Cordelia's Pov
The pack council chamber hadn't changed much in five years. Same heavy wooden table, same portraits of disapproving ancestors, same underlying tension that came from putting a dozen strong-willed supernatural beings in one room and expecting them to agree on anything. What had changed was my position at the table. Instead of sitting in the visitor's chair, trying to look worthy of approval, I now occupied the seat to Lysander's right. The Luna's seat. The one I'd dreamed of occupying when I was young and foolish enough to think titles mattered more than respect. "The curse is broken," Elder Pemberton announced unnecessarily, his rheumy eyes fixed on us with obvious disapproval. "But the circumstances of its breaking rise... questions." "Questions?" I kept my voice pleasant, though I could feel Lysander's amusement through the bond. "Such as?" "The legitimacy of a bond formed under duress." The temperature in the room seemed to drop several degrees. I felt Lysander tense beside me, his protective instincts flaring, but I placed a hand on his arm to stop whatever diplomatic disaster he was about to unleash. "Under duress?" I repeated, letting a hint of steel enter my voice. "Would you care to clarify that, Elder?" Pemberton shifted uncomfortably. "Surely you can understand the pack's concerns. A mating bond formed purely to break a curse…" "Was freely chosen," I interrupted, standing slowly. "By me. After careful consideration of the alternatives. Are you suggesting I lack the mental capacity to make my own decisions?" Several council members suddenly found their papers fascinating. Even Margaret, seated across from us with her customary disapproving expression, looked slightly uncomfortable. "Of course not," Pemberton backtracked. "But the pack deserves assurance that this union serves our interests, not just…" "Not just what?" Lysander's voice was dangerously quiet. "Not just the minor detail of keeping your Alpha alive?" I could feel his anger building through the bond, five years of careful diplomatic patience wearing thin. Time to intervene before he said something we'd all regret. "Perhaps," I said, settling back into my chair with deliberate calm, "we should discuss what my role as Luna will actually entail. Since apparently there are concerns about my suitability." The silence that followed was loaded with unspoken tensions. Finally, Elder Morrison cleared her throat. "The traditional Luna duties include overseeing pack social events, mediating disputes among the women, and supporting the Alpha's decisions." I blinked. "I'm sorry, did you just suggest my job is to plan dinner parties and agree with my mate?" "Well, traditionally…" "Traditionally, women couldn't own property or vote," I said pleasantly. "Shall we stick with outdated traditions, or would you prefer a Luna who actually contributes to pack leadership?" Morrison's face flushed. "That's not what I meant." "Good. Because I have no intention of being a decorative accessory." I leaned forward, addressing the table at large. "If I'm doing this, I'm doing it properly. Full partnership in pack decisions, equal voice in council meetings, and direct involvement in any issues that affect our people." "That's rather... progressive," Pemberton said weakly. "Yes, it is. Revolutionary, even." I smiled sweetly. "I imagine you'll adjust." Through the bond, I felt Lysander's approval and something that might have been pride. It was intoxicating, that shared understanding, the way our emotions amplified and supported each other. "There's also the matter of residence," Margaret said, clearly hoping to regain some ground. "The Luna traditionally lives at the estate." "Traditionally, yes." I nodded agreeably. "However, I'll be keeping my cottage and studio. I have a business to run." The explosion of objections was immediate and predictable. Council members talking over each other, citations of precedent, dire warnings about the importance of tradition. I waited for the noise to die down before responding. "I make pottery," I said simply. "Good pottery. People pay me for it. I employ three part-time assistants and sell to shops throughout Scotland. This isn't a hobby, it's a legitimate business that I built from nothing." I paused, letting that sink in. "The pack will benefit from having a Luna who understands commerce, who has connections outside our supernatural community." "But the estate…" someone started. "Will continue to serve as pack headquarters," Lysander said, speaking for the first time since his earlier outburst. "Delia and I will maintain offices there, attend all necessary functions, and fulfill our duties to the pack. Where we sleep is hardly the council's concern." The look that passed between us in that moment was electric—tensed and undeniable. It wasn’t just a glance; it was an unspoken agreement, a pulse of something unseen humming beneath the surface. In that split second, we understood each other completely. There was partnership in his eyes, the kind built not just on shared goals but shared wounds. There was understanding too, the silent kind that doesn't need words to explain. But most of all, there was the promise of something that had nothing to do with duty or obligation. It was real, and dangerously close to the edge of something we couldn’t name yet. I felt it in my chest, that quiet shift from necessity to choice. We weren’t just allies anymore. In that moment, we became something else entirely. And even if the world around us burned, I knew we’d face it side by side. "This is highly irregular," Pemberton muttered. "So was cursing the Alpha bloodline over a romantic rejection," I pointed out. "Yet somehow we all survived that irregularity." I stood again, signaling that I considered the discussion closed. "Is there anything else that requires immediate attention, or can we adjourn so I can return to the kiln that's been heating since this morning?" The dismissal was clear, and after a few more halfhearted objections, the council began to disperse. Margaret stayed, her expression suggesting she wanted to say something cutting but couldn't quite formulate the words. "Mother," Lysander said pleasantly, "Delia and I have some things to discuss privately. I'm sure you understand." When we were finally alone in the council chamber, I slumped back into my chair with a sigh. "Well," I said, "that went about as well as expected." "You