The beer was warm. She should’ve finished it earlier, but time had a way of unraveling around emotions she didn’t know how to name.
Mira sat on the windowsill of her borrowed room, one boot propped against the stone frame, the other foot dangling into the cool air. The Blackstone house was quiet, too quiet for a pack so large. Even the wolves here moved like soldiers. Everything about this place whispered order. Everything about her whispered danger. She took a long sip, staring out at the dark treetops glowing silver beneath the moonlight. She hadn’t wanted this. Not the Summit, not the bond, and especially not the twisting, unsteady ache in her chest that hadn’t stopped since she first locked eyes with Rhett Calder…or the one that bloomed deeper, slower, when Jace Rowan’s voice brushed against her spine like a memory that hadn’t happened yet. She didn’t trust either of them. She didn’t trust herself either. Why now? Why them? She let the bottle rest against her thigh, fingers drumming against the glass. She’d trained herself for isolation. It was safer. Cleaner. Emotions were liabilities in her world; tools for others to use against you. She’d been a ghost in her skin since she was twelve, surviving rogue territory, bouncing between enforcer contracts and Alpha-sponsored kill lists, keeping her head low and her knives sharp. Desire was manageable. Trust? Love? Those were fatal, but here she was, in an Alpha’s house, wrapped in an impossible bond that refused to break, and all she could think about was how part of her wanted to stop running, not because she was tired, but because she was lonely. She had never spoken that word aloud. She barely let herself think it, but sitting here, drinking half-stale beer under a stranger’s roof, with two soul-deep connections humming like electricity in her veins, she couldn’t shove it down anymore. I want something real. The thought hit her like a knife twist. Honest. Ugly. Dangerous but true. She closed her eyes and let herself feel it—the difference between the two of them. Rhett was gravity. He pulled everything toward him without asking. He didn’t flinch, fold, or even seem to doubt himself; like control was stitched into his bones. Gods help her. It lit something wild inside her every time he stepped into a room, but he was locked up so tight that she wasn’t sure he’d ever let her see what was real underneath. And something inside her needed real. She’d lived too long on lies and silence. Then there was Jace. The quiet one. He didn’t push. Didn’t demand. But there was a steadiness to him; a patience she didn’t trust because it made her feel seen, not watched, not assessed. Seen. He looked at her like she wasn’t a threat to be handled, but a person he wanted to understand. That scared her more than any Alpha ever had. She’d never had anyone want to understand her. She wasn’t sure what she’d do if he succeeded. Another sip of warm beer. Another long silence. She knew what this bond was doing. It wasn’t just physical. It wasn’t even just spiritual. It was pulling her open. Forcing her to see the parts of herself she’d kept locked behind scars, snide remarks, and well-earned distance. It was working, and she hated that. She also wasn’t sure she wanted it to stop. She set the bottle down and let her head rest against the window frame, the cold stone grounding her. Maybe the bond didn’t care what she was ready for. Perhaps it just knew what she needed. Rhett’s sharpness. Jace’s quiet. One gave her structure. The other offered softness. She was standing on the edge of both, still trying to decide whether to leap or run. Footsteps echoed faintly down the hall. Not approaching. Just existing. She didn’t need to guess who they belonged to. Rhett moved like a command waiting to be issued. Jace moved like a secret waiting to be told. And she? She moved like a woman who’d spent her entire life pretending she didn’t need anyone, but for the first time in her life, Mira wasn’t sure if pretending would be enough.Jace wasn’t sure when it started., not the bond with Mira, he’d felt that like a thunderclap. Raw. Immediate. Painful in its honesty. But the second thread, the one tugging quietly, steadily from the edges of his awareness, that was Rhett. At first, Jace had thought it was instinct—pack proximity, Alpha presence, the usual gravitational pull between dominant wolves and those who knew how to follow without submission. But this wasn’t deference. It wasn’t fear. It was his wolf recognizing its mate. A rhythm syncing with his. Like his heartbeat had started listening for someone else’s, and it terrified him. Ifthis was real; if the bond was forming between all three of them, then there was no turning back without tearing something vital apart. He stood at the edge of the Blackstone training grounds, arms crossed as Mira worked through hand-to-hand drills with a young warrior named Risa. Mira moved like wind wrapped around steel, all grace and precision, all muscle and danger. She h
The sunrise didn’t feel like a new beginning. It felt like a warning. Rhett stood at the perimeter line of Blackstone’s northern ridge, wind tugging at his sleeves as the scent of morning dew and pine curled around him. Below, the pack compound stirred. Taining rotations resuming, patrols swapping out, another day pretending everything was normal. It wasn’t. He could still feel the taste of her, Mira. The fire in her touch, the demand in her kiss, the way the bond had burned through him like wildfire the second he let go. He had kissed her like a drowning man, and then, like a coward, he’d walked away. Not because he didn’t want her, but because the moment he gave in, he felt the entire foundation of his control begin to splinter. He didn’t know how to lead while falling apart, and the bond—the triad—was tearing at the seams of every rule that had kept him grounded. ⸻ “You look like shit.” Rhett didn’t turn. Tarek’s voice came from behind him, steady, casual, but not unkind.
