doing complicated gymnastics. Being around pack members again after five years of isolation was like stepping back into a coat that no longer fit properly. "Lovely weather we're having."
He glanced at the grey Scottish sky, currently threatening rain with the determination of a disgruntled deity. "Quite."
We stood there for a moment, two people who'd once known each other well enough to share inside jokes, now separated by years of carefully maintained distance. Rupert looked older, more worn around the edges.
There were lines around his eyes that hadn't been there before, a tension in his shoulders that spoke of too many sleepless nights.
"How bad is it?" I asked, because dancing around the obvious seemed pointless.
His expression shifted, and for a moment, I saw past the professional facade to genuine worry. "Bad enough that the council overruled his objections to bringing you back."
That was interesting. So Lysander hadn't wanted me involved. Typical. The man who'd rejected me in front of half the supernatural community was apparently too proud to ask for help, even when his life depended on it.
"And what exactly makes you all think I can help?" I climbed into the passenger seat, noting that the car still smelled like expensive leather and pack authority. Some things never changed.
Rupert started the engine, and we began the winding drive back toward Ravenshollow.
The landscape rolled past, achingly familiar despite my best efforts to forget it, stone walls, sheep that looked perpetually judgmental, and in the distance, the spires of the estate where I'd once thought I'd spend my life.
"The pack healers are baffled," Rupert said, navigating a particularly aggressive curve. "Whatever's affecting him, it's not responding to conventional treatment. The bond you shared... even damaged, it might be enough."
"Might be." I stared out the window, watching my old life approach with all the enthusiasm of a dental procedure. "Hardly inspiring confidence."
"Delia…"
"It's fine." I cut him off before he could launch into whatever apology or explanation he'd been rehearsing.
"I'm here, aren't I? Despite every rational instinct screaming at me to barricade myself in my studio with enough tea and biscuits to wait out the apocalypse."
The silence stretched between us, filled with things neither of us wanted to address. Like the fact that I'd been in love with Lysander since we were teenagers. Like the fact that the mating bond had been so strong, so obvious, that the entire pack had assumed it was destiny.
Like the fact that he'd chosen pack politics over his supposedly fated mate, and I'd been naive enough to be surprised.
"He asks about you," Rupert said quietly as we turned through the familiar iron gates of Ravenshollow Estate.
My stomach did something complicated. "Does he now?"
"Not directly. But he... notices things. When your pottery shows up in the village shops. When tourists mention the eccentric artist living in the hills."
"Eccentric." I laughed, but it came out sharper than intended. "I prefer 'selectively social.'"
The estate came into view, and despite everything, I felt a pang of something that might have been homesickness. Ravenshollow had been in the Ashworth family for centuries, a sprawling Gothic revival manor that managed to be both imposing and oddly welcoming.
I'd spent countless hours here as a young woman, learning the intricacies of pack politics and dreaming of a future that had spectacularly failed to materialise.
Rupert parked in the circular drive, and I noticed the subtle signs of neglect that spoke of a pack under stress.
The gardens weren't quite as pristine as they once were, and there was a general air of things being maintained rather than lovingly tended.
"Before we go in," Rupert said, turning to face me properly. "You should know... he's not the same. The illness, whatever it is, it's changing him. Making him..." He struggled for the right word.
"More of an arse than usual?" I suggested helpfully.
"Desperate," he said seriously. "And that makes him dangerous."
I considered this as we walked toward the front door, our footsteps echoing on the ancient stone. A desperate Lysander was indeed a concerning prospect.
The man had been formidable enough when he'd been secure in his power. Backed into a corner, facing his own mortality... Well, that had the potential to be spectacularly unpleasant for everyone involved.
The front hall hadn't changed much. Still intimidatingly grand, still designed to make visitors feel small and significant simultaneously.
The portraits of previous Ashworth alphas looked down with their painted expressions of aristocratic superiority, and I wondered if any of them had been stupid enough to reject their fated mates for political expediency.
"Miss Blackthorne." The voice came from the top of the main staircase, crisp and disapproving. Margaret Ashworth, Lysander's mother and current pack matriarch, descended with the grace of someone who'd been practicing intimidation since birth.
"Mrs Ashworth." I inclined my head just enough to be polite, not enough to be deferential. Five years of independence had done wonders for my spine.
She looked me over with the sort of assessment usually reserved for livestock at market. "You look... rustic."
"Thank you," I said cheerfully. "I will try."
Her lips thinned, but before she could respond, a commotion erupted from somewhere inside the house. Shouting, the crash of something expensive hitting something solid, and underlying it all, a sound that made my wolf whimper.
It was a pain-filled, desperate, and undeniably familiar howl.
"Right then," I said, squaring my shoulders. "Let's go see what sort of mess you've all gotten yourselves into.”