were magnificent," Lysander said, and the sincerity in his voice, both spoken and felt through the bond, made my chest warm. "Was I? Because I feel like I just declared war on half the pack hierarchy." "Sometimes," he said, moving closer, "war is necessary for progress." His hand found mine, and the simple touch sent familiar electricity through the bond. We were alone, truly alone, for the first time since everything had changed. "So," I said, looking up at him, "what happens now?”Klaus's Pov I woke up on the morning of the board meeting with the strangest sense of clarity I'd ever experienced. Not peace, exactly—my stomach was still doing aerial acrobatics that would have impressed Cirque du Soleil—but it was like finally putting on glasses after years of squinting at the world.The decision had made itself sometime during the night, in that mysterious space between sleeping and waking where the heart finally overrules the head.I called Finn at seven in the morning."Klaus?" His voice was rough with sleep, and I could picture him sitting up in bed, probably running his hands through his hair in that way that made my chest tight."I want to tell them," I said without preamble. "At the board meeting. I want to tell them the truth."Silence on the other end, then: "Are you sure?""No," I admitted. "I'm terrified. But I'm more terrified of spending the rest of my life wondering what would have happened if I'd been brave enough to try.""Klaus…""I'm in love with
Klaus's Pov Weber's office felt smaller than usual, probably because it contained more tension than a Wagnerian opera. I sat across from his massive oak desk, trying to read his expression and failing spectacularly. Finn sat beside me, close enough that I could feel the heat from his arm but far enough away that we weren't actually touching. Even that small distance felt like a chasm."Gentlemen," Weber began, steepling his fingers in the way that usually preceded either profound wisdom or complete disaster. "We need to discuss last night's performance."I braced myself for the lecture about professionalism, about maintaining appropriate boundaries between personal and professional relationships, about the orchestra's reputation and the need for discretion."It was extraordinary," he continued, and I blinked in surprise. "In thirty years of conducting, I've rarely witnessed such musical chemistry. The reviews this morning, while... coded in their language, are universally praising
Klaus's Pov The reviews were somehow brutal,not about our performance—that had been universally praised as "transcendent" and "a revelation of musical partnership." No, the brutality was in the subtext, the carefully coded language that anyone in Munich's cultural scene would understand perfectly."Richter and Brauer's interpretation of the Brahms sonata was intensely personal," wrote Klaus Weber's review in the Süddeutsche Zeitung, "perhaps more revelatory than intended for such a public venue."The Münchner Merkur was even less subtle: "While the technical execution was flawless, one wonders if such passionate musical chemistry might be better suited to more intimate settings."I sat in my apartment the morning after the gala, surrounded by newspapers and my laptop displaying various online reviews, feeling like I was reading my own obituary. My phone had been buzzing incessantly—interview requests, congratulations, and several calls from my publicist that I was studiously ignori
Klaus's Pov The charity gala was held at the Residenz, Munich's former royal palace, in a ballroom that had hosted emperors and kings and probably witnessed more political intrigue than a dozen spy novels. Tonight it was filled with Bavaria's cultural elite, all dressed in their finest and pretending they came for the music rather than the networking opportunities.I stood backstage, adjusting my bow tie for the fifth time and trying to ignore the way my hands were trembling. In fifteen years of performing, I'd never been this nervous before a concert.I'd played for presidents, recorded albums that went platinum, performed solos at venues that most musicians only dreamed of. But tonight felt different. Tonight felt like everything was balanced on the edge of a knife."You look like you're about to throw up," Finn said, appearing beside me in the wings. He was wearing a perfectly tailored black tuxedo that should have been illegal in several European Union member states, and his bo
Klaus's Pov I didn't sleep.Instead, I spent the night pacing my apartment, alternating between replaying every moment of dinner and trying to convince myself that I was reading far too much into what had been, technically speaking, just a colleague being friendly. By the time my alarm went off at six, I'd worn a path in my hardwood floors and consumed enough coffee to power a small Bavarian village.The morning rehearsal was Vivaldi's Four Seasons, which should have been comforting in its familiarity. I'd performed "Spring" more times than I could count, and could play it in my sleep, which was fortunate considering my current state of consciousness. But the moment Finn's fingers touched the piano keys for the opening measures, my carefully maintained composure evaporated like morning mist.He was wearing a navy sweater that made his eyes look impossibly dark, and he'd obviously showered recently because his hair was still slightly damp at the ends. These were ridiculous things to
Klaus's Pov We walked through Munich's old town afterward, the wine making everything feel slightly soft around the edges. The November air was crisp enough to see our breath, and the Christmas markets were already setting up in Marienplatz, transforming the square into something that looked like it belonged in a fairy tale."God, I love this city," Finn said, stopping in front of the Rathaus to look up at the gothic spires that disappeared into the darkness above the street lights. "Hamburg is beautiful, but it's all maritime efficiency and Protestant work ethic. This place has actual magic to it.""You say that now," I replied, pulling my coat tighter against the cold. "Wait until you experience your first proper Bavarian winter. By February, you'll be dreaming of Hamburg's charming gray skies.""Pessimist." He bumped my shoulder with his, a casual gesture that sent an entirely disproportionate jolt through my nervous system. "I happen to enjoy winter. Something about the way ev