The trees blurred past in a gray-green smear, but Jace barely saw them. The truck rumbled steady beneath them, tires carving through forest roads, but the cabin’s silence was heavy; thicker than the woods, tighter than the space between his shoulder and hers. Mira sat next to him, arms crossed, her face turned toward the window. She hadn’t said a word since the kiss. Not to Rhett. Not to Jace. Not even to herself, from what he could feel through the bond. Her emotions crackled, confused, charged, and defensive. She was holding them in like steam under pressure. It would break her eventually. It always did. Jace didn’t blame her. He wasn’t even sure he could put into words what had shifted during the mission between them, among them, but something had. He’d felt it the second Rhett pressed his mouth to hers,fierce and raw. He hadn’t been close enough to hear their words, but the emotions had flooded through the bond like a lightning strike to the chest. Rhett’s need had been
Rhett’s mouth crushed against hers like gravity finally gave in. There was no hesitation. No measured calculation. Just raw, commanding heat. His hand curled at the back of her neck, anchoring her in place, while his other arm slid around her waist, pulling her against the hard line of his body. The kiss burned—not gentle, not careful—but claiming. Like he’d spent every second of resistance storing up this exact moment. And gods help her, she let him. Because the second his lips met hers, everything else disappeared. The aching, the questions, the fear gone in an instant. There was only his mouth on hers, the smell of smoke and pine, the sound of his restrained breathing as if he, too, was stunned by how badly he needed this. She wanted to be angry. She wanted to shove him and remind him that she wasn’t his to command, but when his tongue brushed hers and her spine arched into his body, she realized she wanted something else more. She wanted to feel, to let it happen, to let som
The dream was soft at first. Mira’s voice—low, urgent, pulling through shadows, not in pain, but calling. Then a second voice—rougher, controlled. A thread of gravel and storm. Rhett. Their voices circled him, not speaking to him, but about him. Around him. Through him. He was in the middle. Always the middle. Jace opened his eyes. It was dark. The cabin creaked softly with age. Cold air pressed against the shuttered windows, and the dying embers of a long-dead fire whispered in the hearth. He was alone; No—not alone. Movement shifted across the room. He sat up slowly, his heart beating faster, not from fear, but knowing. The bond was awake. He could feel them. Mira’s emotions were jagged. Sharp. A mix of restraint and fury. Rhett’s were molten iron wrapped in stone. They weren’t yelling but they were absolutely arguing. Jace rose silently and stepped toward the doorway leading into the next room, moving like the scout he’d been trained to be. What he saw stopped him in his t
It wasn’t supposed to be a real mission. Just a recon run, low-risk terrain, low-profile intel collection. A test of team cohesion, Blackstone’s security tech, and the task force’s ability to not kill each other in close quarters but the forest had other plans. Now Mira was crouched beneath the twisted carcass of a fallen tree, blood in her mouth, sweat on her neck, and two growling, pissed-off males flanking her on either side. “Everyone else is still back at the outpost,” Jace said, voice low. “We got separated at the ridge when the det charge went off. “Yeah, I noticed,” Mira muttered, adjusting the strap on her thigh holster. Rhett didn’t speak. He stood a few feet away, back to them, scanning the treeline with his usual coiled intensity. His hands were flexing and relaxing at his sides, like he was ready to tear something apart. “Trap?” Mira asked. “Most likely,” Rhett said. Jace crouched beside her, steady eyes scanning the terrain. “Minimal blast pattern. Controlled. Not