Sophia's pov I stared at the text for twenty minutes before calling Vincent. He answered on the first ring."Did you tell Diana where I live?""What? No. Why would I?""Because someone just texted me to stay away from you."Silence on his end. Then, "She must have followed me to your house.""That's insane.""That's Diana." Vincent exhaled. "I'm sorry Sophia. I shouldn't have come over. I didn't think she'd—""Save it. I'm not scared of her." I wasn't sure that was true but saying it out loud helped. "But we need to deal with this before it gets worse.""I don't know how.""I do. Meet me at the library tomorrow. Noon. Bring every text, email, anything you have from her.""Sophia, you don't have to—"I hung up.Tuesday morning I called in sick to work. Spent three hours researching extortion laws and blackmail cases. Most of what I found wasn't helpful. Vincent was right. Diana could claim everything was consensual. That he owed her legitimate business debt.But the breaking and enter
Sophia's povI watched from across the street as Diana got out of her Mercedes. She wore a red dress that probably cost more than my monthly salary. Vincent's whole body went rigid when he saw her.They talked. Diana moved closer. Put her hand on his chest. Vincent stepped back. She followed. Even from this distance I could see him shaking his head. Saying no to something.Diana pulled out her phone. Showed him something on the screen. Vincent went completely still. Then he nodded. Got in the passenger seat of her car.They drove away.I sat there for ten minutes trying to figure out what I'd just seen. A landlord doesn't touch her tenant like that. Doesn't show up at nine pm on a Wednesday. Doesn't make someone get in her car with whatever was on that phone.Thursday I couldn't focus at work. Kept checking my phone like Vincent might text me an explanation. He didn't.Friday morning Pastor Williams called me into his office. I work at the church library three days a week cataloging t
Sophia's povI didn't sleep for three nights. By Sunday morning I'd decided not to go to church. Not to meet Vincent for coffee. Not to hear whatever excuse he'd prepared.But at nine thirty I was in my car anyway. Because some part of me needed to hear him say it.Vincent was already at the piano when I walked in. He looked up and smiled like nothing was wrong. Like I hadn't spent three days imagining him in hotel rooms with strangers.The service passed. I didn't hear Pastor Williams's sermon. Just watched Vincent's hands move across the piano. Those hands that had given me tissues on Wednesday. Those hands that had touched people for money.When it ended, Vincent caught my arm."Coffee? There's a place two blocks over."I should say no. Walk away. Go home."Okay."The coffee shop was small. We sat in the back corner. Vincent wrapped his hands around his cup but didn't drink."You know.""What?""About New York. About what I did." He looked at me. "I can see it on your face.""My si
Sophia's pov Diana left after ten minutes with some excuse about an appointment. The way she looked at Vincent before she walked out made my stomach tight. Like she owned him.Vincent sat at the piano running through scales."When did you stop singing?""Eleven months ago.""The same time you stopped coming to church." It wasn't a question. He already knew."Yes.""Do you want to talk about why?""No.""Okay. We don't have to talk. We can just sing."He started playing a hymn I knew from childhood. His voice came in first, showing me where to enter. I opened my mouth but nothing came out."It's okay. First time back is hard.""How do you know?""Because I had a first time back too. Two years ago. I couldn't sing for almost a year.""Why not?""I lost someone. Someone important. Singing reminded me of them. So I stopped.""What changed?""I realized not singing hurt more than singing did. The pain was there either way. At least with music I felt something other than empty."His words
Sophia's pov I haven't step foot in Grace Community Church for eleven months. Not since the funeral. Not since I buried my husband Marcus and our stillborn daughter on the same gray October afternoon.Today was Sunday. The bulletin said they hired a new choir director. Pastor Williams thought live music might bring back the congregation that had dwindled during the pandemic. I came because my sister Isabella wouldn't stop calling until I did.The sanctuary felt smaller than I remembered. Wooden pews that needed refinishing. Stained glass windows that let in too much light. Twenty people scattered across seats meant for two hundred.Isabella grabbed my arm when I walked in. "You came. I'm so glad you came.""Don't make a big deal out of it.""I won't." She pulled me to a pew near the front. "But I am glad."The organist started playing. People stood. I stood because everyone else did but my mouth stayed closed during the hymn. The words felt wrong in my throat. Empty.Then the choir d
Maya's pov Six months later, I stood in Sophie's rebuilt barn. New wood. Fresh paint. Twenty hives arranged in neat rows outside."Hand me that frame." Sophie was up on a ladder installing shelves.I passed it to her. She hammered it into place."That's the last one." She climbed down. "We're officially done with construction.""Took long enough.""Six months isn't bad for a complete rebuild." She looked around. "It's smaller than before, but it works."The house was more compact too. One bedroom instead of two. Kitchen and living room combined. But it was ours. We'd built it together.My phone rang. Mom."Maya, just checking if you're still coming to dinner.""Yeah. Seven, right?""Right. And bring Sophie. I made her favorite.""Will do."Sophie smiled when I told her. "Your mom's been feeding me every Sunday for half a year. I'm getting spoiled.""She likes having someone to cook for." I pulled her closer. "Plus she loves you.""I love her too." She kissed me. "You ready for today?







